Monday 21 October 2013

10 Actors You Didn’t Realise Were in The Sopranos


The Sopranos will forever be instilled in the fabric of culture. Its success and game-changing format was intrinsic to the success of HBO and revitalised televisual drama forever. Without The Sopranos HBO would not have experienced the success it enjoys today and we would not have shows like Game of Thrones, Boardwalk Empire and True Blood. This successful model was adopted by other networks like AMC, FX and Showtime who have given us Dexter, Mad Men, and Breaking Bad. The Sopranos was the game changer and revolutionalised television forever. Televisual drama is now considered a valued art form akin to film thanks to the success of The Sopranos.

The series’ rich and compelling storylines captivated audiences for 8 years and won a host of Emmys over its six seasons. Tony Soprano is still one of the most fascinating characters in television history but he was helped by a phenomenal supporting cast and smorgasbord of scintillating guest stars. David Chase, the show’s creator and executive producer recruited a multitude of familiar gangster actors over the series, including David Proval (from Mean Streets), Robert Loggia (from Scarface), Burt Young (from Rocky and Once Upon a Time in America), Frank Vincent (Goodfellas, Casino) and Steve Buscemi (Reservoir Dogs), to name but a few.

In this article we’ll look at host of character actors and famous faces who guest starred on the show – some of which before they became household names.


  1. Will Arnett
Episodes: ‘For All Debts Public and Private’ & ‘No Show’, Season 4
  
That’s right – G.O.B. Bluth guest-starred on The Sopranos. During Season 4, Arnett appeared in two episodes as FBI agent Mike Waldrup. He was the husband of Deborah – the FBI agent who befriends Adrianna as an undercover informant. This of course is the beginning of an arc that has devastating consequences for several characters. Arnett’s character has very little screen time and would be completely forgettable was it not for his future success. Arnett was in the early phase of his career where he had one off appearances on many television dramas including Law & Order: Special Victims Unit and Sex & the City - despite being celebrated as a comedic actor. However, he would become a household name the next year with the arrival of Arrested Development in 2003. The cult classic gave us one of television’s most enduring doofuses – aspiring magician George Oscar ‘G.O.B.’ Bluth. Imagine the comedic possibilities of a G.O.B. interaction with Christopher or Paulie Walnuts. Something tells me the Mafiosi wouldn’t have much time for one of the world’s worst magicians. Arrested Development was cancelled in 2006 by FOX in a hail of controversy as the show was a cult classic and one of the most critically acclaimed sitcoms of all time. FOX was not enamoured with this cult following and cancelled the show due to poor ratings. Arrested Development will miraculously and rapturously return on May 26 on Netflix.



  1. Michael K. Williams
Season Three, ‘Army of One’

One of the stars of the other HBO masterpiece The Wire briefly appears in an episode towards the end of Season Three. When Jackie Aprile, Jr. foolishly attempts to rob one of the executive card games, things go horribly wrong and Jackie Jr. must take shelter with Williams’s character and his young daughter. The appearance was hardly a career breakthrough mainly due to Williams’s miniscule screen time but Wire fans could not mistake the actor’s formidable presence mainly due to the actor’s real facial scars. Like Arnett, Williams also appeared in a number of US television dramas in the early stage of his career such as Law & Order and Alias. Similar again to Arnett, he would not have to wait long for a recurring starring role. The following year Williams was cast as Omar Little in The Wire. Omar is one of the most iconic characters in the series and was a series regular throughout the show’s five season run. The character who is a daring thief and who is also gay was even the personal favourite of US President Barack Obama despite his violent criminal behaviour. Williams now stars on Boardwalk Empire as Albert ‘Chalky’ White which is developed by former Sopranos writer/producer Terrence Winter.

  1. Tobin Bell
Season Three: ‘Army of One’

‘Hello Mr. Soprano, I’d like to play a game’. The infamous ‘Jigsaw Killer’ featured in the same episode as Williams during season three. Tobin Bell, the man behind cinema’s most successful serial killers of recent years shared a scene with Tony and Carmella Soprano. He plays Major Zwingli, the dean of a military school that the Sopranos are contemplating sending the troubled AJ to when he gets expelled from high school. In fact the incident in question that spells this trouble for AJ features another famous face (seen at the end of this list). Bell had previously featured in small television roles in the likes of 24, Stargate SG-1 and The West Wing. Bell found his career defining role when James Wan cast him as the deviously demented Jigsaw Killer in Saw and its six sequels. To date, the Saw franchise has grossed over $800 million at box offices worldwide and Bell has been the franchise’s star. The genre revitalised by Saw in the earlier 00’s was lampooned in The Sopranos when Christopher decides to cash in on the torture porn craze with his violent fantasy Cleaver. Although he doesn’t snare Tony and Carmella in a vicious death trap – Bell retains his intimidating presence and his raspy husky voice that made the Jigsaw Killer so endearing to horror fans.

