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“but don’t you get your hopes up high” | a blog by cody simms

The Sopranos Last Episode “Made in America”: Don’t Stop Believing!

Straight up. The best final episode of any TV series I’ve seen. It starts out as literal as possible, and ends as figurative as possible. And this is the same way we grew to know Tony — first as just a mean gangster, and over time as a very full and complex person. In rapid unedited succession, the things I loved:

1. “Woke up this morning. Got myself a gun.” Open scene: Tony wakes up; got himself a gun!
2. Godfather reference #1; Quote from The Godfather: Sonny, “No, no, no! No more! Not this time, consiglieri. No more meetings, no more discussions, no more Sollozzo tricks. You give ‘em one message: I want Sollozzo. If not, it’s all-out war: we go to the mattresses.” Tony wakes up having literally, the night before, gone to (sleep on) the (empty) mattress(es). Ok, I may be stretching this one here.
3. Funny, funny funny! The whole bit with the cat and Paulie was hilarious. And more classic Paulie: He sits down at Bobby’s funeral and undoes the top of his pants. Phil’s whacking (the gruesome aftermath). The FBI agent cheering when finding out that Phil was gone. This was the sort of stuff that made the show so great in the early days.
4. Godfather reference #2. Vito Corleone celebrated Michael’s war-herodom. Tony and Carmella did everything they could to talk AJ out of going to war. They were much happier with him producing a scummy mystery movie.
5. AJ as stasis. AJ seemed to have been transformed over the last few episodes into a politically aware person who might rise above the lowlife status of his dad and friends. Nope. After his car burned up and he decided to take the film job instead of joining the army, he proved to just be a rich bratty kid with a BMW dating an underage high schooler.
6. Phil’s whacking. His head had gotten too big. So it got flattened down to size. And two episodes previously he had ordered his guys to “decapitate” New Jersey. What goes around…
7. Back to the beginning. To Junior: “F*ck the birds! You and Johnny ran North Jersey!” (has to be taken in reference to Tony’s issue with the ducks from the Episode 1). Also, when meeting with AJ’s psychologist, he goes through the history of his mother with her — which was an almost instant replay to his first meeting with Dr Melfi in Episode 1.
8. Twilight Zone reference. My brother-in-law pointed this out. But when Tony’s watching an old black-and-white sci fi episode of The Twilight Zone or something in the hideout, it looks like Junior is the star. When he talks to Junior, Junior tells him that “martians stole his money”.
9. The underlying theme of lost glory. The Godfather (above-mentioned) references represent a much grander version of the mob lifestyle than what the Sopranos live.
10. Lost Italian heritage. Phil’s guy is talking with him on the phone in Little Italy. When he hangs up, he’s in Chinatown and looks really lost. All that’s left of the great Little Italy is one little block. And in the final scene, Tony chooses Journey over Tony Bennett on the jukebox (my brother-in-law also pointed these two out to me).
11. Lost power. Tony and Paulie are chatting at a table in front of Satriales. That place used to be packed. But now it’s just the two of them, looking sort of pathetic. Even though Tony’s won the battle with Phil, what does he really have besides a family that makes him miserable and one remaining made guy (Paulie) who has always been a pain. Paulie has always complained about getting passed over…and then he doesn’t even want the job that Tony’s offering him when he’s the only guy who could take it. For eight years we’ve believe that Tony is the modern day Godfather. But in all actuality, Tony’s sort of small potatoes when it comes to terrorism and all of the other horrible stuff going on in the world today.
12. Lost motivation. When Tony tells Junior that he and Johnny “used to run north Jersey”, Junior blankly says “that’s nice.” This is what it’s all come down to…it just doesn’t really matter.
13. Lost hope. Tony realizes that he not been the influence he needs to be with his family. Meadow tells Tony that she wants to be a lawyer because she feels that Italians are not treated fairly. “If I hadn’t seen you taken away by the FBI so many times, I’d probably be a boring suburban doctor.” The look on his face is just plain depressing. Similarly, when finding out Meadow’s college dropout friend was no longer a screwup but instead in med school, Carmella gives a look of sheer disappointment.
14. Religion. Paulie tells Tony that one time he saw the Virgin Mary. Tony tells him “f*ck strippers. We coulda made millions!”. That’s his spirituality.
15. Onion rings. The fried, greasy, imperfect, but wonderfully tasty ring. The imperfect circle goes on.
16. The suspenseful last 5 minutes. I can’t remember feeling so nervous at the end of a show when everything apparently is supposed to be great. The bad guy is gone; the family is there; the happy music is on. But nope! Wow! And to think that creepy feeling is what Tony lives with every minute of every day. Remember a few episodes ago when he decided he couldn’t even go out and get his newspaper in the morning anymore because he didn’t feel safe? Terrible!
17. Godfather reference #3. The guy going to the bathroom at the end. Michael Corleone’s first hit occured in a greasy Italian restaurant. He went into the bathroom to get the gun and came out shooting. At the end of the episode last night, the random guy kept staring at Tony and then slowly walked into the bathroom right before everything went black.
18. The unknown. Did the guy who went into the bathroom get Tony? We’ll never know. But the real question is, does it matter? Even if he lived, it seems he was going to be indicted in a Grand Jury due to testimony of one of his own guys (Carlo) against him, or he would get to live out his time in an unhappy marriage with guys that he doesn’t really like or trust. Regardless, cut to black. No music. Just reality.

