Written by Anya Epstein ; story by Tom Fontana
& Julie Martin
Directed by Alan Taylor
How does Homicide choose to begin its
sixth season?
Bayliss and Pembleton return to the squad after
three months spent in robbery. Lewis went to vice (though we learn he didn't go
that far) and Kellerman went to auto. We're told essentially that all of the
detectives at the end of Season 5 went out on rotation to other units. (Except
for Munch who never goes anywhere.) Through the magic of the rotation (and
television) the entire unit is being brought back to Homicide three
months later. (The exception is Howard
who has been shifted to fugitive and will not be seen again for the rest of the
series run.)
Bayliss is speaking rhapsodic terms: "Give
me Homicide or give me death," certain that Giardello and the unit will be
thrilled their back. And the show immediately undercuts them by having the
bosses cheering the unit and then first Munch, then Giardello saying:
"Nope you were missed at all. In fact the closure rates never been
better."
So the tables have been turned yet again. Now
it's not just Frank who has something to prove but all the detectives who've
come back. And all three of the new detectives – Falsone, Gharty and fresh from
Seattle Laura Ballard – who have new detective smell and have the edge going
forward.
Homicide has never once been concerned with making its viewers comfortable,
whether it comes to attracting new faces or isolating the old. So it begins its
most triumphant season with two ambitious storylines: one of which is clear
from the jump, one which will only become clearer as the season unfolds. The
former is the most prominent as Homicide embarks on what is it first three-part
episode since Season Three led by one of the greatest actors of all time and
two of the greatest African-American character actors in history, though it
would be a while until the latter demonstrated it. The latter is by far the
most ambitious storyline Homicide would ever do and whose likes would
not be seen again on network television until more heavily serialized dramas
like 24 would debut at the start of the new century.
What's remarkable about the show going into the
new season is how brilliantly all three new regulars hit the ground running.
This is particularly impressive when it comes to Callie Thorne as Laura
Ballard. Historically Homicide has a hit or miss track record when it comes to new characters
particularly female ones and its astonishing that Thorne – who at the time had
only three films to her credit and no history in TV – is immediately superb.
And all the more so because she's the first female detective the show has
introduced since we met Howard. Ballard immediately makes it clear she will not
be trifled with, sarcastically mocks Frank as being a low-key Type B guy' and then proves the point when Pembleton is
enraged to find Ballard has not only taken over his old desk but that Al tells
his ace learn to share.
The other problems are subtler. Lewis shows up
and makes it clear he wants a new partner though he refuses to tell Al why
exactly. When Kellerman asks him later why he ended up with Falsone – and
Meldrick immediately lies and says Gee put him with Paul - it confirms what we suspected: Meldrick
wants to get as far away from the shooting of Luther Mahoney as possible and
that means not working with the man who shot him.
Kellerman actually doesn't seem that bad when we
first run into him – or rather into Cox. Their relationship is clearly in the
awkward small talk phase though Mike's clearly making an effort. When he tells
Juliana he hasn't been going to the Waterfront in a while, it's a pleasant
surprise as is the fact that he clearly seems happy to be going back to
Homicide. Given how badly the previous year was for him Mike is clearly hoping
that he can start in the rotation with a clean slate. He doesn't know that
being partnered with Munch is the best change that's coming to him.
While we get hints of the major plot in the
opening sequence where someone in a motorcycle helmet with a gun seems to be
stalking several detectives at the unit we're almost inclined to dismiss it
because we've spent most of the first act catching up with old friends and
meeting the new people. The active plot comes when we learn that Al is
attending a black tie dinner for Felix Wilson, the snack cake king and that Al
is a friend of Regina, the man's wife. "There's a lot we don't know about
you," Munch says when he learns that. As it turns out Al knows less about
his friends.
Frank ends up picking up the phone because
Ballard offers to first do so. There's a murder at the Belvedere hotel: a
woman's body has been found in the second floor men's room. When Ballard and Gharty offer to help Frank
pushes them off and only because of Bayliss saying that there will be nearly
200 guests to interview does Frank say: "We'll make this a road
trip." He doesn't know what he's stepped in for his triumphant return.
