jonathan kleier death
Didn’t you see the scene with Tony and Bobby 5 min before the show ended where they were on the boat and Tony was saying that he bet that when death comes you wouldn’t see it comming, that it would be just black silence. [1]
Tony Soprano is undoubtedly whacked in Holsten’s diner in the concluding scene of the series finale. [2]
Every 1980s music fan instantly recognized the Journey tune, “Don’t Stop Believin’” when Tony played it on the jukebox in the final scene. [...] The comments on my first ‘Sopranos’ finale post are just getting too long to wade through, so let’s start a new post. [3]
Even the second Pirates of the Caribbean movie had better closure…. [1]
And let’s delve more into the scene that everyone’s talking about, the final scene at Holsten’s, the characters who populated the diner, and the Journey song that ended the show. [3]
Every single Sopranos episode had ended with a song. [...] Previously we heard on another episode that when you die it goes black. [1]
Don’t touch that dial: Test Pattern tunes into television, movie, music and pop culture links, as well as gossip and idle chat from around the Web. [3]
I remember Nardo Coppolla died on the patio with Galante and that Joe Turano was shot, but not killed immediately but taken away by ambulance and that his son John was shot in the storeroom, and again went off to hospital. [2]
In this feature, the man claims to know what happens after the episode ends, leading some credence to the idea that he may have had ulterior motives. [3]
Some of the best writers in television, and they cop the ending of a 1999 John Sayles movie. [1]
People have been posting all over the Web that the guy in the diner who disappeared into the men’s room was credited as Nikki Leotardo, the nephew of Phil, claiming that the same actor has appeared as Nikki before. [...] A post reproduced in this Deadspin entry claims that the Cub Scouts seen in the diner were the same little boys in the model-train store when Bobby was shot last week. [...] This Philadelphia newspaper article interviewed Paoli Colandrea, the Italian pizzeria owner who played that character, who says he was just dubbed “Mystery Man,” and that he has NOT been on the show (or any show) before. [3]
Sources:
[1] are you serious? - Reader comments at The New York Sun
[2] The shoot-out at 205 Knickerbocker Avenue - Reader comments at The New …
[3] Dissecting ‘Sopranos’ final scene: Questions abound - Test Pattern …