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The Shield: Season Seven - The Final Act

The Shield: Season Seven - The Final ActDirectors: Michael Chiklis, Bill Gierhart, Clark Johnson, Craig Brewer, Dean White
Actors: Michael Chiklis, Catherine Dent, Paula Garcés, Walton Goggins, Michael Jace
Studio: Sony Pictures
Category: DVD

List Price: $59.95
Buy New: $19.99
as of 11/27/2009 00:31 CST details
You Save: $39.96 (67%)



New (36) Used (26) Collectible (2) from $16.00

Seller: Amazon.com
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 73 reviews
Sales Rank: 329

Format: Box set, Color, Dolby, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Region: 99
Aspect Ratio: 1.77:1
Number Of Discs: 4
Running Time: 619 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.4 x 0.7

MPN: 28046
UPC: 043396280465
EAN: 0043396280465
ASIN: B0020TS5EM

Release Date: June 9, 2009
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
For six seasons, viewers have watched self-proclaimed "different kind of cop" Victor Samuel Mackey get away with murder, corruption, and other sick and twisted crimes too numerous to mention. In the series' penultimate episode, "Possible Kill Screen," Mackey summons from the depths of his tortured soul all of his crimes and abuses as part of an immunity deal he has cut for himself with the Feds at the expense of his unwitting partner, Ronnie (David Rees Snell). Referring to his interrogator's recorder, he asks, "How much memory does that thing got?" How do you solve a problem like Vic? Do you kill him off? Send him to prison? What would be just comeuppance for a character, who, through it all, has somehow compelled our rooting interest? "You have to pay some kind of price," his ex-wife Corrine (Cathy Cahlin Ryan) wails. Suffice to say, without spoilers, that in this Emmy-worthy final season, Vic will be held accountable in a way that does his character (and the audience's investment in him) justice and leaves this groundbreaking series' proud legacy untarnished. It is an understatement when one character notes, "There is a lot of [stuff] going down at the Barn right now." To cover their tracks from the Armenian money train robbery, Vic and his guys orchestrate a gang war that quickly spins out of control. Shane (Walton Goggins), estranged from the Team, is forced to go on the run with his pregnant wife and young son. Corrine agrees to help Dutch (Jay Karnes) and Claudette (CCH Pounder) bring Vic down. As the Strike Team sinks further in the hole they've dug for themselves, viewers can take some comic relief in Det. Steve Billings' (David Marciano) pathetic attempts to defraud the city in the wake of his "injury," and solace in the solid police work of Dutch, Claudette, Danni (Catherine Dent), and Tina (Paula Garces), who is approaching the anniversary of her first year on the force. Stand-alone cases (a missing student whose mother won't cooperate with the investigation) and personal dramas (Claudette's failing health) further enrich each gripping episode, leading to an immensely satisfying series finale that fires on all cylinders. This four-disc set includes a wealth of extras, including convivial episode commentaries, deleted scenes, a genuinely moving featurette that goes behind-the-scenes of the series finale, in which Chiklis pays heartfelt tributes to the ensemble, and a season retrospective that fittingly, gives Chiklis the last word: "We know what we have. We have one of the great television series of all time on our hands." The Shield, we salute you. --Donald Liebenson

Product Description
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 06/09/2009 Run time: 619 minutes


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 73
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5 out of 5 stars Memorable   November 24, 2009
J. Studer
This is one season finale you will never forget. I might have done a few things differently but it is what it is! The whole show kept us wanting to keep watching the next episode. I am a woman & I loved it, even though it is graphic in a lot of parts-but oh well


5 out of 5 stars "How the Mighty Have Fallen.."   November 18, 2009
J from NY (New York)
How Sean Ryan managed to pull this off on a channel as relatively tame as "FX" is beyond me. Since Season 1 of this bloody, Shakespearean epic, Vic Mackey and Company have done some most unpleasant things--the first thing that comes to mind would be Vic frying a murdering drugdealer's face on a stove burner, the mistaken torture and execution of Guardo in Season Six, etc etc. I am more than sure that Ryan had to work a lot harder than David Chase or David Simon (imagine trying to squeeze an hour of real art between commercials for Enzyte.)

"The Final Act" comes extremely close to transcending anything I have ever seen on television. Learning just who Victor Samuel Mackey, and that's his full name, really was felt both exhilarating, dirty, exhausting and in the end, horrifying. He is not the alphamale wolf who protects the clan. He is not the complex, mysterious father figure to Shane. He is not a righteous vigilante cop in the tradition of "The Punisher".

He is a bald headed demon from hell who sucks the life out of those under his satanic influence or destroys them entirely. And he is particularly apt to do so when it is his neck on the line. How he came to be this way and whether he knows it or not are questions we will never know (Ryan was right not to answer them, actually: the feel of this show, which is kind of like dropping Raymond Chandler into "Training Day", does not allow for warm reminiscence). As the aged ICE agent who listens to Mackey's horrifying confession which seals his immunity asks Claudette "Exactly what kind of detective did you *raise* here?", it would be interesting to know that indeed.

