Soprano Home Movies

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Soprano Home Movies
The Sopranos episode

Carmela, Tony, Bobby, and Janice having lunch at Janice and Bobby's vacation home.
Episode no. Season 6
Episode 13
Written by Diane Frolov & Andrew Schneider and
David Chase & Matthew Weiner
Directed by Tim Van Patten
Guest stars John Bianco
John "Cha Cha" Ciarcia
Dominic Chianese, Jr.
Dan Conte
Armen Garo
Robert LuPone
David Margulies
Arthur Nascarella
Dania Ramirez
Saundra Santiago
Original airdate April 8, 2007 (2007-04-08)
Season 6 episodes
Part 1: 12 March 20064 June 2006
Part 2: 8 April 200710 June 2007
  1. "Members Only"
  2. "Join the Club"
  3. "Mayham"
  4. "The Fleshy Part of the Thigh"
  5. "Mr. & Mrs. John Sacrimoni Request"
  6. "Live Free or Die"
  7. "Luxury Lounge"
  8. "Johnny Cakes"
  9. "The Ride"
  10. "Moe N' Joe"
  11. "Cold Stones"
  12. "Kaisha"
  1. "Soprano Home Movies"
  2. "Stage 5"
  3. "Remember When"
  4. "Chasing It"
  5. "Walk Like a Man"
  6. "Kennedy and Heidi"
  7. "The Second Coming"
  8. "The Blue Comet"
  9. "Made in America"
List of The Sopranos episodes

"Soprano Home Movies" is the seventy-eighth episode of the HBO television series The Sopranos. It served as the midseason premiere to the second half of the show's sixth season (the broadcast of which was split into two parts) and is the thirteenth episode of the season overall. It was written by supervising producers Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider, series creator/executive producer David Chase, and executive producer Matthew Weiner. It was directed by longtime series director Tim Van Patten. It originally aired in the United States on April 8, 2007, attracting 7.7 million viewers. Critical reception of the midseason premiere was mostly favorable; critics praised the episode for its calm, contemplative storytelling. "Soprano Home Movies" garnered a number of award nominations and was the episode submitted to Emmy Award voters to represent the season, leading to a win for "Outstanding Drama Series".

Set eight months after the preceding episode,[1] "Soprano Home Movies" details a weekend that series protagonist Tony Soprano and his wife Carmela (James Gandolfini and Edie Falco) spend at his sister and brother-in-law's lakefront vacation home in upstate New York. As they celebrate Tony's birthday, a casual argument leads to insults and culminates in a fistfight between Tony and his brother-in-law, Bobby (Steve Schirripa). After losing the fight, Tony contemplates how to get back at Bobby.

Contents

[edit] Plot

In a flashback to 2004, a neighborhood teenage boy witnesses Johnny Sack's (Vincent Curatola) arrest and Tony Soprano's dropping of his gun in the snow as he flees the scene. The same teenage boy later picks up and fires the gun.

Three years later, Essex County authorities arrest Tony on a gun charge. Tony spends a short period of time in custody before appearing in court with his attorney, Neil Mink (David Margulies), and is released on bail. In Brooklyn, a party is held for Phil Leotardo (Frank Vincent), who has recently returned from the hospital.

Tony returns home to a warm welcome. Later, he and Carmela travel to Janice (Aida Turturro) and Bobby's upstate New York lakefront vacation home to celebrate Tony's forty-seventh birthday, where Tony fires Bobby's customized AR-10 assault rifle in the nearby woods. Bobby gives Tony the firearm as a birthday present. The two later relax by fishing on the lake in Bobby's boat. Tony raises the fact that Bobby has never "popped his cherry" in regard to murdering someone and juxtaposes this with the kill record of Bobby's father. Bobby replies that he has "come close," but that his father never wanted it for him. In New Jersey, A.J. (Robert Iler) uses his parents' bedroom to entertain his new girlfriend and has friends over for a party while his parents are away.

Tony, Carmela, Bobby, and Janice celebrate Tony's birthday with karaoke, drinking, and Monopoly. An argument starts after a discussion of Monopoly house rules. Over Tony's objections, Janice relates a childhood story of their father and mother; tensions reach a crescendo with Tony's remarks about Janice's looks and past promiscuous behavior. Bobby hits Tony in the face and the two have a fight, ending with Tony bloodied and bruised on the floor. Janice scolds Bobby for hitting Tony, and Bobby runs outside, where he drives off drunk in his SUV and reverses into a tree. He returns inside and apologizes to Tony and the two couples go to their beds. Tony wakes up in the middle of the night and tells Bobby and Janice that Bobby beat him in a fair fight. The next day, the couples seem to make amends, but as the day progresses Tony increasingly obsesses over losing the fight to Bobby.

