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  • TV Review: ‘Ballard’

    Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) in 'Ballard'. Photo: Greg Gayne/Prime Video.
    Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) in ‘Ballard’. Photo: Greg Gayne/Prime Video.

    ‘Ballard’ receives 5.5 out of 10 Stars.

    Premiering on Prime Video July 9th is the new cop show ‘Ballard’, which is based on a character created by author Michael Connolly and is set in the same universe as ‘Bosch’ and ‘Bosch: Legacy’.

    Maggie Q (‘The Protégé’) stars as LA detective Renée Ballard, along with John Carroll Lynch (‘The Founder’), Courtney Taylor (‘Abbott Elementary’), Michael Mosley (‘Ozark’), Rebecca Field (‘A Star Is Born’), and Victoria Moroles (‘Teen Wolf’).

    Related Article: Titus Welliver Talks ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3 and Ending the Series

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) and Courtney Taylor (Zamira Parker) in 'Ballard'. Photo: Greg Gayne/Prime Video.
    (L to R) Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) and Courtney Taylor (Zamira Parker) in ‘Ballard’. Photo: Greg Gayne/Prime Video.

    Based on a character created by author Michael Connolly and technically a spinoff of ‘Bosch: Legacy’, ‘Ballard’ is an adequate cop series but lacks the style and magic of its predecessor. While the title character was introduced in the final episode of ‘Bosch: Legacy’, the new series has almost nothing in common with the former other than a few mentions of past characters and an occasional appearance from Titus Welliver and other ‘Bosch’ actors.

    It’s more akin to ‘The Closer’, ‘Cold Case’ or ABC’s ‘Highly Potential’ with Kaitlin Olson. Maggie Q does the best she can with the role but lacks the charisma or gravitas to truly lead the series. John Carroll Lynch and the supporting cast also do their best to fill in the gaps, but it’s not enough to pick up the pace and tone, which otherwise falls flat. The series does get better as it goes on, gaining momentum as the audience gets to know the cast of characters and their backstories, but it never exceeds the level of just your generic cop series.

    Story and Direction

    Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) in 'Ballard'. Photo: Greg Gayne/Prime Video.
    Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) in ‘Ballard’. Photo: Greg Gayne/Prime Video.

    The series begins by reintroducing us to Los Angeles detective Renée Ballard (Maggie Q), who has recently gone through an internal affairs investigation after reporting misconduct by one of her colleagues and has now been assigned to lead her own cold case department, which she sees as a demotion. Ballard’s first case is to solve the murder of councilman Jake Pearlman’s (Noah Bean) sister, which leads to discovering other victims.

    Ballard puts together a new team of her own including her former partner, retired detective Thomas Laffont (John Carroll Lynch), volunteer and possible psychic Colleen Hatteras (Rebecca Field), intern Martina Castro (Victoria Moroles), reserve policeman and Pearlman’s friend Ted Rawls (Michael Mosley), and former detective Samira Parker (Courtney Taylor), who was also forced out of the department because of accusing her co-workers of misconduct.

    In addition to investigating the councilman’s sister’s murder, Ballard and her team take on several other high-profile cold cases, eventually leading to an investigation into a team of crooked cops, that is directly connected to both Ballard and Parker’s pasts. While carefully investigating the dirty police officers, Ballard confides in her old friend Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) for advice, as he is a former LA detective turned private investigator who has had his own troubles in the past navigating the politics of the Los Angeles police department.

    (L to R) Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) and Michael Mosley (Ted Rawls) in 'Ballard'. Photo: Patrick Wymore/Prime Video.
    (L to R) Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) and Michael Mosley (Ted Rawls) in ‘Ballard’. Photo: Patrick Wymore/Prime Video.

    I know that ‘Ballard’ is technically a spinoff of ‘Bosch: Legacy’, but the series tries to have it’s cake and eat it too by completely stripping the tone and style of its predecessor and yet still shoehorning in ‘Bosch’ characters as if to say, “Hey, remember this is still ‘Bosch’!” And it’s not just the great Titus Welliver who returns with almost nothing to do, but more on that in a moment.

    The series jumps right in as if we are supposed to already care about these characters, with no backstory explaining how they got here. To be fair, the backstories unfold as the series progresses, and that’s when you begin to care about these characters and the team they have created, but its several episodes in before that happens, and I’m afraid the casual watcher won’t give the series that long to get going.

    ‘Ballard’ is also missing the style and substance of ‘Bosch’ and ‘Bosch: Legacy’, which is what made the show so compelling. Those series had a noir feeling that ‘Ballard’ just can’t replicate. Ballard lives on the west side of LA, by the beach, which is in stark contrast to the Downtown LA/Hollywood vibe of the original series and fails to create an intriguing atmosphere. While the series builds some momentum as the episodes progress, it’s not enough to transcend the standard cop show syndrome the series is stuck in.

    With the character of Renée Ballard only introduced in the final episode of season 3 of ‘Bosch: Legacy’, it’s not like even ‘Bosch’ fans have a long history with her and the series does nothing in the first few episodes to show us why we should care about her or the show. Ballard’s catch phrase is “The past is always present”, which holds a different meaning through the prism of solving cold cases, but rings hollow in the context of the series and just seems like a substitute for Bosch’s famous motto, “Everybody counts, or nobody counts.”

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) John Carroll Lynch (Thomas Laffont) and Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) in 'Ballard'. Photo: Tyler Golden/Prime Video.
    (L to R) John Carroll Lynch (Thomas Laffont) and Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) in ‘Ballard’. Photo: Tyler Golden/Prime Video.

    Maggie Q is a capable actress and has been quite good in action driven movies like ‘Mission: Impossible III,’ ‘Live Free or Die Hard’ and ‘The Protégé’ but lacks the charismas or gravitas to lead a series like this in the same way Titus Welliver did with the ‘Bosch’ franchise. Welliver became synonymous with the character, and it was hard to know the difference between Bosch and the actor playing him. Welliver also had a magnetic quality on screen, you couldn’t take your eyes off him, and Q does not possess the same characteristics as Ballard.

    With popular series like ‘Nikita’ and ‘Designated Survivor’ under her belt, Q is more than qualified to lead her own series, but perhaps this was not the best marriage of actor and character, as she has difficulty being believable in the role. What should be a showcase for another complex and likable Michael Connolly character instead seems like a run-of-the-mill cop you would find on any network police procedural.

    The supporting cast does their best including acclaimed actor John Carroll Lynch (‘Zodiac’ and ‘The Founder’), who plays Ballard’s former partner Thomas Laffont, who has come out of retirement to back up Renée. As their past together and the reasons why Laffont retired come to the surface, there is more for Lynch to work with, but his character is a standout from the very beginning of the season.

    (L to R) Courtney Taylor (Zamira Parker) and Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) in 'Ballard'. Photo: Greg Gayne/Prime Video.
    (L to R) Courtney Taylor (Zamira Parker) and Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) in ‘Ballard’. Photo: Greg Gayne/Prime Video.

    Courtney Taylor’s Samira Parker has a big redemption arc in the first season and the actress is solid in the role. Having her past connect with Ballard’s was smart, if not also predictable, but works for the conspiracy plot and bringing Parker and Ballard closer together as friends.

    Rounding out the cast are Michael Mosley, whose Ted Rawls is annoying at first but grows on you as time goes on, Victoria Moroles’ Martina, who’s not given much to do until the final episodes, and Rebecca Field’s possibly psychic Colleen, who is bubbly and funny, and is a standout the entire season.

    Connections to ‘Bosch’

    (L to R) Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) and Titus Welliver (Bosch) in 'Ballard'. Photo: Tyler Golden/Prime Video.
    (L to R) Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) and Titus Welliver (Bosch) in ‘Ballard’. Photo: Tyler Golden/Prime Video.

    While the series seems completely devoid of any connections or even a similar tone to ‘Bosch’ in the opening episodes, several characters, both big and small, make their return in ‘Ballard’. The most obvious is Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch. While Welliver’s appearance is always welcome, Harry seems out of place in ‘Ballard’, regulated to basically an advisory character.

    Keep in mind, when ‘Ballard’ was first announced, it was assumed that ‘Bosch: Legacy’ would get a fourth season after she was introduced in season three, but after ‘Ballard’ got picked up, the decision was made to cancel the show. Unfortunately, Ballard was not introduced early in ‘Bosch: Legacy’s final season and given time to build, instead she was injected into the final episode, which always felt more like a backdoor pilot.

    Let’s get this out of the way: ‘Bosch: Legacy’ never should have been canceled! Sadly, it was and while I want nothing more than to see Titus Welliver on screen as Harry Bosch once again, this was not the right way to do it. Major kudos to Welliver for being a class act and donating his time to appear on the new series, but why the showrunners would waste his appearance like this is beyond me. If you are going to bring Bosch back, make him part of the story. Give him some actions scenes and something to recite other than exposition, please!

    Jamie Hector on Prime Video's 'Bosch.' Credit: Hopper Stone. Copyright: Amazon Studios.
    Jamie Hector on Prime Video’s ‘Bosch.’ Credit: Hopper Stone. Copyright: Amazon Studios.

    Hardcore ‘Bosch’ fans will be over-the-moon to know that Jamie Hector returns as Detective Jerry Edgar, but again, don’t get too excited. His appearances are nothing more than cameos, and a way of bridging the gap between the two series and making ‘Ballard’ feel more like it is part of the ‘Bosch’ world. But again, these attempts feel hollow and not only don’t work to connect it to the overall ‘Bosch’ universe but keeps it from standing apart as its own distinct series.