In the end, though, speculation is immaterial. When Lem got shafted by Shane with a grenade, whatever tincture of a conscience Vic Mackey possessed in the first place went right through the window. Lem was the first Sacrifical Lamb, one of Vic's own who died because of his deluded belief in his own intelligence, and Ronnie was the second. Time heals all wounds, I guess, because it was easier for Vic to sell his friend out so blatantly to save his own skin. None of that anguish or rage he had when searching for Lem's killer, who was always at his back, only a begrudging and slightly pained willingness.

When Claudette finally confronts Vic in the last episode to see what he's made of, to see if there is anything remotely human left in the man, we have perhaps one of the most disturbing sequences in TV history. The "Hitler act" with Shane poisoning his wife and children with the threat of prison hanging over his head
(Goebbels did the same thing when "the great man" withdrew his affection in suicide) ultimately does not affect Vic. He looks at the awful picture of Shane with his head blown to bits, his wife and child clutching a toy and flowers, and sits for a moment. He blinks, represses a tear, and grins. He is a sociopath. If he so wills it, these kind of things will not hurt him. The reaction to Claudette trying to probe him is akin to the Devil himself: tearing the camera off the wall with that cobra-like loook in his eye, as though to say "You dare to judge me?" and swaggering out of the interrogation room.

Watching Ronnie go down was the worst for me. Though it is possible that Vic was going to tell him that he was screwed, it's pretty clear he didn't care that much. When he screams "RONNIE!" as the police approach to take him straight to hell, it is only to save face in the mirror of his cracked identity. The heated dialogue between them tells you a lot about Mackey. He tries to tell Ronnie that he believed Karin, his wife, was "loyal"--loyal?? Like Vic was loyal? This is not a titanic figure at all, but a "twisted and sick man" as Olivia puts it. He didn't really have any idea where all this was going and "the team" was BS as soon as he lost the feeling for it.

One of the best television series in history.



1 out of 5 stars Where is my DVD???   November 9, 2009
Melissa Elliott (Australia)
0 out of 2 found this review helpful

I would love to say that I am enjoying this DVD but unfortunately I am still awaiting its arrival!!!!!!!!!!!


3 out of 5 stars The abscence of the writers was apparent   November 5, 2009
Paul Ponder (St, Louis, Mo)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

On the cover it says "The most brilliant Finale I've ever seen" I'm not sure what this guy was smoking but it was obviously something that made his tv seem brighter than reality. I really wished they would have waited for the writer's strike to end before they did this. The finale was a major disappointment. In the final scene I watch Vic sitting at a desk for about 5 minutes wondering if he's going to shoot himself and then he holsters his gun and walks out with this look on his face like he just stepped in dog crap. That's the "brilliant" finale. The last 5 minutes of "The Wire" was the most brilliant finale I've seen. It had an intense montage that showed us what are characters are doing and implied would be doing long after the series. It wrapped every little detail up.
The main thing that made no sense at all was this Danny/Vic feud where in one episode she loves because she feels threatened by Vic she actually packs up her place and then inexplicably for no reason at all she reappears a few eps later leaving her and her son the ONLY THING VIC HAD LEFT!!!!! Except for Corrine how witness relocates to the Bay Area a whole 300 miles from LA!!! That's a 5 hour drive people!!! It would have been much more believable had it been Columbus OH or something very far from LA
The thing with Shane affected me so much that I could not believe what I was seeing I just did not see that coming. But for the conclusion of the series and a very frustrating season I needed more I needed shock after shock after shock instead shock and Nothing more emotional than the deal with Ronnie. It was a good show per se however it wasn't the satisfying conclusion I was promised. If the real writers had been there I probably would still be losing my bowels even a year later.



5 out of 5 stars Its a love hate thing   October 27, 2009
Jimmy Morelli (South Boston, MA)
I have followed the series since it first aired. It was a different breed of a cop show series, it went much further than most cop shows go and it was a anti hero series, that's why I liked it so much, it was much different then the other crap out there. This entire series, including the last, season 7 kept you glued to the TV, and the DVR's programed. These cops are the guys you love to hate and they just get worse as the years role by. If you haven't seen the show before, START!!! from the beginning and do it justice, if you like cops shows you'll love this. This isn't your lame duck NYPD Blue or Law and Order where the cops are the good guys and they face the same stuff show after show, good vs bad. In The Shield the cops are the bad guys.

Honestly every season was great. The one thing that I didn't like about the 7th and final season was the ending. I waited 7 years to see that cop killing son of a [%$] Macky get killed or sentenced to prison and what happened, he walked. After the mayhem he has caused it was a bit of a let down to see it end that way.

Buy this or buy whole series if you have never seen it. It was a great series, well worth paying for in my eyes.


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