Charlie Brooker talks to the cast of The Wire, and to Baltimore natives, to find out what makes the show so special.Charlie Brooker talks to the cast of The Wire, and to Baltimore natives, to find out what makes the show so special.Charlie Brooker talks to the cast of The Wire, and to Baltimore natives, to find out what makes the show so special.
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[first lines]
Charlie Brooker: If you're anything like me, you're probably sick to the back arse of people telling you about some fantastic American TV series they've gotten into. Banging on and on about how Curb Your Feet Under Sopranos or whatever is "such a searing work of bloody genius, yeah?" that if you don't watch it, you might as well hurl yourself under the nearest bus for crimes against cultural sanity. Trouble is, who has time to watch all these "searing works of bloody genius"? There's just too many of them. You'd die of old age first with your brittle, wizened, disgusting old person's fingers desperately trying to open that 250 episode box set. Fortunately, there is a simple solution: only watch one of them. The best one, which is without a shadow of a doubt, The Wire.
- ConnectionsFeatures The Wire (2002)
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Performed by Diablo
Written by Damian Lamont Champ, Juan Donovan Bell, Jamal Roberts
Produced by Juan Donovan Bell and Jamal Roberts
Courtesy of Darkroom Enterprises LLC
If you ignore the fact that the title "Tapping The Wire" is a pretty poor one, then this film is still mis-titled because the "Tapping" suggests listening in to the inside story, getting insight covertly and so on. In this area the film is slightly disappointing because it is not aimed at existing fans but rather FX viewers who have not yet got into the sheer intellectual and entertainment drama that is rightly called one of the best things on television. In this regard this film would be better called "Plugging The Wire" because it is simply about selling the series to as many viewers as possible before the repeats start. This is best seen in the fact that the film was screened nightly for 6 nights on FX a channel that does do repeats but not that regularly! With this aim in mind, it is perhaps no real surprise that the material is very much about grabbing the attention rather than being a real documentary on the subject. This means that no specifics of the plot are really discussed rightly so for new viewers but it does limit how much can be discussed. Brooker also observes at the start of the film that it is dull having people gush at you about how brilliant that this show or that show is, but stresses that for The Wire, it is worth it. However this doesn't mean that the contributions needed to be so obvious and predictable. Listening to the celebs gushing about it, I did think that pretty much any viewer could have done as well. I'm not sure why these people were selected it would have been much better to have used professional critics from the UK and US who may have been much more elegant on the subject.
The small interviews with the cast don't add a huge amount to proceedings but they are better than the celebs, and their contributions are edited into succinct snippets and they do have insight. Further to this I did enjoy hearing West and Elba speaking in their native accents only further showing how good their performances are. Brooker also goes into the hoods of Baltimore to find how real the world of The Wire is, and this bit also falls flat because it offers too little. Two residents say how real it is but again it would have been of more value to have expert testimony as well as their contributions because I didn't think the film got anywhere near exploring this side of the city although that was never the intension.
The documentary still had vague interest for me because I don't know any Wire fan who doesn't like to hear others say how good the series is, even if it is only to feel smug that "well I already know that". On top of that, it is hard for me to criticise anything that has the aim of getting more of the viewing public to check the series out hell, I myself have forced DVD's on family, friends, colleagues and even the odd internet user who I know! As a marketing tool then, it is an effective film that will hopefully grab a few more viewers for the FX rerun, however in terms of its value beyond this I'm afraid it is a bit thin.
- bob the moo
- Jul 25, 2007
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Details
- Runtime25 minutes
- Color