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Pine Barrens (The Sopranos)

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"Pine Barrens"
The Sopranosepisode
Episodeno.Season 3
Episode 11
Directed bySteve Buscemi
Story by
Teleplay byTerence Winter
Cinematography byPhil Abraham
Production code311
Original air dateMay 6, 2001(2001-05-06)
Running time60 minutes
Episode chronology
Previous
"...To Save Us All from Satan's Power"
Next
"Amour Fou"
The Sopranosseason 3
List of episodes

"Pine Barrens"is an episode of theHBOseriesThe Sopranos;it is the 11th of the show's third season and the 37th overall. Theteleplaywas written byTerence Winterfrom a story idea by Winter andTim Van Patten.It was the first of four episodes for the series directed bySteve Buscemiand originally aired on May 6, 2001. The episode has been widely praised.

Starring

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* = credit only

Guest starring

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Synopsis

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Following a change inJackie Jr.'s behavior,Meadowbegins to suspect he is cheating on her. Her suspicions are confirmed when she catches him with another girl. Heartbroken, she tells him they are finished.

GloriaandTony's relationship is growing increasingly unstable and the two frequently argue, though they always reconcile. Tony tellsDr. Melfithat he is seeing Gloria. In the first session, he speaks of how happy they are together; in the second he complains of her changing moods. Melfi says Gloria isdepressive,unstable, and impossible to please, asking Tony if that reminds him of anyone (implyinghis mother). Tony shakes his head.

Tony instructsPaulieto make a collection fromValery,a Russian, on behalf ofSilvio,who is ill. He goes withChristopherto Valery's apartment. Paulie provokes Valery and starts a fight. Following a struggle Paulie and Christopher manage to subdue Valery and believe they have killed him. Panicked, Paulie suggests that they dump him in thePine Barrens.

In the snow-covered woods, Paulie and Chris prepare to dump the body but find that Valery, who is revealed to be a trainedcommando,is still alive. They give him a shovel and instruct him to dig his own grave. While both are distracted, Valery hits them with the shovel and flees. They chase him, shooting wildly, with Paulie believing that he has hit him. They follow his track, but it ends: Valery has vanished.

After wandering in the woods trying to find their car, Paulie and Chris realize they are lost. Long after nightfall, faint with cold and hunger, they find an abandoned van where they take refuge. They blame each other for what has happened and the two fight before agreeing to stay together. In the middle of the night, Paulie manages to call Tony despite poor cell service and pleads for help. Tony drives out withBobby,an amateuroutdoorsman.They reach the parking spot but Paulie's car, containing the money from Valery, has vanished. They wait until dawn to look for Paulie and Chris and eventually find them.

Paulie gives a false version of what caused the fight with Valery, and Chris backs him up. Tony stresses to Paulie that if Valery ever turns up again, Paulie will have to take care of it. They head back to north Jersey in silence.

Valery's fate

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Shortly after Valery escapes into the Pine Barrens, Paulie shoots him, apparently in the head, but he still vanishes. At one point, the camera shifts away from Paulie and Christopher to an aerial viewpoint, suggesting that Valery was watching them from a tree. In addition, Paulie's car is missing when they return. Valery was never seen again. Series creatorDavid Chasehas said that he never intended to have Valery return and that the story is richer and more realistic with some mystery to the plot.HBOlisted Valery as "Deceased?" in promotional materials.

On the fate of Valery, Terence Winter said:

That's the question I get asked more than any other. It drives people crazy: "Where's the Russian? What happened to the Russian?" We could say, "Well, he got out and there's a big mob war with the Russians," or "He crawled off and died." But we wanted to keep it ambiguous. You know, not everything gets answered in life.[1]

David Chase said:

They shot a guy. Who knows where he went? Who cares about some Russian? This is what Hollywood has done to America. Do you have to have closure on every little thing? Isn't there any mystery in the world? It's a murky world out there. It's a murky life these guys lead. And by the way, I do know where the Russian is. But I'll never say because so many people got so pissy about it.[1]

In 2008 Chase said in an interview at theActors Guild:

OK, this is what happened. Some Boy Scouts found the Russian, who had the telephone number to his Boss, Slava, in his pocket. They called Slava, who took him to the hospital where he had brain surgery. Then Slava sent him back to Russia.[2]

In an interview with Sam Roberts, Chase said:

You mean the Russian? People came to me...He never went up a tree...He collapsed and he was found by some Boy Scouts. And they got in touch with his...somehow he was carrying a piece of ID, which led them back to his Boss. Slava the Russian guy. He was put in a hospital, and, ummm...you know, like he was completely, is, massive brain trauma. And he was sent back to Russia.[3]

Discussing the episode in a June 10, 2007New York Timesarticle titled "One Final Whack at That HBO Mob", Imperioli depicted the lack of closure regarding Valery as an example of the series' overall subversiveness, saying, "This show was never what people expected."[4]

In the same article, Sirico said that Chase wrote a sixth-season scene where Christopher and Paulie chanced upon Valery outside a bar and promptly shot him to death but it was removed from the script, possibly by Chase: "I think David didn't like it. He wanted the audience just to suffer."[4]

Deceased

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Title reference

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ThePine Barrensis a protected wilderness area managed by theNew Jersey Pinelands Commissionin SouthernNew Jersey.This is where Christopher and Paulie try to "dispose" of what they assume is Valery's body.

