Boys of Summer (The Wire)
"Boys of Summer" | |
---|---|
The Wire episode | |
Episode no. |
Season 4 Episode 1 |
Directed by | Joe Chappelle |
Teleplay by | David Simon |
Story by |
David Simon Ed Burns |
Original air date | September 10, 2006 |
Running time | 58 minutes |
Guest actors | |
"Boys of Summer" is the first episode of the fourth season of the HBO original series The Wire. Written by David Simon from a story by David Simon & Ed Burns, and directed by Joe Chappelle, it originally aired on September 10, 2006.
Production
Simon has commented that the influx of novice child actors led to an unruly behavior at the beginning of filming but they became a close knit group of professional young actors by the close of the series.[1]
Non-fiction elements
During the counter-terrorism briefing, Carver jokes that terrorists "got jacked by Apex's crew." Apex was a real stick-up man in Baltimore in the 1990s whom Ed Burns met, and was one of several inspirations for Omar Little.[2]
Title reference
The title refers to the children of West Baltimore on summer break. "The Boys of Summer" is also the title of a song by Don Henley and book by Roger Kahn. Both of those works illustrate a remembrance of glory days past and innocence lost. Thus the title sets the stage for the fourth season.
Epigraph
“ | Lambs to the slaughter here. | ” | |
— Marcia Donnelly |
Assistant principal Donnelly makes this comment when Prez applies to be a teacher. This also can be applied to the group's (Michael, Namond, Duquan, and Randy) innocence before the events of the season begin to unfold, as well as Carcetti's inexperience heading into his campaign for election as mayor of Baltimore. The epigraph also ties into the sinister activities of Marlo's enforcers efficiently executing undesirables over pleas.
Music
The song playing in the background while Randy is selling candy to Little Kevin is "Survival of the Fittest" by Mobb Deep.
Credits
Starring cast
Although credited, Chad Coleman, John Doman, Frankie Faison, Andre Royo, Michael K. Williams and Robert Wisdom do not appear in this episode.
Guest stars
- Jermaine Crawford as Duquan "Dukie" Weems
- Maestro Harrell as Randy Wagstaff
- Julito McCullum as Namond Brice
- Tristan Wilds as Michael Lee
- Gbenga Akinnagbe as Chris Partlow
- Tootsie Duvall as Assistant Principal Marcia Donnelly
- Henri Edmonds as School lecturer
- Richard Hildebird as Principal Claudell Withers
- Christopher Mann as Councilman Anthony Gray
- Megan Anderson as Jen Carcetti
- Brandy Burre as Theresa D'Agostino
- Sam Coppola as "Young Tony" - Former Mayor
- Joilet F. Harris as Officer Caroline Massey
- Brandon Fobbs as Fruit
- Anwan Glover as Slim Charles
- Norman Jackson as Curtis "Lex" Anderson
- Cleo Reginald Pizana as Chief of Staff Coleman Parker
- Tyrell Baker as Little Kevin
- Nathan Corbett as Donut
- Felicia Pearson as Snoop
- Karen Vicks as Gerry
- Cynthia Webb-Manly as Teacher #2
- Benjamin Busch as Officer Anthony Colicchio
- Jay Landsman as Lieutenant Dennis Mello
- Ed Norris as Detective Ed Norris
- Jason Parker as Officer Reggie Leddett
- Michael Salconi as Officer Michael Santangelo
- Tyreeka Freamon as School Receptionist
- Thomas C. Hessenauer as Teacher #1
- Paul L. Nolan as Hardware store employee
- Jim Rood as Southern District Patrol Officer
- Gene Terinoni as Lieutenant Jimmy Asher
Uncredited appearances
- Ryan Sands as Officer Lloyd "Truck" Garrick
- Kwame Patterson as Monk Metcalf
- Thuliso Dingwall as Kenard
- Shante Usual as Patrice
- Marlyne Afflack as Nerese Campbell
- Denise Hart as Miss Anna Jeffries
- Bryan McLarney as Bryan - Western District Officer
- Tamieka Chavis as Royce's Assistant
- Chris James as Carcetti’s Driver
- Mark Joy as Ed Bowers - Property Developer
- Atif Lanier as Western District Officer
- Thomas Joe Craig as Construction Foreman
- Derek A. Smith as Construction Foreman
- Unknown as Tote (Stanfield Soldier)
- Unknown as Reesy
- Unknown as Lieutenant Hoskins
- Unknown as Miss Simmons
- Unknown as Reverend Garnett
Thomas Hessenauer has a cameo in this episode as a dissenting school teacher; he is also the assistant to executive producer Nina Kostroff Noble.