    It’s also particularly disappointing as ‘Bosch’ fans were really hoping for J. Edgar to reunite with Harry on screen before the end of ‘Legacy’, which didn’t happen. So, seeing him here seems like another wasted moment. Speaking of wasted moments, Stephen Chang who was a series regular on ‘Legacy’ for three seasons as Mo Bassi returns for one scene where he has no dialogue and only walks out of a house. I appreciate the continuity, but why make Chang return for that?

    Several other recognizable faces from the two previous series return, including Troy Evans as Barrel and Mimi Rogers as Honey “Money” Chandler. Just like Welliver and Hector’s returns, they don’t amount to much other than connecting ‘Ballard’ to the greater ‘Bosch’ universe. But since the show goes so far out of its way to establish that this show is not ‘Bosch’, it confuses me as to why they even bothered with the cameos. In all other ways, style, substance, tone, music, there are no connections to the previous shows, so these cameo appearances feel a bit off. But if you are going to bring back these excellent actors in the future, please give them more to do.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) and Courtney Taylor (Zamira Parker) in 'Ballard'. Photo: Adam Rose/Prime Video.
    (L to R) Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) and Courtney Taylor (Zamira Parker) in ‘Ballard’. Photo: Adam Rose/Prime Video.

    While ‘Ballard’ is a fine cop show, it just can’t hold a candle to the previous two ‘Bosch’ series, which is probably an unfair comparison. But since ‘Ballard’ tries so hard to both be part of the ‘Bosch’ universe and something completely new, it fails on both counts. Maggie Q lacks the gravitas required for the role and the series fails to create any real urgency to watch. In the end, ‘Ballard’ is just another cop show and does not live up to the legacy of ‘Bosch’.

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    What is the plot of ‘Ballard’?

    Ballard continues to bring Michael Connelly’s bestselling novels to life, following Detective Renée Ballard (Maggie Q) as she leads the LAPD’s new and underfunded cold case division, tackling the city’s most challenging long-forgotten crimes with empathy and relentless determination. As she peels back layers of crimes spanning decades, including a serial killer’s string of murders and a murdered John Doe, she soon uncovers a dangerous conspiracy within the LAPD. With the help of her volunteer team and retired detective Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver), Detective Ballard navigates personal trauma, professional challenges, and life-threatening dangers to expose the truth.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Ballard’?

    • Maggie Q as Renée Ballard
    • John Carroll Lynch as Thomas Laffont
    • Courtney Taylor as Samina Parker
    • Michael Mosley as Ted Rawls
    • Rebecca Field as Colleen Hatteras
    • Victoria Moroles as Martina Castro
    • Noah Bean as Jake Pearlman
    • Hector Hugo as Captain Berchem
    • Ricardo Chavira as Detective Robert Olivas
    • Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch
    (L to R) Courtney Taylor (Zamira Parker) and Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) in 'Ballard'. Photo: Tyler Golden/Prime Video.
    (L to R) Courtney Taylor (Zamira Parker) and Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) in ‘Ballard’. Photo: Tyler Golden/Prime Video.

    List of Movies and TV Shows Based on Michael Connelly Novels:

    Buy Maggie Q Movies On Amazon

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  • ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3 Interview: Titus Welliver

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    Currently available to stream on Prime Video is the third and final season of ‘Bosch: Legacy’, which is based on characters created by author Michael Connelly and is a continuation/spinoff of the groundbreaking seven season series, ‘Bosch’.

    The series once again stars Titus Welliver (‘The Town’) as Harry Bosch, Madison Lintz (‘Parental Guidance’) as his daughter Maddie Bosch, and Mimi Rogers (‘The Mighty Quinn’) as Honey “Money” Chandler, as well original series actor Paul Calderón (‘King of New York’) reprising his role as Det. Jimmy Robertson.

    Related Article: ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3 Serves Up a Bittersweet Ending for the Series

    Titus Welliver (Harry Bosch) in 'Bosch: Legacy' Season 3. Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Titus Welliver (Harry Bosch) in ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3. Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with actor Titus Welliver about his work on ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 3, the decision to end the series, playing the character for the final time, if he is happy with how Harry’s story ends, if he will reprise his role on the upcoming spinoff ‘Ballard’ starring Maggie Q, and bringing back fan favorite characters like Paul Calderón’s Jimmy Robertson.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interview.

    (L to R) Maurice ‘Mo” Bassi (Stephen A. Chang) and Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) in 'Bosch: Legacy' season 3. Photo Credit: Greg Gayne/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Maurice ‘Mo” Bassi (Stephen A. Chang) and Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) in ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 3. Photo Credit: Greg Gayne/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Moviefone: To begin with, as a hardcore fan, I’m heartbroken by the ending of ‘Bosch: Legacy’. Can you talk about the decision to end the series now, and what was it like for you to play this character for a final time?

    Titus Welliver: Well, here’s the thing. I did not know that. Nobody knew that. We were already talking about what we were going to be doing in season 4. So, as Harry would say, “That’s above my pay grade”. I don’t know all the different machinations or reasons. Am I saddened by that? Deeply. You know, I love the people that I work with. I have formed a very close, deep bond with the character, even though he’s a fictional character. There’s a part of that that penetrates you to a certain degree when you do that. When you breathe life into a character, they become some sort of odd manifestation. So, I miss Harry. I really missed him. I know if I could get on the phone and call him, I would. I really do miss the character. I miss working with this group of people and the joy that it’s brought me for a decade was such a tremendous privilege.

    Titus Welliver (Harry Bosch) in 'Bosch: Legacy' Season 3. Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Titus Welliver (Harry Bosch) in ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3. Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    MF: Without giving away any spoilers, can you talk about crafting Harry’s final moment on screen? How involved were you with that, and are you satisfied with how Harry’s story ends?

    TW: No, because we were not aware at that point when we shot that. There’s no closure at all. That’s not atypical for ‘Bosch’. We would leave things kind of hanging. But as far as when you see the final scene, it’s not a ride off into the sunset. It’s not a so long. It feels like the end of a season, but it doesn’t feel like the end. As Harry would say, “Closure is a myth”. There is no closure. What it does do is it introduces the character of Renee Ballard, who’s played brilliantly by Maggie Q. She fully embodies the character, and it was such a tremendous pleasure working with her. We got to do some solid work together and laughed our asses off. She’s very deeply funny, and very gracious and generous as an actor. That relationship is introduced, and I think very well realized. So, in that regard and that they are doing this ‘Ballard’ show, I think it tees it up well for that, but it will not feel like this is teeing up for a spinoff. The only finality is that it’s the 10th episode, but there is no closure.

    (L to R) Madison Lintz (Maddie Bosch) and Titus Welliver (Harry Bosch) on set of 'Bosch: Legacy' season 3. Photo Credit: Eddy Chen/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Madison Lintz (Maddie Bosch) and Titus Welliver (Harry Bosch) on set of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 3. Photo Credit: Eddy Chen/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    MF: So, here is the million-dollar question: With the ‘Ballard’ series in the works, is it possible that we could see you return as Harry Bosch on that series at some point?

    TW: You never know. Hollywood is a strange and aerial place, right? There’s talk. Since this season has come out and it’s the final season clearly even on the poster and all the ads and everything. I have people coming up to me on the streets very vexed and not happy about it at all. But they’re also really enjoying this this season, which always makes me feel good because that’s what it is for. It is meant to entertain and to give our audiences that which they have invested so much time in, not only the viewers of the show, but the readers of the books. They get that it’s a kind of mutual gratification there. But the temperature in the public over the years has been very warm, and there’s a kind of personal connection that people feel with this character, which I find interesting. They feel a connection and a kind of ownership of the shows. I was just in in New York, and I had this one guy who was a New York cop say to me, “This is our show. We’ll let you know when we’re tired of watching it. So go back to these guys and tell them we’re not ready to go. We’ll let you know.” I was very moved by it, but it was also great because it was coming from a cop, and it had a genuine emotional tone to what he was saying. He wasn’t doing it with a smile. He was kind of emphatic in a way, which I was touched by.

    Det. Jimmy Robertson (Paul Calderon) in 'Bosch: Legacy' season 3. Photo Credit: Eddy Chen/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Det. Jimmy Robertson (Paul Calderon) in ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 3. Photo Credit: Eddy Chen/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    MF: Finally, can you talk about how this season ties up loose ends from not only ‘Legacy’ but the original series as well, and having the opportunity to bring back fan favorite characters like, for example, Paul Calderón’s Jimmy Robertson?

    TW: Paul Calderón and I have known each other for 30 years. Prior to even knowing him, I was always very aware of Paul. You know, we both come from New York. We’re New York theater guys and then we worked together a million years ago on a show called uh, ‘New York Undercover’. So we go that far back. His realization of the Jimmy Robertson character is an absolute chef’s kiss of work. First, you get an actor who brings a level of gravitas and we’ve been blessed over the years to have actors on the show that have a certain caliber. Obviously, any opportunity to see Crate (Gregory Scott Cummins) and Barrel (Troy Evans) again always brings a smile. I love those guys so dearly. I never had to really act with those guys. First, Troy Evans and I have known each other also for probably about 30 years and he and I are extremely close. Playing any element of humor or buoyancy with them, the hardest part of my job doing scenes with Troy and Greg was not losing it and cracking up because that was the banter that existed in between takes. We were all crying laughing. But to bring back Jimmy Robertson and then to circle back and that relationship between he and Bosch, their contemporaries, they are from the old school, and their relationship in the past has been contentious. He’s investigated Bosh once before and now he’s thrust into this. So, there’s mutual respect that exists there, but he saves Bosch’s life, and we see the beginning gestation of a different kind of relationship between those two characters. But Bosch maintains his silence about certain elements of things. Robertson respects that, but they move past that and the fact that Harry says, “Let’s do this again sooner than later”. So, as an audience remember, you go, “Oh, that’s cool. These guys, it’s not a love fest, but it’s a genuine relationship”. But we never get to see it realized and then his character is so suddenly taken out and that infuriates Bosch. So, then you see Bosch ignited into this parallel investigation, which leads and connects other threads. All cases are personal with Bosch, but I think in this season, when he’s hired to find this family that’s disappeared, any detective will tell you that all cases that they work, and I’m speaking particularly about murder cops, takes a piece of them. We see that with Harry and him looking into the abyss, but they will all say unanimously, the cases that haunt them are cases that involve children. So, Harry investigates the darkness probably deeper than he’s ever looked, maybe except for the times where he confronted the killer of his mother, and when he confronts Dockweiler, who kidnapped Maddie. We see an element of that with this. It penetrates him in a way. I think the audience will really worry and or question if this is something that will push Harry into a place of compromising his moral compass, which we know to be flawless, right? “Everybody counts or nobody counts”. But this one is very specific, and we see him unravel a bit.

