Written by Debbie Sarjeant ; story by Tom Fontana,
Julie Martin and James Yoshimura
Directed by Peter Medak
'Deception' is a landmark episode of Homicide for
many reasons.
First it is one of the most highly regard by fans
of the show (see Notes From The Board) in large part because of how the arch
nemesis of Homicide Luther Mahoney meets his end. Second is that this is
arguably the most important episode of the entire series to this point: almost
every storyline and character action for the next season – and arguably until
the series ends – will end up being affected by Mahoney's shooting. And third
is something more subtle: it disguises all of this in such a brilliant fashion
that the viewer is blindsided in a way it hasn't been since 'Work Related'.
In later writings David Simon, now one of the
staff writers, would argue how the end of the Mahoney saga bothered him: Mahoney
had been built up as such a near superhuman figure but NBC was essentially
making the argument that he had to be killed off for sweeps. This would be one
of the impetus that would, after Homicide ended, be an impetus for Simon
creating The Wire where as I've already indicated there are many
parallels between Luther and so many of the drug dealers we saw during that
shows incredible run.
While I understand Simon's logic in hindsight
I've never fully agreed with it, in large part because of fans of Homicide know
Mahoney's death doesn't mean that he stops being a problem for Kellerman
and Lewis. On the contrary Luther dead will cause even more problems for the
two of them when he was alive. That will lead, in a way that is clearly a
preamble for what Simon will do in The Wire, a chain of events that will
reverberate through the entire squad and lead to even more violence and death
as a result of it.
I'll deal with that when we get into Season Six
but part of the reason I think the comparison to Work Related is valid is that
the show does all of this is an episode that until the last five minutes, is
basically another episode of Homicide. And when the episode ends I, like
the average viewer in 1997, thought this was clearly the end of the Mahoney saga.
That was how cop shows worked back then: bad guy takes a bullet in the chest,
cops are cleared of the charges, we move on to the next case. But that's not
what Fontana and Simon have planned. It takes longer for the shock to come then
it does in Work Related' and it unfolds so gradually that it's not until much later
you realize the trick the writers did. I have no idea if it was planned this
way or circumstances forced the writers hands (we'll see in Season 6 why
exactly) but either way it’s a magnificent accomplishment.
And it starts so simply with a random man from
Nigeria dead with a smile on his face in a motel room. Munch doesn't care about
it because it's not a murder. Cox finds 77 balloons of heroin in the mans
stomach and passes it on to Stivers. They in turn pass it over to Lewis and
Kellerman who have little interest until Stivers says its destined for Luther Mahoney.
When she asks if they're interested Lewis says: "Mention the name Luther
Mahoney we'll follow you to the end of the earth." Neither of them know
(nor does the viewer) how badly it will end for all involved.
Once again they get tied to the feds as Gail
Ingram is back certain she knows that if they get Brookdale they can get him to
roll on Luther. Meldrick and Mike practically laugh at her. They know firsthand
just how good Mahoney is at tearing down cases against him and they have no
illusions that they'll get anywhere against one of his lieutenants. Ingram tells
them they have a wiretap on Mahoney's phone for three months but they've gotten
nothing in that time. Its Al Giardello who makes it clear what the stakes are:
there are thirteen open murders tied to him to this point (some of them we've
seen over the last year, some we doubtless haven't) and Al wants to end the
story here.
Its here we see Al Giardello at his most reckless:
he suggest the idea of substituting Mahoney's package with baking soda and see
what happens. Ingram is understandably appalled at what might go wrong if every
addict and slinger who buys double star bags ends up with dope that isn't dope.
Here Al is as close to any of the bosses we will later see: he doesn't care
about how much violence ends up following after so many dope fiends and dealer
get violent, all he cares about is the man whose responsible for so much red
under his name. We're reminded yet again that Homicide doesn't have any real
interest in the drug war; it's only when people get killed as a result that it
bothers them. If Mahoney wasn't so flagrantly killing people as well as
flaunting it in front of the cops, he probably could have become the next
Stringer Bell.
Indeed this episode does involve a wiretap though
it reveals that Mahoney and his lieutenants have been talking in code: whenever
packages arrives they talk in terms of the stock market. In typical fashion its
taken the Feds three months to realize that Mahoney and his colleagues aren't
interested in pricing the Dow. Still there's knowing and what you can take to
court.
There's a sequence that plays very much like one
we'll see on The Wire in a few years' time: we watch as the package is
delivered, cut and eventually distributed and sold. Its intercut with Meldrick
and Stivers waiting on the wire for something to happen. We here music fitting
the scenario, we watch children delivering dope, finally we see the violence
begin and we cut to Lewis and Stivers asleep with their heads on their shoulders
when Mike and the FBI show up. (Their little flirtation is about to come to an
end for very obvious reasons.) There's awkwardness afterwards, particularly for
Terri. Perhaps she has a crush on Meldrick, perhaps she's afraid of what this
might do to her reputation. The question is rendered moot because Luther's
phone rings and he learns the stock is down.