Plot
Stanfield organization
The episode opens with Marlo Stanfield's young female enforcer Snoop visiting a large home improvement store to replace a cordless nail gun that is continually running out of charge. A salesman cordially and enthusiastically recommends a powder-actuated model and explains its characteristics to her. Grateful for his time and effort, Snoop pays for the tool and heavily tips the bewildered salesman and walks out with the nail gun. Her mentor Chris Partlow waits outside in the car. Snoop cheerfully relates her new-found knowledge of their new hardware.
Partlow and Snoop prepare a vacant row house while a prisoner pleads with them. Partlow promises him a quick and clean death and then shoots him with a suppressed pistol. They cover the body with quicklime and plastic sheets and nail the vacant building closed before they leave. Later scenes indicate that they repeatedly hide bodies in this manner in order to keep police attention away from their organization.
Politics
Councilman Tommy Carcetti has a morning meeting with a previous mayor (inspired by Thomas L. J. D'Alesandro III) to discuss his election campaign. Carcetti's deputy campaign manager, Norman Wilson, interrupts his candidate to tell him that he is behind schedule and hurries him off to his next appointment. Carcetti speaks to an indifferent group of seniors in an East side residential home.
Officer Thomas "Herc" Hauk reports for duty in his new post with Mayor Clarence Royce's security detail. Herc finds his new partner lacking the good humor of his old one, Ellis Carver. When waiting on Mayor Royce, Herc and his new partner see council president Nerese Campbell, in whom both show an immediate sexual interest. Herc reports in to his commander, Lieutenant Hoskins. Royce declines to return a call from property developer and campaign donor Andy Krawczyk. Royce's chief of staff, Coleman Parker, reports that Carcetti and Anthony Gray's campaigns are asking for two separate debates. In contrast to Carcetti, Royce has a speaking engagement with a healthy attendance at a harbor redevelopment site.
When Carcetti returns to his campaign offices his campaign manager Theresa D'Agostino orders him to begin making fundraising calls. Carcetti shirks his task and plays darts in the office with the phone off the hook. He finally begins making the calls and has some success. However, the process of campaigning for mayor has left him bitter and disillusioned, and he continually swears and makes negative remarks about politics and politicians.
The next day Carcetti is irritable and is disappointed with the radio spots that Norman Wilson plays him. He gets a call informing him that Royce has spent $300,000 on TV advertising. Wilson tries to divert Carcetti to thinking about his forthcoming meeting with Victorina Simmons and Reverend Garnett, both influential local figures. Carcetti views the damage drug dealers have done to the neighborhood including blocking alleyways.
Carcetti spends a large part of the day with the community and Wilson approves of his work. On the way to their next engagement Wilson jokes with Carcetti about which candidate he will be voting for as Carcetti worries about his race affecting voters. When Carcetti arrives he is met by an embittered and departing Tony Gray who refuses Carcetti's reconciliatory overtures.
Carcetti leaves the next day seeming more energized. He tells his wife Jen that he is expecting a bump in the new polling data. His mood quickly turns when he learns that the polls are not moving the way he hoped. His staff remain optimistic but he believes he has already lost. When he walks out D'Agostino admits that he has read the polls accurately. A police officer later finds and recognizes a drunk Carcetti sitting on a park bench at Federal Hill Park after closing hours and politely but firmly asks him to move on.
Neighborhood kids
Bodie Broadus marshals his new independent drug dealing crew. He chastises young runner Namond Brice for not spotting a customer pulling up because he was reading. One of Bodie's colleagues, Lex, bemoans his relationship with his baby's mother, Patrice. Patrice has begun dating Fruit, a crew chief from Marlo Stanfield's powerful drug dealing organization. Lex tells Bodie that he will kill Fruit if he does not leave Patrice alone. Slim Charles drives to the corner to ask Bodie why he has not resupplied from him recently. Bodie tells Slim Charles that business is slow since Stanfield forced his crew from Fayette Street. Slim Charles is now working as a supplier for independent crews on behalf of "Proposition" Joe Stewart. Bodie expresses a desire to hit back against Stanfield and Slim Charles reminds him that he is operating on his own now that Barksdale is gone. Bodie warns Lex that acting against Fruit will bring Stanfield's attention against him.
Namond's friends Michael Lee and Randy Wagstaff arrive and ask him to take them to catch pigeons. Namond asks Bodie if he can leave early to get back-to-school supplies. Bodie ridicules Namond's academic abilities but allows him to leave on the condition that he work extra hours the following day. Bodie tells Lex that he only employs Namond because of his father's reputation.
