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« Heller Hath No Fury

Has McNulty Gone McNutty?

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Dominic West by Nicole Rivelli/HBO
The Wire's beloved man-child Det. Jimmy McNulty (Dominic West) has always been a lovable troublemaker — mouthing off to superiors, drinking on the job, hookin' up with Russian prostitutes while working undercover… you know, the usual boyish shenanigans. But last night's episode "The Dickensian Aspect" proves that this season, McNulty has lost his McMarbles — not to mention his moral integrity. Season 5's phony serial-killer storyline is inane and totally improbable, but most of all, it's morally reprehensible and it's destroying one of TV's best-written characters.

This last point was driven home for me most clearly as I watched McNulty abandon a childlike, mentally ill homeless man in a lonely shelter hours from Baltimore. McNulty paused for only the briefest moment of hesitation before getting into his car and driving off, leaving that helpless man with no way to get back and no way for his family to trace him. Jimmy's always been a bit self-centered, sure, but this season his behavior is downright cruel. His silent, unexplained abandonment of the beloved Beadie (played by the brilliant Amy Ryan, who now finds herself stuck in a cardboard "wife" role). His harsh, pornographic sex scene with a barfly floozy in a parking lot, when he disgustingly flashed his badge mid-act at a passing police car. His self-righteous arguments with Bunk over his bonkers plan to curry police funding from the city budgeters. And now the escalation of this impossible-to-buy fake-serial-killer bill of sales. McNulty's become a mere cog in the wheels of his own elaborate insanity.

Sure, the serial-killer storyline is a convenient way to tie the goings-on in the police department with this season's thematic focus on the dirty doings at the Baltimore Sun. But it's clear that show creator and former Sun reporter David Simon is using this season to settle some old scores regarding the press' tendency to buy any story, no matter how bogus, in order to sell papers. And here's the thing about score-settling: It backfires if it looks bitter and maniacal. Also, unlike past Wire seasons that examined various aspects of Baltimore culture — like the dockworkers or the schoolteachers — the edit desk at the Sun isn't populated with a single likable or even distinctive character, making every Sun scene look gray and gloomy. So between the sunless Sun and McNulty's inexplicably brutish lunacy, I can't help but worry — is this stupid storyline destroying the final season of my favorite show on television? Is McNulty's fake killer fraying The Wire?


Posted by Michelle Heller
Feb 11, 2008 12:29 PM
Sorry Michelle but I do find the fake serial homeless killer to be very compelling. I do agree however that McNutty's character is hitting rock bottom and there really is very little left to like about the guy.

What amazes me is that the Sun reporter also faked the serial killer phone call and the Mayor has been faking the role that the police are taking on the fake killings? Does that make sense or does it sound FAKE?
Posted by Ranger99
Feb 11, 2008 1:53 PM
I think that the fact that McNulty is no longer "likeable" is exactly the point. He has completely lost it, been beaten down by the system. While he still tries to take the moral high ground, Bunk (who I believe is the real voice of the show) will have none of it. This is and always has been a particularly bleak view of the urban landscape. I don't think anyone is going to make it out (metaphorically) alive.
As far as the paper, you really don't like Gus? I think his character is very sympathetic as is several of the background characters. It is the publisher the suits that are clearly the villains.
Posted by PKK
Feb 11, 2008 5:22 PM
I don't think this story line is any more unbelievable then Colvin legalizing drugs and creating free zones that operated for months without anyone finding out about it.

The Wire has always been a moral drama, and this season is about exactly what Bunk said in the opening scene: "The bigger the lie, the more they'll believe."

Perhaps your enjoyment of it is stifled by the lack of emotional story lines -- true, nothing has the resonance of children in jeopardy ala S4 -- but the social themes are there, the examinations into why Baltimore (and our society at large) is the way it is...not to mention the drama, the downward spirals for all characters, the inevitable tightening of the noose around everyone for what they are (or were) doing: McNulty, Marlo, Omar...Prop Joe, Butchie, etc. It's still the best show on TV.
Posted by socalj
Feb 12, 2008 2:58 PM
The Wire has always had the courage to veer from likeable, heroic, resolved...all the things that define drama on commercial TV.

McNulty opened Act I, Scene 1 of this show. By conventional standards, he's the show's "hero" or main protagonist. But, of course, The Wire has shifted emphasis to others in the ensemble...enough so that McNulty could even be absent from most of Season 4.

It is unfathomable that the show's "hero" could be led down such a dark path of destruction. But it is a remarkable testament to the show's courage to do this. McNulty opened the series standing over a corpse. Will he close it by being the corpse?
Posted by MarkH
Feb 12, 2008 9:50 PM
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