Transitions (The Wire)
"Transitions" | |
---|---|
The Wire episode | |
Episode no. |
Season 5 Episode 4 |
Directed by | Dan Attias |
Teleplay by | Ed Burns |
Story by |
David Simon Ed Burns |
Original air date | January 27, 2008 |
Running time | 58 minutes |
Guest actors | |
see below | |
Season 5 episodes | |
| |
List of The Wire episodes |
"Transitions" is the fourth episode of the fifth season of the HBO original series, The Wire. The episode was written by Ed Burns from a story by David Simon & Ed Burns and was directed by Dan Attias, who won the Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directing – Drama Series for the episode.[1] It first aired on January 27, 2008.[2]
Production
Title reference
The title refers to the several transitions seen during the episode, mostly Ervin Burrell and Cedric Daniels at the Baltimore Police Department, Roger Twigg and Scott Templeton at the Baltimore Sun, and finally Proposition Joe and Marlo Stanfield.
Epigraph
“ | Buyer's market out there. | ” |
—Templeton |
Though Scott Templeton is lamenting the dwindling job market in journalism, there is also a noticeable resonance regarding the local drug trade.
Oscar Requer also says, "It's a buyer's market," when talking to Jimmy McNulty and Lester Freamon. Requer is joking about selling McNulty a condominium, but the comment also carries an implication about the availability of bodies in unsolved homicides for McNulty and Freamon to work into their investigation.
Credits
Starring cast
Although credited, Andre Royo and Jermaine Crawford do not appear in this episode.
Guest stars
- Frankie Faison as Ervin Burrell
- Amy Ryan as Beatrice "Beadie" Russell
- Paul Ben-Victor as Spiros "Vondas" Vondopoulos
- Robert F. Chew as Proposition Joe
- Bill Raymond as The Greek
- Delaney Williams as Jay Landsman
- Marlyne Afflack as Nerese Campbell
- Benjamin Busch as Anthony Colicchio
- Anwan Glover as Slim Charles
- Felicia Pearson as Felicia "Snoop" Pearson
- Method Man as Melvin "Cheese" Wagstaff
- Duane Chandler Rawlings as Hungry Man
- Dion Graham as Rupert Bond
- Melanie Nicholls-King as Cheryl
- Frederick Strother as Odell Watkins
- David Costabile as Thomas Klebanow
- Shamika Cotton as Raylene Lee
- Sam Freed as James Whiting
- Bobby Brown as Bobby Brown
- Ed Norris as Ed Norris
- Roscoe Orman as Oscar Requer
- Michael Salconi as Michael Santangelo
- Bruce Kirkpatrick as Roger Twigg
- Donald Neal as Jay Spry
- Todd Scofield as Jeff Price
- William F. Zorzi as Bill Zorzi
- Jeffrey Pratt Gordon as Johnny "Fifty" Spamanto
- Curtis L. McClarin as Florist
- Jeff Roberts as Homeless Employed Man
- Ptolemy Slocum as Homeless Business Card Man
- John Badila as Sun Staff Member
- Valerie Leonard as Washington Post Editor
- Jayne Miller as TV news journalist
- Jerry B. Whiddon as Washington Post Editor
- Miriam Hyman as Social Worker
- Nathan James as Western DEU Officer
- Tim R. McAdams as Motorist
- Joey Perillo as Medical Examiner
- Alan J. Wendl as Southern District Desk Sergeant
- Larry Andrews as Donnie
- Sho "Swordsman" Brown as Phil Boy
- Thuliso Dingall as Kenard
- Edward Green as Spider
- Derrick Purvey as Big Guy
- Troj Marquis Strickland as Ricardo "Fat-Face Rick" Hendrix
Uncredited appearances
- Mike D. Anderson as Ghost
- Thomas J. McCarthy as Tim Phelps
- Kwame Patterson as Monk Metcalf
- Brandon Young as Mike Fletcher
Ryan Sands (Lloyd "Truck" Garrick) was supposed to appear in this episode but Sands was busy filming The Kill Point. Nathan James was hired to fill in for Sands as an unnamed officer.[3]
Plot
Summary
Homicide
Jimmy McNulty and Lester Freamon collaborate on raising the profile of their fake serial killer. They conduct actual canvassing among the homeless as a cover. McNulty briefly meets and talks to Johnny "Fifty" Spamanto, a checker on the docks from Season 2, demonstrating how far the union has fallen since Season 2 and Frank Sobotka's death. Freamon sensationalizes the idea by adding a sexual motive and supplies a set of dentures to create bite marks. Freamon also recruits his old patrol partner to look out for bodies. They soon have their next fake victim and McNulty mocks up the crime scene and tampers with the body to imply another murder. McNulty's binge drinking and infidelity are noticed by his domestic partner Beadie Russell. Kima Greggs finds the child survivor in her case too withdrawn to help and decides to spend more time with her ex-partner Cheryl's son Elijah.