Namond becomes impatient as Randy tries to trap a bird that he thinks might be a homing pigeon. Randy believes they can sell homing pigeons to Nemo, who handles Marlo's pigeon coops. Their younger friends Kenard and Donut stand and look on. Duquan "Dukie" Weems scares off the birds by throwing a bottle. Namond initiates an argument with Dukie and Michael breaks up the fight. Randy talks to Dukie as the others leave and Dukie reveals that the bird was not a homing pigeon because it didn't have a tag on its leg.
That night Lex tracks Fruit and Patrice to a club. As they leave he shoots Fruit in the head and casually greets Patrice. Patrice screams and flees.
The following day Michael and Randy continue to try to catch pigeons. Dukie arrives having been beaten up by the children in the terraces. Namond suggests they retaliate and Randy comes up with a plan. Randy has his friends drink soda and urinate into water balloons. Namond continues to bully Dukie as they prepare. Michael incites the terrace boys by stealing a bike from them (punching two of them in the process) and they chase him into the ambush. The plan goes sour when Namond bursts a balloon on himself and his friends all flee. Michael is caught and gets a severe beating. Randy hides to escape as does Namond, who is within sight of Michael's misfortune. Later, having changed his clothes Namond buys ice creams for his friends even including Dukie at Michael's urging. When Randy returns home he is scolded by his foster mother for breaking his curfew.
Major crimes unit
Detectives Lester Freamon and Kima Greggs meet with ASA Rhonda Pearlman to discuss the Stanfield investigation. Freamon reveals that he is disappointed with Stanfield's organization - they have poor phone discipline and don't seem to be murdering anyone. Freamon also asks Pearlman to sign off on subpoenas of key political figures that they have linked to the Barksdale organization through their investigation of the money trail. Pearlman questions their new lieutenant's willingness to pursue the case and Freamon tells her he is fearless. Pearlman criticizes Freamon's timing with the forthcoming election and he feigns a lack of knowledge. Greggs meets with Lieutenant Asher, the unit's new commander, and has him sign all the papers they need by distracting him with talk about his beach house construction project.
Freamon catches discussion of Fruit's murder on the wiretaps of the Stanfield crew. Officer Massey notes that Fruit's phone has not been used in two hours. Freamon meets with Bunk Moreland and Ed Norris in the homicide unit as they are investigating the murder. Bunk gives Freamon a cell phone that they recovered from Fruit's body to garner more numbers for wiretaps.
Western District
Officer McNulty is called to meet with new district commander Major Daniels and his administrative lieutenant Dennis Mello. Daniels pleads with McNulty to move out of the patrol division as he needs better detectives in his district. McNulty declines the offer and as he leaves the room, Mello states that he tried numerous times to get McNulty to be a district investigator before Daniels' arrival. While Mello feels McNulty is in the wrong place, Daniels admits that while he feels McNulty has capabilities beyond his post he is probably better off in patrol on a personal level.
District DEU sergeant Ellis Carver harasses Bodie and his crew. He knows all of their names and their roles. Jimmy McNulty arrives to see if Carver needs assistance. He reminds Carver of Bodie beating charges on the wiretap by claiming entrapment and then leaves telling Bodie to close his operation down for the day. When Bodie tries the politeness that Carver has taught him on Officer Anthony Colicchio he is angrily rebuked. Carver reminds Colicchio that if they come down hard on everyone, they'll have no one to get information from when something serious happens.
At the roll call meeting the officers are given a mandatory lecture about soft targets for terrorism. Santangelo and Truck voice dissent about the usefulness of the seminar as due to the drug war and crime rate, counter-terrorism is not a priority feeling amongst the western district officers. Santangelo in particular comments "if them terrorists do fuck up the Western, could anybody even tell?" causing the other officers to laugh. Carver then jokes that if the terrorists came into West Baltimore to blow up something like a "chicken joint" that they would most likely be robbed of the "camels and robes" by a local stickup crew. As Lieutenant Mello calms the officers down, Bunk visits McNulty at the meeting to ask if he knows Lex. McNulty suggests Bunk talk to Carver as he is now on top of his work. Bunk suggests a drinking session and McNulty counters by inviting him to dinner with his domestic partner Beadie Russell. Santangelo walks out of the meeting and McNulty takes his discarded briefing binder to give to Russell's children as back-to-school equipment.
