Showing posts with label The Sopranos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Sopranos. Show all posts

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Whatever Happened to Tony Soprano?


In the end and after a bit of reflection perhaps it was the perfect way to bid adieu to New Jersey’s most watched family.
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(Warning: if you're a fan and have taped the show for future viewing, STOP right here)
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With the tension of Steve Perry singing the Journey classic Don’t Stop Believin’, the last five minutes of Sunday night’s finale of the Sopranos played out with an audience anxiously on the edge of their seats. The building momentum of the tune and the lyrics of the song itself lent themselves well to the farewell that Soprano fans had been waiting for. Perry’s reflections on the will to roll the dice one more time, some will win, some will lose, some were born to sing the blues, in a nut shell it was the Sopranos life.

Played out to the increasing tempo of the song, every shift of the camera brought a new set of nerves, the guy at the counter is he there with malice or just a bad case of hunger, AJ enters the restaurant and immediately someone follows in the door behind him. Every face, a potential danger (even the boy scouts?) , strangers come in, the camera shifts to them then away, are they bit players or the final scene? The very last moments with Meadow’s entry delayed time and time again by a inability to park wrung out even more tension as she approached the restaurant, opened the door and left us all with an unexpected blank screen. View the scene here, until YouTube is told to pull it.

It leaves an unfulfilled answer to the many questions we may have, yet is perfectly in keeping with David Chase’s unorthodox approach to television these last six years.

He tied up a few loose ends for us with the finale; Phil met his demise in a most gruesome yet cartoon like way, as though shot by the roadrunner of Wily E Coyote fame. Bobby got the mobster’s funeral that was his destiny, captured in full by a collection of FBI agents.

Tony tapped his FBI well one more time, his favourite New Jersey agent somehow deciding to choose sides, tipping Soprano to the location of Phil and then when informed of the sudden demise of Phil, proclaiming that “we’re going to win this thing”, somehow we don’t think he was thinking of the war on terror here.

The family tension played out as well, Carmela in hiding while Tony tries to broker peace more concerned about her current accommodations that the risks involved in returning home, Meadow moves closer and closer to the lifestyle of her father, her romance with Patrick destined it seems for marriage and perhaps a place in the family firm for her husband. AJ still a mess, has thoughts of joining the Army and a tour of Afghanistan, instead is bought off with dreams of Hollywood and club life, a brief surge of self awareness buried amongst the strings to be pulled by his parents.

Janice, Tony’s sister now in search of a new financial plan seeks to play the Uncle Junior card, a gambit that seems to be destined to be a failure as Uncle’s dementia continues to rob him not only of his memories but of his knowledge of where the “treasure” may be buried.

Tony bids the farewells of sort he couldn’t attend to last week, pre-occupied as he was by the business of staying alive. He attends Bobby’s funeral, visits the gravely wounded Silvio in hospital and returns to visit Uncle Junior.

It is a visit which brings the aging uncle and nephew together, family still by name but more strangers than ever before. The state of the uncle’s mental health is such that he’s been robbed of any past glories and has no recall of his nephew or any past transgressions and clearly is no threat to Tony what so ever anymore.

Tony tries to remind him of the glory days with his brother when “they ran North Jersey”, but it doesn’t seem to register on the lost old man in the wheel chair. Nor does the warning about Janice and her maneuvering to steal whatever money that Uncle Junior may have, if he ever remembers where he buried it.

The final meeting with Uncle Junior leads to the climactic restaurant scene, Tony flips through the juke box of the old style diner, running through a list of songs; most past treasures and perhaps containing a message or two, before settling on Journey, he pops his money in the slot and the piano chord begins to play out the tempo of the opening, leading to the fade to black closing.

For those that prefer their television to clear the table of the dishes and sweep the kitchen floor after the meal, Sunday will be a night of great disappointment. We’re left staring at the television wondering if the satellite dish went out, or if Movie Central lost the signal for the final nerve jangling seconds.

