The Sopranos Sessions Quotes

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The Sopranos Sessions The Sopranos Sessions by Matt Zoller Seitz
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The Sopranos Sessions Quotes Showing 1-30 of 39
“You, know, it sounds kind of silly, but when stuff like that would happen, I would think, “This show is meant to be.” I would feel like, “I’m not organizing this; someone else is, or a greater power, a muse, is organising it. How could this fall into my lap like this.” - David Chase”
David Chase, The Sopranos Sessions
“Tony adored the ducks in the pool because they were guarded by a mother who protected and nurtured them in a manner free of ulterior motive, of deceit and manipulation, of the urge to annihilate. Livia, for all her evident helplessness, is the most actively destructive force in the pilot, a black hole vacuuming up hope.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“I have a liberal arts English degree, so I was brought up thinking that's what it was all about, and I had to learn that sometimes, or often times, art just is. It's not attempting at anything. It's not providing answers. I had to grow up a little bit before I got to that.”
David Chase, The Sopranos Sessions
“He was becoming a man, but you can tell me, people just didn’t like that kid, and I didn’t know why. I didn’t know why. He was not an empowered teenager like they’re usually portrayed nowadays. They hated AJ, and I thought he was a really good, confused, young person.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“You just go by what’s an entertaining storyline. You just feel your way through it. If it feels thrilling to you, then you do it. There’s ideas you get that are good, and some that are thrilling.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“We all have this image we want to portray, that we’re in control. Control is a big issue in human life. Falling down, or having violence arrayed against you, is a lack of control, and all your pretenses, your image—that all goes down the toilet, who you’re trying to project yourself as.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“To me, people do change, but it’s a long process. People always think, “Well, people have trauma and then they change.” But I don’t know if that’s true.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“Humanity. There was humor in places you would not have expected, expressed in certain ways you wouldn’t have expected.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“I’m searching for something. That’s what’s really going on here. That’s all I can really say.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“I’m interested in this idea that people bottom out, and that’s when they go to God. It’s the Fundamentalist idea of it: you’ll come to Him when you’re down and out.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“You know, it sounds kind of silly, but when stuff like that would happen, I would think, “This show is meant to be.” I would feel like, “I’m not organizing this; someone else is, or a greater power, a muse, is organizing it. How could this fall into my lap like this?”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“all the long-term stuff, most of that usually played out, but not in the detail I thought it would, because we’d come up with something else, or something would happen.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“I tried to give each season a theme. Season one, Tony as a son, that was the theme. Then Tony as parent, then Tony as a husband. It went like that. A: And season four is the marriage as a whole? D: Yes, you’re right.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“I tried to give each season a theme. Season one, Tony as a son, that was the theme. Then Tony as parent, then Tony as a husband. It went like that.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“M: So you were trying to answer the question, “What do we have to do to make you people not like these guys?” D: Yeah—to make you see what this show is about. It’s about people who’ve made a deal with the devil, starting with the head guy. It’s about evil. I was surprised by how hard it was get people to see that.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“Was there ever any frustration on your part, or the part of the other writers, that the audience loved these gangsters so much? D: Yes. M: Was there any element in this stuff we’re talking about—violence against women, racism, escalating levels of brutality, the sadism of characters like Ralphie—where this was your response to these viewers? Like, “You can’t like these guys! Goddammit, what’s wrong with you?” D: Yes.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“every time you introduce a new character, you don’t have to play “The Star-Spangled Banner.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“sometimes, or oftentimes, art just is. It’s not attempting at anything. It’s not providing answers. But I had to grow up a little bit before I got to that.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“sometimes, or oftentimes, art just is. It’s not attempting at anything.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“Chase is an intuitive writer, somebody who’s not trying to send messages or create puzzles for people to solve, but is just trying to make people feel and think and question themselves.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“Almost nobody gives a damn about your life but you, and according to Chase, there’s a good chance you don’t even give as much of a damn as you think. If you did, you’d already have done the hard work necessary to change yourself to match your idealized image. Most people aren’t capable of that. It’s too hard, we’re too lazy as a species, and life is just too long and too filled with problems that need immediate solving. And then, at some point, you’re not in the picture anymore, and it’s all a moot point, for you anyway.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“AJ’s depression was, in every sense, a wake-up call.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“Meadow had her chance to get off the bus for good, but instead she’s inching toward a lifetime bus pass. Carmela had two chances—first when Dr. Krakower’s second opinion told her to leave Tony, then when she actually threw him out—and both times she couldn’t do it.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“but the Family functions as a bus, too, one that everyone’s either afraid or incapable of staying off for long.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“Tony tells Melfi that he knew he had a golden moment after Junior shot him, and that he let it slip away; the implication is that his Las Vegas trip was a half-assed attempt to create a new chance for epiphany. But is such a thing possible, for Tony or anyone else? Especially when it’s just so easy to dwell on old grudges and feuds—to keep stewing in the juices, like the steak Christopher was cooking in “Walk Like a Man,” long after the flame’s turned off?”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“Changing one’s essential nature—one’s entire world view—is not easy, even when, like Tony, you’ve suffered (and inflicted) trauma on an unimaginable scale, and have immediate life-or-death reasons for making a major change.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“That’s Tony in a nutshell—always pushing toward some realization greater than what his relatives, colleagues, and friends can muster, but invariably coming up short.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“Numbness is the means to comfort’s end. If you’re numb to morality, to empathy, you can do whatever you want and feel little or no guilt.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“Tony, whose deeply submerged decent self (the guy who dotes on his kids, banters with his wife, and idealizes young mothers and innocent animals) rarely emerges from his toxic cesspool of a personality. There have always been two Tonys. Kennedy is the voice in Tony’s head that says, “Do the right thing.” To which Heidi replies, “Fuck that.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions
“We all know David Chase’s view of human nature is bleak. The Sopranos is set in a universe where good and evil have renamed themselves principle and instinct. Animals are not known for their inclination to act on principle.”
Matt Zoller Seitz, The Sopranos Sessions

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