Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Sopranos Ending

I've been thinking and talking about the Sopranos ending. I like it the more I think about it because it's a beautiful thing. It lets the audience make their own interpretation of what did or didn't happen.

Many things about this year's series point towards Tony's demise. Other characters close to Tony die, sometimes by Tony's hand; Dr. Malfi learns that Tony's psychotic behavior may not be curable, and that therapy may actually validate his violent nature; plus, the lighting is so dark in practically every scene with Tony. He is often in almost complete darkness, with barely one half of his face in the light.

Some people find insight in the penultimate episode when Tony imagines that the moment of death will simply end in sudden blackness, exactly as the series did for television viewers. Other people think the Sopranos family continues on as usual, but that Tony always lives in fear of sudden death.

I like to take a more cyclical view and see the final episode as merely another moment in time with these characters and their lives, which will continue from moment to moment into the infinity of television. It's brilliant marketing because a latecomer to the show won't worry about starting the series because of a spoilt ending. In a sense there is no ending so it almost doesn't matter which episode you begin watching as long as you are familiar with the characters and their situations. You can catch up on the particular stories of each season of episodes.

I speak from experience, having seen the first two series (sorry, I prefer the British nomenclature) on DVD just in time to catch the most recent two series on television. It felt like I had never missed an episode of the show. I know from my friends that there is a lot of family history and intrigue in the middle part of the series that I am eager to see on DVD. Thank God for Netflix!!

In the meantime, an aquaintance of mine produced a short radio journal about people's reactions to The Sopranos ending and you can listen to it online here (scroll down to "Sopranos Sleep with the Fishes"). Listen closely and you might hear yours truly chiming in for a couple comments!

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