The women in the men's room has been thrown into
the wall and someone tried to clean up the mess. We learn almost immediately
this is where the function that Giardello is at it taking place and while he
doesn't know the victim the Wilson family does – Melia Brierre, a Haitian
domestic. It's when Frank refers to Felix Wilson as better known for his good
work to the black community then his cupcakes. Al makes it clear he grew up
with Regina in Perkins Homes – and then he gets called away from what's been
going on without him knowing.
Its at the first commercial when Lewis and
Falsone are driving back from dinner and complaining about the check that shots
start being fired at their black and white. It's the driver from before but we
still don't know who it is. Only that he was firing .50 caliber rounds. Bonfather shows up and for once his fear has
less to do with PR: he makes it clear he wants all plainclothes wearing Kevlar
from now on. And because this is Homicide Lewis and Falsone are
immediately called to a murder.
There is another familiar face: Stivers, whose
been rotated to robbery. She was interviewing a woman named Molly Bowman and
while she was talking to her Bowman was shot dead. Tellingly Al makes it very clear he wants the
Bowman murder put on hold: he wants them to find out who's taking shots at his
detectives. "I'm not going to any more police funerals this year," he
sees meaningfully.
Each of the detectives takes one of the Brierre
family. Bayliss talks to Thea who says she brought her in from Haiti to try and
save her. "Arrogant, Ivy League me."
Gharty talks to Regina and tells her that Al needs to separate himself
from the interviews. Ballard talks to Hal the son who asks almost dumbly:
"Did it hurt?" Ballard in her fashion says: "Yeah, it probably
hurts like hell."
And Pembleton and Felix Wilson get into a longer
talk then he usually has with witnesses to murders about a woman named Hattie
Caroll, a woman who was casually hit by a blue blood and the woman dies of a
heart attack while the white blue- blood gets away with a nothing sentence. The
first real sign that this isn't business as usual comes after the interviews
ends and Bayliss asks Frank a question we've never heard him ask Frank in five
years: "If this wasn't Felix Wilson, would we have just let him
leave?" Frank, who has a rejoinder
for everything Bayliss says, simply says. "It's time to go."
Cox tells the detectives (including Ballard and
Gharty) that in addition to being beaten and strangled Melia Brierre had what
appeared to be consensual sex before she was killed. Pembleton then wants to
talk with Thea Wilson about potential lovers, which would be the next step in
the investigation. He's told that Melia's last boyfriend, a man she knows only
as Caja a member of the Haitian Army before Aristide took over, Caja becomes
the suspect.
Ballard actually has a conversation with Cox
which basically passes the Bechdel test before the term was coined. Ballard is
trying to think about what it means to be a good cop and that she respects
Pembleton but she thinks he's undercutting her.
Cox says to stand up to him. "That's easy. You have height on your
side," Ballard jokes.
Munch actually seems to be looking forward to
working with Kellerman – he reminds us the bad luck he has with partners. He
flinches when he hears a noise which Kellerman mocks but Munch – who's been
shot at before is nervous about. Immediately after shots ring out and Kellerman
gets nicked in the arm. After that
Falsone puts two and two together and figures out the three detectives who've
been shot at all were present at Luther Mahoney's death. This immediately pisses
off Kellerman who wants to work the case while bleeding.
Jon Seda would start taking abuse almost
immediately as Paul Falsone and I suspect much of it had to do with his
apparent determination to get to the truth behind the Mahoney shooting. Because
Falsone was the new guy and Kellerman and Lewis were established characters it
was natural long time viewers took sides – that combined with the 'cop-a-ganda'
narrative that Homicide basically resisted but that was still baked into
90s TV.