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    What is the plot of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3?

    Season Three of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ is based on Michael Connelly’s best-selling novels ‘Desert Star’ (2022) and ‘The Black Ice’ (1993). The murder investigation of Kurt Dockweiler (David Denman) brings dangerous secrets to light and threatens to ruin the lives of our three principal characters. The disappearance of a family haunts Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) and forces him to confront the limits of justice. In a hotly contested race, Honey “Money” Chandler (Mimi Rogers) is poised to become the next District Attorney of Los Angeles, and Maddie Bosch (Madison Lintz) gets entangled in a series of violent follow-home robberies.

    Who stars in ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3?

    'Bosch: Legacy' Season 3 premieres on Prime Video March 27th.
    ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3 premieres on Prime Video March 27th.

    List of Movies and TV Shows Based on Michael Connelly Novels:

    Buy Titus Welliver Movies On Amazon

     

  • TV Review: ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3

    (L to R) Madison Lintz, Titus Welliver, and Mimi Rodgers star in 'Bosch: Legacy'. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Madison Lintz, Titus Welliver, and Mimi Rodgers star in ‘Bosch: Legacy’. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    ‘Bosch: Legacy’ receives 9.5 out of 10 stars

    Premiering March 27th on Prime Video is the third and final season of ‘Bosch: Legacy’, which is based on characters created by author Michael Connelly and is a continuation/spinoff of the groundbreaking seven season series, ‘Bosch’.

    The series once again stars Titus Welliver (‘The Town’) as Harry Bosch, Madison Lintz (‘Parental Guidance’) as his daughter Maddie Bosch, and Mimi Rogers (‘The Mighty Quinn’) as Honey “Money” Chandler.

    Season 3 will also see the return of original series actors Scott Klace (‘The Pursuit of Happyness’) as Sgt. John Mankiewicz, Gregory Scott Cummins (‘The Italian Job’) as Det. “Crate” Moore, Troy Evans (‘Ace Ventura: Pet Detective’) as Det. “Barrel” Johnson, Paul Calderón (‘King of New York’) as Det. Jimmy Robertson, and Jamie McShane (‘Wednesday’) as former Det. Francis Sheehan.

    Related Article: Titus Welliver and Mimi Rogers Talk ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2 and Beyond

    Initial Thoughts

    Titus Welliver (Harry Bosch) in 'Bosch: Legacy' Season 3. Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Titus Welliver (Harry Bosch) in ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3. Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    As a hardcore fan of both ‘Bosch’ and ‘Bosch Legacy’, it is bittersweet to think that season 3 of ‘Legacy’ will be the end of Harry Bosch’s story and the last time we’ll get to see Titus Welliver (pound for pound the best actor working on TV today) in his signature role … at least for now (more on that later).

    The third and final season of ‘Bosch Legacy’ picks up with a four-episode arc (which is all that we were allowed to see for this review), that completes the cliffhanger that season 2 ended with, as well as tying up loose ends from both this series and the original ‘Bosch’.

    (L to R) Honey Chandler (Mimi Rodgers) and Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) in 'Bosch: Legacy' Season 3. Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Honey Chandler (Mimi Rodgers) and Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) in ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3. Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    The first four episodes will lead the audience to begin to question everything they know about Harry Bosch, concluding in a redemption of sorts for the character. It also introduces another mystery, that presumably, will be the main plot in the remaining episodes.

    Welliver once again gives a powerful performance as Harry Bosch, and brings the character full circle while dealing with the demons of his past. Madison Lintz, who we’ve practically watched grow up on screen as Maddie Bosch, continues to stretch the character in new directions and her relationship with her father is still the heart of the series. While Mimi Rogers’ Honey “Money” Chandler, runs for District Attorney, and fends off a threat of her own, with Bosch’s assistance.

    Script and Direction

    (L to R) Honey Chandler (Mimi Rodgers) and Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) in 'Bosch: Legacy' Season 3. Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Honey Chandler (Mimi Rodgers) and Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) in ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3. Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    There are two different stories that run through the first four episodes of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 3. The main story involves an investigation into the death of Kurt Dockweiler (David Denman), the man who kidnapped Maddie (Lintz) at the end of ‘Legacy’ season 1. It is revealed at the end of season 2, that convicted criminal Preston Borders (Chris Browning) may have been involved, and that Harry (Welliver) may be involved too. With the current District Attorney, who is running for reelection against Honey Chandler (Rogers), eager to pin Dockweiler’s death on her friend Harry, Detective Jimmy Robertson (Calderón) and his new young partner (Miles Gaston Villanueva), are assigned to the case and begin investigating Harry.

    Meanwhile, Chandler gets a threatening visit from former Detective Francis Sheehan (McShane), and asks Bosch for protection. The secondary story, involves a new case Harry is working on involving a missing family. Along with his client – Orla Brady (Siobhan Murphy), and his associate Mo Bassi (Stephen Chang), Bosch begins to unravel the conspiracy behind their disappearance, while at the same time trying to defend himself and protect Maddie from Robertson’s investigation.

    Honey Chandler (Mimi Rogers) in 'Bosch: Legacy' Season 3. Photo Credit: Greg Gayne/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Honey Chandler (Mimi Rogers) in ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3. Photo Credit: Greg Gayne/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    At this point, ‘Bosch: Legacy’, and the entire franchise, is like a well-oiled machine. That’s not a criticism, but rather a fact. The tone, style, dialogue, locations, and music all fall into place perfectly and feels like an old familiar friend from the first frame of the new season. While season 3 does not start off with the same urgency that the previous season did, with the search for a missing Maddie, it is just as captivating watching past characters like Robertson and Sheehan return, and Harry have to defend his actions throughout his career.

    Harry Bosch has always walked a fine line between the law and justice, but has never crossed over it. ‘Legacy’ season 3 explores that notion and allows the audience to really question the character in a way we never have before. More importantly, it allows the character of Maddie to wonder if she really knows what her father is capable of and question his tactics for herself. But this threatens her relationship with Harry, as well as her own career, and is fertile dramatic ground to explore.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Det. Perry Lopez (Miles Gaston Villanueva) and Det. Jimmy Robertson (Paul Calderon) in 'Bosch: Legacy' Season 3. Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Det. Perry Lopez (Miles Gaston Villanueva) and Det. Jimmy Robertson (Paul Calderon) in ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3. Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Make no mistakes, ‘Bosch’ and ‘Bosch: Legacy’ have always been Titus Welliver’s shows, and a brilliant showcase for the veteran actor. Welliver fits the character of Harry Bosch like a glove, and I believe is now synonymous with the role created by Connelly in his popular novels.

    In my opinion, this is Welliver’s signature role, and the part he will be remembered for. I also believe that he has continually been the best actor on TV for over a decade now and it is an absolute travesty that this man has not at least been nominated once for an Emmy for playing this role. Shame on you Emmy voters!

    Welliver’s performance in the first four episodes is so reserved and layered, that if that isn’t an example of great acting, then I don’t know what is. And while he is certainly comfortable in the role after all these years, season to season, he is always growing the character in new and unusual ways, and never hesitates to take a risk or explore the different aspects of Harry’s complex personality.

    Maddie Bosch (Madison Lintz) in 'Bosch: Legacy' Season 3. Photo Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright. © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Maddie Bosch (Madison Lintz) in ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3. Photo Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright. © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    The heart of the series is still Harry’s relationship with Maddie, who we first met as a teenager and is now a member of the Los Angeles police department, just like her dad. Madison Lintz continues to shine as Maddie Bosch, and watching her relationship grow with her father over the course of the franchise, has been one of the highlights of the series. However, that relationship is truly tested this season, and Lintz is terrific navigating those emotions as Maddie questions her father’s legacy for herself.

    Mimi Rogers is given a lot to explore this season with Honey Chandler’s run for office, which I assume will carry through most of the season and resolve in the finale. Chandler was first introduced as an adversary to Harry, but part of the fun of the series has been watching them become close friends. She’s like a surrogate mother to Maddie now, and one of Harry’s closest allies. Rogers has been excellent in the role from day one, but she is given more to do this season, including introducing Chandler’s own daughter into the mix.

    As a fan, its great seeing Paul Calderón and Jamie McShane return as Detective Jimmy Robertson, and former Detective Francis Sheehan, respectively. It’s kind of like a high school reunion or seeing old friends. But with this being the end of the Harry’s story, at least for now, I hope that the finale includes a few more familiar faces from the franchise like Grace Billets (Amy Aquino), and of course, Jamie Hector as Jerry Edgar. Dear Producers: You can’t end the series without J. Edgar!!!

    Will we ever see Harry Bosch again?

    Titus Welliver (Harry Bosch) in 'Bosch: Legacy' Season 3. Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Titus Welliver (Harry Bosch) in ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3. Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Which brings us to the big question: Is this really the last we’ll see of Harry Bosch? Maybe, and maybe not. Season 3 of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ also promises to introduce a new character, Detective Renée Ballard played by Maggie Q (‘Live Free or Die Hard’). She is a cold case investigator, and while the character does not appear in the first four episodes provided for review, she does appear in a scene with Harry that was included in a preview of the remainder of the season. Presumably, she and Harry will team up together before the season’s end.