Yet the process used by Chase is like life in the mob as we’ve come to understand it all these years, you never seem to see what’s coming, or when it does.

But like witnesses to a mob hit, we’ll be talking about the ending for years to come, everyone will have a theory, some will have the family taken out, others no doubt vision an arrest from the FBI and some will just have the family sit down to dinner, another episode ending like all the others in this riveting series, Tony, Carm, AJ and Meadow, carrying on with their dysfunctional lives, without those millions of voyeurs hovering over their shoulders every Sunday night.
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A few spots you can go to vent your Post Sopranos depression.
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To Whack, or be whacked, that is the question

You woke up this morning
Got yourself a gun,
Mama always said you'd beThe Chosen One.

She said: You're one in a million
You've got to burn to shine,
But you were born under a bad sign,
With a blue moon in your eyes.

From the opening theme to the Sopranos.

The modern equivalent of Shakespeare (all be it with a Joisy accent) plays out its run on Sunday night. The Sopranos, considered by many to be one of the best television shows to be aired will wrap up its television life with the final episode.

As the second to last episode played out last week, Tony the leader of the Jersey mob had seen his crew all but wiped out in a tactical strike by rival gang leader Phil, a mobster who himself escaped death because Tony’s crew botched up the hit.

It was a violent weekend last Sunday, even by Soprano standards, Silvio’s Tony’s trusted lieutenant had taken care of a problem himself, only to be gunned down outside the gang’s own strip club, and we’re left to believe that he is clinging to life in a Jersey hospital, little hope given to his prognosis. Tony’s other trusted assistant and long suffering brother in law Bobby was murdered in a toy store as the hit list knocked off the names one by one.

The sudden vacancies at Soprano Inc, leave Tony with Paulie and a few other hangers on, Paulie having already botched up the hit on Phil, is probably not the most reliable of mobsters to be counting on when the chips are down.

But there he is, one of the last mobster’s standing, manning the mattresses with Soprano.

The final weeks have seen Tony all but abandoned after years of crime, besides his two most trusted associates, his therapist has ended her professional work with him, he’s eliminated the nephew he treated like a son and his own son is not exactly on the same family page as his father. Even the FBI no longer seems to waste their time on a lonely mobster in New Jersey, what with a war on terror to prosecute and many more enemies of the state to be concerned about.

As he hides out and plans his final moves, he has sent his family into exile, while he awaits the fate that is his to come.

The final days of the Sopranos has brought the same kind of interest as the days of who shot JR, what would happen to the 4077th and other key touchstones of pop culture tied to television.

Will Tony go out with a bang, or will he disappear with a whimper, David Chase will unveil all Sunday night. And then Sunday nights will no longer take us across the bridges and through the tunnels into the underbelly of Jersey. Whatever the fate of Tony, there will be a gap in the television schedules for a long time to come.

Below are just a few of the items from the thousands of articles, previews and reviews of this most talked about television show.

Who's really the boss? David Chase calls the shots.
Sunday, it's the end of story for Tony Soprano.
"The Sopranos" heads for highly anticipated climax
A beautifully ugly ending for ‘The Sopranos’
Will Tony survive or sleep with the fishes
A whack or a whimper?
Actor reflects on last days as Tony Soprano
This is the end for 'The Sopranos'
Farewell Sopranos
Greatest Soprano Hits
'Sopranos' finale a cultural milestone that's rare for today's TV
Who will be left when we say goodbye to the Sopranos?
'Sopranos' signoff marks end of era
We'll never fuhgeddaboutit
Mob hit
Sopranos go out with a BANG
‘Sopranos’ could mimic ‘Godfather’ in finale

HBO Homepage for The Sopranos

Friday, April 06, 2007

"Everything comes to an end"


The radio and television teaser ads provide quick snippets of past events and a somber sense of foreshadowing of the near future. Of all the quick release lines in the thirty second spots, the one that seems to scream out at the listener is from a weary wife, tired of her daily tribulations, “everything comes to an end.”

