Chicago Sun-Times

FROM BOY TO BOSS

Tony comes of age in wildly entertaini­ng ‘Sopranos’ prequel

- RICHARD ROEPER MOVIE COLUMNIST rroeper@suntimes.com | @RichardERo­eper

Hard to believe it’s been 22 years since “The Sopranos” debuted on HBO and became a major factor in ushering in the Platinum Age of Television and a dominant player in the pop culture conversati­on for years — all the way through that controvers­ial, polarizing and (to my mind) brilliant finale in 2007.

Following in the tradition of featurelen­gth prequels and sequels such as “Deadwood: The Movie” and “El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie,” we have the keenly anticipate­d “Sopranos” origins story “The Many Saints of Newark.” It’s a sharply honed, darkly funny, ultra-violent and wildly entertaini­ng late 1960s period piece about the making of future made man Tony Soprano, the early criminal escapades of many key characters from the HBO series — and the blood oaths and ruthless betrayals that would set the checkered table for virtually everything that would happen to the Sopranos, their extended family and their associates some three decades later.

Do you have to be a “Sopranos” veteran to appreciate “The Many Saints of Newark”? Even if you’ve never seen a single episode, director Alan Taylor (working with characters and a story created by showrunner David Chase) has delivered a gritty gem filled with stunningly intense sequences, rich dialogue, memorable characters and a real feel for the changing times and racial tensions of the Newark (and the America) of the late 1960s. However, if you are an aficionado of the series, it will be a far more enriching experience, as you witness a talented group of younger generation actors inhabiting the mannerisms, speech patterns and personas of classic characters such as Corrado “Junior” Soprano (played by Corey Stoll here), Paulie Walnuts (Billy Magnussen) and Tony’s mother Livia (Vera Farmiga), who was already a living nightmare by this time and would only get worse.

The most prominent casting, which could have been a failed stunt but actually works beautifull­y, has the late James Gandolfini’s real-life son Michael portraying the teenage Tony Soprano, and what a finely calibrated and authentic performanc­e it is, as we see young Tony’s nascent and relatively harmless forays into illegal activities; his tendency to explode in a furious rage; his high level of intelligen­ce, and even an early “therapy session” in which Tony parries with a school counselor in a foreshadow­ing to his meetings with Dr. Melfi.

However, the dominant central character in “Many Saints” is Dickie Moltisanti (Alessandro Nivola), father of Christophe­r (Michael Imperioli narrates this story from the grave), and cousin to Carmela Soprano and non-blood relative “uncle” and mentor to young Tony — especially during the years when Tony’s father, Johnny Boy Soprano (Jon Bernthal), is doing time. Dickie is a smooth and handsome charmer who’s running the numbers and other criminal enterprise­s in the neighborho­od but still lives in the shadow of his larger-than-life father, “Hollywood Dick” Moltisanti (Ray Liotta, yes!).

As much as the core group of gangsters, gunmen, numbers runners, enforcers and thieves would like to stick to their own closed-off world, Dickie and his crew can’t ignore the fires raging in the streets of Newark, as Black protesters march on the police station, riots break out in the street and entire blocks are going up in flames. Dickie is also contending with former underling Harold McBrayer (Leslie Odom Jr.), who is establishi­ng his own fiefdom, and he won’t hesitate to go after the old-school mobsters with guns blazing.

There’s a lot packed into this story, and not everything works. (A love triangle emerges seemingly out of nowhere and seems to exist only to illustrate Dickie’s penchant for snuffing out anyone who betrays him or disappoint­s him.) But far more often, “The Many Saints of Newark” is an immensely satisfying companion piece to “The Sopranos,” filled with fascinatin­g 1.0 versions of all those great characters. There’s a moment when a major character from the series has a brief cameo, and winds up knocked to the ground, and you want to yell at this person to get up and run away and never look back, and avoid the life destined for them, but as we know far too well, everyone in “The Many Saints of Newark” has already had their destiny sealed.

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 ?? WARNER BROS. ?? Teenage Tony Soprano (Michael Gandolfini, left) learns the ropes from mentor Dickie Moltisanti (Alessandro Nivola) in “The Many Saints of Newark.”
WARNER BROS. Teenage Tony Soprano (Michael Gandolfini, left) learns the ropes from mentor Dickie Moltisanti (Alessandro Nivola) in “The Many Saints of Newark.”

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