    Prime Video is also developing a spinoff for Q and the Ballard character, so the “Bosch Legacy” really will live on, but it is unclear if Harry himself will appear on the proposed new series. In fact, it was recently announced that Titus Welliver has signed on for a potential spinoff of CBS’ ‘The Equalizer’, which could indicate that he is not planning to return to the character anytime soon, but never say never.

    Final Thoughts

    Titus Welliver (Harry Bosch) in 'Bosch: Legacy' Season 3. Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Titus Welliver (Harry Bosch) in ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3. Credit: Tyler Golden/Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    While it is sad to think that we will never see Titus Welliver play Harry Bosch again, fans still have the new season to enjoy and will not be disappointed. After eleven years of playing the character on TV (if you count both series), Welliver’s performance is just as powerful and complex as ever, and the final season is a fitting send off to one of the best TV cops of all time.

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    What is the plot of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3?

    Season Three of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ is based on Michael Connelly’s best-selling novels ‘Desert Star’ (2022) and ‘The Black Ice’ (1993). The murder investigation of Kurt Dockweiler (David Denman) brings dangerous secrets to light and threatens to ruin the lives of our three principal characters. The disappearance of a family haunts Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) and forces him to confront the limits of justice. In a hotly contested race, Honey “Money” Chandler (Mimi Rogers) is poised to become the next District Attorney of Los Angeles, and Maddie Bosch (Madison Lintz) gets entangled in a series of violent follow-home robberies.

    Who stars in ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3?

    • Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch,
    • Madison Lintz as Maddie Bosch
    • Mimi Rogers as Honey ‘Money” Chandler
    • Stephen A. Chang as Maurice “Mo” Bassi
    • Denise Sanchez as Det. Reina Vasquez
    • Siobhan Murphy as Orla Brady
    • Scott Klace as Sergeant Mank
    • Paul Calderón as Detective Jimmy Robertson
    • Miles Gaston Villanueva as Det. Perry Lopez
    • Jamie McShane as Detective Francis Sheehan
    • David Denman as Kurt Dockweiler
    • Chris Browning as Preston Borders
    'Bosch: Legacy' Season 3 premieres on Prime Video March 27th.
    ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 3 premieres on Prime Video March 27th.

    List of Movies and TV Shows Based on Michael Connelly Novels:

    Buy Titus Welliver Movies On Amazon

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  • ‘Bosch: Legacy’ to End with Season 3

    Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch on 'Bosch: Legacy' season 2. Credit: Tyler Golden/Amazon Freevee. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.
    Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch on ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2. Credit: Tyler Golden/Amazon Freevee. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

    Preview:

    • Prime Video and Freevee have announced that ‘Bosch: Legacy’ is to end.
    • Titus Welliver stars in the show as former LAPD detective Harry Bosch.
    • The series’ final season will be on screens next year.

    We recently learned that Prime Video has decided to wrap its Freevee ads-based service in with its main offerings (especially now that all of Prime Video carries commercials unless viewers pay an extra fee).

    With that, we’re also now getting word that one of Freevee’s biggest shows is coming to an end.

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    Bosch: Legacy,’ which continued the story of novelist Michael Connelly’s veteran LAPD detective Harry Bosch –– brought to life with winning grumpy power by Titus Welliver across seven seasons of original Prime Video series ‘Bosch,’ launched in 2022.

    Its third season, due in March next year, will be its last.

    What’s the story of ‘Bosch: Legacy’?

    (L to R) Officer Reina Vasquez (Denise G. Sanchez) and Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) in season 2 of 'Bosch: Legacy.' Photo Credit: Warrick Page.
    (L to R) Officer Reina Vasquez (Denise G. Sanchez) and Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) in season 2 of ‘Bosch: Legacy.’ Photo Credit: Warrick Page.

    ‘Bosch: Legacy’ follows Bosch, the retired homicide detective-turned-private investigator, as he embarks on the next chapter of his career; attorney Honey “Money” Chandler (Mimi Rogers), who struggles to maintain her faith in the justice system after surviving a murder attempt; and Maddie Bosch (Madison Lintz), as she discovers the possibilities and challenges of being a rookie patrol cop on the streets of Los Angeles.

    Related Article: Titus Welliver and Mimi Rogers Talk ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2 and Beyond

    ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Ends: The Producer and Studio Talk

    Author and 'Bosch: Legacy' Season 2 executive producer Michael Connelly.
    Author and ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2 executive producer Michael Connelly.

    Here’s executive producer Connelly’s statement on the show:

    “I am so proud of what we have accomplished with this show. Ten years ago I asked Titus Welliver if he could stick with Harry Bosch for five seasons, and he said he could do it forever. Well, five became 10, and the character, thanks to Titus, will live forever in the hearts of viewers and in the streaming world as the detective who knows that everybody counts, or nobody counts. The good news here is that we have not seen the last of Harry Bosch. As in the books, Bosch is part of the Renée Ballard world, and I can’t wait for the next chapter to open.”

    And this is what Vernon Sanders, Head of Television at Amazon MGM Studios said in a statement:

    “For 10 years, Bosch and Bosch: Legacy have been two of our most defining series for Prime Video, Freevee and Amazon MGM Studios. They are a testament to the enduring power of the storytelling universe that Michael Connelly built for the fans. We are proud of the impact these series have made, and we are excited that Michael, Titus, Henrik and the creative team have more engaging stories to tell in the Bosch world with the final season of Bosch: Legacy, our new Ballard series and more to come.”

    Is this really the end of ‘Bosch’ on TV?

    Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch in 'Bosch: Legacy.' Photo: Tyler Golden. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.
    Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch in ‘Bosch: Legacy.’ Photo: Tyler Golden. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

    Of course not! As Connelly alludes, the next iteration, which will follow the character of Renée Ballard (played by Maggie Q), is due in 2025.

    The untitled series follows Detective Ballard, who is tasked with running the LAPD’s new cold-case unit — a poorly funded, all-volunteer unit with the largest case load in the city. Ballard approaches these frozen-in-time cases with empathy and determination. When she uncovers a larger conspiracy during her investigations, she’ll lean on the assistance of her retired ally, Harry Bosch (Welliver), to navigate the dangers that threaten both her unit and her life.

    'Bosch: Legacy' season 2 premieres October 20th on Freevee.
    ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2 premieres October 20th on Freevee.

    List of Movies and TV Shows Based on Michael Connelly Novels:

    Buy Titus Welliver Movies On Amazon

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  • Maggie Q to Lead ‘Bosch’ Spin-Off Series

    Maggie Q as Tess in the action/thriller, 'Fear the Night,' a Quiver Distribution release.
    Maggie Q as Tess in the action/thriller, ‘Fear the Night,’ a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.

    Preview:

    • Another ‘Bosch’ series is in development at Prime Video.
    • Maggie Q will star as the character of Renée Ballard.
    • Titus Welliver is likely to show up as Harry Bosch.

    The “Bosch-iverse” based on author Michael Connelly’s grumpy LAPD (and now retired) detective character has proven to be quite the fertile franchise ground for Amazon’s Prime Video.

    We had seven seasons of the main ‘Bosch’ show adapted from the books and starring Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch between 2014 and 2021. He’s a man unafraid of digging into Los Angeles’ darkest corners to figure out cryptic violent crimes, partially driven by the ghosts of his past, including the unsolved murder of his mother.

    That was followed by the ongoing series ‘Bosch: Legacy’ on ad-supported sibling channel Freevee, which sees a retired Harry working as a private eye and allied with his one-time enemy Honey Chandler (Mimi Rogers).

    Mimi Rogers as Honey “Money” Chandler and Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch on 'Bosch: Legacy' season 2.
    (L to R) Mimi Rogers as Honey “Money” Chandler and Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch on ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2. Credit: Tyler Golden/Amazon Freevee. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

    Looking to keep the ‘Bosch’ party going (and this time back on the main Prime Video service), the company has now commissioned a second spin-off, this time one not featuring Harry Bosch.

    Instead, Maggie Q will star in an untitled new show about Detective Renée Ballard, a character from another series of Connelly’s books, albeit one where Bosch pops up from time to time.

    Related Article: Titus Welliver and Mimi Rogers Talk ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2 and Beyond

    What’s the story of the new ‘Bosch’ spin-off?

    It’s personal for Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) as season 2 of 'Bosch: Legacy' kicks off with a two episode premiere this fall on Amazon Freevee.
    It’s personal for Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) as season 2 of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ kicks off with a two episode premiere this fall on Amazon Freevee. Photo Credit: Tyler Golden.

    The new series follows Ballard, who is tasked with running the LAPD’s new cold case division — a poorly funded, all-volunteer unit with the largest case load in the city. Ballard approaches these frozen-in-time cases with empathy and determination. When she uncovers a larger conspiracy during her investigations, she’ll lean on the assistance of her retired ally, Harry Bosch (Welliver), to navigate the dangers that threaten both her unit and her life.

    This new show will be based on the Ballard books, of which there are six. The character was introduced in 2017 tome ‘The Late Show’, named after the night shift, called “the late show,” that she works. It was followed by ‘Dark Sacred Night’ in 2018, ‘The Night Fire’ in 2019, ‘The Dark Hours’ in 2021 and ‘Desert Star’ in 2022. The sixth book, ‘The Waiting’, is scheduled for release on November 5th.

    Who is making the new ‘Bosch’ spin-off?

    Author and 'Bosch: Legacy' Season 2 executive producer Michael Connelly.
    Author and ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2 executive producer Michael Connelly.