For the first time since we've met him we get a
sense of the Luther that his slingers and associates know rather then the face
he puts on in front of the public. Immediately he turns on Brookdale and
believes he is responsible for this and threatens to kill both him and his mother.
Then he immediately calls his suppliers and makes it very clear that he holds
them responsible. Luther is angry as hell and while the cops rejoice in this
having forgotten exactly what happens when Luther gets pissed.
The meeting In Druitt Hill Park is fascinating,
mainly because we see Luther in a position we haven't seen him yet: he doesn't
know if he's been cheating and we actually see he's overextended himself. We're
so used to seeing him being Teflon around the cops, this is the first time he's
in his element and we see him as he must be: paranoid, arrogant, certain he alone
can do everything. He is willing to kill a man who has worked with him for
years the second he sense disloyalty (innocently killing a bystander) and then
drives off.
Clark Johnson is incredible in a way we've never
seen him before. Meldrick has always been the picture of equilibrium in the
face of so much death. But when Luther shoots Brookdale and one other he kicks
the window of a car open and jumps in it without a word but utter
determination. Kellerman and Stivers are clearly terrified and drive after him.
Lewis gets angrier as they go, driving through the
gate when they ask for identification. And the scene where he corners Mahoney
in his apartment is extraordinary. Luther is caught cold, he knows he's done.
All Meldrick has to do is slap the cuffs on him. The monologue he delivers may be
Johnson's highpoint:
I'm a good cop. I'm an honest cop. That means I
got standards. Never beat on a man half your size, they won't think it’s a fair
fight. Never put an ass-whupping on a man unless you damn sure he got it coming
to him. See I'm going to be beating on you for a long time. Drugs out there, we
ain't gonna win that. There's a hundred
open air dope markets in this city and 50,000 drug fiends. And we are taking on
human desire with lawyers and jailhouses and lockups. And you and I both know
that human desire is kicking us in the ass. So, what I need to know, Luther, is
why couldn't you just be happy with the packages? If they were just slinging
drugs, we wouldn't be here. Would we? But the bodies. What about the bodies,
Luther?"
As he beats him we see all the names of those
killed in red on the board.
In a real sense Simon didn't have to write The
Wire. The reason for the entire first season (at least) has been delivered
in a single speech. All the details
matter, as we will find out, but its rarely been put up as eloquently and with
such rage as Johnson does here. And its because it gets away from him that
everything goes to hell.
The scene that follows would be repeated over and
over at the start of nearly every episode on the 'Previously on Homicide' for
the next year. It is one of the most powerful ones. A battered Luther manages
to get his hands on Meldrick's gun. He holds it on him. Kellerman and Stivers
run in and tell him to drop it. Meldrick seems to be almost presenting himself
to Luther "What you gonna do detective?" he says with one last trace
of his old arrogance. "Read me my rights?" There's a mix of hysteria in
his chuckle
Kellerman doesn't blink. "You have the right
to remain silent." BANG. Luther drops with that hysterical grin
still on his face. Kellerman bends over his dying body and tells him "Before
you die on me, I want you to know. We switched your dope." He turns to
Meldrick. "Anybody got a problem?" Meldrick pauses before saying no.
Stivers shakes her head and she's clearly shaken to her core.
What makes this episode work so well is that is
that so much of it is old school Homicide. Munch gets a call from an
inmate at Jessup named 'Punchy' Deleon who Bolander put away for murder a
decade ago. This is a case of Bolander's that's come back to haunt Munch.
We get spend much of the episode in the wonderful
company of Lewis Black as Punchy. Black is best known to viewers like myself
for his over the top comedic rants on The Daily Show in the segment
'Back in Black' so viewers would be surprised how subdued and straight-laced
Black plays Punchy. It's another in the line of comic actors giving superb
dramatic performances, dating back to Robin Williams in Season 2, but its more
surprising because Black has no real presence as anything but comic. It follows
through a wonderful case that is perfectly fitting for Munch because it turns
out to be remarkably Zen all while it is frustrating for John. Considering he
almost always takes an attitude of snark there's something fitting about the
comic also being subdued and showing his instincts, even though they lead him
down the wrong path.
Black is so convincing in his delivery, sincere as
to how much he wants freedom and to start with a clean slate. He talks with
openness about how much he admired Pugliese, how he was his mentor and how he helped
him buy an engagement ring the first day they met. He's so convincing about
wanting to give his friend a proper burial – which is true. He just leaves out
certain details.
Munch believes DeLeon, who is about to be
released after 10 years in prison is going to hand him a closed case and asks
for nothing in return. DeLeon tells him that he wants a clean slate and freedom
and tells him that in October of 1987 a man named Jimmy 'The Shirt' Pugliese
was shot twice and buried under the parking lot at Pimlico in Section C. Of course he then tells him that if he finds
the body, the rest will follow.
