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‘The Sopranos' turns 20. David Chase opens up about Tony’s fate: ‘We all could be whacked in a diner
The Star Ledger ^ | 01.09.19 | Amy Kuperinsky

Posted on 03/11/2019 11:40:39 AM PDT by Coleus

On June 10, 2007, less than five minutes remained in the final episode of “The Sopranos.”

After eight years with Tony Soprano, his family and the Family, viewers of the landmark series sat keenly alert to the final action as Tony waited for his family at Holsten’s in Bloomfield: The bell that sounds each time someone walks through the door. Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin'” playing on the jukebox. The onion rings that Tony, Carmela and A.J. pop in their mouths as Meadow attempts her maddening parallel parking job outside.

Then, nothing. Cut to black.

Those final seconds hit Tony’s native New Jersey — and the entire viewing audience — like the Big Bang, especially when everyone realized the black screen was not, in fact, a cable outage. As the waves of shock expanded outward, “The Sopranos” was never really over. Since that Sunday night more than 11 years ago, fans and TV critics, including former Star-Ledger writers Alan Sepinwall and Matt Zoller Seitz, have debated whether the abrupt end was an indication of Tony’s demise or something else entirely.

So when they sat down recently with series creator David Chase for a series of interviews about the show, they did not expect any monumental clarification. And yet, behold this sentence in their new book:

“I think I had that death scene around two years before the end,” Chase told them.

Yes. “Death scene.”

(Excerpt) Read more at nj.com ...


TOPICS: Local News; Society
KEYWORDS: bloomfield; davidchase; holstens; sopranos
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear
And "Podkayne of Mars" is just a book but 56 years later you can find Sci-Fi fans arguing earnestly about whether she lived or died.

Yes, I always figured she didn't make it. Didn't the grandfather say to the parents "you'll lose him too," referring to Poddy's brother, who set off the nuclear bomb?

81 posted on 03/11/2019 2:43:12 PM PDT by Steely Tom ([Seth Rich] == [the Democrat's John Dean])
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To: dfwgator
False. What really happened:


82 posted on 03/11/2019 2:49:24 PM PDT by lowbridge
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To: dfwgator

Did you notice that when Tony first walks into the diner, we see a shot of the inside the diner from Tonys POV.

BUT among the diner customers seated, is himself.


83 posted on 03/11/2019 2:51:54 PM PDT by lowbridge
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To: dfwgator
...if you’re dead, you don’t even see black.

So, you think you die when the body does? I've never bought into that materialist concept.

A lifetime of living and learning has convinced me that we are all immortal spirits, inhabiting humanoid bodies, which act as temporary vessels.

At body death, we exit these mortal shells with full awareness of self, and complete perception of the material world around us. We do not die. We move on to the next chapter in our existence.

84 posted on 03/11/2019 2:52:07 PM PDT by Windflier (Pitchforks and torches ripen on the vine. Left too long, they become black rifles.)
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To: stuck_in_new_orleans

Exactly. And they placed them whole on their tongues, rather than take a bite. The symbolism struck me right away. The last supper for the sopranos.


85 posted on 03/11/2019 2:57:15 PM PDT by sparklite2 (Don't mind me. I'm just a contrarian.)
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To: Tijeras_Slim

I bought the complete DVD set of B5 and found it so dated, I only watched an episode or two. Shows that stood the passage of time for me are the series China Beach and the movie Broadcast News.


86 posted on 03/11/2019 3:01:39 PM PDT by sparklite2 (Don't mind me. I'm just a contrarian.)
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To: Windflier

I hope you’re right. But for me the only rational ending is to resume the state we were in before conception. Forever.


87 posted on 03/11/2019 3:03:29 PM PDT by sparklite2 (Don't mind me. I'm just a contrarian.)
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To: Steely Tom
Something along those lines. I will have to dig my copy out and review. It is time for my bi-yearly reading binge in any case. It is too blamed cold to start the spring chores and the winter ones have been put to bed.

Once you realize that the book is actually Clark's story, with Podkayne only being the narrator, her dying is the only option.

88 posted on 03/11/2019 3:12:13 PM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (If you are going to be baked by a witch you might as well go out with a mouth full of gingerbread!)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear

Also Heinlein had a tendency to make his “juvenile” novels kind of hard on the reader, because he didn’t think kids should be fed a sugar-coated version of real life.

The last two words of the story, “maybe everyone,” also kind of imply that she’s not with us anymore.

If the ending of that story hadn’t been so sad, I don’t think I would have remembered it more than forty years. In fact, I think the reason I do remember it is because I read the last five or six pages over and over again, trying to figure out of Podkayne survived or not.

