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'Sopranos' finale: Do not attempt to adjust your set

Posted: Sunday, June 10, 2007 7:08 PM by Gael Fashingbauer Cooper
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TUESDAY UPDATE: I've turned off comments to this post because we're buried in them. Please direct your attention (and comments) to the more recent post, which discusses the pivotal final scene, plus plenty of other issues from the finale. Don't stop believin'!

SUNDAY NIGHT POST: That horrendous sound you just heard was a couple million "Sopranos" fans, including those without HBO who'd rented hotel rooms for the occasion, throwing shoes at their TVs and frantically dialing their cable or satellite providers screaming about how they'd lost the signal in the pivotal last minute of the show.

But they didn't. The show was transmitted just as creator David Chase intended. The last five minutes were entrancingly filled with knee-jiggling tension. Tony went to a diner where his wife and son joined him. Daughter Meadow pulled up outside and struggled to parallel park. For someone who'd never seen the show before, it was a mind-numbingly banal scene of a family gathering in an inexpensive restaurant, popping down onion rings.

But for a "Sopranos" fan, every movement seemed to suggest something. A guy took a seat at the counter -- was he there to take out Tony? A guy walked in with A.J. -- was he there to whack Tony's son? Someone walked slowly to the men's room -- would there be a repeat of the famous "Godfather" scene where Michael went to retrieve a gun hidden in a bathroom stall, walked out, shot two men, dropped the gun and left? Meadow struggled with her car -- was someone watching her, gun in hand? Or when she pulled out to try to repark, would she pull into a car accident? Or would she alone be saved by her sad parking skills while the rest of the family was killed in a diner explosion? Viewers came up with a million scenarios, but the one that no one but Chase came up with was...nothing happened.

The episode definitely had its moments, but few of the possibilities viewers had been discussing for weeks came through. How many of these theories below had you heard bounced around in weeks past? None of them happened.

Tony was not whacked. Nor was Carmela, or either of the children.

A.J. did not take over the family to avenge his father.

Adriana did not pop out of Witness Protection or some other spot, still alive.

Paulie did not reveal himself to be a turncoat.

Sil was not secretly working with the feds, and remained on the edge of death in the hospital. He was neither shielding an uninjured Ade, nor wearing a bulletproof vest.

There was no terrorist attack, nothing involving the Middle Eastern men that Christopher had befriended.

Carmela never found out that Tony had indeed had Adriana killed, and she did not leave her marriage.

The Russian from the Pine Barrens did not resurface. Neither did the Canadian Mounties show up, tracking now-deceased Bobby for leaving a bit of his clothes behind when he whacked a guy in a laundromat north of the border.

Melfi's rapist was never punished. She and Tony never made up.

And Tony never spent those final moments with the ducks in his yard, the ducks that were such an important part of the early seasons.

That's not to say that major events didn't go down in the episode. The most major: One of Tony's guys finally, finally whacked Phil Leotardo, as he pulled up in a car with his wife and twin grandbabies. And those who longed to see Phil pay for having Bobby and Sil shot last week got their revenge, as Phil was not only shot, but had his head run over by his SUV, leading a passerby to toss his cookies at the sight.

And one might say that Christopher, Carmela's nephew, made a return of sorts. Tony's crew adopted an orange cat they found lurking around their safe house, a cat who focused his vision on Chris' portrait, wherever it was moved to, and freaked Paulie out big-time.

Meadow seemed to be moving ahead with marriage plans to Patrick Parisi. A.J. announced he wanted to join the army, but Carmela and Tony seemed to distract him with a job on a film.

Tony did manage a final goodbye with Uncle Junior, a tear coming to his eye as he seemed to, perhaps, finally realize that his uncle no longer knew him. And A.J. pulled another typical bonehead A.J. move, accidentally setting his SUV on fire in the woods while making out with his high-school-age girlfriend.