  1. Nancy Sinatra & Frank Sinatra, Jr.
Final Season: ‘Chasing It’, Season Two: ‘The Happy Wanderer’


Among the principal cast of The Sopranos is Steven Van Zandt the guitarist with Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band. Van Zandt was cast on David Chase’s love of music despite a limited acting background. Keeping with the tradition of musicians on the show – these appearances are much more interesting. The children of Ol’ Blue Eyes himself – Frank Sinatra appeared at separate times as themselves over the series. Frank, Jr. features in Season Two as a card player of the Soprano-run ‘Executive Game’. This is also the game where Robert Patrick (the T-1000 of Terminator 2) bets his entire fortune and loses it all. Nancy Sinatra, the singer of such hits as ‘Bang, Bang’ and ‘These Boots Are Made for Walking’ appears in the final season at a party for the newly crowned boss of New York Phil Leotardo (Frank Vincent). She even interrupts a heated discussion between Tony and Phil brazenly asking: ‘you two going home with each other?’ What is confounding is that the children of Sinatra would continue to perpetuate their family’s connection to the Mafia. Sinatra’s Mob connections allegedly coerced a Hollywood producer to cast the singer in an Oscar winning role in From Here to Eternity. This would serve as inspiration in The Godfather.



  1. Frankie Valli
Seasons Five & Six

Another musician on the list, Frankie Valli is one of the biggest music stars of all time. With hits like ‘Big GirlsDon’t Cry’, ‘Sherry’ and ‘I Can’t Tale My Eyes Off of You’, Valli and his band the Four Seasons had a career to rival The Beatles. So this is all the more amusing that a pop singer like Valli should be playing a feared New York gangster. Frankie Valli’s music appeared (the song ‘Dawn (Go Away)’ features in season four) in the show long before the Four Seasons leader himself was cast. He is even referred to by Tony and Silvio in an earlier episode where Silvio must use his connections to get Valli booked in a Native American casino as a favour. Valli as Rusty Millio appeared many times over series five and six as an ally of Carmine Lupertazzi, Jr. during the war with Johnny Sack’s outfit. Rusty met an unfortunate demise in a hit ordered by Johnny Sack. Valli a proud Italian-American and New Jersey native seemed like an odd choice to appear on a show that has a somewhat stereotypical view of Italians. Still, Valli could’ve done worse and appeared on Jersey Shore.



  1. Hal Holbrook
Season Six: ‘The Fleshy Part of the Thigh’
  
The Academy Award nominated actor features in one episode of the sixth season. When Tony suffers a near-fatal gunshot from Junior, he spends several weeks in hospital. When Tony comes out of his existentialist coma he meets the Lincoln star. Holbrook plays a physicist who clues Tony into the interconnectivity of all life, telling him how no event or entity can be understood independent from the rest of the world – how ‘everything is connected’. Holbrook’s musings on quantum physics are lost on Paulie Walnuts who during a bad signalled boxing match on satellite TV abruptly challenges: ‘you’re so f***in’ smart, fix the TV!’ This is all taken in by Tony who is going through an existential and spiritual awakening which is welcomed after hearing a pastor’s creationist ideas. Holbrook went on to star in Sean Penn’s Into the Wild the following year as Ron, the lonely leather worker who passes his trade onto Alexander Supertramp (Emile Hirsch) and offers to adopt him as his grandchild. Holbrook’s touching performance earned an Academy Award nomination the in 2007 but lost out to Javier Bardem for No Country for Old Men.



  1. Sydney Pollack
Final Season: ‘Stage Five’


The Academy Award winning director of Out of Africa made a cameo appearance in the final season. He plays Dr. Warren Feldman, a formerly reputed surgeon who is serving time for the murder of his wife. He later befriends Johnny Sack while advising him on his cancer treatment in prison hospital. Another prolific director Peter Bogdanovich also had a recurring role as psychiatrist to Lorraine Bracco’s Dr Melfi, who is titillated by the gossip of Mafia life. Dr Feldman, despite his own transgressions, is another character who is fascinated by Mafia figures. He is seen gushing over Johnny Sack’s Mafia stories and descriptions of New York boss Carmine Lupertazzi. As well as directing such films as Three Days in the Condor and Tootsie, Pollack is also known from starring roles in Michael Clayton and in Stanley Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut. Pollack always had a welcome naturalistic presence onscreen and this appearance was his third last ever screen performance. This episode is also the last appearance of Johnny Sack who dies of cancer. This unfortunately is mirrored by the actor’s fate as Pollack died in 2008 after his own long battle with cancer.



