For fans, Wise Guy is essential not because it reveals the secrets of The Sopranos —there are no secrets left, only mysteries—but because it captures the essential loneliness of creation. David Chase made a world so real that we forgot it was a lie. And this miniseries is his confession: that he loved Tony Soprano, and that loving him was a kind of sin.
That voice belongs to David Chase. He is 78 now. The anger is still there—the coiled, suburban, Italian-Catholic rage that birthed the greatest television drama of all time—but it has mellowed into something resembling rueful wisdom. For two decades, Chase has been asked the same questions: Was Tony a good man? Did he die in Holsten’s? Is the whole thing just a long joke about Americans being full of shit? He has answered them with the patience of a man pulling teeth. Now, in Wise Guy , he doesn’t so much answer as he does excavate.
Chace stares at the document. “They wanted Goodfellas ,” he says. “I wanted The Lost Weekend with guns.” Wise Guy- David Chase and The Sopranos Miniseri...
This is the core revelation of Part One: The Sopranos was not a show about the mafia. It was a show about depression that used the mafia as a Trojan horse. Gibney interviews Lorraine Bracco, who recalls reading the pilot script and thinking, “This is a woman treating a bear.” James Gandolfini’s audition tape is shown—the full, unedited three minutes. It is staggering. Gandolfini, then a character actor with a hangdog face, transforms in real time. He starts the scene as a sad, tired man. By the end, he has smashed a lamp and is weeping. Chase’s voiceover: “I knew him. I knew that guy. He was every uncle I ever had, if they’d been given a license to kill.” The second half, “Don’t Stop Believin’,” is where Gibney turns the lens on the legacy. And it is here that the documentary becomes genuinely destabilizing. We expect a victory lap. Instead, we get an autopsy.
The first fifteen minutes cover the infamous “College” episode (Season 1, Episode 5), where Tony kills a rat while taking Meadow to tour colleges. Chase admits he thought the episode would get him fired. Instead, it won Emmys. But the cost, he argues, was that the show became a cipher. People loved the violence. They loved Paulie Walnuts’ one-liners. They missed the point. For fans, Wise Guy is essential not because
Chase leans forward. He has the posture of a prosecutor. “The point is that you root for him. You, the viewer, are the problem. Not me. You. You sit there eating pizza while a man suffocates his nephew’s informant with a garrote, and you think, ‘Well, Ralphie was a jerk anyway.’ That is the sickness. That is America.”
Through reenactments (a risky choice for Gibney, but rendered here with a dreamlike, almost Lynchian filter), we see the origins of Livia Soprano. Chase admits, for the first time on camera, that his mother once told him, “I wish you were never born.” He says it casually, then looks away. “But she made great manicotti,” he adds. The room laughs. It is the laugh of survivors. That voice belongs to David Chase
The documentary then pivots to the show’s infamous ending—the cut to black at Holsten’s diner. For thirty minutes, Gibney deconstructs it with the precision of a bomb squad. He interviews fans, critics, and cast members. Steven Van Zandt (Silvio Dante) admits he threw his remote at the TV. Edie Falco (Carmela) says she understood it immediately: “It’s the only way it could end. Because death doesn’t give you a crescendo. It gives you nothing.”
In the end, Wise Guy is not about a TV show. It is about the price of looking into the abyss. And David Chase, like his creation, stared so long that the abyss stared back. The only difference? Tony had a gun. Chase had a pen. And somehow, the pen was more dangerous.