So Munch goes to Giardello and Howard who are
understandably annoyed at how much it will cost to dig up an entire parking
lot. "Not an entire parking lot, Section C," Munch says. To tap it off
there's no missing persons report on Pugliese and while he has a criminal record
it ended in October of 1987 right around the time DeLeon says he got killed.
Cut to the parking lot being dug up and no sign of a body.
Munch then tells us about his conversation with
Bolander (off screen.) Bolander says he was working another angle on the murder
when Punchy just confessed. "He's a stand up guy and we can trust him."
Pause. "As much as we can trust any of these lying son-of-a-bitches."
Its striking how little John has learned since the Big Man left the department
back in '95.
Eventually Munch manages to track down by calling
the feds a lead on Jimmy Pugliese, an old girlfriend. And in fact there he finds
a very much alive Pugliese. He wants to just throw the case to the wind and let
it go – but he doesn't know what happened after he left. We see him in a spin
trying to figure out, there's no body, the man's alive. When Howard tells him
to drop it he's lost. Then his girlfriend shows up and Munch knows exactly
where to go: 'Pimlico Parking Lot, Section C'
Even when Munch learns the truth there's
something about Punchy's explanation as to why he put John through all this
that makes your heartache. Jimmy caught Sam Noonan stealing and stabbed him in
the throat. Punchy would go to Bolander and take the wrap and Jimmy would take
care of his wife and kid. Pugliese immediately dropped out of the picture and
Frances waited as long as she could, nearly three years but she left him and
married one of the maitre'd's. Punchy did what he did out of love and loss.
John knows he has to take him in. "10 years is a long time. A decade of my
life for a murder I didn't commit. Now I've committed a murder but I've served my
time. That's gotta count for something?1" You can tell Munch really wishes
he didn't have to do this.
And in the midst of this Bayliss and Pembleton
are working their way back to each other. They finish the paperwork on the
Rader case, Frank mentions they worked well together on it and finally asks
Bayliss if they want to partner again. Tim says yes. Unfortunately its undercut
because when Frank gets a call Tim is nowhere to be found.
What Frank doesn't know and what shocks us is
that Tim is back at his Uncle George's, having not only not taken it out on him
but is taking care of him. He seems reluctant to do so but we see he's bought
groceries and is willing to cook for him. Tim clearly doesn't like this but he
feels a sense of obligation we don't understand yet.
In the final sequence before the musical montage.
Kellerman tells Giardello that Luther held a gun on Lewis so he lit him up.
Meldrick says it’s a clean shooting and that he has no desire to talk it through.
Stivers says nothing. And Mike, for the first time since the season began,
takes out a cigarette and lights it. It's the only sign that any of this
bothers him.
The episode ends with Mike typing up his report
with a cigarette in his mouth. He looks at Meldrick who can barely do that or
look him in the eye. And yet despite that the viewer would initially come away
with the impression that this is the end of the Mahoney saga, that Lewis and
Kellerman who've been through the wars, will come out the other side and we'll
move on to other things.
But this is Homicide. The story never ends
with a well-placed bullet. That's where it starts.
NOTES FROM THE BOARD
In a 1999 survey by Court TV fans ranked this the
eleventh best episode in Homicide's run.
Once again Meldrick Lewis meets another
appropriately named man: Agent Ray Borders
from Customs. A little humor before the darkness.
When Cox reports "Then the condom
broke" Scheiner walks by. "I hate when that happens." Leave it
to Ralph Tabakin to make curmudgeon adorable.
"Detective Munch" Obviously there are
no shortage of great Munch lines. I think it’s a tie between these two. After
they unsuccessfully dig up the parking lot, a construction worker as Munch if
there's anywhere else they want to dig. "Yeah. Here. Six feet down. Cover
me over. Unmarked grave." The second comes when Munch told that everyone
laughs in his face does verbatim Joe Pesci's sequence from Goodfellas.
"You think I'm some kind of clown? That I amuse you?" Except with
John we know he's a clown.
Of all things Munch's case oddly parallels a
story from Columbo. Both stories involve a killer duping a detective into
digging up a parking lot in search of a body only to then bury it when the lot
is repaved.
As the book points out the DEA agent is wrong
when he says the capital of Nigeria is Lagos. In 1997 the capital was Abuja.
Hey, Isn't That…In addition to his standup career
and work on The Daily Show Black has a rather interesting footprint in film and
TV. He played Bernie on The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd and has done voiceover
work in The Brak Show, Duck Dodgers, Harvey Birdman: Attorney at Law and Scooby
Doo: Mystery Incorporated. His most famous voice work is as Anger in the Inside
Out Franchise. He also played Gregory Perkins in the ABC adaptation of Madoff
and worked with Barry Levenson in the Robin Williams Comedy Man of the Year.
On the Soundtrack: The episode brilliantly uses 'Evidence'
by the band Faith No More in two separate montages.