Sopranos Final Season
entries
to: Jeffrey Goldberg
Week 3: A Strict Constructionist Reading of The Godfather.
Posted Tuesday, April 24, 2007, at 6:36 PM ETTimothy Noah chatted with readers about The Sopranos on June 7. Read the transcript here.
Dear Jeff,
Thanks for setting me straight on Long Island geography, but don't be so sure that you've settled the matter of precisely where the Barzini family popped Santino Corleone in The Godfather. Clearly I was wrong that it was the Long Island Expressway. But the Meadowbrook Parkway? Fuggedaboudit. As it happens, I spent some of my childhood splashing in the surf at Jones Beach. Before my family moved to California we lived in New Rochelle, N.Y., separated from you by the Long Island Sound. The expertise I serve up here, however, is not my own—I was only 12 when we moved—but rather that of Mike Pesca, intrepid reporter for NPR's Day to Day and an occasional Slate contributor. Pesca has just sent me an urgent e-mail about this matter. "Jeff might be from Long Island," he begins, "but I'm from Oceanside," i.e., closer than you were to the fateful toll plaza. Dude, he's pulling rank.
The exact location of the tollbooths matter a lot to a half-Italian like myself. Those tollbooths are more aptly described as on what is now known as the Loop Parkway. Though Puzo's description of the "Jones Beach Causeway" correlates to a road now known as the Wantagh State Parkway. Either way, you can see from Puzo's description that Sonny wasn't at the Meadowbrook yet.
Pesca takes for his text this passage from Mario Puzo's novel:
[Sonny] had taken the Jones Beach Causeway, as always, because it was usually deserted this time of night, at this time of year, and he could speed recklessly until he hit the parkways on the other side. And even there traffic would be light. The release of driving very fast would help dissipate what he knew was a dangerous tension. He had already left his bodyguards' car far behind.
The causeway was badly lit, there was not a single car. Far ahead he saw the white cone of the manned tollbooth.
There were other tollbooths beside it but they were staffed only during the day, for heavier traffic. Sonny started braking the Buick and at the same time searched his pockets for change.
[Rat-a-tat-tat, etc… .]
Seconds afterwards, all four men, the three actual assassins and the bogus toll collector, were in their car and speeding toward the Meadowbrook Parkway on the other side of Jones Beach. Their pursuit was blocked by Sonny's car and body in the tollgate slot, but when Sonny's bodyguards pulled up a few minutes later and saw his body lying there, they had no intention to pursue. They swung their car around in a huge arc and returned to Long Beach.
If Barzini's hit men were "at the toll plaza on the Meadowbrook Parkway," as you contend, then Puzo wouldn't have them "speeding toward [italics mine] the Meadowbrook Parkway." He'd have them speeding onto the Meadowbrook Parkway. What's more, a little Google-based sleuthing confirms that Puzo did not invent the "Jones Beach Causeway," as Pesca seems to believe. That was in fact the original name for a 5-mile stretch of the Wantagh State Parkway, completed in 1929, that runs from Wantagh to Jones Beach. The name is still used on occasion to describe that part of the parkway. My strict constructionist reading of The Godfather therefore tells me that Sonny Corleone went to his reward not on the Long Island Expressway nor the Meadowbrook Parkway, nor the Loop Parkway, but rather on what is now the Wantagh State Parkway.
Now if someone can only tell me the name of that highway just south of Gibsland, La., where Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow were gunned down by Texas Ranger Frank Hamer and associates in May 1934, my education will be complete.
(Next time you're in Las Vegas, you might consider detouring 40 miles south to the Primm Valley Resort and Casino, where Bonnie and Clyde's bullet-ridden V-8 Ford and the bloodstained shirt that Clyde died in are preserved lovingly behind glass. If you prefer to see the "death car" replica used by Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway in the movie, you'll find that at the Bonnie and Clyde Ambush Museum in Gibsland, located on the former site of Ma Canfield's Café, where the real Bonnie and Clyde purchased their last meal. The Ambush Museum also has weapons seized from the real death car and some gruesome film footage and still photographs of Parker and Barrow after they'd been pumped with 167 rounds. Children under 5 admitted free of charge!)
Love your shop-class story. Like you, I didn't know a monkey wrench from a ball-peen hammer when I took shop. I was, however, a passionate film buff, and I owned a Super 8 camera and a tripod. (This was 1971.) What I lacked was a camera dolly to perform tracking shots—by now I was living not in New Rochelle but in Beverly Hills—so that's what I made. I recall using the thing only once. The real appeal of the project, as you've no doubt deduced, was that after I screwed four wheels to the bottom of a square hunk of plywood I was more or less done. No fangul necessary. I spent the rest of the semester sanding the edges.
What was it we were talking about? Oh, The Sopranos. Let's get back to them next week.
