Homicide: Life on the Street

Homicide: Life on the Street is an American television drama series chronicling the life of a fictional Baltimore police homicide unit. It ran for seven seasons on the NBC network from 1993 to 1999, plus a 2000 TV-movie. The series was based on David Simon's nonfiction book Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets, and many characters and plots in the series are directly based on individuals and events depicted in the book.

Contents

The series

Homicide was developed by Paul Attanasio and included film director Barry Levinson as an executive producer, but writer-director Tom Fontana is largely recognized as the guiding hand behind the series.

Homicide featured a no-nonsense police procedural look at the workings of a homicide unit: From answering telephone calls to the investigation of crimes, to the professional and personal drama in the unit, to the dominant use of handheld cameras to film the series, Homicide developed a trademark feel and look that distinguished itself from its contemporaries. The series was filmed entirely on location in Baltimore (except for parts of crossover episodes of Law & Order which were filmed in New York City and one or two trips to Washington, D.C.); the city practically became a character. Homicide was responsible for several television innovations, including being the first show to regularly use the technique of playing a musical number over a montage of scenes.

The series got off to a shaky start on the schedule with a nine-episode first season on NBC. Despite premiering in the coveted post Super Bowl timeslot, the show had lackluster ratings. Two Emmy Awards (for Levinson's direction and Fontana's writing) and the success of another police drama NYPD Blue were responsible for NBC giving it another chance, though the four episode renewal was the smallest in network television history. Despite critical acclaim, ratings were poor. NBC kept Homicide on the air for five full seasons.

Hoping to improve ratings, NBC insisted on frequent changes that have been criticised as harming the program, such as mandating that Jon Polito be dropped from the cast, and clamoring for more romance and violence. NBC sometimes aired episodes out of order, often to the detriment of story arcs that developed over several episodes or even entire seasons.

Hailed by many critics as one of the best, most realistic cop shows and one of the very finest dramas ever produced and propelled by strong writing and a stellar ensemble cast, Homicide garnered three straight television critics awards for outstanding drama from 1996 to 1998 and was the first drama ever to win three of the prestigious Peabody Awards for best drama (1993, 1995, 1997).

The series has been syndicated on Lifetime and Court TV, and the first six seasons are available on DVD. One DVD set combines the first two seasons, while separate sets contain the complete third, fourth, fifth, and sixth seasons. The DVDs contain the episodes in the producers' intended order, and not necessarily the order in which NBC aired them.

Notable stories

The series opens with Detective Tim Bayliss being assigned to Lt. Al Giardello's unit and partnered with Detective Frank Pembleton. Pembleton resents having his style cramped with a partner, and Tim, nervous and a little scared, isn't sure he's up to the job. His first case is the murder of a young girl, Adena Watson, full of publicity and pressure from all sides. The story culminates in the first-season episode, "Three Men and Adena", throwing several actors in a box to talk, argue and shout their way through an interrogation.

"Night of the Dead Living", also from season one, shows the unit working the graveyard shift in the middle of a hot summer when the building's air conditioning has broken down and tempers are running high.

Homicide saw its cast rotate, as most TV series do, and it dealt with these changes with varying degrees of effectiveness. The first major cast member to leave saw his character die, and the exploration of what happened and how the unit reacts to it is the focus of the season three episode "Crosetti".

The third season also featured a three-part episode in which several detectives are seriously injured, two of them near to death, while the rest of the unit copes with the loss and hunts down the attacker.

"All Through the House" was a special Christmas episode in the third season, Homicide-style.

Homicide often mixed its characters' personal lives with their professional lives, including several affairs among department officers. Despite this uncompromising approach, the series always felt slightly uncomfortable dealing with romance, and predictably the affairs tended to end badly.

The fourth season saw the departure of two other cast members, and the addition of arson investigator Mike Kellerman. Kellerman became the central figure of the main storyline during the fifth and sixth seasons, involving the death of an underworld crime boss and the gang war that rocks the city in the wake of his death.

The sixth season is also notable for the acclaimed "Subway" episode, which centered on a man trapped between a subway car and the edge of the platform. Although he was still alive, he would die from his injuries the moment the car was removed from his body. The homicide unit was called in to investigate whether the man fell by accident or was deliberately pushed from the platform (as it turned out, he was pushed); two of its members tried in vain to find the victim's girlfriend before his death. Andre Braugher as Detective Frank Pembleton and Vincent D'Onofrio as the doomed victim John Lange would earn Emmy nominations for their performances in this episode.

The seventh season is widely regarded as the weakest, as it lacked an overarching storyline and the characters—following a major cast overhaul, including Braugher's departure—felt less dynamic and the stories less inventive than earlier episodes.

In the 2000 TV movie, Giardello runs for mayor and is shot, and the whole unit turns out to find the shooter. Every regular from the series—including those whose characters died—returns for this final chapter in the story.

H:LotS crossed over three times with Law and Order, where a case would begin with L&O in New York City in part 1, before moving the action to Baltimore in part two:

  • Charm City (L&O ep 6-13)/For God and Country (H:LotS ep 4-12)
  • Baby, it's You Part I (L&O ep 8-6)/Baby, it's You Part II (H:LotS ep 6-5)
  • Sideshow Part I (L&O ep 9-14)/Sideshow Part II (H:LotS ep 7-15)

Cast

Original cast

Other regulars

Recurring characters

Homicide: Second Shift

Homicide:LotS was one of the first shows to have a major internet tie-in. The show had a spin-off series called Homicide: Second Shift. There were several stories that extended from the TV-show through the web-show. The shows have had crossovers as well.

Cast

Trivia

  • Richard Belzer has played John Munch on six different TV series: Homicide, Law & Order, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Law & Order: Trial By Jury, The X-Files, and the short-lived UPN series The Beat.
  • Homicide:Life on the Street featured a film crew filming a fictious version of Homicide in one episode, when Bayliss and Pembleton run through the set while filming is going on, while chasing a suspect.

External Links

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