What was most important in this episode, other than the haunted, hunted feeling of the final scene, was that Tony was told that Carlo had flipped, and he's likely to be dragged into court again. The Sopranos crew have discussed before how there's no easy way out of their life -- death or jail are the likely options, with very few mobsters retiring to Boca to sit in the sun. And so perhaps viewers left Tony with the idea that he knows his life is forever not his own, that he'll never be able to stop looking over his shoulder. (Or, to be cynical, maybe viewers left with the idea that David Chase wants to make a movie, and couldn't kill off Tony this soon.)

If Tony was indeed an anti-hero, the show he helmed came to an anticlimax. There's no question fans will be frustrated. Those who've defended the show all along will claim Chase is brilliant, leaving fans to finish the plotlines in their own minds, while those who had other expectations were likely be furious.  (Vote here as to whether you found the show's ending frustrating or fascinating.)

Many viewers are already claiming that the show fading to black was because Tony was (silently, offscreen) shot at the same time as Meadow entered the diner -- the black screen popped up as his life was extinguished, is their thinking, reaching back to the first episode of the season, where Bobby and Tony discuss how death can sneak up on you. Not buying it myself, just as I never could buy the argument that Ade didn't die, that Sil somehow miraculously let her crawl safely away.

One thing's for sure: "The Sopranos" rarely gave viewers exactly what they wanted -- the show had its own path, and always trod it without nodding to popular pressure. The series ended the same way.

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Comments

At first I was disappointed in the ending but after having some time to think about it I'm really glad it ended this way.

I like to believe that we as an audience got "whacked" since it's been forshadowed for several episodes that when it happens you don't hear it or see it coming.  The show is over for us but Tony continues to live on even though he'll always be looking over his shoulder.

Any of the other theories out there can apply as well but this is the ending I'm choosing and I think David Chase left it to us to decide how it ended.  

Great show and I loved every minute of it.
It ended as it should have.
What the Hell!!!  Nothing was finalized....leaving a movie open, I think so.
If Mr. Chase is saying Tony was whacked because, as Bobby once said, "You don't hear it coming" and life (the show)just ends for Tony, no music, nothing then I'm still very unhappy with this.  If this was indeed Mr. Chase's intention then the final shot of the show should not have been Tony looking up to see who was coming in the diner...it should have been a shot of who was coming in the diner from Tony's vantage point, as if we were seeing what Tony was seeing just before his life (the show) goes dark.  A terrible terrible way to end a great series.
Disappointing.  If I had known this was how it was going to end I would never have watched ANY of the Sopranos.
I am absolutely disappointed.  Fans have hung in there with David Chase for all of these seasons, all of the loose ends, the very disappointing last 2 - 3 seasons and the death of our beloved Adrianna only to be rewarded with this ending. Mr. Chase you owed us more!
I think the ending was PERFECT!! No ones life is tied up in a pretty little bow and served on a platter.....Tony should be no exception!!
Brilliant? Stupid? Boring?

The final episode, especially the final five minutes, followed the arc set by the best written show in television when it debuted ten years ago: this is the story of a guy trying to piece his life together until he dies.  Long periods of banality interrupted by brief moments of excitement.  The only difference was the business this schmuck inherited was "boss of North Jersey," so it came with very different flavors of banality and excitement.  

And the ending five minutes, the harsh ending ("WHERE's THE DAME REMOTE! WHAT HAPPENED TO MY CABLE SIGNAL!!!") was precisely what David Chase meant.

