Sopranos' mesmerizing in fifth season
YOU won't see Tony Soprano walking down his driveway to pick up his morning edition of the Newark Star Ledger as he's done every episode of the last four seasons.
Things have changed since last we saw "The Sopranos" back in December 2002.
Tony doesn't live with the family anymore. Since the mob boss (James Gandolfini) and his wife Carmela (Edie Falco) split, Tony's been living in his deceased mom's house. Carmela's struggling to become the person she wants to be -- not the mob boss wife, but someone more refined. Falco's always been a presence to be reckoned with, but this season she's got a meatier role.
Carmela's a woman who has made many moral compromises in her life, but she still thinks of herself as basically a good person. And she wants to be a better one. We won't bet the house on it.
Not only is Tony's personal life in chaos, but things are shaky on the professional front. "Sopranos" creator David Chase says he was reading about all the organized crime figures who were put in jail in the 1980s. Federal agents boasted they had broken the back of the Mafia in a series of highly publicized RICO cases.
"I read an article that a lot of those guys are now getting out of jail. They've now served their time, and they are hitting the
streets again," Chase says
during a recent interview. "So the show begins with what we call the Mafia Class of 2004 hitting the streets."
And they hit the streets hard.
The genius of Chase and his cast is taking essentially despicable characters and making them mesmerizing, episode after episode. The layered characters offer humor, intensity and human nature in its most raw form. It's the closest thing to Shakespeare we've seen in contemporary times.
The tortured Tony yearns to be someone different, someone better. But, as the clich goes, a leopard can't hide its spots. After some body-thumping with his nameless mistress du jour, Tony sees "The Prince of Tides" on TV and fantasizes being with his former psychologist Dr. Melfi (Lorraine Bracco).
He sends her a cute basket with a box of Tide in it to get her attention. But even though she has her own Tony fantasies, she realizes they cannot be more than doctor-patient. After a blow-up in which she tells him she can never have a romantic relationship with him because she knows all the bad things he's done, and he calls her an anatomical term no woman should be called, Tony sends her a card apologizing for his "fowl language."
As for Uncle Junior (Dominic Chianese), the tough old man is facing an unbeatable enemy: Alzheimer's. In one scene, he watches television and sees another actor (fellow bald man Larry David on the HBO series "Curb Your Enthusiasm) thinks he's seeing himself on TV.
Strokes small and large make this series a masterpiece canvas.
Tonight, the fifth season starts with "Two Tonys," which refers not only to Tony Soprano trying to separate himself from his personal life and his dirty career but also to Tony's cousin, Tony Blundetto. Steve Buscemi comes on board as Tony B., who was just climbing up the ranks when he was slammed in jail. Tony S., who couldn't make it to the crime scene that night, dodged the law and became the crime boss.
Now Tony B.'s out and just wants to go straight as a massage therapist, a skill he learned in prison. He's still got a mouth on him, but Tony B. seems to want out of the Wise Guy loop. Or is he just lying low, ready to turn on his cousin?
Veteran actor Joe Santos ("The Rockford Files") and Robert Loggia ("Jagged Edge") play two of the paroled mobsters. While Santos' character would rather spend his remaining years playing with his grandchildren, he's forced back into the business. Loggia's character, Feech, however, is eager to get back into the life.
While the subject matter may be offensive, television doesn't get any better than this show. The blend of humor, pathos, depravity and human desires has never been portrayed in more lyrical fashion. Beyond the splendid writing and acting, there's a cadence of language, a brilliance of direction and photography that pulls you into this story that can only end badly for the principals involved.
The sixth season, which will be an abbreviated 10 episodes rather than the traditional 13, will probably mark the end of this series. Gandolfini has said that playing this tortured character has been difficult for him, and the other cast members seem ready to move on. But the end will not come easy for anyone.
"I've always looked at this show as really trying to get people a lot of bang for their buck, because it's not free. People have to pay for 'The Sopranos,'" Chase says of the HBO program.
"And personally, I've always tried to cram the show just full of this humor, suspense, violence, sex, great rock'n' roll music, cinematography and high production values, ... just cram it as tight as we can and have it be almost bursting with stuff."
Mission accomplished.
courtesy of
http://www.oaklandtribune.com/Stories/0,1413,82~1804~2002516,00.html