Bobby returns to the vacation home after committing his first murder.
Bobby returns to the vacation home after committing his first murder.

Tony and Bobby leave for a pre-arranged business meeting. They meet with two Quebecers who are interested in doing business with Tony. As a part of a business arrangement, Tony agrees to arrange the murder of one of the Quebecer's former brother-in-law and asks Bobby to take care of it. Back at the vacation home, Carmela and Tony leave for home and Bobby sets off for Montreal, where the man he agreed to murder lives. He finds his target in the laundry room of an apartment building and kills him by shooting him twice.

Back home, Tony watches a DVD given to him by Janice. Mink calls, informing Tony that the gun charge, though dropped by Essex County, has been picked up by the FBI. Bobby returns to his lake front house, picks up his daughter, and gazes out over the lake.[2][3]

[edit] Production

The episode title derives from Janice's birthday present to Tony: a DVD onto which she has had transferred old home movies of them and their sister during their childhood.

"Soprano Home Movies" was the first episode of the final batch of episodes to be produced, following a six-month-long production hiatus. In preparation for shooting the episode, series creator/executive producer David Chase held several rehearsals with the lead actors.[4]

The scenes at the lake front vacation home were filmed over two weeks in June 2006 in Putnam Valley, New York. Additional interior shots were filmed six months later at Silvercup Studios, New York, where a replica of the cabin had been built in a sound stage. The lake seen multiple times in the episode is Lake Oscawana. The scenes of Tony and Bobby fishing were filmed on location on the lake but much closer to the shoal than it appears in the episode. The scenes set in Montreal were actually filmed in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn. Filming of the scenes set in New Jersey and the Soprano residence took place on location in Essex County, New Jersey and in Silvercup Studios. The ripping of Bobby's shirt when he commits his first murder was not in the script but was added during production.[4] While filming the cabin fight scene between Tony and Bobby in Silvercup Studios, Steve Schirripa accidentally headbutted James Gandolfini. The fight scene was choreographed but Gandolfini didn't step out of the way in time. His nose was bloodied but not broken. The real headbutting was kept in the episode.[5]

Gregory Antonacci, who plays Phil Leotardo's advisor Butch DeConcini on the show, is now billed in the opening credits. Joseph R. Gannascoli has been removed from the main credits as his character was murdered two episodes prior to "Soprano Home Movies". The characters Dr. Jennifer Melfi (Lorraine Bracco) and Junior Soprano (Dominic Chianese) do not appear in the episode but the actors who play them are still listed in the opening credits.

[edit] Reception

[edit] Ratings

"Soprano Home Movies" drew an average of 7.7 million viewers when it first aired on HBO on Sunday 8 April 2007 in the United States, a significant drop from the 2006 season premiere, which attracted 9.5 million viewers, and the lowest ratings for a Sopranos premiere since the season two premiere, which drew roughly the same number of viewers as "Soprano Home Movies".[6][7]

[edit] Critical response

The episode was generally well-received by critics. Maureen Ryan of the Chicago Tribune wrote "this is loose, contemplative Sopranos storytelling at its best."[8] Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly was impressed with the midseason premiere and wrote that, despite not being a very eventful episode on the surface, "everything happened".[9] Tim Goodman of the San Francisco Chronicle praised the episode, writing "the series remains as vital and interesting as ever [...] There may be no better (or realistic) way to go forward into this Sopranos swan song."[10] Brian Zoromski of IGN awarded the episode a score of 9.5 out of 10, citing the calm, subtle storytelling as a great strength.[11] Alan Sepinwall of The Star Ledger gave the episode a positive review and praised it for featuring the character of Bobby Bacala in a more prominent role, writing "The hour was largely a refresher course on Tony, Janice and their history, but it also gave Bacala the dignity he's so often been deprived by the writers."[12] Marisa Carroll of PopMatters called the midseason premiere "stellar" and wrote that "David Chase repeatedly re-imagines ordinary family scenarios—like a weekend trip to the mountains—in brutal, gangster terms. [...] Such signature exaggerations remain both hilarious and unsettling." She awarded the episode a score of 9 out of 10 (shared with the following two episodes).[13] Tom Biro of television webblog TV Squad gave the episode a favorable review, writing "All in all, big thumbs up from me."[14] Kim Reed of Television Without Pity gave the midseason premiere an A-, writing "...while, on the surface, not much happened, I think there were a ton of callbacks to previous episodes, and that familiar Soprano tension was used to good effect."[15] Alessandra Stanley of The New York Times gave the episode a mixed review, calling it "solemn" and wrote that "even before last season the series had started to sag in places, a creative fatigue that matched the main characters' weariness and also the audience's."[16]

