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Family. Redefined.
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Dear Jeffrey:
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I think there are two questions which have to be answered in this "TV Club."
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The first is, can we find something to say about The Sopranos not
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already said in the thousands of articles on the subject, including the two by
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you? And the second is, is the second season any good? Partly as a cheap way to
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build suspense, and partly to force readers to plow through my pet theories
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before giving them the goods, I'm going to take a stab at the first question
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and leave the second one for later.
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Here's my theory about what makes The Sopranos different from other
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TV shows and movies about the mafia . I think The Sopranos brings
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the understatement of the American short story to a subject usually treated as
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high drama or farce. The Godfather is an opera in three acts. Martin
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Scorsese's brilliant Italian-American movies strive for, and often achieve, the
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altitude of classical tragedy--they tell the stories of heroes whose fates are
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the result of their own flawed natures. ( GoodFellas was a jaunty
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laugh-fest for its first two-thirds, but that was just Scorsese's setup for
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disaster.) The comedies, such as Prizzi's Honor and Analyze This ,
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are meant to cut through the globby schmaltz of mob drama by showing us wise
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guys as goofballs. When last season began, it looked like The Sopranos
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was a comedy, too--a spoof about a mobster with spoiled, nagging children and
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mother problems who goes to see a shrink. But where the show departs from the
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norm is that it eschews both caricature and melodrama (though it has elements
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of both) for something that has the weight of, and comes across as, realism.
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(How realistic it actually is, Mr. Mob Reporter, I hope you are going to tell
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us.) I mean, does this or does this not sound like your standard short-form
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suburbiana? It's about the little moments of anomie in the daily routine,
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underscored by cheerful violence and Tarantino-esque riffing. It's about teen
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anorexia and pre-teen rapster attitudinizing and brand-name chitchat and
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unbearable self-loathing and intergenerational weirdness.
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Maybe I'm being pretentious here and shoehorning pop culture into a literary
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context to which it doesn't belong, because television is obviously less
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compressed and more mundane than the movies. A series has to have the
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open-endedness of daily life, or else it would come abruptly to an end. But
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even nighttime dramas remain tightly structured around 15-minute segments,
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which means that points have to be hammered into your head for fear you'll
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forget what happened from one commercial to the next. The Sopranos takes
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advantage of its commercial-free environment to be comparatively fearless in
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the face of flat dramatic affect. Characters register information with the
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tiniest of gestures--all Edie Falco has to do is not move her facial muscles
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when her priest and would-be lover lets something slip that suggests he may be
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toying with her, and we know that Carmela Soprano just grasped something
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important. How important we won't know for several episodes, when she gives him
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the lowdown with the kind of brutal, layered insight into his character you
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usually don't see outside of novels.
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modem
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T1 connection
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Download Windows Media Player
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The producers also grant us a fairly high tolerance for boredom. This comes
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across most vividly in Dr. Melfi's office. I love how Tony taps his shoes with
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hostile insecurity and looks around at the psychiatrist's weird doctor's-office
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art, avoiding her eyes as he refuses to talk, the way patients do. You've seen
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this scene a million times before (especially in Analyze This ), but it
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never goes on so long, or with so many sudden changes in mood. You can tell
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that the writers and actors trust that the payoff will be worth it. It is,
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too--remember the time when Tony is getting ready to call it quits with Melfi
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and she asks, in her protracted, oracular intonation: "What do you want to say
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to me?" And he replies, as if drugged, "I had a dream," which is that his penis
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fell off and he's running around holding it up while he looks for the guy who
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fixes his Lincolns to screw it back on, at which point a duck swoops down and
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snaps it out of his hands. It's a moment of sheer absurdity played straight and
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almost in slow motion, until we realize belatedly that the escalating
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surrealism has just earned us the only weeping session of the season. And
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they're Tony 's tears, which is inevitable but still shocking.
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Which brings us to what makes The Sopranos not just different but
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good. There's the writing. I think what I like best about that is not the
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attention the writers pay to the details of Italian-American sociology, not the
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witty bullshitting sessions among the members of the crew, and not the way the
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plot lines mess with genre expectations, so that the worst thing that can
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happen to Anthony Soprano Jr. is not that he gets beaten up by a school bully
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but that he doesn't get beaten up, because that means he learns that his
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classmates' parents are afraid of his father. I like the treatment of Tony
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Soprano, a man who is trying in surprisingly good faith and with honest
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introspection to wake up to what he is--an adulterous husband, a bad example to
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his children, the son of a criminal father and an infanticidal mother. (Of
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course, he is also a killer and a thief, two facts about himself he hasn't
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quite dealt with yet.) By taking him and Carmela seriously, by making them
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neither monsters nor the butt of jokes, the writers grant them dignity and
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pathos. That, in turn, demythologizes the world they inhabit. Making them human
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brings home almost for the first time the mob's human costs.
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I haven't begun to talk about what may be the best part of the show--the
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acting. Any thoughts?
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Yours,
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Judith
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