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  • Close and 'The Shield' make sense

    Times Union, Albany, NY
    March 13 2005

    Close and 'The Shield' make sense


    By MARK McGUIRE, Staff writer
    First published: Sunday, March 13, 2005

    Go back four years ago: Could you imagine Glenn Close joining a TV
    show and taking second billing?
    The star of "The Big Chill" and "Fatal Attraction" taking a
    theoretical back seat -- on a basic cable show? It would make no
    sense.

    Makes sense now, especially when you're talking about FX's "The
    Shield."

    Close plays Capt. Monica Rawling, who takes over the Los Angeles
    precinct that includes volatile Detective Vic Mackey (Michael
    Chiklis), one of the most indelible characters on TV today. By the
    end of the first episode of the fourth season (airing at 10 p.m.
    Tuesday), I was ready to declare them to be arguably the strongest
    tandem of actors on any current series. You may come up with a better
    pair; I did say "arguably." But Close and Chiklis have to be in the
    debate.

    Close, who turns 58 on Saturday, is as good as advertised, displaying
    her trademark ability to slip into roles without overwhelming the
    part. Maybe the best compliment you can give her is that you stop
    concentrating on the fact it's Glenn Close by about the second
    episode. (By the way: She looks ridiculously good in jeans and a
    jacket.)

    Rawling arrives at "The Barn" even as former boss David Aceveda
    (Benito Martinez) -- who was elected to the City Council last year --
    hovers in the background. A street cop who rose through the ranks,
    she recognizes the value of a bruiser like Mackey, even as she
    realizes his hothead streak can make things go very, very wrong. Then
    again, if she knew Mackey like viewers of the first three seasons of
    "The Shield" know him, Vic would be in cuffs.

    One of her first impressions of Mackey is watching him come close to
    a brawl with Aceveda, whose blistering evaluation of Vic submarined a
    promotion.

    "One happy family, huh?" Rawling says to Wyms (CCH Pounder), whose
    own career was stymied last season when she ran afoul of the district
    attorney's office.

    "Oh, yeah," Wyms replies. "You hit the jackpot."

    In the world of "The Shield," clean cops like Wyms often find
    themselves on the outs; the dirty ones get ahead. As season four
    begins, Mackey's strike team has been disbanded, but their past
    illicit activities -- especially ripping off the Armenian mob -- will
    continue to have repercussions.

    While most of the team attempts to stay legit and keep in the new
    captain's good graces, Mackey's former sidekick, Shane Vendrell
    (Walton Goggins), is working vice and also working the angles.
    Without Mackey to rein him in, Goggins and his new partner -- a
    veritable rookie -- are headed for trouble. If Vendrell goes down,
    Mackey and the rest are sure to follow.

    Close's addition makes the cast of "The Shield" as overloaded with
    talent as the Yankees' lineup, but she isn't the only big-screen star
    to join up: Anthony Anderson ("Barbershop") plays Antwon Mitchell, a
    former gangbanger and drug slinger who returns to Farmington
    preaching community revitalization. In reality, he's back controlling
    the streets.

    With its strong ensemble cast and guerrilla-style camera work, "The
    Shield" is most remarkable for its portrait of the brutal concessions
    decent people make in the effort to seek civic justice and personal
    advancement. At the same time, the show's bad guys carry a streak of
    decency; they can't be dismissed as amoral monsters. The gray area
    between right and wrong provides the thematic setting for some of the
    best shows on TV, including "The Sopranos," "Deadwood" and "Lost."
    It's also the terrain where the men and women of "The Shield" patrol.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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