    Michael Alaimo and Kendall Sherwood will run the new show, which is now in pre-production, while Connelly is as usual involved as a writer and producer.

    Now, if only Amazon and Netflix could work out a deal, so we can have the TV version of Connelly’s other big character, ‘The Lincoln Lawyer‘ (with Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller) crossover with the Bosch-iverse…

    When will the new ‘Bosch’ spin-off be on screens?

    With the show at a relatively early stage, there is no official release date on the books just yet. ‘Bosch’ fans will for now have to content themselves with the third season of ‘Bosch: Legacy’, which is filming and could well be out later this year.

    Maggie Q as Tess in the action/thriller, 'Fear the Night,' a Quiver Distribution release.
    Maggie Q as Tess in the action/thriller, ‘Fear the Night,’ a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Bosch: Legacy:’

    Buy Maggie Q Movies On Amazon

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  • ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2 Interview: Titus Welliver and Mimi Rogers

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    Currently available on Freevee in its entirety is the second season of ‘Bosch: Legacy,’ which is a follow up series to Prime Video’s ‘Bosch’ and based on the popular novels by author Michael Connelly (‘The Lincoln Lawyer’).

    Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch and Mimi Rogers as Honey “Money” Chandler on 'Bosch: Legacy' season 2.
    (L to R) Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch and Mimi Rogers as Honey “Money” Chandler on ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2. Credit: Tyler Golden/Amazon Freevee. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Titus Welliver and Mimi Rogers about their work on ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2, what playing Hieronymus “Harry” Bosch and Honey “Money” Chandler has been like for both of them, respectively, how Harry’s relationship with Maddie has grown over the years and how that was jeopardized by the season 2 cliffhanger, Honey’s relationship with Maddie, shooting her final scene with the late Lance Reddick, his importance to the franchise, and what fans can expect from season 3.

    Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch on 'Bosch: Legacy' season 2.
    Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch on ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2. Credit: Tyler Golden/Amazon Freevee. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch the interview.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Titus, Harry Bosch has really become your signature character and you will forever be recognized for this role. At this point in your career, what does it mean to you to be on a long-lasting series like this and have the chance to bring Michael Connelly’s popular literary character alive on screen?

    Titus Welliver: Look, it’s an absolute dream come true. I mean, I always thought that if I was going to do a series, I would really hope that it offered the sustenance that would carry me through, and the writers have delivered that in spades. I get to work with incredible actors. I mean, I’ve got Mimi and Madison Lintz, Denise Sanchez and Stephen Chang, but over the years, it’s been a revolving door of great guest actors. I’ll do it for another 30 years if they’ll have me. I mean, Mimi joked earlier she was saying, “We’re going to do Bosch and Chandler at the retirement home, which will be called ‘Bosch: Sedentary.’” But it never gets old, and there’s always new stuff to find. Although he’s so clearly defined in the books, there’s those little movements of evolution for Harry. There’s never something where you go, “Oh, he’s a different guy.” He’s the same guy, but he’s always in a state of forward movement. They do a great job of throwing avenues for me to take Harry down, and it’s endlessly rewarding.

    Mimi Rogers as Honey "Money" Chandler on 'Bosch: Legacy' season 2.
    Mimi Rogers as Honey “Money” Chandler on ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2. Credit: Tyler Golden/Amazon Freevee. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

    MF: Mimi, what has it been like for you to have this opportunity to explore Honey Chandler over all these seasons and get to work with Titus and Michael Connelly on this franchise?

    Mimi Rogers: Well, it really is a dream come true. It’s not often as an actor that you have the luxury of playing a character over such a long period of time. It’s really through that that you can continue to evolve and find new elements and new areas of creativity. Again, like I said, it’s very rare to have an opportunity to play a character for this long, and I’ve been doing this a long time. This is probably my favorite character and my favorite job, my favorite situation of all time. It’s Michael Connelly’s amazing books. It’s working with Titus. It’s working in LA. We don’t have to leave home. It’s a character, for a woman of a certain age, who’s not a grandmother or a mother or an aunt or a girlfriend, or an ex-wife. She’s Honey Chandler. She’s a fully-fledged character who’s professional and dynamic and intelligent and strong. Seriously, what could be better?

    Related Article: Author and Producer Michael Connelly Talks ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2

    Madison Lintz as Maddie Bosch and Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch on 'Bosch: Legacy' season 2.
    (L to R) Madison Lintz as Maddie Bosch and Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch on ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2. Credit: Tyler Golden/Amazon Freevee. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

    MF: Titus, from the original series all the way to ‘Legacy,’ we’ve really watched Maddie Bosch grow up in front of our eyes. She’s been through so much in this past season alone with her abduction at the beginning and Harry’s betrayal of her at the end. Can you talk about how that relationship has grown and changed, working with Maddison Lintz, and where that relationship might go in season 3?

    TW: Well, originally that character was going to kind of come into play maybe for a couple of episodes, and then seeing the chemistry that Madison and I had together, but also the idea of, Harry’s always this kind of isolated lone wolf character. But now if you create a relationship or Harry can be gotten to because he has a vulnerability and an exposure that didn’t exist before because she’s been living away from him, and he didn’t raise her. So, then you bring her into his life and she’s right at that age moving into a teenager, and then there’s that rocky thing. Harry did not have the skillset. He doesn’t know anything about parenting, so it’s all sort of improvised. Then you move it to the place of her as a young adult. Working with Madison, for me, is that you, the audience, have watched her grow up on this show, I’ve had the experience of being able to watch her mature and spread her wings as an artist, going from a child to a young woman. From the beginning, I was always very protective, and I remain the same way. Even though now she’s a grown woman, there’s a cocoon that exists. There’s a sphere, a bubble that is only for Madison and me to exist in that when we’re doing those scenes. We don’t over-rehearse things. We know who these characters are now. We know the dynamics and the relationship, but what we do is we just create a place that’s sacrosanct and it works well. Look, sometimes art imitates life. I know that when Madison started dating, I kept saying, “Oh, when am I going to meet…” She said, “I’m never bringing him to the set. That’s not going to happen because I know that you’ll do something.” I said, “No, what am I going to do? Don’t be ridiculous.” But to be able to witness that as a fellow traveler, it’s incredibly rewarding. I think in this season, we had an ability to move that relationship to the highest stakes emotionally, both individually and together, and it carries through. I think when after you’re dealing with what’s going on in real time in the first two episodes, and then there’s the aftermath and/or the recovery, so even though time has passed, you really do clearly see the thread there as to what’s going on. It’s just the gift that keeps on giving, truly.

    Mimi Rogers as Honey “Money” Chandler and Madison Lintz as Maddie Bosch on 'Bosch: Legacy' season 2.
    (L to R) Mimi Rogers as Honey “Money” Chandler and Madison Lintz as Maddie Bosch on ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2. Credit: Tyler Golden/Amazon Freevee. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

    MF: Mimi, Honey has really become a surrogate mother for Maddie in a way and was pivotal in Harry’s search for her at the beginning of the season. Can you talk about how her relationship to Maddie has really brought Harry and Honey closer together throughout the years?

    MR: I mean, it’s interesting because in some odd way, we’re kind of a family unit, and particularly during the time Maddie was working for me in the law office. Between that and then both of us having been targeted by Carl Rogers and what we went through, she and I share a very strong bond, and I think it was a tremendous opportunity for us to see a different side of Chandler’s character. But she cares very much for this young woman in kind of a maternal way. She and Harry have been through all sorts of different phases of their relationship. But this is another way that they’re connected because as you see in the first two episodes, and particularly in the second episode, Honey will do anything. Maddie, she’s not my child, it’s different than what Bosch has but on the next level, she’ll do anything to protect Madison. She’ll do anything to help, and she cares very deeply. So, I love when they intersperse through the series moments where Chandler and Maddie just get to hang out together. Even when she was moving out, I was joking like, “Well, I live in this big house. Why don’t you just have her move in with me? We’ll be roommates.” But it’s been terrific.

    Mimi Rogers as Honey "Money" Chandler and Lance Reddick as Irvin Irving on 'Bosch: Legacy' season 2.
    (L to R) Mimi Rogers as Honey “Money” Chandler and Lance Reddick as Irvin Irving on ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2. Credit: Tyler Golden/Amazon Freevee. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

    MF: Season 2 of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ was dedicated to the late Lance Reddick, who makes his final ‘Bosch’ appearance in the finale. Mimi, you shared that scene with Lance, what was it like working with him on that day?

    MR: Well, that’s one of the few times that Lance, and I had the opportunity to work together, certainly one-on-one, so I hadn’t had the opportunity to get to know him as well as everybody else. Just a gentle giant, just the sweetest guy ever. It came as a terrible shock to all of us, his passing. We had a lovely time shooting that scene. He’s such an imposing figure when you look at him on screen and then when you know him, when you see him in life, he was just a gentle, giant, kind of shy, and just very sweet.

    Lance Reddick as Irvin Irving on 'Bosch: Legacy' season 2.
    Lance Reddick as Irvin Irving on ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2. Credit: Tyler Golden/Amazon Freevee. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

    MF: Titus, do you have any memories of working with Lance on the series that you could share, and can you talk about his importance to the ‘Bosch’ universe?

