The Second Coming (The Sopranos)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
"The Second Coming"
The Sopranos episode
Episode no.Season 6
Episode 19
Directed byTim Van Patten
Written byTerence Winter
Cinematography byAlik Sakharov
Production code619
Original air dateMay 20, 2007 (2007-05-20)
Running time53 minutes
Episode chronology
← Previous
"Kennedy and Heidi"
Next →
"The Blue Comet"
The Sopranos season 6
List of episodes

"The Second Coming" is the 84th episode of the HBO television series The Sopranos, the seventh episode of the second half of the show's sixth season, and the 19th episode of the season overall. Written by Terence Winter and directed by Tim Van Patten, it originally aired in the United States on May 20, 2007.

Starring

* = credit only ** = photo only

Guest starring

Synopsis

Tony goes with

Butchie
off the payroll from another construction project. When they hear of this from the foreman, they viciously beat him up and steal the cash in his wallet.

A drunken Coco notices Meadow in a restaurant. He touches her cheek and makes some lewd comments. She reluctantly tells her father. Enraged, Tony finds Coco and

Little Carmine
tells Tony that he will once again broker a truce meeting with Phil, who has shut down one of their joint construction projects. Tony admits, "I lost it, timing couldn't have been worse." But Phil refuses to meet with them when they arrive at his home; from behind a second-floor window, he spews profanities as they walk away.

Harris and Goddard visit Satriale's and ask Tony to look at some photos. Tony identifies Ahmed and Muhammad
.

When

con men
" in the process.

Meadow reveals that her new boyfriend is Patrick Parisi, Patsy's eldest son, and that, inspired by him, she has decided to enter law school.

A.J. remains depressed. Moved by W. B. Yeats' apocalyptic poem "The Second Coming
", he tries to kill himself in the family pool. With one foot tied by a rope to a cinder block, and with a plastic bag over his head, he jumps in. But the rope is too long to keep him submerged. He struggles: he can neither drown nor save himself. Tony happens to come home. Hearing shouts, he goes out. He runs and jumps, wearing a suit and tie, into the pool. He saves A.J. and hauls up the cinder block. At first, he is shocked and furious, but A.J. is sobbing; he cradles his son in his lap, saying "Come on, baby, you're all right, baby."

A.J. is put on

his therapist and his parents, he speaks of resentments going back to 2nd grade, and quotes his grandmother
at the end of her life: "It's all a big nothing." This session occurs just after Tony's assault on Coco; as he listens, he notices one of Coco's bloody teeth in the cuff of his pant leg. Tony and Carmela both feel guilty about the attempted suicide, and each blames the other.

Tony scornfully rejects Dr. Melfi's suggestion that A.J. was calling for help and, at some level, knew the rope was too long. "He could just be a fucking idiot. Historically, that's been the case." He tells her about his insight on peyote: "I saw … that this and everything we experience is not all there is – there's something else."

Final appearances

  • Kelli Lombardo Moltisanti
    : widow of Christopher Moltisanti

Title reference

Production

  • Carlo Gervasi
    ) is promoted to the main cast and billed in the opening credits but only for this episode.

References to prior episodes

Other cultural and historical references

Music

Awards

  • This episode was nominated for and won Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series at the WGA Awards.

References

  1. ^ Italian Folk Songs and Dances. Folkways Records/Smithsonian Folkways Recordings. 1955. Catalog Number FW06915 / FW 6915.
  2. ^ Perez, Rodrigo (May 25, 2007). "Ninna Ninna – Sopranos Song Mystery Revealed". The Playlist.

External links