Sunday, June 10, 2007

Into the Sunset

Now that all the hype surrounding the Sopranos finale is in the past tense, as is the final episode itself, I have a few reactions. First, however, if you need a warning that this piece contains spoilers, what you really need is some self-examination for not watching it live like the rest of the country.

I went out with a few friends about three weeks ago, on a cold Friday night, and we were all surmising what might comprise the final few episodes. My friend Dave opined that the series would end with a flash-bang and fireworks that would leave us all with muted, stifled "wows." The penultimate episode, in which Bobby and Silvio are shot, the former being killed and the latter surviving -- barely -- it occurred to me that this series would not necessarily end with fireworks, but it wouldn't end with a whimper, either. I advised my friend Dave that if I was doing the writing, the final scene would, ostensibly, wrap up with the four -- Tony Sr., Carmela, Meadow and AJ -- sitting and talking (not arguing, bitching or insulting one another) and the camera would pan out, through a window, and fade to black. Granted, the finale was a bit different -- Meadow was making her way through the door when the blackout occurred -- but overall it wasn't far from what I envisioned as the end to a great story.

There were and remain a lot of loose ends -- from the Russian who gets loose in the woods with Chris and Paulie chasing him (from a few seasons ago) to what happens with Silvio; from what about Junior's money to who, if not Carlo, is informing on the family; will Tony be indicted, and if so, will he eventually go to prison?

The point of the story is that none of these questions really matter, nor do their answers. The whole point of the story was about a guy -- Tony Soprano -- who is the head of a family of four, and who happens to also be the mob boss of New Jersey. So the actual ending -- the four of them sitting, together, as a family, at a table eating dinner is far from a shock to me. The quick, almost abrupt ending was weird -- and I think it was meant to be jarring and obvious in its zeal to wind up or down, depending on your perspective. David Chase obviously wanted to shake our tree, and when he zooms in on the key turning in the ignition after all the hits happen in the penultimate episode, it's clear that everyone watching firmly believed that car was blowing up.

So all the back and forth, the ramping up of tension with Meadow parking her car and running to get into the restaurant, led one to believe that she was in grave danger. And I applaud David Chase for playing with our emotions as he had for the past seven seasons (and the past ten years). Let's be clear -- the ending came too soon, and of course, the series could easily continue on into another year or more (or, more likely, a movie). But the whole point of what he was trying to say with this series, and, especially, the finale, was that the family -- both the Soprano family of four and the Sopranos of the mob, will continue. If Tony is indicted, someone will take his place until -- if -- he leaves prison. If he is killed/assassinated, the Family will continue, whether it's Paulie -- unlikely -- or someone younger and less jaded and thwarted by life. Phil's right-hand man will step up with Little Carmine, who has always worked well with and loved Tony, and they'll do great things. AJ's movie producing days will start -- and don't ignore the connection between Christopher's waffling, flaccid, dual personality and AJ's similarity in both his inability to cope with life and his eventual career being what Christopher was doing prior to his untimely death. Everything will wind up, and continue, even if we -- and David Chase's cameras -- are not there to witness it.

The whole point is that the mob is, has been and always will be run by men who want, simply, to make money. Some of them get angry -- like Phil, or even Tony -- but for the most part, they use their heads to guide their hearts. Sure, Phil was pissed that Tony beat the crap (and the teeth -- literally) out of one of his guys, but logically speaking, he had the right to do that. And it was the wrong move to go after Tony and his guys (Bobby & Silvio). So when the war got out of hand -- when people started losing money -- Phil's guy suggested (not in so many words) that they should back off and go back. Tony, after avenging the insult to his daughter two weeks ago, immediately agreed to go with Little Carmine to Phil's house to make peace. It was the right move, and people in this business -- this dirty, secret business -- either think and act properly and logically or they wind up dead, either by gunshot or getting their heads flattened with the front tire of a Ford Explorer, or, in Phil's case, both.

Was the ending abrupt, too short and unsatisfying? Absolutely. Was it brilliant? Absolutely.

I think part of his point was that life in the mob will always continue, and that people -- like Tony and his wife and his children -- all bear the burden of surviving and living in that life. Sure, they have lots of money and do basically whatever they want -- but at what price? To go to funerals, mourn people that were killed by their former friends, and to wonder whether Tony, or others like him, will go to a meeting one night and never come home? The whole point is this life will continue, and even though there is no beginning, no middle and no end, one has to wonder whether this type of life is one in which you'd like to participate, be a spectator or eradicate completely.

I'm simultaneously irritated that this show has run its course -- even though I acknowledge that it has. The thing is, when applying a finite thing like a television show to something like the Mafia, the key difference is that one, eventually, must reach its conclusion. That, above all else, is what Chase was saying in this somewhat anti-climactic ending. I do think it was wonderful direction, editing and puppet-mastering, ie the ramping up of the tension ie with Meadow, etc. You expected something, and what you got -- for better or worse -- was an ending that acknowledged and reminded us that it, first and foremost, was, is and always will be about the family, before The Family.

3 comments:

Kaia said...

Great post. The actual ending had me changing my channels to make sure my cable didn't blow - which i'm sure millions of others were also doing at the same time. It was literally Chase shutting the camera off - done - series over. Impactful - but frustrating.

I think the last 2 episodes should have been 1 and i think phil's death should have been a little more dramatic. I mean bobby's death was so cleanly crafted and edited - it was incredible - it was epic. Phil, was more of a whimper - not suited for the head of the NY family. There should have been impact - there was no wow factor except for the tire moving slowly toward his head. The kid throwing up afterward was almost kitsch to me - not necessary.

I don't know - while i loved the series i was disappointed - greatly - in last season and this season in the sense that while it is about family and "family" - these are sweet men - this isn't an easy life - and their survival is always hanging in the balance. The finale fell short for me - sadly.

Boogie said...

I think the finale fell short for everyone on some level; it would have been a lot more fun if Chase ramped up the violence and the impact of the last episode, and/or if he combined the last two into one two-hour episode. But on the other hand, aside from the neat little packages of AJ's and Meadow's futures being laid out like tomorrow's clothes for us, nothing else really was wrapped up, which is the antithesis of a series-ending finale but which is completely in keeping with Chase's non-TV-friendly but memorable, careful writing.

As much as Bobby's hit in the train store being so memorable, though, I disagree that Phil's head-crushing wasn't as memorable. On some level, it was even more appropriately done than the Bobby hit. These are not high-end, sophisticated, classy people. It's well within the scope of the mafia reality, at least in these times, to have a mob boss (or a high-ranking mob guy, at least) getting hit outside a gas station and being left for dead. The tire-crusher was as cinematic, I suppose, as Chase was willing to get.

It won't get any easier in time knowing this was it, but hopefully we'll all at least realize what Chase was trying to do, even if most -- if not all -- of us disagree with his choices. I guess we'll have to wait for the DVD...

Anonymous said...

LOL, my friends and I also checked to see if the cable blew ;-)

I was disappointed but it makes sense I guess.

Absolutely LOVED the cat though. Really fun bit with him and Pauly.