Here are the things that I couldn’t quite put my finger on. Please speculate away in the comments!
1. Meadow. She knew something was going on. Did her boyfriend give her some inside info on the pending Grand Jury case against Tony? Why was she so nervous when parking the car? Carmela seemed to know that something was up, too; she looked strange when telling Tony that Meadow was going to be late to dinner because she was “at the doctor”.
2. The FBI. Was the female agent who was sleeping with the main FBI guy somehow involved with Carlo’s plans to testify against Tony? My brother in law seems he thinks he remembers Carlo’s son getting busted for drugs earlier this year. If so, is that what caused Carlo to flip?
3. The cat and Paulie. I can’t figure this one out. The cat loved Christopher. Is this another Godfather reference? Christopher was obviously the true “Michael Corleone” to Tony (as AJ was just a screw up), but Tony killed him anyway. So is this cat’s love of Christopher some reference to Marlon Brando’s cat in The Godfather? And why did Paulie hate it so much? Is it something to do with Paulie getting passed over by Christopher in the ranks? After all, Paulie was the only guy in the family who was of Junior and Johnny’s generation. And he was originally Christopher’s mentor. (Another take, I’ve recently seen some comments in another post suggesting that the cat is Adriana).

One last time, wow! Some day, some time in my life, I’m going to have to make a real effort to watch all of the episodes again in succession over the course of a few months. I honestly believe that drama doesn’t come any better. Original, referential; serious, funny; metaphorical, popular; timeless, contemporary. Thanks David Chase, James Gandolfini, HBO and everyone else involved in The Sopranos. It’s been amazing.


 
 
 

6 Responses to “The Sopranos Last Episode “Made in America”: Don’t Stop Believing!”

  1. Brian Monroe
    12. June 2007 at 04:16

    The perspective of the series has largely been 3rd person. That is we watch the characters and plot from an outsiders point of view. For the most part this is the perspective. However, every once in while it becomes a sort of 1st and 2nd person perspective. Every once in while we are thrust into the perspective (usually just visually) of Tony. There are many instances which I will bring up later, but this has been the basic pattern of perspectives for the series. Let us say that those 11 seconds of nothing was really being suddenly thrust into that Tony perspective. What would this nothing mean? Well, it would mean he is dead. Suddenly, without warning, Tony is dead. Well, how would he have a died? I don’t know about you, but did you notice that guy who barely touched his food at the counter go to the bathroom? We know how they do it. Inconspicuous. Methodical. Without warning. Headshot. Dead. So, Tony is killed in front of his entire family. Some may say how do I know if this is what the nothingness is? Okay, let’s say you’re right and Tony is killed, why wouldn’t they just show it. My reply is that I guess I’m not as heartless as you. I really don’t want to see Tony get offed. It seems a little perverse. And for you fans who would want to see it just to know, you really aren’t fans. A real fan would relish the opportunity to experience that last moment rather than merely witnessing it. A real fan (unlike Dr. Melfi) believes there’s something good in Tony worth experiencing. And for those fans who refuse to step into Tony’s world, David Chase gave you the ending you deserved: nothing. As for the true believers who have made it a habit to empathize and understand, we have the special treat of truly experiencing who the man is, his essence, and his purpose. And if you need any further encouragement to accept this interpretation, remember what Bobby said to Tony on the boat: When you die, all you see is blankness. Coincidence–probably not. For those who are now ready to step inside the world of Tony, remember that at the heart of understanding The Sopranos lies the viewers’ willingness to infer. (check out more on my blog jakjonsun.wordpress.com)

  2. Cody Simms
    12. June 2007 at 07:50

    Brian, I completely agree with your statement that there’s “something good in Tony worth experiencing”. The last episode was full of those moments — the look on his face when Meadow told him that she’s going into law due to having watched him be arrested rather than become “a boring suburban doctor” — which is what he wanted — was crushing. I completely appreciate the perspective that “when you die, all you see is blankness” and thus he was indeed killed. But just because it is a work of fiction, and I can, I also like to entertain the subtext that he didn’t die but his glory did. The blankness is the death of his pride. It is his moment of realizing that nothing he has really matters…he’s stuck with a family he feels depressed about, a job that he realizes is never going to actually end in a positive way and doesn’t provide anything good to society (see Junior’s malaise and Dr Melfi’s decided lack of faith in her ability to help him), a life that is full of the constant fear of being hunted (which we felt for those last five minutes), and a reality that he is probably going to go to prison for a long time even though he supposedly “won”. I actually feel that this interpretation is almost even more bleak. About 10 minutes prior to the ending, Tony was talking with AJ, and AJ said something like “you once told me to try to focus on the good things”. Tony said something like “I did? Umm, yeah…”

  3. Cody Simms
    13. June 2007 at 09:44

    Another great point of view:
    http://jeffstrabone.blogspot.com/2007/06/dont-stop.html

  4. Derek
    31. October 2007 at 22:22

    There was another very subtle Godfater image in the final episode where Tony was eating an orange. Oranges symbolised death in the Godfather trilogy, so this tells me that Tony was killed in the restaurant.

  5. lippy
    25. March 2008 at 21:19

    WOw! just saw the last season now. Incredible ending! I think it was pure genious, and there is so much symbolism in the series that forces you to think. But i believe they purposly wrote the final endind to create controversy. i honestly believe that tony is killed in the end. However, there are many strong points that suggest otherwise. Great series, hopefully HBO comes out with another jem!

  6. Amy
    21. May 2008 at 21:12

    what was the deal with Meadow taking so long to park and that they focused on that for a while.

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