The Wire - The Complete Fourth Season DVD Review

The Wire
Click the image above to view a trailer! Buy it now - DVD

DVD Release Date - December 4, 2007
Description:

With the fall of Barksdale and the ascent of young Marlo Stanfield as West Baltimore’s drug king the detail continues to “follow the money” up the political ladder in the midst of a mayoral election that pits the black incumbent Clarence Royce against an ambitious white councilman Tommy Carcetti. The theme of urban education is explored through four new characters ? Michael Lee Namond Brice Randy Wagstaff and “Dukie” Weems as they traverse adolescence in the stunted drug-saturated streets of West Baltimore. The world that awaits these boys and the American commitment to equal opportunity are depicted brilliantly in the edgy all too realistic Season 4 of The Wire.

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The Wire - The Complete Third Season DVD Review

The Wire
Click the image above to view a trailer! Buy it now - DVD

DVD Release Date - August 8, 2006
Description:

With volatile issues of Baltimore city political reform as its narrative focus, the third season of The Wire superbly maintains the series’ astonishingly consistent status as the greatest “novel for television” ever created. While the Baltimore police department’s wire-tapping investigations continue to monitor the intricate and now legitimately fronted drug ring of Russell “Stringer” Bell (Idris Elba, smooth as ever), detective Jimmy McNulty (Dominic West) continues his loutish ways, navigating through a series of shallow sexual conquests while doing some of the best cop-work of his career. Stringer’s ex-convict partner Avon Barksdale (Wood Harris) is back in the picture and bent on eliminating a drug-dealing competitor named Marlo (Jamie Hector), and Baltimore P.D. Major Howard “Bunny” Colvin (Robert Wisdom) tries his own defiantly independent brand of street justice by essentially legalizing drugs in “Hamsterdam,” where isolated sections of the city are established as open drug-dealing zones, utterly without the knowledge or approval of Colvin’s superiors. As city councilman Tommy Carcetti (Aiden Gillen) plots his own ruthlessly ambitious strategy for the mayor’s seat, Baltimore officials, McNulty’s wire unit, and the entire Baltimore P.D. stand poised for the inevitable fallout from street-level and executive-level manipulations of power.
Of course, this is just the tip of a very large iceberg, as The Wire continues its labyrinthine yet tightly controlled chronicle of over 50 characters, major and minor, who are all flawlessly woven into the fabric of these 12 remarkable episodes. For season 3, series creator David Simon continued to recruit a top-drawer lineup of reputable writers (including novelists Richard Price, Dennis Lehane, and George Pelecanos) and directors (including Ernest Dickerson, Tim Van Patten, and Agnieszka Holland), and by the time a major character is killed in the season’s penultimate episode (arguably the series’ finest yet), it’s clear that The Wire has earned its crown as the most ambitious and intelligent crime drama in the history of American television. DVD extras are excellent, as usual, including five illuminating episode commentaries (an absolute must for devoted fans of the series), a Q&A session with cast & crew moderated by renowned TV critic and author Ken Tucker, and a classroom conversation with Simon that delves deeper into the creative process of the series. Having deservedly earned its renewal for a fourth season (out of a projected five, according to Simon), The Wire delivers surprises aplenty (keep a close watch for startling revelations) while proving, yet again, that cable-TV is the place to be for anyone seeking respite from the relative mediocrity of mainstream network programming.

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