    TW: Well, Lance and I have been friends over 20 something years, so we knew each other long before we ever did ‘Bosch’ together. I remember having to have a nudging conversation with him because he, at first, didn’t want to sign on to play another cop, to which I just said, “Look, you don’t understand. This is going to be something completely different and look at who is involved and who’s writing and who’s producing. Look at the source material.” Thank God he made the decision to come on and do the show. I mean, the character of Irving, I feel like Irving and the city of Los Angeles were these two bookends with Harry in the middle of it. We saw Irving, he was a very political animal. He’d been a righteous cop, but we also found out later that he had played around with evidence in the Preston Borders case, and Harry called him out on that. Irving, he was a very smart guy. He was a good cop. I think certainly the season where Bosch and Irving team up to find who killed his son, for Lance and me, that was great. We were both always giggling about the fact that, “Oh, all we ever do is he comes in, and he goes, ‘BOSCH.’” We were like, “Look, let’s put them together.” The scene in which he discovers his son in the supermarket, to me, is probably one of the most heartbreaking scenes and depictions of that kind of loss. It blew me away. I mean, I watched it repeatedly. It’s very, very hard to talk about him without it being emotional. He was not my friend; he was my brother. I loved and adored him. We were very close. His departure was a shock. It was a body blow, and it has left a wound in many people’s hearts that I don’t think will ever heal. It will heal in the abstract sense of that. But I miss him terribly. When that scene came up with, he and Mimi. In the end, I cried like a baby, as I’m sure many people did, certainly the people that knew him and loved him. I don’t know, it’s kind of inexplicable. I’m inarticulate in being able to express the magnitude of respect and love that I had for him. I mean, pound for pound, one of the greatest actors of our generation, without question. I miss him. I miss him, terribly.

    Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch on 'Bosch: Legacy' season 2.
    Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch on ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2. Credit: Tyler Golden/Amazon Freevee. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

    MF: Finally, I understand that season 3 will begin shooting early next year. What can you tell the fans to tease them about the upcoming season?

    TW: Well, honestly, we really don’t know because everything kind of collided at the beginning of the writers’ room opening back up again, then the next thing, boom, we were back after the strike. We have a sense of what the framework is, but we really don’t know anything. I mean, obviously we closed on a cliffhanger, so it wasn’t closed, and that’s up for interpretation and extrapolation, I think, in the audience’s mind between now and when it comes out. Mimi and I and everybody else are certainly curious about what’s going to happen there. But what I can assure you is the conversations that I have with the writers and the producers is on the level of excitement, which it always is. We’re like little kids hoping for a new bike, and Mimi and I and Madison and everyone involved, we get new bikes every year, so we’re excited. But I could make something up, but then you won’t be my friend anymore, so I’m not going to do that.

    Mimi Rogers as Honey “Money” Chandler and Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch on 'Bosch: Legacy' season 2.
    (L to R) Mimi Rogers as Honey “Money” Chandler and Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch on ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2. Credit: Tyler Golden/Amazon Freevee. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

    What is the plot of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2?

    Continuing where ‘Bosch’ season 7 left off, ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 1 saw Hieronymus “Harry” Bosch (Titus Welliver) retiring from the LAPD and working as a private investigator for defense attorney Honey “Money” Chandler (Mimi Rogers). Harry begins investigating businessman Carl Rogers (Michael Rose), who previously hired a hitman to kill Chandler in the final season of ‘Bosch.’ Meanwhile, Bosch’s daughter, Maddie (Madison Lintz), navigates her first days as a patrol officer with the LAPD, working from Hollywood Station, where her father used to be assigned.

    The first season of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ ended with Maddie being kidnapped by a serial rapist that she was investigating, and season 2 begins with Bosch and his former partner Jerry Edgar (Jamie Hector) leading the manhunt to find Maddie. The rest of the season is based on Connelly’s book, ‘The Crossing,’ and ties up loose ends from both series.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2?

    Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch and Mimi Rogers as Honey “Money” Chandler on 'Bosch: Legacy' season 2.
    (L to R) Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch and Mimi Rogers as Honey “Money” Chandler on ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2. Credit: Tyler Golden/Amazon Freevee. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Bosch: Legacy:’

    Buy Titus Welliver Movies On Amazon

  • ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2 Interview: Michael Connelly

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    Bosch: Legacy,’ which is a follow up series to Prime Video’s ‘Bosch’ and based on the popular novels by author Michael Connelly (‘The Lincoln Lawyer’), will premiere its second season on Freevee beginning October 20th.

    What is the plot of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2?

    Continuing where ‘Bosch’ season 7 left off, ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 1 saw Hieronymus “Harry” Bosch (Titus Welliver) retiring from the LAPD and working as a private investigator for defense attorney Honey “Money” Chandler (Mimi Rogers). Harry begins investigating businessman Carl Rogers (Michael Rose), who previously hired a hitman to kill Chandler in the final season of ‘Bosch.’ Meanwhile, Bosch’s daughter, Maddie (Madison Lintz), navigates her first days as a patrol officer with the LAPD, working from Hollywood Station, where her father used to be assigned.

    The first season of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ ended with Maddie being kidnapped by a serial rapist that she was investigating, and season 2 begins with Bosch and his former partner Jerry Edgar (Jamie Hector) leading the manhunt to find Maddie. The rest of the season is based on Connelly’s book, ‘The Crossing,’ and ties up loose ends from both series.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2?

    It’s personal for Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) as season 2 of 'Bosch: Legacy' kicks off with a two episode premiere this fall on Amazon Freevee.
    It’s personal for Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) as season 2 of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ kicks off with a two episode premiere this fall on Amazon Freevee. Photo Credit: Tyler Golden.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with author and executive producer Michael Connelly about season 2 of ‘Bosch: Legacy,’ paying off the season 1 cliffhanger, bringing back actors from the original ‘Bosch’ series, working with Titus Welliver, the late great Lance Reddick, and if a crossover between ‘Bosch: Legacy’ and ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’ could ever happen.

    Author and 'Bosch: Legacy' Season 2 executive producer Michael Connelly.
    Author and ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2 executive producer Michael Connelly.

    Moviefone: To begin with, season 2 of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ begins with the search for Maddie Bosch. Can you talk about where the characters are emotionally when the new season begins, and choosing to adapt your book ‘The Crossing’ for the second part of this season?

    Michael Connelly: Well, we ended season one with a pretty big cliffhanger, probably the biggest in the history of the show, and we have to pay that off, but it’s also a very high stakes emotional thing. Also, we extended the hiatus of the show. We were coming out in the summer, and now we moved it to October, so we also knew people would really be waiting and wondering. So, we decided to go with the search for Maddie Bosch and close that story early in. The first two episodes are almost like a movie. In fact, they’re actually going to play it in some theaters, because it functions as a film, basically, when the first two episodes are cut together. They do plant the seeds of ‘The Crossing’ as well, so we went into this with two ideas. One is, let’s come to a conclusion on the Maddie cliffhanger, because we just didn’t think it would be fair. You got to be fair to the viewers and readers of books and so forth. So, we didn’t want to string that out for 10 episodes, so we take care of that, and then set up ‘The Crossing.’ Why did we do ‘The Crossing?’ Because the new show, ‘Legacy,’ is a three lead show, and we can’t have three storylines going off in different directions. They have to come together, they got to entwine around each other, so we’re looking for story that will bring them all together. ‘The Crossing’ seemed perfect, because it’s about Harry Bosch working for Money Chandler. She’s not in the book ‘The Crossing,’ Mickey Haller (from ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’) is, but we realized how we could replace him with her in our storytelling. So, right there, we have connections. It’s not an easy connection, Harry Bosch was a homicide cop, worked for the other side of the aisle for all those decades, and so he’s a reluctant guy to do it. But we would tap into his innate sense of fairness, and that would be if somebody is innocent, if someone is wrongly accused, then there’s somebody out there who’s gotten away with this. That’s what motivates him and connects him to the case and allows us to go from there. Then that’s intertwining of two characters, Money Chandler and Harry Bosch. But Harry’s daughter is a cop, and of course she’s going to run across aspects of this case and then it all churns together into a pretty big set piece. Maddie Bosch is intrinsic to this story as well by the time we reach the end.

    First look at Jerry Edgar’s (Jamie Hector) epic return to 'Bosch: Legacy' for season 2.
    First look at Jerry Edgar’s (Jamie Hector) epic return to ‘Bosch: Legacy’ for season 2. Photo Credit: Greg Gayne.

    MF: Can you talk about “putting the band back together” by bringing back original ‘Bosch’ actors Jamie Hector, Gregory Scott Cummins, Troy Evans, and others for this new season of ‘Bosch: Legacy’?

    MC: Yeah, it’s fun. You said “bring the band back together,” that’s right. We had a very lucky run, seven years, of the original show, and so we became a family. Anytime we can bring one of those characters back, we want to do it. We’re developing other shows, and so we want to keep everyone in this universe active and alive, we don’t want to forget about Jamie Hector as Jerry Edgar, because we might see him again in an expanded role. Then, the books are pretty serious and dark. Early on, I credit Eric Overmyer, the showrunner, he said, “We got to bring some humor to this.” So, he created the characters of Crate and Barrel and we got to keep those guys going. I love every minute they’re on-screen, I love being in the writing room when we talk about the stuff we can do with them and the arguments they can have. That’s all great stuff and we got to keep it going.

    Related Article: TV Review: ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2

    Officer Reina Vasquez (Denise G. Sanchez) and Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) in season 2 of 'Bosch: Legacy.'
    (L to R) Officer Reina Vasquez (Denise G. Sanchez) and Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) in season 2 of ‘Bosch: Legacy.’ Photo Credit: Warrick Page.

    MF: The casting of Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch might be one of the most perfect marriages of actor and character in the history of television. Can you talk about his performance this season and what it’s been like to work with him over the years and watch him bring the character you created to life on screen?

