The 12th season starts when Ortiz and Murphy go to the scene of a new murder and, oddly enough, Murphy may flee again. On the other hand, there is a person named Kyog, a person who went to the academy with him and witnessed the witness of the victim who was killed, a homeless man. Within a short time, Sepovich arrives at the scene of a new victim as an 18-year-old child.
Mark Tinker, Michael M. Robin, Donna Deitch, Gregory Hoblit, Dennis Dugan, Mark Piznarski, Rick Wallace, Elodie Keene, Joe Ann Fogle, Davis Guggenheim, Lesli Linka Glatter
Did NYPD Blue outstay its welcome? Yes, although Mark-Paul Gosselaar has proven surprisingly adept as Sipowicz's latest partner and the episodes this season have been well-executed.
NYPD Blue stumbled in its old age... Andy became more cuddly. Yes, this was the logical endpoint to his trajectory, but there was still something painful about watching him setting up shop with his little boy.
But endings are the hardest part, and this balance couldn't last... A show with six great years in it would run twice as long, a victim of its own success and an increasingly desperate network.
The show's decidedly mature language, nudity, violence, and issues are all good reasons for kids to stay away, but adults will definitely enjoy Blue's edgy, dense drama.