Western district
Officer Anthony Colicchio attacks a motorist who irritates him while he tries to arrest Michael Lee's drug dealing crew. The motorist turns out to be an elementary school teacher who then files a police brutality complaint against Colicchio. Sergeant Ellis Carver offers to help Colicchio through the subsequent internal investigation but Colicchio remains unrepentant. Carver decides Colicchio's behavior cannot continue unchecked and charges Colicchio himself. Thomas "Herc" Hauk later appeals to Carver for leniency but Carver explains his new philosophy that their actions as police are always important. Herc expresses regret over his own misdeeds leading to his dismissal.
Michael
Michael is signed out of holding by his mother but refuses to give her money.
Major crimes
Leander Sydnor uncovers new evidence in the Clay Davis investigation. Rupert Bond decides not to file the new charge as it would mean allowing a federal prosecution and would cost him the opportunity to raise his political profile. Bond has Rhonda Pearlman hold a grand jury deposition for Davis. Bond stages a photo opportunity (perp walk) as Davis leaves the court house to mark Davis as his target.
Baltimore Sun
Scott Templeton unsuccessfully interviews for a position with The Washington Post. Upon his return the staff at The Baltimore Sun he rushes to catch up on the Davis story after being left out of the loop.
Politics
Mayor Tommy Carcetti must grant favors to Nerese Campbell and the politically influential ministers to smooth the transitions in the police department. Cedric Daniels remains concerned that Ervin Burrell will expose his history of unexplained income and destroy his chances of becoming commissioner. Daniels appeals to Burrell but receives the silent treatment. Burrell gives the file on Daniels' past to Campbell. Campbell convinces Burrell to leave the department quietly with the promise of a well-paid replacement position.
New Day Co-Op
Marlo Stanfield convinces The Greeks to consider him as an insurance policy for handling their supply of narcotics into Baltimore. Stanfield's rival "Proposition Joe" Stewart fears reprisal from Omar Little following the death of Butchie and decides to leave town. Stanfield asks Proposition Joe to teach him more about money laundering and is introduced to attorney Maurice Levy. Omar returns to Baltimore and quickly ascertains that Stanfield was behind Butchie's death.
Stanfield observes Hungry Man and Cheese arguing over territory at a New Day Co-Op meeting. Stanfield continues to court Cheese's loyalty and has Chris Partlow capture Hungry Man and deliver him for Cheese to murder. Cheese reciprocates by revealing Proposition Joe's location. Stanfield and Partlow surprise Proposition Joe as he prepares to leave town. Proposition Joe tells Marlo that it would be in their best interest to keep him alive due to the quality heroin being supplied through him by the Greeks, but Marlo explains that he's already spoken with the Greeks and that they'll do their business with Marlo instead. Marlo tells Proposition Joe to close his eyes, telling him to "breathe easy," and Chris shoots Proposition Joe in the back of the head.[4]
Omar
Omar returns to Baltimore to avenge Butchie's murder and Donnie offers to help. Initially suspecting Proposition Joe, Omar confronts Slim Charles in an apartment complex but Slim is able to persuade Omar that Prop Joe had no involvement in Butchie's death. Slim Charles suggests Marlo was behind the murder. Later, Omar and Donnie visit Marlo's court in hiding and decide to go after Monk Metcalf.
First appearances
- Oscar Requer: Freamon's former partner in the patrol division an ex-homicide detective. Requer was kicked out of Homicide after pulling rank over an Area Chief at the scene of a murder. It is subsequently revealed that the Area Chief was William Rawls, who retaliated by transferring Oscar to the midnight shift in the Southern District. A retired homicide detective with the same surname provided inspiration for the character of Bunk Moreland on the show.[5]
Deceased
- Proposition Joe: Shot by Chris Partlow on orders of Marlo Stanfield.
- Hungry Man: Delivered as prize to Cheese by Marlo Stanfield.
References
- ↑ "Season 5 crew". HBO. 2007. Retrieved 2007-12-12.
- ↑ "HBO Schedule: THE WIRE 54: TRANSITIONS". HBO. 2008. Retrieved 2007-12-01.
- ↑ Nathan James' WAMO interview
- ↑ Dan Attias (2008-01-27). "Transitions". The Wire. Season 5. Episode 4. HBO.
- ↑ Simon, David (2006) [1991]. "Post Mortem". Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets (4th ed.). Owl Books. p. 641. ISBN 0-8050-8075-9. "Rick 'The Bunk' Requer left to man the department's retirement services bureau, though his homicide incarnation lives on in Wendell Pierce's portrayal of the legendary Bunk Moreland on The Wire, right down to the ubiquitous cigar."
External links
- "Transitions" at HBO.com
- "Transitions" at the Internet Movie Database
- "Transitions" at TV.com
|
|