And what we--and Tony Soprano--deserved.
I completely agree that Tony was the anti-hero. The series has been building up to this for quite a while and I'm glad it ended the way it did. Good-bye Sapranos!
Worst ending to a series since M*A*S*H
All true and well observed.  Still...if completely ignoring and dropping narrative elements, brilliant though they may be, is "what life is like," there is something distressing about it.  Realism as a form accepted the "conventions" of the theatre and gave a nod to narrative logic and the desires of the audience by doing so.  I admire the way scenes just trailed off.  Many times characters were not witty or wise.  Many times a scene went on too long or was too short and there was no urbane or overwritten response.  The dialogue was always surprising.  But why would Chase invoke so many poetic devices and images--like Tony's hospital visions, the ducks, the bear, the seeming invincibility of the Russian, etc., etc. if only to drop them cold.  Why not let some of them be thematic devices?  And is it fair or "natural" to create a possible violent scenario or raise expectations and tensions for an ending, and just end it in such an unclear way.  It's not that I mind nothing happening but to have the screen go blank and make us all think that the cable had gone out (earlier in the episode on my screen the digital image halted and froze for a moment)?  It's like getting to the ending of a movie and having someone yell "fire" in the theatre.  It's not part of the convention.  It's a bit cheap and manipulative and not "natural" or "real."  I would have accepted a sudden ending if it had been done in a way that said more clearly, this is where we stop, not "the cable just went out."   Anyway, I loved the show for many of the reasons I'm not so  happy tonight.  And I don't believe there was any way to end it and make everyone happy.
how could we expect anything else....i actually loved it...and yes i thought hbo had lost the feed...but chase has played with us and our expectations from the very first episode and this was no different.....there were so many beautiful moments in this episode.....that i don't want the ending to overshadow how amazing this series has been...the ending actually gives me hope...as a huge fan of the show.....that at some point it can come back in some other form....that only chase has concocted in that magnificent mind of his....thank you for the show...
I think the Sopranos finale was..............
What a cop out! This ending ranks right up there with Ewing getting shot and then waking up from a dream. Unfortunately this was no deam...more like a nightmare for us. How utterly disappointing. If Chase comes up with a movie I will not be disappointed again because I will not go see it.
Someone needs to put a hit out on David Chase!  

Did he just look up at the clock, see that it was late and decide to call it a night?




Chase left the door open for a sequel; plain and simple.
Yep, thought my satellite went out, then saw the credits rolling and screamed, "THAT'S IT??!!".  Maybe a stroke of brilliance, because any ending at all would have been "borrowed" from all the other mob films of history.  So while disappointed Chase left us hanging, maybe in a way he didn't.   I for one will not get sucked into a Sopranos movie or any kind of spinoff type ploy.  It it weren't for Big Love, I'd have cancelled my HBO tonight.  Episode grade?  B-/C+.  
A great ending, it spent time showing us what we liked about each character, at least the few that were left. (For me, Paulie was a riot in the finale.  Tony didn't do bad either.)
It also let you know that life goes on, just as it had in between episodes and seasons all along.  A new episode always started at a new place from the previous show and may or may not have refereced the previous show(s)
I guess mobsters have other things in their life that do not necessarily pertain to the mob.
How does Chase say "Thank you" to all the Sopranos fans that have put up with all drama and crap between seasons over the years?  With a big final middle finger to all of us.  Well Mr. Chase - same to you!  I could not be more disappointed.
I have been a FAN of this show for its entire existance, and I think the ending was unfair and absurb. ....But, then again, maybe they are thinking of a Soprano MOVIE, where all loose ends will be taken care.  We will see
I thought the ending was a heart-pounding way to end the series. The final "blackout" was totally inline with the style of the show. I was not disappointed. I was glad when Phil got whacked. The ending at least leaves the possibility of a movie hanging out there.
I agree 100% with this writer.  Where do I go to read the comments?
Wow... how sad was this ending... all those loyal fans (myself included) who have never missed an episode, even as the show has taken a decline in story and content in recent times, were given an incredibly lack-luster series finally.  It almost feels like David Chase just gave up trying to come up with a story to satisfy all of the possible endings, so instead he just decided to have nothing happen.  I feel cheated.
It was almost obvious that nothing was going to happen at the end. I just wish they'de have wrapped it up with Meadow sitting down and rolled the credits to the music. The way he cut to black was wierd.
The sudden blackness, silence? Tony got whacked. I kept rewinding the very last few moments, analyzing the final look on Tony's face. There was no fear--he was seeing Meadow, then he saw NOTHING. Brilliant.
Tony and Bobby discussing death when they were sitting in the boat and one of them said that when it happens, everything goes dark and you don't hear anything, not even the sound of the gun.  That makes me think that Tony did die in the end.
Now we can finnaly get back to acting out our own lives and not living ours lives thru the Sapranos'.  What a sad commentary on our culture.
The symbolism in the beginning of the show (the bitter winter and the tour guide noting how Little Italy has shrunk) led me to believe that something was going to end.  I waited and waited, however something else happened.

