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selenak: (Money by Distempera)
[personal profile] selenak
In which the main plot moves to the waterfront and nobody could have been a contender.



Okay, enough with the On the Waterfront jokes. I think I can guess why this was the season many comments declared their least favourite compared to the others. For starters, of the three new characters through which we mainly get the union corruption/organized crime side of the tale, Ziggy is such an annoying character every time he's on screen (well, except perhaps for two scenes, but that's it) that one hopes for his untimely demise (but no such luck), Nick is somewhat bland, and while Frank Zabatko isn't, is in fact somewhat sympathetic, he's also very familiar (to me, at least): the union boss who fervently believes in the union and wants the best but has so often kidded himself about "doing the wrong thing for the right reasons" that he's become thoroughly corrupt, and everything starts to crash in around him. (Also, the various father-son constellations, Frank and Ziggy, Frank and nephew Nick who is also sort of a son, Nick and his actual father, and the havoc following the American Dream wrecks do feel incredibly Miller-esque, I wasn't kidding about that.) As for Spiro and "The Greek", they feel like a crossover to an early Scorsese or Coppola film every time they show up (only, you know, Greek not Italian, leaving the "I'm not even Greek" confession at the end aside). Meanwhile, the ongoing c-plot continuing last season's saga only makes the contrast more glaring, because D'Angelo (more in a second), Omar and Stringer are all much more vivid characters and less familiar feeling characters.

This being said, I also agree that it's still a compelling season, and it also starts to give you a sense of what David Simon is trying to accomplish, with the focus on various city institutions - in the first season the Westside drug gangs and the police, and the second on the union, the dying shipping industries and the entanglement in international crime. (And s3, the first episode of which I couldn't resist watching last night, seems to tackle city hall.) ( Oh, and Sergeji, you may be a professional thug, but I hear you on the "why is it always Boris?" complaint and pointing out that no, being an Ukrainian isn't the same as being a Russian.) I also really liked new character Beadie Russell, and her interplay with our established cops. Daniels finding a way to make his unit permanent avoids having do find a plot excuse for getting the band back together every season, but I do appreciate we get to see Rawles' threats from last season weren't in vain and at the start of s2 everyone is indeed scattered and working through the consequences. It's also the season of breaking down marriages - Daniels and Marla, Kima and Cheryl (not just over Kima going back to street duty; it seems obvious to me that she's not really ready to raise a child, and while McNulty manages to get on more civil terms with his divorce-intending wife than he was last season, he erronously believes that this is the same as resumption of marriage and immediately finds out otherwise, because, as she says, she may care about him but can't trust him (and who can blame her). On the other hand, the black humor is as vivid as ever (something I appreciate about the show), and so are the friendships; for example, when Bunk comes to the rescue because he can see McNulty is really falling apart without genuine policing to do, this is what feels right for their relationship as established.

The backseat taking c-plot about the fallout from last sason for the gangsters was very compelling - and tragic. What the show does with D'Angelo - letting him go through despair at the start to resolution and growing and finding his strength and peace, only to kill him and let him be framed as suicide - is positively Whedonian. It also continues to pile up a lot of bad karma for Stringer Bell. I must admit I wasn't entirely clear whether Avon's "I've been more than fair to him" re: Dee was in fact an indirect instruction until the next episode made it clear that Avon really had no idea and was horrified at Dee's death. Of course, it's exactly the kind of remorseless cold logic Stringer and Avon both showed when ordering the second witness' death and Wallace's last season: the idea that once D'Angelo has shown himself to be genuinenly willing to stand on his own and no longer benefit from his uncle's connections and thus had become independent, he could no longer be trusted to keep quiet. At this point, I started to wonder why it hadn't occured to Stringer yet to order Avon's assassination in prison the same way and officially take the top spot he already has in effect as long as Avon is in prison. By now, the remaining drug dealers working for the crumbling Barksdale empire probably never even saw Avon and have been reporting to Stringer all the time, so it's not like he needs to worry about various loyal underlings going for him if he does that, and Proposition Joe has already signalled he infinitely prefers dealing with Stringer. Presumably what keeps Avon alive for now is some leftover old friendship and loyalty, but I fully expect a lethal Stringer versus Avon confrontation next season, both about the business and now with the added incentive of the ticking time bomb that's the truth about Dee's death. Given that Stringer is the character the audience has spend the most time with (btw, those continuing evening business classes he takes are a great touch), I also expect him to win, but of course he now also has Omar on his case, and that's another question entirely.

The Omar scenes throughout the season were terrific, but they inadvertendly also illustrate something which has been pointed out to me in the s1 comments. I mean, it's great that Omar, after watching two women robbing drug dealers, recruits them into his mini gang, and that we see them working with him throughout the season, but at the end of s2 we still don't even know their names or anything about their personalities other than they're good at their job. And that's very different from how the male young criminals are treated by the narrative. Also, as the show's seasonal main plot includes white slave traffic, it might have been a good idea to make one of the women therein a point of view character (instead of, say, ZIGGY) , but no. (I get the symbolism of McNulty being unable to find out their names. My point still stands.) The two women we see enough of to get a sense of their personalities on the criminals' side are Brianna and Donette, and while I like Brianna (and the fact she's not presented as A Bad Mother for having persuaded Dee not to testify last season), Donette so far is a shallow stereotype.

