Crap or Not Crap?

Crap?
Total votes: 5 (7%)
Not Crap?
Total votes: 69 (93%)
Total votes: 74

HBO Drama: The Wire

175
The whole mcnulty thing reminds me of deadwood, where they introduce a main protagonist, but the actor or character just isn't that interesting. they should've killed mcnulty off a long time ago.

from hbo:

In the series finale, Carcetti maps out a damage-control scenario with the police brass in the wake of a startling revelation from Pearlman and Daniels. Their choice: clean up the mess...or hide the dirt. With his leads predictably drying up, McNulty asks Landsman to pull police off the homeless case--until a fresh homicide ramps up the investigation. A frustrated Haynes finds his concerns about Templeton falling on increasingly deaf ears. Convinced he has the upper hand but caught in a legal quandary, Levy plays a cat-and-mouse game with Pearlman. Bubbles debates whether to greenlight a newspaper story about his life; Dukie seeks out an old mentor for a loan; Marlo oversees a new co-op order as he maps out his next move. As the officers stage an Irish wake for another dearly departed officer, the seeds of the future are sown throughout Baltimore.


irish wake?

HBO Drama: The Wire

176
madlee wrote:The whole mcnulty thing reminds me of deadwood, where they introduce a main protagonist, but the actor or character just isn't that interesting. they should've killed mcnulty off a long time ago.

from hbo:

In the series finale, Carcetti maps out a damage-control scenario with the police brass in the wake of a startling revelation from Pearlman and Daniels. Their choice: clean up the mess...or hide the dirt. With his leads predictably drying up, McNulty asks Landsman to pull police off the homeless case--until a fresh homicide ramps up the investigation. A frustrated Haynes finds his concerns about Templeton falling on increasingly deaf ears. Convinced he has the upper hand but caught in a legal quandary, Levy plays a cat-and-mouse game with Pearlman. Bubbles debates whether to greenlight a newspaper story about his life; Dukie seeks out an old mentor for a loan; Marlo oversees a new co-op order as he maps out his next move. As the officers stage an Irish wake for another dearly departed officer, the seeds of the future are sown throughout Baltimore.


irish wake?


lots of raised glasses, drunkenness and singing of 'danny boy'. this shit has been in the wire before and always reminds me of the funeral at the end of 'family business'.

HBO Drama: The Wire

177
Heeby Jeeby wrote:
madlee wrote:The whole mcnulty thing reminds me of deadwood, where they introduce a main protagonist, but the actor or character just isn't that interesting. they should've killed mcnulty off a long time ago.

from hbo:

In the series finale, Carcetti maps out a damage-control scenario with the police brass in the wake of a startling revelation from Pearlman and Daniels. Their choice: clean up the mess...or hide the dirt. With his leads predictably drying up, McNulty asks Landsman to pull police off the homeless case--until a fresh homicide ramps up the investigation. A frustrated Haynes finds his concerns about Templeton falling on increasingly deaf ears. Convinced he has the upper hand but caught in a legal quandary, Levy plays a cat-and-mouse game with Pearlman. Bubbles debates whether to greenlight a newspaper story about his life; Dukie seeks out an old mentor for a loan; Marlo oversees a new co-op order as he maps out his next move. As the officers stage an Irish wake for another dearly departed officer, the seeds of the future are sown throughout Baltimore.


irish wake?


lots of raised glasses, drunkenness and singing of 'danny boy'. this shit has been in the wire before and always reminds me of the funeral at the end of 'family business'.


I just meant that it implies that a cop in the series is going to die.

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests