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No easy ending for 'The Sopranos'
#1
I didn’t like the way the Sopranos ended. It wasn’t anything that I was expecting. I thought it would end with a bang but instead ends as life as usual.

By Frazier Moore, AP Television Writer  |  June 10, 2007

NEW YORK --Tony Soprano carries on. 

The much-awaited conclusion of HBO's "The Sopranos" arrived Sunday night in a frenzy of audience speculation. Would New Jersey mob boss Soprano live or be killed? Would his family die before his eyes? Would he go to jail? Be forced to enter witness protection? Would Brooklyn boss Phil Leotardo, who had ordered a hit on Tony, prevail?

In the end, the only ending that mattered was the one masterminded by "Sopranos" creator David Chase. And playing against viewer expectations, as always, Chase refused to stage a mass extermination, put the characters through any major transformations, or provide his viewers with comfortable closure. Or catharsis. After all, he declined to pass moral judgment on Tony -- he reminded viewers all season what a thug Tony is, then gave him a pass.

But Chase was true to himself, and that's what made "The Sopranos" brilliant on Sunday night, and the 85 episodes that went before. The product of an artist with a bleak but incisive vision, "The Sopranos" has always existed on its own terms. It was challenging and elegant, but seldom tidy.

The only neat development in the finale was that Leotardo was crushed. Otherwise it was perversely non-earthshaking -- just one last visit with the characters we have followed so devoutly since 1999.

Here was the funeral for Bobby Bacala, Tony's soldier and brother-in-law, who was shot dead on Leotardo's orders last week. Here was Tony (series star James Gandolfini) paying a hospital visit to his gravely injured consigliere, Silvio Dante, also targeted by Leotardo.

Tony's ne'er-do-well son A.J. (Robert Iler) continued to wail about the misery in the world, and voiced a fleeting urge to join the Army and go fight in Afghanistan (Tony persuaded him to get involved in filmmaking, instead). Daughter Meadow (Jamie-Lynn Sigler) harped on her plans to be a lawyer.

Tony visits his senile Uncle Junior (Dominic Chianese) at the nursing home. "You and my dad, you two ran North Jersey," Tony prompts him.

"We did?" said Uncle Junior with no sign of recognition. "That's nice."

Despite suspicions to the contrary, neither Paulie Walnuts nor Patsy Parisi sold out Tony. And neither was whacked. Dr. Melfi, who kicked Tony out of therapy last week, made no last-minute appearance.

Sure, headaches lie ahead for Tony. The Feds are still after him. And Meadow's fiance, Patsy Jr., is a lawyer who may well be pursuing cases that intrude on Tony's business interests.

So what else is new?

The finale displayed their lives continuing, for better and worse, unaffected by the fact that the series is done. The implication was, they will go on as usual. We just won't be able to watch.

Of course, Leotardo (Frank Vincent) hit a dead end after Tony located him with the help of his favorite federal agent. The execution was a quick but classic "Sopranos" scene: Pulling up at a gas station with his wife, Leotardo made a grand show of telling his two young grandchildren in the back seat to "wave bye-bye" as he emerged from his SUV. The next moment he was on the pavement, shot in the head.

Then you heard the car roll over his head. Carunnnchh! Quick, clinical, even comical, this was the only violence during the hour.

Not that Chase (who wrote and directed this episode) didn't tease viewers with the threat of death in almost every scene.

This was never more true than in the final sequence. On the surface, it was nothing more momentous than Tony, his wife, Carmela (Edie Falco), Meadow and A.J. meeting for dinner at a cozy family restaurant.

When he arrived, Tony dropped a coin in the jukebox and played the classic Journey power ballad "Don't Stop Believing." Meanwhile, every moment seemed to foreshadow disaster: Suspicious-looking people coming in the door or sitting at a nearby table. Meadow on the street having trouble parallel parking her car. With every passing second, the audience was primed for tragedy. It was a scene both warm and fuzzy yet full of dread, setting every viewer's heart racing for no clear reason.

But nothing would happen. It was just a family gathering for dinner at a restaurant. Four people among many.

But then -- with a jingle of the bell on the front door, Tony looked up, apparently seeing Meadow make her delayed entrance. Or could he have seen something awful -- something her certainly deserved -- about to come down?

Probably not. Almost certainly a false alarm. But we'll never know. With that, "The Sopranos" cut to black, leaving us enriched after eight years. And flustered. And fated to always wonder what happened next. 

http://www.boston.com/ae/tv/articles/200..._sopranos/
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#2
A chance to talk about The Sopranos... I can't pass this up.  :)

[size="2"]I loved the ending. 

I think the final song selection that Tony choose to play was so good and right. 

...Some will win, some will lose,
Some were born to sing the blues,
Oh, the movie never ends,
It goes on and on and on and on

Don't stop believing
Hold on to that feeling...


The tension was building so much in the final scene, I couldn't watch.  I didn't want Tony or his family to get whacked and I didn't know what Chase was going to do with the ending, so I actually turned away and covered my eyes for a few seconds.  I said to husband.. "I CAN'T WATCH".   I loved how Chase left the ending up to each of us to create on our own. 

Me?  I believe Tony and his family survives and goes on.  I can't stop believing and I want to hold on to that feeling.... but most people, I think, really feel the ending sucked.  I know my husband thought for sure Tony would be whacked and when the black screen came up at the end he was like "WHAT?  That's IT?"...... He called a couple people and they thought the ending was a let down.  I was just sitting in my chair - thanking god it ended the way it did.  To me - it was the best ending to one of my favorite shows and favorite characters.

My fav moments... Adrianna coming back as a cat and watching the picture of Christopher and giving Paulie Walnuts the creeps -- also when Agent Harris said "We'll win" after he heard Phil Retardo was killed.  I loved how the "good guys/bad guys" started to work together in the end.

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#3
I thought there would be a huge gun battle and Tony would be the last man standing. I thought that because in the previous episode at the end Tony and his men were holdup in a house with guns ready. In the last episode they acted like something was going to happen at the restaurant and that’s what I was sitting in suspense waiting for. Then a blank screen and nothing happened. I thought my cable went out and I was mad that I missed the ending. Then the screen credits stated rolling. I’m glad Tony and his family survived everything. I imagine this did it this way so that they could bring back the Sopranos if they ever wanted to. Hopefully they will someday. Cool
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#4
Richard Wrote:...I thought there would be a huge gun battle and Tony would be the last man standing...
What a glorious thought - I would have liked to have seen that (what you said).


Chase is in France and gave one interview to a NJ paper.  He said he's not going to define or explain the ending for us.  Everything we need to know is in the final scene, he said.

I've been talking a lot about the number 11 lately.  I heard the black screen at the end lasted for 11 seconds.  And AJ's sweatshirt, while at the "safe house" said "11" on it.

I'm not holding my breath for a movie but possibily DVD's with a little help on figuring out if Tony is dead or not.  Maybe a Director's commentary... Mr. CHASE!?

Turns out the "B" side of Journey's Don't Stop Believing is Anyway You Want It.  I guess the ending is anyway we want it.


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#5
That’s interesting the screen was blank for 11 seconds. For some reason I didn’t notice the 11 on AJ’s shirt. I don’t remember seeing that. So does the 11s mean new beginnings for the Sopranos?
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#6
It could be.  I'm not really sure.  I've read many meanings to the number 11, all different.  Another Chase mystery, if he meant it to mean anything at all?  I'm not sure.
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#7
  Ahhh how we glorify death and murder....  heheheh Yes I watched it....  I thought the ending was cool.   Someone teach that girl how to park a car ok!  ;)

 
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#8
Daddy Soprano needs to buy Meadow a Self Parking Lexus, I say.  :big grin:
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#9
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#10
Sily Wrote:Hillary Clinton Sopranos Ending Parody

:big grin:
Comments please...  Oh I have mine...  Ive seen this already.........
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