Sunday, perhaps we shall view the beginning of the end!

The final nine episodes of the Soprano’s will air on HBO (and Movie Central in Canada), as everyone’s favourite anger management patient, Tony Soprano, begins to take us all down the uncharted path ahead (well uncharted for the viewers, David Chase we suspect has an idea where this all is going) for his New Jersey families.

The Feds have been getting closer over the seasons, his enemies bolder and there is the whiff of insiders to his very own organization perhaps playing pretty loose with their loyalty. All issues that don’t suggest a happy outcome for the middle manager of crime incorporated for upper New Jersey.

The Soprano’s has been a most remarkable television show, unlike anything that most of us had ever seen on the television. It has changed mindsets in the entertainment business as to just how grown up an audience is these days. It has angered and amazed large numbers at times, blurring the lines of where television should and could go with their product.

It is most likely the one show that launched HBO to its major player status in the United States and changed the viewing habits of many Americans over the last seven years, from the very first episodes The Soprano’s built up a cult following that abandoned the networks on Sunday evenings, a sea change of viewership that continues at full speed to this day.

From that early beginning for HBO, the channel that was dedicated to movies and entertainment specials suddenly became a major player in the world of television programming.

With The Soprano’s leading the way, HBO provided quality television for adults, those not afraid of the odd curse word or an overtly violent act. Viewers that wanted plot development, real characters and realistic portrayals of life, not some Hollywood sanitized version of how things could be.

Once the Soprano’s took hold of the television clickers of the continent, the television gates would open to bring other equally well made productions to the screens that normally lower themselves to a base common denominator.

Shows such as The Wire, Rome, Deadwood, Carnivale, Brotherhood, The Shield to name but a few, can all raise a glass of wine in salute to Tony and his crew, they blazed the trail for television that took chances and found an audience anxious to break free of the formula of the network offerings.

It’s no surprise that network television has changed in the seven years that the Soprano’s have ruled their empire, for most part the night time dramas on the networks are now more powerful and more entertaining than a decade ago. While still not as graphic as those that appear on HBO or Movie Central, the themes have become more complete, reflective of a maturing of commercial television completely due to the acceptance of the upper pay channels offerings.

Sunday, Tony will begin to settle his accounts, for Canadians the opening night offers up a rendezvous with some Quebecois gangsters who apparently rub Mr. Soprano the wrong way, not something you would wish on your worst enemy (well okay, sure your worst enemy, but not just some shmoe you're mad at for the moment).

As the mid season finale was winding down, there were hints that Tony had problems within his own organization. Maybe Paulie, who doesn’t project the term loyalty very easily will turn on his boss, maybe someone else close Silvio or Christopher, who knows for sure who may crack should the pressure mount.

Then again, there is the building tension between Tony and his New York rival Phil, who has been the stone in Tony’s shoe for a number of seasons now. With Phil’s boss John secure and unhappily in jail, there is no one to reign Phil in, an explosion of violence seems to be only a matter of time between to the two branch offices.

Compared to business, Tony’s family life seemed happier than ever by the time Christmas had rolled around, but considering the past history on the home front and the numerous skeletons waiting to be revealed, the next nine shows surely won’t be a rerun of the Walton’s.

Though the promise of perhaps feature movies from time to time in the future is interesting, it’s been the ritual viewing patterns over the last seven years that have made the show the fixture it became. The events of Sunday were always up for debate on Monday, leaving us with six days of wondering who would be whacked next, who would turn out to be a rat or where Tony would go next in his quest for his share of the prize of organized crime. There will be a few more weeks of debate and analysis before Tony and his crew fade to black.

We’ll pop the popcorn and get ready for A3 to lead us into the night on Sunday; the show has been one in a million, complete with that shotgun shine.

Like a night at the Bada Bing, we expect that these next nine shows will not disappoint.
You can do a little research on the season finales with the stories below: