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Glenn Close new sheriff in town on FX's 'The Shield'

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  • Glenn Close new sheriff in town on FX's 'The Shield'

    South Bend Tribune, IN
    March 18 2005

    Glenn Close new sheriff in town on FX's 'The Shield'
    TELEVISION

    By MAUREEN RYAN
    Chicago Tribune

    On FX's breakout police drama "The Shield," which premiered its
    fourth season at 10 p.m. Tuesday, there's a new sheriff in town.

    Glenn Close has joined the series as Capt. Monica Rawling, a veteran
    cop who's charged with cleaning up "The Barn," the police
    headquarters in the fictional, gang-riddled Los Angeles district of
    Farmington.

    For the first three seasons of the show, Farmington was rogue cop Vic
    Mackey's turf, ruled by him and his take-no-prisoners "strike team."
    The role of Mackey, a cop who dispenses street justice according to
    his own twisted sense of morality, won Michael Chiklis Emmy and
    Golden Globe awards early in "The Shield's" run, which isn't
    surprising; even when he's seated behind a desk, Mackey exudes a
    riveting fierceness.

    And behind a desk is where Mackey can be found as the season opens.
    The strike team broke up at the end of the previous season, after
    Mackey and his three partners had serious disagreements over a
    multimillion-dollar haul they'd stolen from a gang of Armenian bad
    guys.

    As Rawling arrives, outgoing Barn boss David Aceveda has Mackey, the
    former king of Farmington's mean streets, logging videotapes from a
    boring sting operation. Needless to say, Mackey is not happy.

    Rawling, played with increasing ease by Close over the first three
    episodes of the season, doesn't have to wait long to see a
    demonstration of the in-house power struggles that beset The Barn.

    In view of Rawling and the entire staff, Aceveda (Benito Martinez)
    and Mackey lunge at each other as their ongoing disputes over tactics
    and ethics finally boil over into a barely averted brawl.

    "One happy family, huh?" Rawling mutters.

    "Oh yeah, you hit the jackpot," says Detective Claudette Wyms (CCH
    Pounder).

    But all those strained relationships make juicy viewing for fans of
    the rough-and-tumble police drama (and be forewarned: The show can be
    graphic and violent at times). Though "The Shield" always has been
    watchable, the Armenian heist plot chewed up far too much of last
    season. And Aceveda, as played by the excellent Martinez, has always
    been a worthy adversary for Mackey, but it's intriguing to see The
    Barn's charismatic bad boy face up to a brand-new boss.

    Rawling is far too subtle to read Mackey the riot act over his past
    bad behavior. Instead, she entices him to go by the book by holding
    out the possibility that if he does, he can lead her new anti-gang
    initiative, one that will use the proceeds from property seizures to
    bring new funds to the beleaguered Barn. Is Rawling setting Mackey up
    to fail, so she can get rid of him? Or is she cleverly using his
    street-smart skills to her advantage? It's tough to say, and it'll be
    interesting to see how their relationship plays out.



    'The Shield'
    When: 10 p.m. Tuesdays
    Network: F/X



    Rawling isn't Mackey's only problem, however. He's also contending
    with a savvy new street leader, Antwon Mitchell (Anthony Anderson),
    who's got far more influence over the hearts and minds of the local
    gangs and residents than Mackey does. And bad blood still lingers
    between Mackey and former strike team cops Curtis "Lem" Lemansky
    (Kenneth Johnson) and Shane Vendrell (Walton Goggins), who still
    interact with Mackey but have new assignments with other units.

    One of the strengths of "The Shield" is the fine work that comes from
    the entire cast: Pounder and Jay Karnes, who plays Holland "Dutch"
    Wagenbach, are particularly appealing as an effective, dedicated
    detective team. As the new season begins, Wagenbach and Wyms are
    paying for Wyms' exposure of corruption that led to improper
    convictions. Now many of those convictions have been overturned,
    which puts both detectives in the doghouse with their colleagues and
    the district attorney's office.

    Though he and Wyms have often been the moral center of the show,
    Wagenbach is increasingly irritated that standing by his partner may
    cost him his career. On the other hand, the future of patrol officer
    Danielle "Danny" Sofer (Catherine Dent) is looking up, now that
    Rawling's ambitious plans are giving her a chance to shine.

    One hopes the shake-up at The Barn will afford all these worthy
    supporting characters some meaty story lines; though Mackey's
    travails have been intriguing enough, it would be good to see more
    about Wagenbach, Wyms and Sofer. When it comes to Mackey's former
    strike-team buddies, we've probably seen as much as we need to of
    Vendrell and his needy new wife. It'd be good to see more stories
    centered on the appealing Lemansky, and possibly on the fourth
    strike-team detective, Ronnie Gardocki (David Rees Snell), who's had
    so few lines over the course of the entire series that I never could
    remember his name and took to calling him the Fourth Guy.

    There's only one serious wrong turn in the first three episodes of
    Season 4. In a plot that feels recycled from any number of medical
    dramas, Mackey and his wife contemplate suing a vaccine maker over
    the autism that's been diagnosed in two of their three children. It's
    a strange misfire in the otherwise bracing opening of a new regime at
    The Barn.
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