Remember When (The Sopranos)

"Remember When"
The Sopranos episode
Episode no. Season 6B
Episode 3
Directed by Phil Abraham
Written by Terence Winter
Cinematography by Phil Abraham
Production code 615
Original air date April 22, 2007
Running time 58 minutes
Guest actors

see below

"Remember When" is the eightieth episode of the HBO television series The Sopranos. It is the third episode of the second half of the show's sixth season, the fifteenth episode of the season overall. It was written by Terence Winter and was directed by Phil Abraham. It originally aired on April 22, 2007 and was watched by 6.85 million viewers on its premiere.[1]

Starring

* = credit only

Guest starring

Also guest starring

Episode recap

Tony and Paulie go into hiding

On a suspected tip from the reincarcerated capo "Larry Boy" Barese, the FBI begin investigating an old murder of a small-time bookie named Willie Overall. Overall was Tony's first murder, which happened on Labor Day weekend of 1982 when Tony was 22. The hit was assigned to Tony by his father, DiMeo Family Capo "Johnny Boy" Soprano, and Paulie Gualtieri accompanied him on it. Paulie goes to Tony's house and informs him of the situation, and, after the Bureau starts digging for Willie's body, Tony and Paulie pack up and drive toward Miami, Florida, to lie low until the heat blows over. The FBI indeed manage to find Overall's remains.

On the trip down to Miami, Tony at first enjoys reminiscing old times with Paulie but soon grows weary of his annoying mannerisms and tendency to sometimes blab carelessly with strangers. Suspecting his previous disloyalty, Tony questions Paulie several times about the circumstance by which Johnny "Sack" became aware of Ralph Cifaretto's joke made at the expense of his wife, Ginny Sacrimoni, back in 2002 that caused great tensions between the two families, but Paulie denies any knowledge of it. The two visit "Beansie" Gaeta in Miami and all have dinner together with some women at a restaurant. Beansie and Paulie share old stories and joke and Beansie shows them some old photos: one of a younger Paulie and the other of Tony's father with Junior. Tony gets irritated by the incessant reminiscing and Paulie once almost mentioning mob crimes to civilians and leaves the table, angrily dubbing "remember when" as "the lowest form of conversation." After having sex with one of the women, though, Tony learns she had an impression he was Paulie's best friend from all of Paulie's stories about him at the table. Tony admits Paulie used to be his role model when growing up.

Tony phones Hesh Rabkin to ask him for money, in the form of a bridge loan, saying he needs to pay back some gambling debts that he attributes to a run of bad luck. Hesh agrees to lend him the money.

Paulie and Tony also manage to do some business while in hiding. They arrange a meeting with some Cuban contacts of Beansie, but when more men than expected suddenly arrive, Paulie charges to meet them unfazed, making Tony, who would have preferred more caution, follow him. The meeting goes well in the end, and the parties agree to trade stolen goods between them.

In a later conversation with Beansie, Tony expresses his concerns about Paulie, particularly his loose tongue, diminishing earnings and his vulnerability to the Feds due to his lack of legitimate income on his IRS tax returns. Beansie sticks up for Paulie, saying his peculiar behavior owes to him having no wife or children, since he only has Tony and his crew for friendship. Beansie adds Paulie has great respect for Tony, and the mob boss admits to once finding a painting of him as a general at Paulie's house, which he did not think was a joke. Plus, Tony commends Paulie's ever-present boldness, citing their recent meeting with the Cubans as an example. Nevertheless, Tony still wonders whether Paulie's loyalty has ever been truly "put to the test."

Larry's misinformation about Willie Overall's murder leads the FBI to blame it on the deceased Jackie Aprile, Sr. Tony invites Paulie on a sport fishing trip to celebrate. Paulie has serious misgivings about going out alone on the open ocean with Tony, remembering how they used a boat trip to lure informant "Big Pussy" to his death, but ultimately joins him. On the boat, Tony once again, this time aggressively, interrogates Paulie about the Ginny "Sack" joke leak, but Paulie again denies any involvement. Tony then gets up from his seat to fetch a bottle and spots a sharp bait knife on the boat's floor and then glances at Paulie, who is standing at the edge of the boat with his back turned. Tony picks the bottle instead of the knife, though throws it at Paulie with some force. Paulie catches it and protests, but Tony insists the throw was a joke, with a contorted smile on his face.