The show tells us that the Mahoney empire is
being divvied up by a bunch of wanna-be Luther's and no one wants to talk about
whose shooting even though these people will 'roll at the drop of a crack
pipe.' When Falsone tries to reconstruct the shooting with an already hostile
Kellerman he tries to be honest but admittedly does so in a way that really
seems like he's trying to get a rise out of Mike when he details everything
that happened as well as the fact that Lewis can't look him in the eye as well
as that Mike seems perfectly fine with it. I suspect we're uncomfortable
because we actually know what happened and Falsone is making the viewer
complicit in rejoicing in Luther's death. It doesn't help that Mike is starting
to ask with a snideness and unpleasant we're not used to from him. It really
does seem like Falsone and Mike are going to come to blows before Meldrick
brings Falsone down to talk to one of Luther's old suppliers Willkie Collins.
Falsone and Lewis go to town on Collins. Falsone
brings up the fact that cops are being shot and that doesn't muss Willkie's
hair. Its when Meldrick starts threatening his cash flow that Willkie takes it
personally. "I'm an import/exporter," he demurs. "You are a
narcotics trafficker!" Meldrick snarls.
"But I'm also a reasonable man." Willkie takes the position
not unlike Stringer Bell would with Avon Barksdale that the Mahoney family had
too much killing and not enough business. He gives up the shooter as Junior
Bunk.
Junior has not changed since we first met him: he
runs for the door the moment Lewis and Stivers track him down, he starts crying
the moment he's caught and he flips the moment the heat gets too bad. Lewis
takes his normal tone; Falsone is far more aggressive. And we learn who sent
Junior on his rampage: Luther's sister Georgia Rae Mahoney. Georgia Rae is
convinced that Kellerman, Lewis and Stivers set her brother up to be killed
because they couldn't make a case against him. (The look that Lewis and Stivers
share when Junior says that makes it clear they know this is bad.) Georgia Rae
has been in the Caymans handling the money and now that her brother's dead.
"She has my uncle's way of seeing things," Junior says. And talk about dysfunction: Junior is more
than willing to give us his mother in exchange for a deal.
Much of what happens has quite a bit of action
heavy level – bullets flying and hitting police cars and regulars, a helicopter
chase to a private airstrip, Georgia Rae greeting Kellerman by kneeing him in
the grown. Some fans saw this as action heavy but I have little doubt this was
not far removed from what the producers had done during Season 4 when they'd
successfully managed to boost the ratings. As always the show remained true to
itself keeping it within the context of Homicide. Georgia Rae is caught but
its clear we're nowhere near finished – though at this point we can't guess
how. Falsone is still pushing at Lewis at the end, and Meldrick clearly doesn't
want to talk about it.
The final scene demonstrates just how good Callie
Thorne is. It takes a great actor to go head to head with Andre Braugher and
keep even. Ballard makes it very clear that she wants to talk to Felix and Hal
Wilson in regard to whether they had a relationship with Melia. Frank, who's
mostly held it in, says he had no reason to dislike Ballard but that he is the
primary and he will run this case the way he sees fit. "This is the way
I've always worked. Do we understand each other?"
We've seen other detectives react in anger or
frustration or just walk away from Frank for five seasons. Ballard doesn't even
blink. "Perfectly." Before Frank can say good Ballard says sweetly:
"So I guess that means you want to handle the press?"
Frank blinks and says what. Ballard's eyes flick
towards the outside of the squad. She barely cracks a smile. "Smile
Pembleton. It'll look a lot better on television." Then the two of them
walk outside and Ballard basically lets Pembleton face the vultures on his own.
And in the final shot we see Georgia Rae in a
jumpsuit and behind bars. She tells the guard to send a message to Kellerman
making it clear that they have no idea what they're in for and what they've
unleashed. And like her brother before her, this is one promise that will be
kept.
NOTES FROM THE BOARD
"Detective Munch" The moment Frank and
Tim show up Munch describes Ballard as 'flavor of the month, detective de
jure,". When Frank asks which makes us Munch replies: "Well the
phrase 'chopped liver' comes to mind. He then says thanks to Ballard they're
all getting citations of merit and then says "Welcome back. I gotta get my
picture taken."
