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Des témoignages de première main et des révélations des personnes qui ont donné vie à cette série révolutionnaire.Des témoignages de première main et des révélations des personnes qui ont donné vie à cette série révolutionnaire.Des témoignages de première main et des révélations des personnes qui ont donné vie à cette série révolutionnaire.
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The verb beginning part it shows a lot of David Chase's history, and it shows pictures of him as a young man and he Tough he only stands about 5 foot eight. I guess reading an interview. I research this that Tony Sirico said "if there's any man I would fear it's David Chase" Not saying that Chase is the ultimate bad ass sociopath but he did look like a tough guy even for being a little dude scrappy. I mean I'm born in 1980 but I could just tell by looking at them back then he was a tough guy. I'm sure a lot of stuff they wrote about they did on the show and I think ultimately this is a great documentary that shows that maybe David Chase Was actually Tony soprano.
If you are like me and can't get enough of the Sopranos this is a really great two part documentary. This conversation with David Chase and the world of the hit HBO Show in the year of the 25th Anniversary is worth watching. There is great footage from the history of the show and a ton of behind the scenes footage from the making of it. There are conversations with HBO Executives, Cast Members, Writers, and people related to the show. I loved the audition footage. The documentary takes the viewer on the journey from concept to creation and more. This is a good documentary and doesn't suffer from the disease of being too long, which many documentaries do.
Alex Gibney has been behind some good documentaries, and The Sopranos is - yes - one of the greatest shows ever made, if not the greatest show ever made. So expectations for something like Wise Guy: David Chase and The Sopranos are allowed to be high, especially given this clocks in at a beefy 160 minutes (it's technically a miniseries, but it's comprised of two "episodes" that both released at the same time, so it's easy to watch as one big movie, effectively).
There is so much to say about The Sopranos, so I feel this could've been an actual miniseries. More could've been covered, but it's a little strange that with what they chose to cover, there was still a bit of repetition. It exists in a strange and flabby middle ground between being a tight two-hour movie and being a multi-hour TV series. Honestly, they could've quite comfortably spent an hour on each season, and made the whole thing 7-ish hours long, a little like The Beatles Anthology miniseries, which spends 60 to 70 minutes per year The Beatles were around, on average.
To get one more complaint out of the way, Wise Guy makes a terrible first impression. The editing feels like it's trying to speedrun the background info on Chase's pre-Sopranos life, and the result is awkward.
Actually, another (minor) complaint. Wise Guy brings up some fairly tired things I feel have been talked about to death regarding The Sopranos, but maybe that's because I've probably spent as much time reading about The Sopranos and watching videos about it than I have spent watching the show (and I've seen it three times, front to back).
But this is generally quite good, especially once you get past that awkward opening. The behind-the-scenes footage is valuable, and the doc's at its best when it focuses on Chase and his relationship with James Gandolfini. Something 80 to 90 minutes long completely focused on that would've been remarkable, but it's still compelling as presented here.
It's a good documentary on a great show. It's hard to imagine any fans of the show not getting at least a little out of it.
There is so much to say about The Sopranos, so I feel this could've been an actual miniseries. More could've been covered, but it's a little strange that with what they chose to cover, there was still a bit of repetition. It exists in a strange and flabby middle ground between being a tight two-hour movie and being a multi-hour TV series. Honestly, they could've quite comfortably spent an hour on each season, and made the whole thing 7-ish hours long, a little like The Beatles Anthology miniseries, which spends 60 to 70 minutes per year The Beatles were around, on average.
To get one more complaint out of the way, Wise Guy makes a terrible first impression. The editing feels like it's trying to speedrun the background info on Chase's pre-Sopranos life, and the result is awkward.
Actually, another (minor) complaint. Wise Guy brings up some fairly tired things I feel have been talked about to death regarding The Sopranos, but maybe that's because I've probably spent as much time reading about The Sopranos and watching videos about it than I have spent watching the show (and I've seen it three times, front to back).
But this is generally quite good, especially once you get past that awkward opening. The behind-the-scenes footage is valuable, and the doc's at its best when it focuses on Chase and his relationship with James Gandolfini. Something 80 to 90 minutes long completely focused on that would've been remarkable, but it's still compelling as presented here.
It's a good documentary on a great show. It's hard to imagine any fans of the show not getting at least a little out of it.
I'm a huge Sopranos fan. I had many questions about the talent searches, the writers, and how all of the series would come together. David Chase has always struck me as aloof, but my opinion now is that he's direct and poignant. He's. Never going to cow-tow to convention, and won't bend to social pressure. That certainly shows in the final scene. When the screen went black, I was stunned, but after thought I understood what the director wanted; for people to have their own ending. I felt the same way when No Country for Old Men ended. It didn't end in a wrapped bow. Which was fine. Life doesn't work out with a pretty bow all the time, so why should every movie? Anyway, the Wise Guy was really interesting and I'm happy to have closure 😊
I found myself tearing up, thinking about all the great scenes and characters, and most of all about the creative process. This series didn't just happen. It came together with a lot of hard work by everyone involved.
My wish is this: that Alex Gibney, or someone, will do a follow-up like Wise Guy, about The Wire. Perhaps David Simon could be the focal point, perhaps Ed Burns, perhaps a dozen other people, but like The Sopranos, The Wire created a world foreign to the viewers, that became so believable that you became part of it.
Hearing about David Chase drawing 13 lines down a page, then adding the character names, then creating a story arc for each-then bringing it into the Writers room to create 13 teleplays-it sounds simple but is fascinating. Then, the actors. James putting a sharp stone in his shoe to make himself angry, Andrianna finding out she was going to be killled at the end of the season, Pauli Walnuts and the hair. So much went into it, and the result was fantastic.
My wish is this: that Alex Gibney, or someone, will do a follow-up like Wise Guy, about The Wire. Perhaps David Simon could be the focal point, perhaps Ed Burns, perhaps a dozen other people, but like The Sopranos, The Wire created a world foreign to the viewers, that became so believable that you became part of it.
Hearing about David Chase drawing 13 lines down a page, then adding the character names, then creating a story arc for each-then bringing it into the Writers room to create 13 teleplays-it sounds simple but is fascinating. Then, the actors. James putting a sharp stone in his shoe to make himself angry, Andrianna finding out she was going to be killled at the end of the season, Pauli Walnuts and the hair. So much went into it, and the result was fantastic.
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Wise Guy: Los Soprano por David Chase
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 2h 40min(160 min)
- Couleur
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