Later that night, Paulie has a dream in which he gets home from the trip and finds Big Pussy at the stove, cooking a meal. Paulie asks Pussy, "When my time comes, tell me, will I stand up?" Paulie awakens startled and is then shown frantically lifting weights in his living room with a scowl on his face.

Once they return to Jersey, Paulie sends Tony and Carmela a $2,000 espresso machine. When she wonders why, Tony angrily defends Paulie, saying that they wouldn't live "our whole lifestyle here" without the hard work of people like Paulie.

Phil becomes boss

Faustino "Doc" Santoro's reign as the new boss of the Lupertazzi crime family is very short lived - after leaving a massage parlor in New York, Doc and his bodyguard are shot and killed by multiple gunshots from hit men sent by Phil Leotardo. Santoro seemed to have sealed his fate when he insulted Phil by literally taking food off his plate during a sit down dinner in front of other mobsters, even after Phil recognized Faustino as the official boss. With Faustino gone, Phil officially becomes the boss of the crime family.

Junior in mental care center

At the Wyckoff mental care center, Junior Soprano gets a visit from former soldiers from his crew, Pat Blundetto and Beppy Scerbo. They still "kick him up" money and Junior begs them to aid him in his escape from the Center. Pat suggests he make an appointment with an outside dentist so that he and Beppy could sneak Junior off in their car.

Junior seems to return to his old mob crime habits and customs even while being kept in the mental institution. He bribes one of the orderlies, Jameel, for special treatment and organizes a poker game one night, using colored buttons as chips and (banned) soda and candy as purchasable snacks for the gambler patients, the whole setup like the executive card game he once used to run. Junior entertains the patients with his off-color jokes, but the game ends prematurely when another patient, Prof. Lynch, who is resentful towards Junior, informs another orderly, who is not on the take, about it.

Junior finds an admiring follower in a much younger fellow patient Carter Chong. Carter, apparently in the institution for uncontrollable violent outbursts of anger (particularly displayed when he remembers his demanding father), serves as Junior's assistant. He brings him his tea, helps him write a letter to reinvestigate his legal case to Vice President Dick Cheney, among other things. Carter also picks up using profanity from Junior, which worries his visiting mother, who tells him to not socialize with the mobster.

When Pat calls Junior about his escape plan, Junior is both confused and unwilling to go ahead with it, preferring to stay in the mental care center after all.

One day, Junior is provoked by Professor Lynch, and beats him in the presence of the staff. The physicians then prescribe Junior a new plan of meds that leave him effectively sedated most of the time. Carter devises a technique to distract the orderlies handing out the pills to Junior so that he can covertly throw them away. Unfortunately, some of the drugs were meant to combat Junior's incontinence, and he soon humiliatingly urinates on himself. Correctly suspected of receiving bribes, Jameel is fired, and Junior is confronted by the psychiatric doctor in charge who threatens to transfer him to a less pleasant, state-run mental facility if he does not take his medications. Junior decides to comply with the pharmaceutical treatment plan after all, much to the disappointment of Carter.

Junior tries to make amends with Carter, but refers to the young man as "Anthony." Later that day, during a sing-along in the recreation room, Carter throws a few wads of paper at the woman playing the piano, in hopes of getting a laugh out of Junior. But when he looks back at him and shakes his head disapprovingly, Carter becomes enraged and furiously attacks Junior, hitting him repeatedly and attempting to strangle him, before he is wrestled to the ground by the orderlies.

The episode ends with a scene of the mental patients engaged in some animal-assisted therapy outdoors. Junior is sitting in a wheelchair now, his arm is in a plaster cast and his broken eyeglasses are taped back together. Junior, in a catatonic-like state, is idly petting a cat.

Deceased

Title reference

Production

Connections to prior episodes

Other cultural and historical references

Music

References

  1. Huff, Richard (2007-04-27). ""Sopranos" ratings slip again". The Denver Post. Retrieved 2009-09-26.

External links

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