That line's nearly as good as after Munch
finishes the interview and leaves he says: "I feel like I've been in this
ballroom all night. Maybe it's because I've been in this ballroom all
night." Of course two minutes after he leaves he and Kellerman get shot
at…
The episode explains Max Perlich's absence from
the show in one of the greatest in-jokes. Brodie's documentary (the one we all
saw in the episode of the same name) won an Emmy and he moved to LA. "An
Emmy?" Bayliss says snidely. "They give those to anybody." No,
the cast and crew of Homicide is not the least bit bitter that they only
got one Emmy nomination in 1997. Not at all.
Get the DVD: As the Mahoney crew is rousted
you'll hear Terrell's 'Black and White Blues'. In the bar when Junior is
rousted RunOn's 'Bring Her Blues can be heard.' The helicopter chase is scored
to INXS 'Elegantly Wasted'. On either the DVD or streaming you can hear the
Jason Stevens Quartet play 'Say What in the Belvedere ballroom before the
arrest.
Considering the incredible caliber of guest stars
in the first three episodes alone I'm going to highlight each of the big names
in their own episode of Blood Ties. I will start, as you can imagine, with the
biggest.
Hey, Isn't That…James Earl Jones was arguably the
biggest get Homicide had managed since Robin Williams had appeared in Bop Gun
back in Season 2. While he's understandably known for his movie and Broadway
work, I'm going to focus on television which during his more than six decade
career was just as impressive as anything else.
For one he was the man who generations of people
knew said 'This is CNN. But his career dated back to playing the Prince of
Morocco on the TV series Monitor back in 1962. He played Dr. Jim Frazier on
Guiding Light for 2266 episodes in 1966. While he had many small TV roles in in
the interim he played Long John Spoilsport on the 1975 series Vegetable Soup.
He played Balthazar on the 1977 series Jesus of Nazareth (the same year Episode
IV came out) and played Alex Haley in Roots: The Next Generation and Father
Divine in the Emmy Winning TV Movie: Guyana Tragedy. He played the title tole
in the short-lived series Paris in 1979-1980, Lou Garfield in the justly
forgotten TV series Me and Mom and Lee Atkins in two episodes on L.A. Law which
earned him an Emmy nomination. He played Gabriel Bird on the TV series
Gabriel's Fire, then again on Pros and Cons. (He's also known to this viewer
for playing Thad Green on the Mathnet sequence of SQUARE ONE TV) He served as
the Narrator on the first season of 3RD Rock from the Sun, the Angel
of Angels on Touched by an Angel and countless
other roles.
Jones would be nominated for eight Emmys and win
two, both in 1991. He won Best Actor in a Drama for playing Gabriel Bird in
Gabriel's Fire and for playing Junius Jackson in the TV Movie Heat Wave. He was
nominated for playing Alice in the HBO TV movie
By Dawn's Early Light in 1990, for Best Guest Actor in a Drama for
Bryant Thomas in Picket Fences in 1994, for Best Supporting Actor in a dram for
Under One Roof, for Best Guest Actor in a Comedy for Frasier in 1997 and for
Guest Actor in a Drama for playing Will Cleveland in Everwood. His last major
award nomination was for playing himself in The Big Bang Theory in 2014.
Of course there's always been a fair amount of
voice work connected to his major works Star Wars and The Lion King and every
TV show connected with it. He last did the voice of Darth Vader in Obi-Wan
Kenobi in 2022. He passed away much beloved and honored in 2024 at the age of
93.
Robert Chew who plays Willkie Collins will later
go on to play a very similar character in The Wire, Prop Joe. Those of you who
remember that series will know he met a similar fate as he will in Homicide.
It's Baltimore: Lenny Moore who introduces Felix
Wilson was a halfback and flanker for the Colts from 1956 to 1967. He was MVP
of the NFL in 1964 and was selected to the Pro Bowl seven times. Incredibly as
of this writing he is still alive at 92.