Heinlein had a knack for creating very lovable female characters.


89 posted on 03/11/2019 3:19:09 PM PDT by Steely Tom ([Seth Rich] == [the Democrat's John Dean])
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To: Coleus
(apart from, say, what happened to Valery, the Russian gangster in the “Pine Barrens” episode)...a few months ago my daughter and I were eating lunch with a couple of others in a restaurant on the fringes of the Pine Barrens here in south Jersey - sitting in the booth in back of us were two guys who were rattling on and on in a foreign language which eventually we recognized as Russian - as they got up to leave and were walking to the door, daughter looked at me and quipped "that was probably that Russian guy from the Pine Barrens"....

I always thought the ending death scene could be related back to the episode earlier when Tony and Bobby and their wives spent time together at the lake cottage - Tony and Bobby admire a moose head mounted on the wall, and later while on the lake fishing get into a discussion of what it must be like to die - one opines that you feel or see nothing - "everything goes black', and Tony ends the discussion sardonically with "Why don't you ask your friend back there on the wall"......

90 posted on 03/11/2019 3:22:36 PM PDT by Intolerant in NJ
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To: sparklite2
I hope you’re right. But for me the only rational ending is to resume the state we were in before conception. Forever.

In my view we're always in the same state, forever. That is, we live, we perceive, we think, emote, and imagine.

We are the same before birth, and after death. We never perish, even though our bodies do. We ourselves are eternal.

91 posted on 03/11/2019 3:39:57 PM PDT by Windflier (Pitchforks and torches ripen on the vine. Left too long, they become black rifles.)
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To: dfwgator
criminally underrated movie...
92 posted on 03/11/2019 3:59:09 PM PDT by Chode ( WeÂ’re America, Bitch!)
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To: cgbg
I watched B-5 when it first aired years ago. For me, the show veered too much between character and situation based story-telling and flamboyant space opera. I especially disliked the incorporation of smug liberal pieties of the Clinton era.

More than once I shut the show off in the middle of an episode, hoping that my next viewing would reveal the hopelessly shattered wreck of B-5 after an enemy attack -- the most plausible end for a UN adrift in space without the protection of a superpower.

93 posted on 03/11/2019 4:02:10 PM PDT by Rockingham
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To: Rockingham

You miss the part where the Minbari offer it that protection?


94 posted on 03/11/2019 4:04:55 PM PDT by Reily
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To: Reily

Indeed. The Minbari abandoned the Battle of the Line when they realized humans had components of themselves. The Minbari partially funded B5.


95 posted on 03/11/2019 4:10:26 PM PDT by sparklite2 (Don't mind me. I'm just a contrarian.)
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To: lowbridge

Au contraire. My youth included a summer of watching Gilligan’s Island reruns on the afternoons when Florida thunderstorms chased us indoors. Shakespeare, it wasn’t, but it did help keep us from getting skizzled.


96 posted on 03/11/2019 4:13:27 PM PDT by Rockingham
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To: sparklite2

I actually thought B5 was one of the best SciFi on TV at the time. The story arc was such that the first season first episode impacted last season last episode. Very tight interwoven story. Of course we find out years later that JMS had to “loosen things” to accommodate Michael O’Hare’s medical problems. Think how much better the story arc might have been if that hadn’t happened. It blew away its ST:NG competition. You want Clintoneseque moralizing & reasoning go no further the those ST:NG shows. Some of the storylines in B5 made me think JMS was familiar with Thucydides’ “Peloponnesian War” .


97 posted on 03/11/2019 4:24:44 PM PDT by Reily
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To: Rockingham

I hear that. Truth or not, where I live in Florida is called the lightning capital of the world. I believe it.


98 posted on 03/11/2019 4:26:19 PM PDT by sparklite2 (Don't mind me. I'm just a contrarian.)
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To: Reily

Even in sci-fi, I do not see it as realistic writing to have nice, powerful aliens come to the rescue of liberal good intentions when they are in mortal jeopardy.


99 posted on 03/11/2019 4:29:41 PM PDT by Rockingham
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To: Reily

I loved B5 at the time, too. The special effects put Star Trek to shame, especially the notion that an ‘alien’ could be more than a human with forehead ridges. And having JMS semi-available to fans during the course of the series was amazing. I’ve only ever seen that done with Mad Men and B5.

Star Trek: NG is my favorite of the ST family, though, and holds up better in repeated viewings. B5 doesn’t show up much, if at all, on cable/streaming, which is a shame. NG seems like it’s always running somewhere, currently on BBC America.


100 posted on 03/11/2019 4:34:14 PM PDT by sparklite2 (Don't mind me. I'm just a contrarian.)
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