(Sidenote: otoh I was delighted to see that Shardene, though only appearing once, is really building a good new life for herself. Excellent news!)

In conclusion: I won't miss the waterfront characters (except for Beadie), but found the season still worth watching, and now am on to season 3.

Date: 2013-02-13 07:20 am (UTC)
lizbee: A vivid pink bear against a grey background (TV: Pink bear)
From: [personal profile] lizbee
Now that I'm not spoiling you, I can elaborate on my last comments: the essay about African-American women in The Wire that didn't mention Kima was specifically discussing mothers, and their role in socialising their children, even if that socialisation is criminal. And I found it really off that it didn't discuss Kima, especially since Cheryl is almost preparing for motherhood by socialising her, trying to encourage her to advance into the middle class. There was a whole limb of this essay that was missing!

SEE ICON!

Date: 2013-02-13 09:36 am (UTC)
monanotlisa: (KIMA! - the wire)
From: [personal profile] monanotlisa
That's such a fascinating topic; it's an oversight that really stunning because as Selena points out, motherhood and family is where Kima is NOT at...

Re: SEE ICON!

Date: 2013-02-13 07:06 pm (UTC)
monanotlisa: (omar - the wire)
From: [personal profile] monanotlisa
It's by ciderpress and shareable! Cannot find her post, alas.

Got some icons. New characters and quotes of theirs; visual content otherwise is nonspoilery:

http://monanotlisa.dreamwidth.org/tag/the+wire

Date: 2013-02-13 03:01 pm (UTC)
likeadeuce: (genius)
From: [personal profile] likeadeuce
Marla! I just wanted to say I'm glad you mentioned her; it's nice to see such a take-no-shit female character as part of the political sphere.

Date: 2013-02-13 03:11 pm (UTC)
crossedwires: toph punches katara to show her affection (Default)
From: [personal profile] crossedwires
Marla Daniels is my not-so-secret favourite! ♥

Date: 2013-02-13 03:12 pm (UTC)
likeadeuce: (genius)
From: [personal profile] likeadeuce
I would watch a Marla-centric political spinoff!

Date: 2013-02-13 12:24 pm (UTC)
likeadeuce: (roque)
From: [personal profile] likeadeuce
Your review of the season's strengths and weaknesses is dead on -- I see what they were doing with the waterfront plot but the continuing dynamics with the remains of the Barksdale crew are infinitely more compelling.

Re Stringer & Avon, I'll revisit that paragraph after you've seen season 3.

Brianna is the character that I most want to see have more to do in the series than she ever actually does. She's not insignificant as things go on, but she doesn't get nearly the development Stringer & Avon do.

Date: 2013-02-13 02:50 pm (UTC)
likeadeuce: (roque)
From: [personal profile] likeadeuce
It's interesting because Simon previously did a miniseries based on a nonfiction book about life in the Baltimore drug culture (The Corner) and that has a wonderful mother character played by Khandi Alexander; subsequent to The Wire, Simon made Treme which has numerous great female characters, who get as much or more attention and development as the men. So there's something particular about The Wire that ends up being treated as a male sphere, and examination of the male side of various cultures. (Even Kima at various points indicates that she considers herself different from other female cops, which is a valid character note but sort of unfortunate when there isn't much shown to counteract her thesis -- I'm trying to remember whether she and Beadie have any significant scenes together.)

Date: 2013-02-13 01:58 pm (UTC)
gelliaclodiana: (rock the cradle)
From: [personal profile] gelliaclodiana
The Wire is great in so many, many ways (like many people, I think that Season 2 is weak, but S3 and 4 are some of the best television ever made). But it is ultimately a story about men; there is a really interesting story to be told about the women who also inhabit this world, but it is by and large not a story being told except where it impacts on the story of the men.

But still, a great show.

Date: 2013-02-13 03:53 pm (UTC)
astridv: (Default)
From: [personal profile] astridv
*nodnod* That's pretty much how I felt about the season. Some of the A plot characters are impossible to relate to (Oh god, Ziggy, you useless tool) but overall it's an important facet of the story. And I though Frank was an interesting character in the way his corruptness was motivated by his total dedication to the Union and his desperate fight to turn the clock back.

I like Beadie too, she's great! And I loved how she fitted right into the unit.

Heh, hard to talk about the show without spoiling anything. I'm double-checking every sentence.

Date: 2022-11-01 12:01 pm (UTC)
itsnotmymind: (connor hand on face)
From: [personal profile] itsnotmymind
I also love the black humor - The Wire isn't really famed for its humor but I find it very funny and I'm fussy about my humor.

I have to admit that I do like Ziggy. He would be hard to take as, say, a protagonist, but in the doses we got on the show I liked him. But yes, there should have been more female characters or at least more focus on the ones we had.

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