  1. Annette Bening
Season Five: ‘The Test Dream’
  
Keeping with the Oscar nominees, this four-time Academy Award nominee is the sole entry on this list that is playing herself - albeit in a dream. Bening appears in ‘The Test Dream’ in Season 5. This episode is where Tony spends a night in the Plaza in New York and sleeps uneasy worrying about his livewire cousin Tony Blundetto (Steve Buscemi). Bening plays the (imagined) mother of Tony’s future son in law, Finn who is recently engaged to Tony’s daughter Meadow (Jamie-Lynn Sigler). Tony’s imagination is always fervid and creative and even calls her out on her fame asking: ‘You’re Annette Bening, ain’t you?’ Bening is no stranger to the gangster genre as she starred in Warren Beatty’s Bugsy (to whom she later married). The episode is one of the most notoriously trippy as it is almost entirely set in Tony’s subconscious. Bening is not the only Hollywood actor to play themselves on the show. Ben Kingsley and Lauren Bacall also appeared as snooty versions of themselves in the final season. Kingsley was courted for the antagonist role in ‘Cleaver’ by Christopher and Little Carmine while Bacall was violently mugged by Christopher. Cleaver’s lead role eventually went to Daniel Baldwin who channelled his inner Tony Soprano for the part.



  1. Paul Dano
Season Four: ‘Everybody Hurts’ & Season Five: ‘All Due Respect’

The Ruby Sparks star featured in two episodes during the fourth season as a friend to AJ Soprano (Robert Iler). Dano didn’t display any of his intensity that would later become evident in There Will be Blood and Looper – but was a geeky and spoiled rich pal of AJ’s whose friendship is based on Dano’s obsession with The Godfather. He is fascinated by the Sopranos’ various legitimate businesses which he assumes are a front to the shady Mafia dealings. He even likens Tony’s base of operations, the Satriale’s Pork Store, to Genco’s Olive Oil (where Vito Corleone operated from in The Godfather). Dano had already made a memorable debut performance alongside Brain Cox at aged 15 in Michael Cuesta’s superb 2001 film L.I.E. Here, Dano is barely recognisable from his powerful turn in L.I.E. and instead uses a geeky persona that would become a staple of his career (see The Girl Next Door, Gigantic). Three years later, Dano would break through to the mainstream with his role in Little Miss Sunshine as troubled Nietzsche loving mute Dwayne. The film was a commercial and critical smash and went on to win two Oscars in 2006.

  1. Lady Gaga
Season Three: ‘The Telltale Moozadell’


This one is a tricky find. But it is true. Lady Gaga – the ‘Born this Way’ singer was in The Sopranos. The then 15 year old - billed by her real name Stefani Germanotta - plays a friend of AJ’s. In this episode the gang of friends vandalise the school swimming pool and trophy cabinet which leads to AJ’s expulsion from school. AJ is ultimately found out by his pizza being left at the scene of the crime and giving the episode it’s title: ‘The Telltale Moozadell’. Interestingly, Michael Imperioli who plays Christopher Moltissanti on the show wrote the now infamous episode. Germanotta would break through with the smash hit ‘Just Dance’ 7 years later, followed by the behemoth album The Fame. She is today, of course, one of the biggest pop stars on the planet. Germanotta is barely recognisable here as a 15 year old high school student. One of Gaga’s most famous fashion statements - a dress made up of slabs of meat worn at the 2010 MTV Video Music Awards would not look out of place at Satriale’s.


A Late Quartet - Review

Extra-marital affairs, jealousy, betrayal, resentment – all set in the world of classical music. A Late Quartet has relationships and emotional punch ups as tumultuous as the Beethoven the four-piece quartet perform. The frenetic pace of Beethoven is certainly represented in the film but so too is the heart-rendering beauty and tenderness.

The plot is limited but packed with character and emotion. ‘The Fugue’ is a four piece string quartet comprised of cellist Peter (Christopher Walken), violist Juliette and first and second violinist Daniel (Mark Ivanir) and Robert (Philip Seymour Hoffmen). The group are approaching their 25th anniversary but are faced with difficult and potentially devastating decisions when Peter announces he must leave the group after being diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. The rest of the group must decide whether to continue or go their separate ways while dealing with pent up feelings of resentment, longing and jealousy. The married couple of the group Robert and Juliette also face a crisis in their marriage as well as dealing with a rebellious daughter (Imogen Poots) who has embarked upon an affair with Daniel.

