The Wire – Undertow
Season 2, Episode 5
Directed By: Steve Shill
Written By: Ed Burns, from a story by David Simon and Burns
Read out “The Wire” Project here. Read about the previous episode here, or click here to see the total coverage. Assume spoilers for the episode
After
a long break from The Wire
(non-cinema issues: moving apartments, overload of work, some other stuff) I
was afraid if I could jump back into the show without it losing its magic. It
had been over a month, and while I had not forgotten about lonely fighter
McNulty, the cautious and adaptive Stringer Bell, and the moral conundrums of
Frank Sobotka, I wondered if the show would start to show fatigue, just from
being more of the same. But The Wire
always finds new ways to not just put its characters in new places, but make us see
these characters differently. Not a complete 180 or anything, but to really
understand their true convictions.
But
“Undertow” is one of the most plot
heavy episodes of The Wire. Ed Burns
and director Steve Shill have no rush of plot, and nothing revelatory or
shocking happens. But small nudges reveal these characters as the police
attempt to break into the port culture, a self-contained world where everyone
protects themselves. When Freamon, Bunk, and Russell present Grand Jury summons
to a number of workers, Frank laughs in their face almost manically. He knows
these guys are loyal to the end, as long as he’s loyal to them.