School
The principal and assistant principal discuss their staffing problems. Prez arrives at the school as trainee teacher pending his certification. Principal Withers in particular is skeptical of his abilities until he tells them that his former occupation was a police officer on the force in Baltimore City. Hearing that he used to be a city cop, they hire him immediately feeling that he is up to the job to work at the school. Prez attends a seminar on teaching using praise and self-belief to motivate their students; it seems as misguided as the police seminar on terrorism and is met with a similar response. Teachers specifically ask the old woman who is giving the lecture what her lesson plan suggests when students vandalize the classroom and attempt to assault them with textbooks and pencil sharpeners. Prez later takes in his new classroom which is a complete mess but seems excited at the prospect of teaching.
Lex's fate
Following Fruit's murder Marlo meets with his lieutenants including the bloodthirsty Monk and Tote and more reserved Partlow. Tote suggests they kill all of Lex's crew but on the suggestion of Chris, Marlo decides that since Lex was acting alone, he alone must die.
Little Kevin buys snacks from Randy, tells him to keep the change, and in exchange for the gratuity asks Randy to deliver a message to Lex - that Patrice wants to meet him behind the playground after 8pm. When Lex arrives for the meeting he finds Snoop and Partlow lying in wait. Bunk and Carver try to find Lex on his usual corner, but when they are unsuccessful that night, they decide to return the next day. Later, Randy sells food to Bodie's crew as they play dice. Little Kevin gives Randy a good deal of cash for following his instructions and tells him that Lex is dead. Meanwhile, Snoop and Partlow board up another vacant row house after hiding Lex's body within. Randy sits on his stoop brooding over his involvement until he is called inside by his foster mother.[3][4]
First appearances
- Namond Brice: Middle school child who works as a runner for Bodie Broadus. He is the son of infamous Barksdale drug enforcer Wee-Bey Brice.
- Michael Lee: Middle school child who takes a leadership role amongst his peers.
- Randy Wagstaff: Middle school child who lives with a strict foster mother and is known for his imagination and entrepreneurship. He is the son of "Cheese" Wagstaff
- Duquan "Dukie" Weems: Impoverished middle school child living with drug addicted mother, often bullied by his peers.
- Norman Wilson: Tommy Carcetti's new deputy campaign manager.
- Gerry: Senior Carcetti campaign staffer.
- Lieutenant Asher: Commander of the major case unit. Asher is a retiring Lieutenant who provides no interference with the cases being conducted led by Lester Freamon.
- Lieutenant Hoskins: Commander of mayor Royce's security detail.
- Monk: A lieutenant in the Stanfield Organization.
- Lex, Little Kevin and Reesy: Drug dealers in Bodie's crew.
- Donut: Middle school child who is friends with Namond, Michael and Randy.
- Claudell Withers: Edward Tilghman middle school's principal who handles most of the school's external problems.
- Marcia Donnely: Edward Tilghman middle school's assistant principal who handles most of the school's internal problems.
- Nerese Campbell: Baltimore City Council President on Mayor Clarence Royce's election ticket.
Deceased
- Fruit: shot in the head by Lex outside a nightclub.
- Lex: killed by Chris Partlow and Snoop as a reprisal for the murder of Fruit.
- Unknown dealer: shot and killed by Chris Partlow in empty row house
Reception
Ratings
The episode drew an average of 1.5 million viewers.[5] Coverage considered this as low compared to other HBO series like Deadwood and The Sopranos but felt that including repeats of the episode and video-on-demand viewers would enhance the figure.[5] Despite the low figures HBO commissioned a fifth season of the show two days after the episode aired.[5]
Critical response
An Entertainment Weekly critic named the opening scene of the episode as the first of his "five reasons to live" for the week.[6] A second critic picked out the parallels between the police briefing and the teachers seminar as a key element of the episode tying the institution of the school and the police department together. He also saw the scenes as significant in demonstrating how far removed the bureaucracies of modern lives are from reality.[7]
References
- ↑ Margaret Talbot (2007). "Stealing Life". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2007-10-14.
- ↑ Alvarez, Rafael (2004). The Wire: Truth Be Told. Pocket Books. p. 87. ISBN 0-7434-9732-5.
- ↑ "Episode guide - episode 38 boys of summer". HBO. 2004. Retrieved 2006-08-09.
- ↑ David Simon, Ed Burns (2004-09-10). "Boys of Summer". The Wire. Season 4. Episode 01. HBO.
- 1 2 3 John M. Higgins (12 September 2006). "HBO Renews The Wire". Broadcasting & Cable. Retrieved 25 January 2012.
- ↑ Ken Tucker (2006). "5 Reasons to Live". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2006-09-26.
- ↑ Michael Endelman (2006). ""Wire" education". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2006-09-26.
External links
- "Boys of Summer" at HBO.com
- "Boys of Summer" at the Internet Movie Database
- "Boys of Summer" at TV.com
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