    MC: Yeah, he is an amazing. Just take his performance in the first episode of this new season. So, we’re nine seasons in and the guy keeps raising the bar. His performance through it all has been amazing, and he is Harry Bosch! I write the character in books and so forth, but he’s Harry Bosch. I love to give myself credit, because I was the one who suggested him about 12 years ago. He went through all the jumps, hurdles, auditions and all of that, and then he ends up getting the job. So I’m proud of that. But I think way back then, I saw something in him. His ability to project the darkness that’s inside, and that was a key thing, because the books are very internal in terms of his internal thinking, and that goes out the window when you write scripts and make a show. But he’s able to pick up that and present it. That’s the key, I think, to the success of the show, that people who know the books or don’t know the books view him as a very accurate portrayal of a guy who’s seen a lot, carries that PTSD trauma inside, and gives forward his best effort.

    Lance Reddick as Irvin Irving on Prime Video's 'Bosch.'
    Lance Reddick as Irvin Irving on Prime Video’s ‘Bosch.’ Photo: Aaron Epstein. Copyright: Amazon Studios

    MF: The first episode of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2 is dedicated to the late great actor Lance Reddick, who played Chief Irving on all seven seasons of the original ‘Bosch’ series. Can you talk about your relationship with him and his legacy in the ‘Bosch’ universe?

    MC: It’s actually difficult to talk about it, because as I said before, you become a family. You do 12-hour days and there’s so much downtime as you’re setting things up, and there’s a lot of circle around the campfire, sitting in chairs, and waiting. So, you get to know people way beyond the character they’re playing and what they’re trying to accomplish in life with family, with work and so forth. Lance was a big part of that over the last nine years. I can’t believe how long we’ve been able to do this. But I remember crystal clear being on a location scout, and him calling me and telling me where he was thinking about taking the role, wanting to know how different it would be, and how it had to be different from the character he played in ‘The Wire.’ Somehow I convinced him to give it a shot, and we ended up with seven seasons together. I think it was a different character, and I think he was very fulfilled by the character. The friendship we had … he was just one of the best people I’ve ever known. But also, I’ve really been punched in the heart by his loss.

    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller in 'The Lincoln Lawyer.'
    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller in ‘The Lincoln Lawyer.’ Photo: Lara Solanki/Netflix © 2023.

    MF: Finally, fans of your novels are aware that Harry Bosch and Mickey Haller are half-brothers in your books. Is there any chance that there could ever be a crossover between Netflix’s ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’ and Freevee’s ‘Bosch: Legacy,’ or is that simply impossible because of the two different streaming services that are involved?

    MC: I don’t know, I think it might take an act of Congress or something, so I just don’t think it could ever happen. I would love it to happen. I think the fan base for that would be huge, but it’s like you got to get Jeff Bezos and Ted Sarandos together in a room and maybe they can negotiate that. But we’ll see. But the replacement for that is Money Chandler, so I’m turning this back into ‘Bosch: Legacy,’ and her performance. What we do with her is just so good and so fulfilling to me, especially on a level because she’s not in the books. To go back to your question, I doubt that will ever happen, but I’m not worried about that, because I have Money Chandler in ‘Bosch: Legacy.’ But I’m in a good position to have a show that’s doing well on both of these services and very thankful for that.

    'Bosch: Legacy' season 2 premieres October 20th on Freevee.
    ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2 premieres October 20th on Freevee.

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  • TV Review: ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2

    'Bosch: Legacy' season 2 premieres October 20th on Freevee.
    ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2 premieres October 20th on Freevee.

    Premiering on Freevee beginning October 20th is the second season of the hit series ‘Bosch: Legacy,’ which is a follow up series to Prime Video’s ‘Bosch’ and based on the popular novels by author Michael Connelly (‘The Lincoln Lawyer‘).

    What is the plot of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2?

    Picking up where ‘Bosch’ season 7 left off, ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 1 saw Hieronymus “Harry” Bosch (Titus Welliver) retiring from the LAPD and working as a private investigator for defense attorney Honey “Money” Chandler (Mimi Rogers). Harry begins investigating businessman Carl Rogers (Michael Rose), who previously hired a hitman to kill Chandler in the final season of ‘Bosch.’ Meanwhile, Bosch’s daughter, Maddie (Madison Lintz), navigates her first days as a patrol officer with the LAPD, working from Hollywood Station, where her father used to be assigned.

    The first season of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ ended with Maddie being kidnapped by a serial rapist that she was investigating, and season 2 begins with Bosch and his former partner Jerry Edgar (Jamie Hector) leading the manhunt to find Maddie. The rest of the season is based on Connelly’s book, ‘The Crossing,’ and ties up loose ends from both series.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2?

    Initial Thoughts

    Officer Reina Vasquez (Denise G. Sanchez) and Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) in season 2 of 'Bosch: Legacy.'
    (L to R) Officer Reina Vasquez (Denise G. Sanchez) and Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) in season 2 of ‘Bosch: Legacy.’ Photo Credit: Warrick Page.

    ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2 delivers an exciting and personal arc for the lead character, while also bringing back some familiar faces from the ‘Bosch’ universe. Titus Welliver returns with another powerful and commanding performance as Harry Bosch, who is desperately searching for his missing daughter.

    Story and character arcs

    Madison Lintz in 'Bosch: Legacy Season 2.'
    (Bottom) Madison Lintz in ‘Bosch: Legacy Season 2.’ Credit: Warrick Page/Amazon Freevee. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

    The first season of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ ended with Madeline Bosch (Lintz) being kidnapped, and the new season picks up in the aftermath of that event. No longer a cop, Harry Bosch (Welliver) finds himself in unfamiliar territory, unable to lead the hunt to find his daughter and having to rely on his old partner Jerry Edgar (Hector) and the rest of the LAPD to save Maddie. Of course, Bosch is not willing to waste a moment and bumps heads with Jerry and other members of the LAPD along the way, eventually taking matters into his own hands and recruiting Honey Chandler (Rogers) and Mo Bassi (Chang) to help him with his search.

    The “Search for Maddie” storyline plays out over two episodes and is basically a ‘Bosch’ movie. In fact, the first two episodes will be released in theaters, so fans can watch it on the big screen. While the storyline is a bit like ‘Taken,’ it feels fresh and original to the show and is acted with urgency by Welliver. The character that he has created, and the relationship with Maddie that we’ve seen grow over seven seasons of the original ‘Bosch’ and the first season of ‘Legacy’ is pivotal to this story arc working. It’s a fun and surprisingly emotional opening to the new season, and nicely ties up the season one cliffhanger. The rest of the season follows Michael Connolly’s ‘The Crossing,’ and introduces a new challenge for Bosch and Chandler, while tying up loose ends from the previous season.

    Titus Welliver is Harry Bosch

    It’s personal for Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) as season 2 of 'Bosch: Legacy' kicks off with a two episode premiere this fall on Amazon Freevee.
    It’s personal for Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) as season 2 of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ kicks off with a two episode premiere this fall on Amazon Freevee. Photo Credit: Tyler Golden.

    Before ‘Bosch,’ Titus Welliver was a journeyman actor, best known for roles in ‘Deadwood,’ ‘Lost,’ ‘Sons of Anarchy’ and Ben Affleck movies like ‘Gone Baby Gone’ and ‘The Town.’ But playing the title character on ‘Bosch,’ and now ‘Bosch: Legacy’ has made Welliver a household name and a bona fide TV star. Playing Michael Connolly’s beloved literary character, Welliver has found depth and new levels in the role bringing him alive on screen in an authentic and captivating way.

    It is a perfect marriage of actor and character and that continues with the new season of ‘Legacy.’ Welliver is comfortable in the role and gives a commanding and emotional performance, especially in the first few episodes. It’s one of the rare times that an actor is so believable in a role that you forget they are acting and truly begin to think that they are the character. Harry Bosch is Titus Welliver’s signature role and his performance as this character will forever be synonymous with the actor’s work.

    Related Article: ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Fans will be Able to Watch the First Two Episodes of Season 2 in Cinemas

    Familiar Faces

    First look at Jerry Edgar’s (Jamie Hector) epic return to 'Bosch: Legacy' for season 2.
    First look at Jerry Edgar’s (Jamie Hector) epic return to ‘Bosch: Legacy’ for season 2. Photo Credit: Greg Gayne.

    Original series ‘Bosch’ fans will be delighted at the return of Jamie Hector as Jerry Edgar in the opening episodes, and the actor seems right at home reprising his role. It’s a different dynamic for Edgar and Bosch this time around and Hector and Welliver play off each other great, never letting you forget the respect the two characters have for each other. Also returning from the original series are Gregory Scott Cummins and Troy Evans, who play former detectives Crate and Barrel, respectively, and bring humor and heart to their roles.

    ‘Bosch’ fans have watched the character of Maddie Bosch grow up on screen through the course of the franchise, and actress Madison Lintz continues to play the character with integrity and grace. Her relationship with her father is at the heart of the new season, and Lintz and Welliver have some great scenes together.

    Mimi Rogers’ Honey “Money” Chandler is again a strong ally to Bosch, and her own history with Maddie fuels her desire to help Harry find her. Originally an adversary to Bosch, the character of Chandler has become pivotal to the overall series and fills an important role as Bosch’s confidant. Maurice “Mo” Bassi played by Stephen Chang, who was introduced in the first season of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ and is a tech expert that helps Bosch and Chandler, has an expanded role and his own arc in the new season. Chang is a talented and unique actor, who has created a fascinating and colorful character that is a fun addition to the series.

    Final Thoughts

    Honey Chandler (Mimi Rogers) and Bosch (Titus Welliver) reunite in season 2 of 'Bosch: Legacy.'
    (L to R) Honey Chandler (Mimi Rogers) and Bosch (Titus Welliver) reunite in season 2 of ‘Bosch: Legacy.’ Photo Credit: Greg Gayne.

    ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2 continues to build on the world that has been created by author Michael Connolly and remains the best cop show on television. Titus Welliver delivers another layered, thoughtful, and explosively powerful performance as his signature character, and also continues to be the best and perhaps most underrated actor working on TV today.

