
"Any Way You Want It"
For years, the go-to guys for this thing of ours ("The Sopranos") have been Alan Sepinwall at Tony's hometown newspaper, The Newark Star-Ledger ("The Voice of New Jersey"), and his former Star-Ledger colleague, Matt Zoller Seitz. (Be sure to see Seitz's terrific column on the final episode and the fine comments it inspired. And, while you're at it, check out the newly built archive of "Sopranos" Mondays at The Bada-Bing Next Door.) As the TV critic for the paper at the end of Tony's driveway, Sepinwall managed to score an interview with series creator David Chase, who has gone away to France for a little while until this series ending thing blows over.
Chase says:
"I have no interest in explaining, defending, reinterpreting, or adding to what is there," he says of the final scene.Sounds a lot like the Coen Brothers in the piece I posted yesterday."No one was trying to be audacious, honest to God," he adds. "We did what we thought we had to do. No one was trying to blow people's minds, or thinking, 'Wow, this'll (tick) them off.' People get the impression that you're trying to (mess) with them and it's not true. You're trying to entertain them.... Anybody who wants to watch it, it's all there."
Sepinwall summarizes the ending succinctly and perfectly:
Since Chase is declining to offer his interpretation of the final scene, let me present two more of my own, which came to me with a good night's sleep and a lot of helpful reader e-mails:I read a comment somewhere today that pointed out the B-side of the closing song (Journey's "Don't Stop Believin'") is listed on the jukebox as: "Any Way You Want It." Yeah, and whatsa matta wit dat?Theory No. 1 (and the one I prefer): Chase is using the final scene to place the viewer into Tony's mindset. This is how he sees the world: every open door, every person walking past him could be coming to kill him, or arrest him, or otherwise harm him or his family. This is his life, even though the paranoia's rarely justified. We end without knowing what Tony's looking at because he never knows what's coming next.
Theory No. 2: In the scene on the boat in "Soprano Home Movies," repeated again last week, Bobby Bacala suggests that when you get killed, you don't see it coming. Certainly, our man in the Members Only jacket could have gone to the men's room to prepare for killing Tony (shades of the first "Godfather"), and the picture and sound cut out because Tony's life just did. (Or because we, as viewers, got whacked from our life with the show.)
P.S. Yes, I'm more interested in the last few hours -- and particularly the last hour -- of "The Sopranos" than in any movie I've seen since "Zodiac." I'd like to do a shot-by-shot of Episode 86....

















For those of us who don't see "The Sopranos" until it comes out on DVD and are carefully avoiding all spoilers, please please PLEASE stop writing about this so that we may return to our normal reading habits.
Thank you.
People keep saying that Bobby's theory on how you don't see or here yourself getting whacked explains the ending of the final episode. I think it's nothing more than a set-up for an ironic punchline. Think about how Bobby died. Did things suddenyl go black for him? No; he felt pain and fear and he struggled before he finally died.
No he didn't, and note that when Phil got whacked, he didn't see it coming either. Still, I like the "Any way you want it" metaphor. People will be arguing about this ending for a long time...
Gah! Stop talking about The Sopranos! I haven't seen any of season 6 yet, and I'm doing my best to avoid spoilers.
Incidentally, will all this be under the TV tag? I'll want to read it when I get around to seeing the final season.
That's rubbish about Citizen Kane! The ending of that movie is more than showing off! Sure, he died alone and basically a joke; but those final frames are as important to that experience as the 'understanding' of the whole. Anything could have been used as a catalyst for an investigation! Why would they even ask the bloody question?
Jim, I think you'd enjoy this analysis (written by Bob Harris, Jeopardy loser):
http://www.bobharris.com/content/view/1406/1/
"You probably don't even hear it when it happens." was Bobby's quote. The black screen AND the abrupt silence are significant.