The screenplay is packed with dramatic conflict and leads to wonderful performances from all the actors. This is the type of movie you would expect to be a forgotten gem from the 70’s as its simple and understated plot. Christopher Walken gives the performance that he is capable of but seems to shy away from as of late. There is no self mockery or flippancy with his portrayal of a career musician faced with the prospect of hanging up the string bow – for good. Walken’s latest performances (like in Seven Psychopaths) are centred around the almost mythical cult following The Deer Hunter actor has amassed over the years. His performance as Peter has no traces of quirk or irreverent self-awareness but is the stuff Oscar nominations are made of. His quiet yet shattered acceptance of his disease and the plight of retiring is all expressed through limited dialogue and quiet expression – and is utterly poignant.

Philip Seymour Hoffman also gives a riveting performance. Robert is a character at an impasse in his career and in life. He sees the dissolution of the quartet as a chance to break free from the background and realise his potential. His scenes with Keener are electric and have such a brutal honesty that show ‘this is really forty’. One in scene in the back of a taxi cab shows Hoffman’s incredible internal processing of a devastating revelation from his wife. The couple must face the resentments and harboured emotions while dealing with their rebellious young daughter who also has sequestered feelings towards her parents.

A Late Quartet is a masterful blend of great performances and quiet intensity. The issues amongst the characters feel very real despite being set in the very socially exclusive world of classical musicians.  First time director Yaron Zilberman (who also co-wrote the script) carefully balances melodrama with honest and touching familial dysfunction. The relationship between Juliette’s and Robert’s daughter Alexandra and Daniel does feel more akin to soap opera plot but is saved from ridicule by the thoughtful and charming performances of Ivanir and Imogen Poots. Ivanir’s Daniel, despite being 20 years older than Alex, is imbued with a professional and artistic intensity that aspiring violinist Alexandra is helplessly allured to. Poots also shines in scenes with Keener where issues of abandonment lead to bitter arguments.


The film has such wonderful and compelling performances there is a risk that the talent of Zilberman will be over looked. A Late Quartet is such a triumph because of the characters drawn by the screenplay and the thoughtful execution of the performances. Zilberman allows his superb cast to give superb portrayals and gives us one of the most touching and endearing films of the year.

4/5

Tuesday 19 February 2013

Arbitrage Review: Scintillating Character Study & Moral Bankruptcy in the Finance World


Arbitrage Review: Scintillating Character Study & Moral Bankruptcy in the Finance World


Perhaps the most flustering thing about writer-director Nicholas Jarecki’s scintillating debut is that this could be a ‘based on a true story’. The story is fiction but the characters, situations, moral ambiguities, and toxic world of Wall Street and Corporate America seem very bluntly true. It also features the best performance to date from Richard Gere.

Robert Miller is the CEO of a multi billion capital company. On the surface his life is the epitome of the American dream: a respected billionaire, a positive philanthropist and beloved father and husband. His company even employs his son and daughter (Brit Marling) in high executive positions. Miller however has many plates spinning that threaten to bring his world to a devastating crash. He is desperately trying to sell off his company to hide his fraudulent activities and prevent a car accident involving his mistress from sending him to jail and even worse - financial ruin.

The rest of the cast is superb. Susan Sarandon is reliable as ever as Miller’s wife who is not just a passive billionaire’s spouse. Brit Marling gives a breakout performance as Miller’s daughter who suspects her father’s fraudulent dealing. Tim Roth also gives a superb supporting turn (by seemingly channelling Robert De Niro) as a beat cop who badly wants to pin Miller’s scalp to the wall and win one for the little guy.
Arbitrage is set in a post-crash Wall Street. Miller is a man insulated from the higher echelons of society. He calls on a young black man, Jimmy (Nate Parker) to bail him out of a jam which highlights the still existing racial and social divides in modern post-Obama America. Jarecki is certainly a talent to watch. His debut is a fascinating character study of a man with the perception of wielding incredible power yet tangibly owning none of it. Jarecki also does not judge his central character. He makes the audience route for the ‘hero’ to escape from the jaws of destruction despite his moral bankruptcy. This hero, in his most honest exchange, describes money as ‘God’. He worships at the altar of capitalism – and his God has no plans on smiting him just yet.

4/5