Tangentially,
Tim
entries
to: Jeffrey Goldberg
Week 3: A Strict Constructionist Reading of The Godfather.
Posted Tuesday, April 24, 2007, at 6:36 PM ETRemarks from the Fray Editor:
As a basic cable slum-dweller, the Fray Editor has been following the discussion of The Sopranos with admiration and envy. The passion, erudition, and insight of the show's fans—Slate's commentators and Fraysters alike—proves the case that this series is not to be missed. Below, Fray poster lucabrasi considers how the 6.5 season story arc has led the show inevitably to the present moment.
May this weekend's finale exceed your wildest expectations. My prediction? Paulie Walnuts in the Bing with a shoe buffer.—G.A.
Remarks from the Fray:
I must salute the excellent close of the mob wars arc that started way back in Season One.
Looking back from today, with Tony's Jersey crime family indeed looking like a "glorified crew" in the eyes of New York, one can see it, almost clearly:
Season One: Tony's issues were of ascension in that smallish Jersey family. Jackie Sr. was dying; Uncle Junior was the designated "front don," and yet bitter enough about Tony's power to use Livia's ambiguous directives to hit Tony. Didn't work. Junior was exiled and took on Federal heat; Tony had the others killed.
Season Two: Richie Aprile gets out of prison. A theme begins: guys out of prison resent Tony, who never served. But Richie, too, is "local Jersey trouble." His escalating conflict with Tony is going to be dealt with rather easily -- Tony wants Richie hit, but Janice delivers a dose of even MORE "local" justice.
Meanwhile, I think NYC underboss Johnny Sack turns up living in Jersey, but promising Tony "I don't want to wet my beak."
The main NYC Don is Carmine Sr, an old school guy. Tony can deal with Carmine Sr, but Sack starts getting that lean and hungry look...
Seasons Three and Four: Other issues are on the table (Jackie Jr., Tony and Carm's marriage), but Tony's adversaries are manageable: made guy Ralphie and the ever-more-ambitious and angry Sack. Ralphie is eliminated, quietly (if NYC ever finds out...). Sack wants Tony to hit Old Man Carmine; Tony pulls out at the last moment. Sack looks to be vengeful.
Season Five: The big trouble all starts here, with the release of the "Class of '84". It's like four Richie Apriles. Tony has a lotta plates to spin: an old-timer named Feech who wants it all, locally, Tony's cousin Tony B, the "Rockford Guy" (Joe Santos) who Tony B idolizes as a father, and a real hothead named Phil Leotardo.
Carmine Sr. croaks. Phil joins with Sack against Little Carmine, Tony B joins with the Rockford Guy and Rusty in backing Little Carmine's play. Tony elects to back off and see how Jersey can benefit from the ensuing bloodshed, of which there is a lot.
During all this, two little matters occur: Seeking owed cash, Tony subjects Phil Leotardo to a body-breaking car crash and beats up Phil at the accident site as a "throw-in." Tony B kills Phil's brother Billy Leotardo.
In retrospect, these last two actions were perhaps...unfortunate.
Sack and Phil kill more guys than Little Carmine's team. Little caves ("It's a stagmire.") Sack ascends to Donhood. Tony can deal with Sack (having killed Tony B as a burnt offering), and Sack will stave off the still vengeful Phil Leotardo.
But right at the end of Season Five, the Feds nab Sack. Go directly to jail.
Season 6A: Sack's in prison, but the putative boss, with Phil fronting him on the outside. Tony's shot for a few episodes. The "gay Vito issue" gives Phil new reason for putting the pressure on Tony's Jersey boys. With Sack losing power by the day, Phil contemplates his rages against Tony: getting beaten up by Tony, paying money to Tony, brother killed by the cousin of Tony, gay Vito protected by Tony. Phil has a heart attack to match Tony's gutshot. Things seem peaceful between these two wounded warriors. But this guy Butch turns up, taunting Tony.
Season 6B. Tony's luck with New York runs out, via a series of crap outs: Sack dies of cancer; Doc kills Gerry; Phil kills Doc.. Phil is "the big boss man," finally, and the worst possible New York Don Tony Soprano could face. Filled with jailhouse vengeance and itching to consolidate power, Phil pushes Tony too far (with the sexual insult of Coco towards Meadow, ultimately). Tony retaliates (curbing); Phil says "there's nothing left to talk about," and here we are.
Now, I' m not sure how much of that was plotted early on by Chase and Company, but looking back on it, you see how this final, fatal gang war was literally years in the making. Tony Soprano fended off Jersey threats (Junior, Richie), kept the peace with Carmine Sr, dangerously dueled with Sack (the longest of Tony's strategic encounters), sat out the gang war to replace Carmine Sr...and ended up on the wrong end of Phil's bloody ascension to the throne of the New York Family.
Where things are now is where they HAVE to be. Inevitability.
--lucabrasi
(To reply, click here.)
(6/9)
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