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The Wire: Season 3
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Additional DVD options | Edition | Discs | Price | New from | Used from |
DVD
October 7, 2014 "Please retry" | New Box Art | 5 | $15.99 | $3.99 |
Watch Instantly with ![]() | Per Episode | Buy Season |
Purchase options and add-ons
Genre | Drama |
Format | Multiple Formats, AC-3, Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, NTSC, Subtitled |
Contributor | Ernest Dickerson, John Doman, Aidan Gillen, Agnieszka Holland, Dominic West, Wood Harris, Idris Elba, Tim Van Patten See more |
Language | English, Greek |
Number Of Discs | 5 |
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- Most purchasedin this set of productsWire, The: The Complete Series (DVD/RPKG)Robert F. ColesberryDVD
Product Description
Product Description
Wire, The: The Complete Third Season (DVD) The heat is on in Baltimore. The drug war is being lost, bodies are piling up and a desperate mayor wants the tide turned before the election. But the police department hasn't got any answers. Wiretaps haven't worked. Neither have stakeouts or street busts. With the demolition of the Franklin Terrace towers, Stringer Bell and the Barksdale crew have been forced to improvise. But no matter how hard McNulty and the detail try, the dealers always seem to be one step ahead of the game. It's time to change the rules. A new story begins in Season Three of the acclaimed HBO drama series that focuses on the vagaries of crime, law enforcement and politics in Baltimore, MD. As told from the points of view of both the police and their targets, 'The Wire' captures a universe of subterfuge and surveillance, where easy distinctions between good and evil, and crime and punishment, are challenged at every turn.
Amazon.com
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. --Jeff Shannon
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 1.33:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : Unrated (Not Rated)
- Product Dimensions : 7.5 x 5.5 x 1 inches; 12.8 Ounces
- Item model number : 92776
- Director : Tim Van Patten, Ernest Dickerson, Agnieszka Holland
- Media Format : Multiple Formats, AC-3, Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, NTSC, Subtitled
- Run time : 12 hours
- Release date : May 1, 2007
- Actors : Dominic West, John Doman, Idris Elba, Aidan Gillen, Wood Harris
- Dubbed: : French, Spanish
- Subtitles: : English, Spanish, French
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo), English (Dolby Digital 5.1), French (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo), Spanish (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo), Unqualified (DTS ES 6.1)
- Studio : HBO Studios
- ASIN : B000FTCLSU
- Number of discs : 5
- Best Sellers Rank: #54,817 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #10,330 in Drama DVDs
- Customer Reviews:
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Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2020
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I start with the way it doesn't work because while it's going on, you're treated to some of the most astonishing television ever created (there's that praise again), and to say that eventually, Carcetti's plotline joins the fold and gets interesting. It joins the fold through a different rod of the season - Mjr Colvin, embodied with fierce drive by Robert Wisdom, who decides to conquer the Baltimore drug problem, in a way, by moving it - he drives the dealers we've come to be familiar with and some others into a "free zone" where drugs can be legalized, an idea that works to an extent, but one that no one can talk about without destroying the world around them. It's that "talk" that the season is really about - that is to say, the politics, from the top down. Beyond Carcetti's literal politics and Colvin's political maneuvering within the police department, there's the internal politics of the drug world - of our familiar faces of Barksdale (Wood Harris) and Stringer Bell (Idris Elba) competing in their own way for the heart of what it means to be gangsters - is it blood or business that keeps them all going? The combination of the drug world and the political world - and that includes our always-central crew of detectives, each of whom go through their own political and personal disaster or two in the course of the year - is what makes The Wire so free of easy answers, and so impossible to shake.
There are two scenes that, I think, embody what the show succeeds at so well this season - in the first, late in "Time After Time," the season premiere, Colvin cruises his police car around his filth and crime-ridden West Baltimore streets. He stops as a young boy tries to sell him crack. Colvin pulls out his badge, his hat, etc., and with each step, the boy is completely unthwarted in his attempt. We think, not knowing Colvin, that we're about to see a cop crusing for addictions of his own, but we see the opposite - the heartbreak of the streets on those that want to do good, and the total irrelevance of police in stopping it. The scene crushes expectations nearly as quickly as it does your heart.
And the second? The second scene that blew my mind is the one that taught me that Idris Elba, sitting under our nose as Stringer Bell for so long, could be one of the great actors of his generation. During "Homecoming" he's having dinner with Donette (Shamyl Brown), D'Angelo Barksdale's lonely widow, when Stringer snaps at her about telling D'Angelo's mother that D's murder may have been a murder. Stringer is the drive of all the season's best drama, but it's at the point he yells at her, revealing the gangster under the chilly pose, that we realize, fully, just who he is. Where it goes from there during the remainder of the season is pure business on this show - as cynical as it is daring, as fearless as it is inevitable. To watch Elba's work this season is to see the capabilities on a television show that holds its audience's intelligence at a premium, and does it by fulfilling its own storytelling capabilities. What happens this season changes everything we've seen on The Wire up to this point - its finale, "Mission Accomplished," ties up so many loose ends, its hardly a surprise that we even see a "Reelect Frank Sabotka" poster in its final minutes - that you're shocked at just what dramatic power it retains.
Season 3 builds on the previous seasons and returns to the streets for a showdown between Avon Barksdale's (Wood Harris) crew (still managed, in the interim, by Stringer Bell (Idris Elba)) and a vicious upstart by the name of Marlo, who has taken control of Avon's territory thanks to Stringer's attempts to go straight. On the law side, Kima's (Sonja Sohn) doubts about motherhood continue to grow, while newly-minted Deputy Commissioner Rawls (John Doman) rips district commanders to shreds (and is the subject of a revelation of some interest). At the center of it all is Jimmy McNulty (Dominic West), whose liaison with an elite political consultant leads to some quite surprising conclusions that make you reevaluate the character entirely. The political plotline leads naturally into the new arena the show explores, Baltimore's city politics, which prominently features two figures: Mayor Clarence Royce, who seems like an honest, reasonable man, and City Councilman Tommy Carcetti (Adrien Gillen), whose character flirts the line between raw ambition and occasional idealism. In between these personalities is still-Acting Commissioner Burrell (Frankie Faison), whose previous cock-of-the-walk status gives way to getting chewed out by the Mayor. There are plenty more great storylines: Daniels (Lance Reddick) hooking up with Pearlman (and dealing with his nominal wife), Bunk trying to find a wounded officer's gun, and Major "Bunny" Colvin deciding to legalize drugs in condemned areas in order to keep the dealers off the streets. Colvin's plan does reduce crime, and things seem to be getting better, except that the legal drug area ("Hamsterdam") is a hellhole, and eventually the plan is exposed. This plotline just goes to show how much bigger problems can get if they're ignored. Overall, a spectacular season from a show that exceeds even high expectations.
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