The Daily Telegraph

A ‘Sopranos’ prequel worthy of the original

The Many Saints of Newark

- By Tim Robey

15 Cert, 120min ★★★★★

Dir Alan Taylor

Starring Alessandro Nivola, Leslie Odom, Jr, Michael Gandolfini, Jon Bernthal, Vera Farmiga, Billy Magnussen, Corey Stoll, Ray Liotta, John Magaro, Michela de Rossi

HBO’S great mob saga The Sopranos, which basically initiated long-form American TV drama as we now know it, ended its run on a note of celebrated ambiguity in 2007: a quick, hard cut to black at a New Jersey ice cream parlour.

Did this mean, as widely assumed, that Tony Soprano finally got whacked, after his many grisly deeds and long, dark nights of the soul? In fact, no – it simply left us in a state of permanent suspense about his fate. Anyone’s lingering fantasy of a sequel – an idea never entertaine­d by creator David Chase – was scotched forever when James Gandolfini, who played Tony, died in 2013.

There remain other questions. Such as: what, and who, made Tony the way he was? Zigzagging us forward from his childhood, The Many Saints of Newark is a standalone Sopranos prequel whose insights are refreshing­ly unexpected. The choice of director is Alan Taylor, a series veteran who enforces a certain punchy-yet-fluent house style, with gruesome bursts of bloodshed and a soundtrack of jazz/funk/soul laments.

You don’t need a PHD in Sopranosol­ogy to get hooked (again), but this film is not for total novices. Dedicated viewers should be forewarned, as Chase drops some major bombshells after all these years. (I’ll be spoiling none, for fear of being popped at my next screening.)

If you’re assuming Tony is the main character, though: fuhgedabou­dit. He’s a mere blob of a boy as it starts, innocent of mob morals. (He’s played at that age by William Ludwig, then as a restless teenager by Gandolfini’s son, Michael.)

“Many Saints” points us to the surname of our narrator, Christophe­r Moltisanti (Michael Imperioli), who could logically know little of these events, seeing as they pre-date his own birth in 1969. We allow it, but only because he’s narrating from his grave: Chris is the cousin-in-law Tony asphyxiate­d in season six, who’s understand­ably peeved to be rotting under a hillside. It’s a brilliantl­y ghoulish idea to get his whole take.

It’s Chris’s father, a middle-ranking mob soldier called Dickie (Alessandro Nivola), whom we chiefly follow. Young Tony is drawn to this sharpwitte­d mentor, whom he calls uncle, much more than his racist thug of a dad (Jon Bernthal, a bit neglected).

Remember Tony’s ma Livia, as nailed by the vinegary Nancy Marchand? Vera Farmiga portrays her in middle age, and does a bravura double job – reminding us of Marchand, but also pointedly of Edie Falco’s Carmela, as if to underline everything Oedipally mother-fixated in that marriage.

Chase calls I, Claudius one of his favourite books, which figures: The Sopranos’ toxic intrigue always felt twinned with Ancient Rome’s. (Livia was the name of the emperor Tiberius’s mother.) You could regard this film as a Romulus and Remus origin story – a foundation myth for Tony’s empire.

Our focal figure, Dickie is fighting not to become his own bullying dad (a splenetic Ray Liotta), and it’s he whom the film frames as an inescapabl­e model for Tony. The best of all Dickie’s deeds – this is the crux – would be cutting off Tony stone dead, leaving the boy to find his own way. As we already, tragically, know, his protégé will inherit this exact syndrome of failing to be a better man.

Nivola skulks through it all with compelling ambivalenc­e. He has a charismati­c counterpar­t in the shape of the excellent Leslie Odom, Jr, as an increasing­ly fuming hood called Harold Mcbrayer.

The dramatic punchlines are reliably bang on, even if subtlety isn’t always a strong suit – but that’s a niggle. Sinewy and smart, this is a rich, imaginativ­e leap into the pre-history of an iconic show, and a rare instance of the big screen doing right by the small. In cinemas from today

 ?? ?? Family values: James Gandolfini’s son Michael (wearing tie) plays a young Tony Soprano
Family values: James Gandolfini’s son Michael (wearing tie) plays a young Tony Soprano

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