TV #57 of 2025:
The Sopranos, season 5
There’s a strong sense of inevitable fatalism running throughout this penultimate run* of The Sopranos, ultimately rendering it my favorite season yet. I love it when TV is structured around a single cohesive storyline for the year, and while serialization leads to the typical open ends here, we also have a clear plot anchoring the narrative. This is the season where Tony’s cousin comes home from prison, and it’s likewise the time when that antihero is separated from his wife, processing what led to their estrangement. Both arcs find various characters trying to break free and establish healthier lives for themselves, only to eventually succumb to their worst impulses — or someone else’s — and revert back to their familiar toxic ways, assuming they survive at all.
Let’s begin with the two Tonys (which is amusingly the name of episode 5×1, although there it refers to the protagonist’s claim that he has a nicer side Dr. Melfi hasn’t seen and not to him and his cousin Tony Blundetto, who won’t be properly introduced until the following week). Tony B. is another character the writers spring on us as somebody the whole cast knows but have somehow never mentioned, though it flows naturally enough with how he’s been off serving a sentence until now. We haven’t seen an ex-con on the program like this before, and especially not one who seems genuinely committed to putting his criminal life behind him and making a fresh start of things. Of course, Tony Soprano is like his genre successor Walter White in representing a corruptive influence on everyone around him — or maybe a crab in a bucket pulling back anyone attempting to escape his clutches — and so it’s not long before Steve Buscemi’s new arrival is just the latest thug heading for an unhappy end.
(While we’re on the topic of animal metaphors, Tony S. is clearly set up as a parallel to the brown bear here in the show’s own visual language, as a wild threat who lumbers out of the woods to bring danger to his family home. I love how the finale underscores that bookend without drawing the comparison explicitly.)
Blundetto’s arc connects with the developing conflict between the New York and New Jersey mafias, which reaches an unexpected resolution of sorts in the final episode. It’s anticlimactic, but I appreciate the extra ironical twist it lends Tony’s actions immediately prior, which were a source of great distress for him but perhaps Gift of the Magi-like weren’t actually needed after all. Less uncertain is the fate of Adriana as another major figure who exits the proceedings around then, cementing her role as one of the story’s few relative innocents. Her greatest sin proves thinking her love could be more powerful than the malign inertia surrounding her prospective cousin-in-law, which finally grinds her down as well.
I don’t have as much to say about Carmela here, but her time apart from Tony at least gives her some new concerns and overall makes more sense for her character than her fixation on Furio last season. She’s yet another soul who tries to leave the awful purgatory she’s built for herself through her complacency with her husband’s crimes, but in the end is drawn right back in again. The two of them each wonder if there was a moment in the past when they could have made different choices, but if any such opportunity ever existed, the series is clear that it’s long since been lost.
Above all, this year of The Sopranos is funny. Beyond the dark themes and outbursts of graphic violence, the mob activities are presented as more bickering over payment percentages than usual, with everybody demanding their cut in return for even the smallest of favors. It’s hilariously petty, and adds a welcome surreal humor to what’s otherwise a pretty bleak look at the human condition around organized crime.
*I understand that the final season of the show was nearly twice as long as usual and aired in two halves almost a year apart. I nevertheless intend to watch and review those 21 remaining episodes as the single collective unit that they’re marketed as, unless anyone has an argument to the contrary.
[Content warning for domestic abuse, drug abuse, racism, homophobia, gun violence, sexual assault, and gore.]
★★★★☆
Like this review?
–Throw me a quick one-time donation here!
https://ko-fi.com/lesserjoke
–Subscribe here to support my writing and weigh in on what I read next!
https://patreon.com/lesserjoke
–Follow along on Goodreads here!
https://www.goodreads.com/lesserjoke
–Or click here to browse through all my previous reviews!
https://lesserjoke.home.blog