    ‘Bosch: Legacy’ receives 10 out of 10 stars.

    Titus Welliver in 'Bosch: Legacy' Season 2.
    (Right) Titus Welliver in ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2. Credit: Warrick Page/Amazon Freevee. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

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  • ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Plans Theatrical Episode Screenings

    Titus Welliver in 'Bosch: Legacy' Season 2.
    (Right) Titus Welliver in ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2. Credit: Warrick Page/Amazon Freevee. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

    Are you ready to see Titus Welliver’s Harry Bosch taking down bad guys and making worse choices on the big screen? No, there aren’t plans for a ‘Bosch’ movie spin-off (yet), but Amazon Freevee is offering up the next best thing.

    The free-with-ads service that carries ‘Bosch: Legacy’ is planning a batch of free screenings of the first two episodes of Season 2 around the country.

    What’s the story of ‘Bosch: Legacy’?

    Honey Chandler (Mimi Rogers) and Bosch (Titus Welliver) reunite in season 2 of 'Bosch: Legacy.'
    (L to R) Honey Chandler (Mimi Rogers) and Bosch (Titus Welliver) reunite in season 2 of ‘Bosch: Legacy.’ Photo Credit: Greg Gayne.

    The series, a follow-up to Prime Video’s acclaimed ‘Bosch’ show based on the works of Michael Connelly, follows Harry Bosch, a retired homicide detective turned private investigator, as he embarks on the next chapter of his career; attorney Honey “Money” Chandler (Mimi Rogers), who struggles to maintain her faith in the justice system after surviving an attempted murder; and Maddie Bosch (Madison Lintz), as she discovers the possibilities and challenges of being a rookie patrol cop on the streets of Los Angeles.

    During Season 2, Bosch and Chandler work together to seek out a killer who just might find them first. As a result of being kidnapped by a masked assailant, Maddie’ law enforcement career hangs in the balance. The FBI scrutinizes Carl Rogers’ (Michael Rose) murder and places Bosch and Chandler under suspicion.

    Madison Lintz in 'Bosch: Legacy Season 2.'
    (Bottom) Madison Lintz in ‘Bosch: Legacy Season 2.’ Credit: Warrick Page/Amazon Freevee. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

    Who else is in ‘Bosch: Legacy Season 2’?

    First look at Jerry Edgar’s (Jamie Hector) epic return to 'Bosch: Legacy' for season 2.
    First look at Jerry Edgar’s (Jamie Hector) epic return to ‘Bosch: Legacy’ for season 2. Photo Credit: Greg Gayne.

    The new season includes the return of beloved characters from the original ‘Bosch’ series, including Jerry Edgar (Jamie Hector), Det. Robert “Crate” Moore (Gregory Scott Cummins), and Det. “Barrel” Johnson (Troy Evans), who join Bosch and Honey, Maurice “Mo” Bassi (Stephen A. Chang), and Det. Reina Vasquez (Denise Sanchez) in the search to find Maddie before time runs out.

    Additional returning cast members include Martin Rose (David Moses), Det. Joan Bennett (Cynthia Kaye McWilliams), Sgt. John Mankiewicz (Scott Klace), Det. Julie Espinosa (Jacqueline Pinol), Christine Vega (Jacqueline Obradors), Rondell Pierce (DaJuan Johnson) and Det. Brad Conniff (David Marciano).

    And there will be some new faces this time, too: Anthony Michael Hall as Special Agent Will Barron, Max Martini as Don Ellis, David Denman as Kurt Dockweiler, Patrick Brennan as David Foster, Rafael Cabrera as Vince Harrick, Bruce Davison as James Rafferty, Jessica Camacho as Jade Quinn, and Guy Wilson as Kevin Long.

    Related Article: Harry is On a Desperate Hunt for His Kidnapped Daughter in the ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2 Teaser Trailer

    How can I see ‘Bosch: Legacy’s first two episodes in theaters?

    It’s personal for Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) as season 2 of 'Bosch: Legacy' kicks off with a two episode premiere this fall on Amazon Freevee.
    It’s personal for Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) as season 2 of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ kicks off with a two episode premiere this fall on Amazon Freevee. Photo Credit: Tyler Golden.

    The advanced screening event will take place at select theater locations at 7:00pm local time on October 18th.

    Ticket reservation will require the pre-purchase of a $10 concession voucher at participating theaters. Purchase of one concession voucher grants the customer one reserved seat at a screening of their choice.

    Anyone under the age of 17 must be accompanied by a parent or guardian for the entire screening. No one under the age of 12 will be admitted.

    To request tickets and for all the details, head to this link.

    If you’re also interested in a chance to win a watch party kit from Freevee and Fooji for when the show is back, head here.

    When will ‘Bosch: Legacy’ be on TV screens?

    Officer Reina Vasquez (Denise G. Sanchez) and Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) in season 2 of 'Bosch: Legacy.'
    (L to R) Officer Reina Vasquez (Denise G. Sanchez) and Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) in season 2 of ‘Bosch: Legacy.’ Photo Credit: Warrick Page.

    If you can’t make it to one of the screenings, you still won’t have long to wait as ‘Bosch: Legacy’ returns to Freevee with the first four episodes on October 20th.

    'Bosch: Legacy' season 2 premieres October 20th on Freevee.
    ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2 premieres October 20th on Freevee.

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  • ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2 Trailer

    Can you picture Titus Welliver’s Hieronymus “Harry” Bosch going full Liam Neeson in ‘Taken’? We certainly can. And he’ll have to put his full rule-bending skill set to use as his daughter Madeline (Madison Lintz) was abducted at the end of Season 1.

    As the teaser for Season 2 shows, Harry will stop at nothing to find both her and the people responsible.

    Officer Reina Vasquez (Denise G. Sanchez) and Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) in season 2 of 'Bosch: Legacy.'
    (L to R) Officer Reina Vasquez (Denise G. Sanchez) and Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) in season 2 of ‘Bosch: Legacy.’ Photo Credit: Warrick Page.

    What’s the story of ‘Bosch: Legacy’?

    It’s personal for Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) as season 2 of 'Bosch: Legacy' kicks off with a two episode premiere this fall on Amazon Freevee.
    It’s personal for Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) as season 2 of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ kicks off with a two episode premiere this fall on Amazon Freevee. Photo Credit: Tyler Golden.

    The series, a follow-up to Prime Video’s acclaimed ‘Bosch’ show, follows Harry Bosch, a retired homicide detective turned private investigator, as he embarks on the next chapter of his career; attorney Honey “Money” Chandler (Mimi Rogers), who struggles to maintain her faith in the justice system after surviving an attempted murder; and Maddie Bosch, as she discovers the possibilities and challenges of being a rookie patrol cop on the streets of Los Angeles.

    During Season Two, Bosch and Chandler work together to seek out a killer who just might find them first. As a result of being kidnapped by a masked assailant, Maddie’ law enforcement career hangs in the balance. The FBI scrutinizes Carl Rogers’ (Michael Rose) murder and places Bosch and Chandler under suspicion.

    Honey Chandler (Mimi Rogers) and Bosch (Titus Welliver) reunite in season 2 of 'Bosch: Legacy.'
    (L to R) Honey Chandler (Mimi Rogers) and Bosch (Titus Welliver) reunite in season 2 of ‘Bosch: Legacy.’ Photo Credit: Greg Gayne.

    Related Article: Two New ‘Bosch’ Series in the Works at Amazon Studio

    Who else is in ‘Bosch: Legacy Season 2’?

    First look at Jerry Edgar’s (Jamie Hector) epic return to 'Bosch: Legacy' for season 2.
    First look at Jerry Edgar’s (Jamie Hector) epic return to ‘Bosch: Legacy’ for season 2. Photo Credit: Greg Gayne.

    The new season includes the return of beloved characters from the original Bosch series, including Jerry Edgar (Jamie Hector), Det. Robert “Crate” Moore (Gregory Scott Cummins), and Det. “Barrel” Johnson (Troy Evans), who join Bosch and Honey, Maurice “Mo” Bassi (Stephen A. Chang), and Det. Reina Vasquez (Denise Sanchez) in the search to find Maddie before time runs out.

    Additional returning cast members include Martin Rose (David Moses), Det. Joan Bennett (Cynthia Kaye McWilliams), Sgt. John Mankiewicz (Scott Klace), Det. Julie Espinosa (Jacqueline Pinol), Christine Vega (Jacqueline Obradors), Rondell Pierce (DaJuan Johnson) and Det. Brad Conniff (David Marciano).

    And there will be some new faces this time, too: Anthony Michael Hall as Special Agent Will Barron, Max Martini as Don Ellis, David Denman as Kurt Dockweiler, Patrick Brennan as David Foster, Rafael Cabrera as Vince Harrick, Bruce Davison as James Rafferty, Jessica Camacho as Jade Quinn, and Guy Wilson as Kevin Long.

    Anthony Michael Hall joins 'Bosch: Legacy' as Special Agent Barron.
    (Right) Anthony Michael Hall joins ‘Bosch: Legacy’ as Special Agent Barron. Photo Credit: Tyler Golden.

    We can expect plenty more of Bosch shoving boundaries to do his job, getting in his superiors’ faces and dishing out rough justice. Because what’s ‘Bosch: Legacy’ without the title character going rogue?

    Whereas ‘Bosch’ was on the main Prime Video service, ‘Bosch: Legacy’ screens on Amazon’s ad-supported Freevee service. It has already been renewed for a third season.

    ‘Bosch: Legacy’s first four episodes debut on Freevee on October 20th. Two new episodes will arrive each Friday until the Season finale on November 10th.

    'Bosch: Legacy' season 2 premieres October 20th on Freevee.
    ‘Bosch: Legacy’ season 2 premieres October 20th on Freevee.

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