[edit] Awards

In 2007, "Soprano Home Movies" was nominated in four categories for the 59th Primetime Emmy Awards. It was the submitted Sopranos episode for consideration in the category of "Outstanding Drama Series"; it won, giving the show its second win in the category and making The Sopranos the first drama series to win the award for its final season.[17][18][19] It was also nominated but failed to win in the categories of "Outstanding Cinematography For A Single-Camera Series" (Phil Abraham), "Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing For A Drama Series" (William B. Stich), and "Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series" (Aida Turturro).[20][21] The episode was also submitted for Emmy consideration in the categories of "Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series" (Steve Schirripa) and "Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series" (Diane Frolov & Andrew Schneider and David Chase & Matthew Weiner); however, it was not nominated.[22] In 2008, episode director Tim Van Patten was nominated for a Directors Guild of America Award in the category of "Drama Series (Night)" but lost out to Mad Men's Alan Taylor, also a director for The Sopranos.[23][24]

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Kaisha" ends with a Christmas Eve dinner at the Soprano residence, making the date 2006-12-24. In "Soprano Home Movies", they celebrate Tony's forty-seventh birthday. In "Another Toothpick" Tony's birth date is given as 1960-08-24. This means almost exactly eight months elapsed between the episodes.
  2. ^ "Soprano Home Movies". Diane Frolov & Andrew Schneider and David Chase & Matthew Weiner. The Sopranos. HBO. 2007-04-08. No. 13, season 6.
  3. ^ Episode guide - Episode 78 - "Soprano Home Movies". HBO. Retrieved on 2008-02-20.
  4. ^ a b Schirripa, Steve. (2007). "Soprano Home Movies" commentary track [DVD]. HBO.
  5. ^ Clarke, Norm (2007-04-11). NORM: Schirripa tackles Imus appearance. Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved on 2008-03-09.
  6. ^ Wallenstein, Andrew (2007-04-11). 'Sopranos' ratings take a hit. The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved on 2008-02-20.
  7. ^ Ryan, Maureen (2006-03-14). The comeback. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved on 2008-02-22.
  8. ^ Ryan, Maureen (2007-04-05). Ari Gold and Tony Soprano return, and we can't look away. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved on 2008-02-22.
  9. ^ Schwarzbaum, Lisa. The Sopranos - Soprano Home Movies. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved on 2008-02-20.
  10. ^ Goodman, Tim (2007-04-02). A tidy finish? Fahgeddaboutit.. San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved on 2008-02-22.
  11. ^ Zoromski, Brian (2007-04-09). The Sopranos: Soprano Home Movies Review. IGN. Retrieved on 2008-02-20.
  12. ^ Sepinwall, Alan (2007-04-08). Sopranos Rewind: Livia's legacy, Bacala's broken heart. The Star-Ledger. Retrieved on 2008-02-26.
  13. ^ Carroll, Marisa (2007-04-25). No Turning Back. PopMatters. Retrieved on 2008-02-20.
  14. ^ Biro, Tom (2007-04-09). The Sopranos: Soprano Home Movies (midseason premiere). TV Squad. Retrieved on 2008-02-20.
  15. ^ Reed, Kim (2007-04-10). The Sopranos - "Soprano Home Movies". Television Without Pity. Retrieved on 2008-02-22.
  16. ^ Stanley, Alessandra. "This Thing of Ours, It’s Over", The New York Times, 2007-04-08. Retrieved on 2008-02-20. 
  17. ^ O'Neal, Tom (2007-06-30). Report: Top 10 Emmy finalists for drama & comedy series. The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved on 2008-02-20.
  18. ^ Emmy winners. The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved on 2008-02-22.
  19. ^ Sopranos scores hat-trick at Emmys. RTE (2007-09-17). Retrieved on 2008-02-22.
  20. ^ O'Neal, Tom (2007-07-24). Finally! Your official Emmy episode cheat sheet!. The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved on 2008-02-20.
  21. ^ The 59th Primetime Emmy Awards and Creative Arts Emmy Awards Nominees are.... Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Retrieved on 2008-02-20.
  22. ^ Boomer (2007-07-26). 2007 Emmys Confirmed Episode Submissions. The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved on 2008-02-26.
  23. ^ DGA Announces Nominees for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in All Categories for 2007. Directors Guild of America (2008-01-10). Retrieved on 2008-02-20.
  24. ^ DGA Award Winners and Special Award Recipients. Directors Guild of America (2008-01-26). Retrieved on 2008-02-20.

[edit] External links