The Sopranos: HBO Season 6 (Part 2 - The Final Episodes) [2007]
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #379 in DVD
- Released on: 2007-11-19
- Rating: Suitable for 18 years and over
- Format: PAL
- Original language: English
- Subtitled in: English, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Norwegian, Swedish, Portuguese
- Number of discs: 4
- Running time: 540 minutes
Editorial Reviews
DVD Description
The final installment of HBO’s acclaimed drama series The Sopranos is filled with some of the darkest hours the well-drawn characters have ever faced. Having cheated death after being shot by Uncle Junior, Tony Soprano (James Gandolfini) continues to muse about his second chance at life in this series. He faces a myriad of immediate, stress-inducing crises at home, at work and from the law. Tony's wife Carmela (Edie Falco) plans for a future she's not sure will arrive, and son AJ (Robert Iler) and daughter Meadow find that adulthood holds its own surprises. Meanwhile, at work, Tony comes to doubt the allegiances of many of those closest to him--no one, not Paulie, Bobby, Silvio or even Christopher--is above suspicion. The clock is ticking. Time is running out. But for who?
Synopsis
Emmy Award-winning drama THE SOPRANOS follows the personal and professional exploits of mafia boss Tony Soprano (James Gandolfini) as he tries to balance his home life with heading up a criminal organisation. This release contains a selection of episodes from the show's sixth and final series.
Customer Reviews
Little point for a review really......
This is the seventh box set taking the excellent 'Sopranos' to it's inconclusive conclusion. The final nine episodes included here are of the same high standard as those before it and continues the build up of tension started in Season six part 1. Anybody who has watched the show and has got to this late stage in the saga will not be needing a review to decide on a purchase, you're going to buy it anyway!!. To those people it is an excellent buy. i'm just a little disappointed that the cost has remained substantially higher than all the series before it. You've got to buy it to complete the set and they know that! For this point alone i've reduced the score to four stars.
There will never be enough superlatives for the Sopranos
This last (half) series of the finest TV show ever made is actually one of its best (semi) seasons, so it makes some sense to review this masterwork from the (hopefully now spoiler-proof) end. The Sopranos finishes, indeed, as wonderfully as it began and carried on: constantly complimenting the viewer's intelligence, right up to the bitter-sweet dénouement.
Yes, the penultimate episode is the proper narrative/dramatic "end," with its stunningly-staged assassination of Baccala and the calamitous (and, typically of the show, almost hilarious) near-fatal wounding of Silvio (to the sound of Nat King Cole, the sight of naked Bing bystanders and with hideous collateral damage to a passing motorcyclist).
But the actual finale itself had to, er, not happen; in that typical Sopranos life-goes-on manner of astonishing observation of, and pleasure in, the less extreme, often seemingly mundane, and frequently drop-dead-laughing details of "family" life. (Examples, I'm sure, will crowd in on everyone who knows the show: Junior getting the hump with an unflattering court artist some series back; Junior's conviction, in this series, that his will-executor - an unseen character we know, only from Janice's brief reference, to have an artificial larynx - is from outer space; the ketchup bottle in the last ever episode... there are so many.)
Individual episodes in this last set are also quite outstandingly brilliant. For me, number three ("Remember When"), is perfect Sopranos. It has an exquisitely-constructed counterpoint between a trip wherein Tony basically confronts Paulie with the problem of his trouble-making indiscretion about three series back, interspersed with the unfolding Cuckoo's Nest tragedy of Junior's inglorious "rule" of the mental health facility that is now his domain. The build-up of tension in these parallel worlds is breathtaking. Even as Tony finally asserts his scary authority over Paulie on an extremely uncomfortable boat-trip, Junior's "career" is meeting a sticky, violent end at the hands of a disturbed youth whose worship he has cultivated. The last shot of this episode, a track across one of those outdoor "pet encounter" sessions for Corrado's fellow-inmates, finishes on one of the most poignant images I've ever seen on TV, a devastating pan from the disfigured cat he's vacantly cuddling to the lost, toothless, living-dead face of Junior. Beautiful, dreadful.
So: the final episode has a deliberate, but no less entertaining, sense of bathos to it. And this is Sopranos "anti-climax," remember, so it was always going to be a cut above. Indeed, to echo the quite credible references from other reviewers to its Shakespearian level of attainment, I have to say that the Sopranos' ending certainly puts it amongst the greats for all time - with no small hint of the Existential playfulness we've all come to treasure.
In fact, this last series ends with the most vivid illustration of quantum physics since Schrodinger's Cat - really! Without getting into "spoiler" territory, I think we can confidently say (or not) that what happens "next" is entirely up to you/us. Or not: it's the audience ourselves who can most reasonably be considered to get "annihilated" in the series' last split second. Tony's "fate" won't be resolved until we reopen the "box" and look inside to see whether that Sopranos cat is alive or dead. The Uncertainty Principle in a nutshell - only the box gets switched off for us before we can look further.
Mischievous David Case would probably deny it (just as he playfully pleads ignorance to the significance of all those oranges and eggs), but there is some exceptionally witty referencing going on. As Tony's fellow-patient Schwinn (the great Hal Holbrook) says early in the first phase of this final season, "reality" is only a perception of wave-forms and "we're all connected" (this in an episode that also features some Creationist nutters getting roundly satirised).
So: that very last blip-out shot of Tony in the diner marks our own "disconnection" from the Sopranos' universe, an untidy switch-off that marks a proper anti-climax, weakly rhymed with the HBO "click-off" logo or the "stylus yank" cut-off at the end of every opening credits). It's that deliberate, that random.
Maybe they all go to Paris, as Tony did in his near-death experience (the Eifel Tower beacon tantalisingly visible from an "American" hotel window) and as Carm actually does (only to encounter dead Adriana in a boulevard... and elsewhere ask Ro whether the place really exists when they're not there). The last episode even playfully gives us a supernaturally "aware" cat to plague Paulie in our last glimpses of him!
Fantastic stuff - and all this in a "gangster" show that, during its time with us, has given us some of the funniest, most violent, tender, groovy and jaw-droppingly original moments we've ever had the pleasure of witnessing in a TV programme! The whole thing on box set - get it. Watch it. And, if you care at all about the cultural future, keep it as a bequest for your kids, along with all the other great complete works of which we might avail ourselves.
The End
The sopranos is my all time favourite series ever to be on telly,its great and this for me was the best series out of them all.my favourite character died NO not tony,and the episods were very strong,will miss it but can always watch it back.

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