Chiklis was on "Geektime" this week, promoting his new CBS series, Vegas. The hosts started talking about the Shield finale and Chiklis said that show creator Shawn Ryan has a "brilliant idea" for a Vic Mackey movie. Now they just have to get the studio to greenlight it. If they can make an Arrested Development movie this must happen.
Was the series finale written as a true finale, or was it always expected that they'd follow up on it later with a film?
As insane as the show was and how over-the-top ridiculous I found it to be on occasions, I won't lie. I'd watch it.
A true finale, but one that kept the possibility open, from what I understand. Back in 2010, Chiklis said: We wanted to give FX a satisfying conclusion, but at the same time, you have an incredible character in Vic Mackey, and I think Shawn and I agreed that there’s tremendous potential for him in terms of the big screen. Down the line, I could definitely see that happening.
This would work out about as well as Beverly Hills Buntz. Leave his future to our imagination anything else at this point would be disapointing.
I have to agree, the show ended on a really strong note with Vic getting away with his misdeeds at the cost of everything he really cared about. I don't see a need for a movie to continue the story, it just seems like an attempt to cash-in on a successful show.
I would say his former partners could come back from jail to get revenge, but there really isn't anyone left to come back.
If they say they have a "brilliant idea," I'm willing to see what that idea is... but I'm not exactly itching for new stories in that universe.
I really enjoyed the series and I enjoyed the characters but it ended well. everything tied up just right. but if they did it I'd see it
From what I've seen of the Wire, they are superficially similar but that's it, not unlike how the Wire is superficially similar to Homicide: Life on the Street.
The Shield and The Wire are entirely different types of shows. The Wire used police stories to frame a grander narrative about life in a modern American city, whereas The Shield is drama about corrupt cops and their struggles in balancing their greed and their genuine desire to make the city safer. The Shield stays pretty small-scale and focuses on the characters in a single police district, with a few small forays into politics. It's also a bit less grounded and more action-packed than The Wire, as well as being more episodic, but it tells some really great character stories and builds up to a superb finale that will stick with you for a long time.
The only truly important similarity between The Wire and The Shield - and Homicide: Life on the Street, for that matter - is that they are each genuinely great shows.
I was genuinely confused when I read this at first, wondering if there was ANY demand, let alone talk, of continuing the story. But then I saw I was confused and for some reason thought they were talking of a movie based on The Commish!