As always, The Shield supports these plotlines with gritty casework, including a brutal kidnapping, homicide, and gangland warfare. Every episode (shot in grainy 16mm) meets the series' high standard of excellence, but "Greenlit," "Homewrecker" (featuring the death of a recurring character), and "Dominoes Falling" are standouts, while the controversial "Co-Pilot" offers a retrospective look at the Barn's volatile origins. Writing and direction are consistently superb, and Pounder deserves honorable mention among the brilliant cast, striking a stoical balance of world-weary wisdom, procedural diligence, and righteous indignation. Bonus features comprise a virtual film school for anyone seeking a career in television. While the commentaries explore the nuts and bolts of series development, the "Directors' Roundtable" (with creator Shawn Ryan, Scott Brazil, Peter Horton, and Paris Barclay) is a revealing, frequently hilarious study of the rigors of fast-paced production; "Sound Surgery" presents a track-by-track analysis of sound, music, and dialogue; and "Wrap Day" is a celebratory tribute to the series' hard-working cast and crew. It's all good, and guaranteed to stoke anyone's appetite for Season Three. --Jeff Shannon
RRP: £34.99
Our Price: £10.52 (subject to change)
Editorial
Amazon.co.uk Review
Everything good about the first season of The Shield is intensified in the second. For detective Vic Mackey (Michael Chiklis) and his amoral strike team, these 13 episodes follow "the money train," a stockpile of Armenian mob money ripe for the taking. Mackey's team plots to steal this criminal fortune while under pressure from Capt. Aceveda (Benito Martinez), whose political campaign is threatened by a civilian auditor (Lucinda Jenney) assigned to uncover corruption in "the Barn." The uneasy alliance between Aceveda and Mackey provokes the suspicion of Wyms (CCH Pounder), whose by-the-book vigilance is rewarded while Dutch (Jay Karnes) endures a slump that worsens the Barn's sullied reputation. After being horribly disfigured by Mackey, a vile Mexican druglord (Daniel Pino) plots a territorial coup, prompting the strike team's finest police work while Mackey struggles to save his failing marriage. Post-9/11 tensions erupt when beat cop Danny (Catherine Dent) justifiably shoots an armed Arab civilian, and newlywed Julien (Michael Jace) copes with (literal) gay-bashing following his church-sponsored sexual reorientation.
Here we go again!
Review date: 2008-07-12 Rating: 6 out of 10
Anyone who read my review of Season 1 of The Shield is probably wondering why I subjected myself to this, the second season. My review for those who haven't read it (and why would you have) wasn't overly complimentary, in fact, it almost bordered on the negative. Well visiting the US on holiday earlier this year I caught an episode of Season 2 and for some reason felt a certain affection for the characters (particularly Dutch boy) and also realised that I quite missed a series with plot lines so bad they're funny. So to cut a long story the same length I purchased Season 2.
Now I'm not sure if with age my critical eye is becoming a little myopic or if I have developed a certain affection for The Shield like that for a really annoying friend who you have known for many years, but I quite enjoyed Season 2. Don't get me wrong, essentially the programme is no different. The acting by the strike team is still laughable at times, the storylines are mostly plain silly and the show has absolutely no hold on reality at all. However much of the acting by the supporting cast is in fact very good, the show has a dark moody atmosphere, and rattles along at a good pace witout ever being boring. Where the show lets itself down is that it has no hold on reality. I kind of worry that a generation of kids is growing up thinking that Police work is incredibly exciting and just so easy (take CSI for instance). In The Shield there is a simple solution to every problem. Got a troublesome drug kingpin in town? Well why not just burn his face on the electric cooker that'll solve that one. Or if you deperately need to know the whereabouts of a gang member, burst into his girlfriend's house and pretend you are going to rape her until she gives up the required information (why is that technique not in all Police manuals?). Then need to dispose of said drug kingpin, in case he tells someone you burnt him on the hob, well just get a patsy to stab him for you. Now that wasn't difficult was it?
I appreciate that the show is meant to be raw, mean, gritty and brutal but surely it needs some hold on reality to make it believable. The idea that a Police Officer could run amok in the way that Vic Mackey does is patently absurd though if rather amusing.
Having said all this, I think the show is quite fun if you don't take it too seriously and it is very easy viewing after a long day killing at the abattoir.