AJ fled his car and felt relieved and found a purpose.  Phil was found and killed, Pauly got over his superstitions, NJ makes peace with NY...

Things began to turn around.  In a matter of 45 minutes, everything began to look up.  And it all ended with Tony with his family.  There was a suspenseful 5 minutes where no one is sure what is going to happen, but in the end... nothing.

Same ol, same ol.  Tony is back in control and all our favorite characters are playing their same parts.  No arching conclusion, happy endings, new revelations.  Life just goes on.

At least that what I get out of it.  I'm unsatisfied, but the real world doesn't come to grand conclusions.  It is what it is.  So bravo HBO.
I started laughing when the credits started rolling, I mean I was as frustrated as any other fan but then I said f it, Chase ended it the way he wanted to end.
Are you sure Tony wasn't wacked in the Diner. the black and yjhe silence being his entry into death.

But then again, maybe not.
Based on the feedback I'm reading here, it looks like Chase had his cronies writing in saying how great this stupid ending is. We waited 1.5 years for this garbage!
Tony is dead. He was shot and since the show is in his perspective it just blanks out after he dies.
None of the tragedy came to pass---we watched 8 years in the life of a family.  We came in in the middle, and we left in the middle.  I appreciate the ending.  I know a lot of people won't, but a lot of people want everything to tie up neatly.  Nothing does.
The Sopranos truly was a remarkable show. It will go down in history as one of the best creations ever made for televison. There are many holes left to be answered. It depends on our own perceptions what truly happened at that restuarant.
After all this time and all those episodes left me with a feeling of.......
Excellent Job Mr. Chase.  I will be the first in line for the Big Screen ticket.
Tony is dead. He never saw it coming. Just like he said to Bobby in the boat........
Great series...not so great ending.  Could have had more closure.  Too bad.
I can't believe I shot my TV at the end. Chase owes me a Plasma!
Great posts but I think there's too much analysis here, the ending did NOT deliver... it's easy to come up with the intent after it's been written/filmed... It's still television I'll take my use of imagination from other sources, give me an ending or a sequel ;-)
I feel like we deserved better. I was loyal to the show and even bought the DVDs. We made a big Italian dinner tonight and had a party. At the end we were all left feeling disapointed and confused...
My heart was pounding, I kept looking at my watch, Tony picked the closing song ! all the scenes with Meadow.Checked my watch almost over only a minute left.The customers coming in. The guy heading to the bathroom. Checked my watch again only seconds remain. Then nothing, A blank screen. What an ending. Chase is brillant. No other senario would have worked. My heart is still racing.
I believe fervently that tonight was not the last of the Soprano family, just watch!
I guess after the horrific ending , one can settle their nerves down and hope for a Movie!!! or Not? and just let your mind wonder....whatever happened to the Sopranos!!!!!
That ending bites...I really did't like the tease...won't be suckered in a second time...The Sopranos' now swim w' the fishes...
Junk, pure junk.  I will no longer watch anything associated with David Chase.  
The suspense was killing me! As the credits rolled, I was shaking ... great job!
I'm cancelling HBO tomorrow; they can put Big Love and Cincinnati in the grave with Phil.  A-M-F,  Ta-Ta for Now!
Tony was killed...remember Tony and Bobby in the boat "Do you think you hear the one that gets you?"...apparently not, Tony never heard the shot the got him, and because so much of the show was from Tony's perspective we don't hear it either...fade to black...
What a perfect gift David Chase has given us.  We are in his debt.



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