Cultural references

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  • The "bullshit" movie Christopher alludes to which deals with theCuban Missile CrisisisThirteen Days,released a year prior in 2000.
  • Paulie likens Valery toRasputin,a Russian mystic who was notoriously difficult to kill.
  • When Paulie is tying on his makeshift shoe, Chris ironically likens him toBruno Magli,the name of an Italian luxury shoe company.
  • When Chris and Paulie are in the van, Chris remarks that Valery is trained and that it is likeDie Hard.

Production

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  • DirectorTim Van Pattenhad dreamed about the idea of Paulie and Christopher getting lost in the woods during the production of season 2, and after discussing it with writerTerence Winter,presented the concept toDavid Chasewho worked it into season 3.[5][6]
  • The forest scenes for the episode were filmed atHarriman State Parkin New York after the production team was denied a permit to film in New Jersey at theSouth Mountain Reservation.Essex County executiveJames TreffingersaidThe Sopranos"depicts an ethnic group in stereotypical fashion".[7]This is a fairly rare instance where the show did not depict an environment similar to the one suggested, as neither Harriman State Park nor South Mountain Reservation is ecologically or visually similar to the New Jersey Pine Barrens.
  • There was an unexpected snowfall just before the shoot. Both the cast and the crew agreed that the snow added to the emotional effect of the episode.[5]
  • The interior of the van was shot on a sound stage. The actors' freezing "breath" was added in CGI.[8]
  • Director Steve Buscemi successfully threw the steak at James Gandolfini's head in the scene of Tony's argument with Gloria Trillo; neither Annabella Sciorra nor the prop handlers had been able to hit Gandolfini.[5][8]
  • "Pine Barrens" took 12 days for shooting, setting a record for the longest episode shoot inThe Sopranosat the time.[5]
  • The HBO documentaryJames Gandolfini: Tribute to a Friend(2013) includes an anecdote bySteve Schirripaabout the shooting of the scene where Tony picks up Bobby at Junior's house. When they were shooting Tony's reaction to Bobby's hunting outfit, Schirripa surprised Gandolfini by entering the kitchen wearing a strap-ondildo.Tony's response and laughter, pointing at Bobby and then doubling over the sink, is the take of Gandolfini seeing the strap-on.

Music

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Accolades

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References

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  1. ^ab"EW: Chase 'n' the Russian".Entertainment Weekly.Archivedfrom the original on May 12, 2007.
  2. ^""The Sopranos": David Chase fesses up - on the Air on Variety ".Variety.Archived fromthe originalon December 4, 2011.RetrievedNovember 23,2008.
  3. ^"David Chase Finally Explains the Sopranos Pine Barrens Episode - YouTube".YouTube.
  4. ^ab"One Final Whack at That HBO Mob".The New York Times.June 10, 2007. p. 2 of 2. Archived fromthe originalon November 10, 2023.
  5. ^abcdMartin, Brett (October 30, 2007). ""This Thing of Ours": CreatingThe SopranosUniverse ".The Sopranos: The Complete Book.New York:Time.p. 178–.ISBN978-1-933821-18-4.
  6. ^""Sopranos": A "Pine Barrens" oral history ".Entertainment Weekly.May 13, 2007.
  7. ^"The Sopranos banned from County Property".The New York Times.December 17, 2000. Archived fromthe originalon May 27, 2015.
  8. ^abThe Sopranos: The Complete Third Season,DVD commentary
  9. ^"Pine Barrens - Top 10 Sopranos Episodes".Time.April 4, 2007.ISSN0040-781X.RetrievedJanuary 8,2024.
  10. ^"EW: The all-time 10 best" Sopranos "episodes".Entertainment Weekly.Archivedfrom the original on November 11, 2014.RetrievedSeptember 18,2007.
  11. ^Flydal, Eiliv Frich (September 6, 2007)."Har du en yndlingsepisode i Sopranos?"[Do you have a favorite episode of the Sopranos?].Dagbladet(in Norwegian).
  12. ^D'Arminio, Aubry (April 2–15, 2018). "65 Best Episodes of the 21st Century".TV Guide.
  13. ^King, Susan (March 3, 2002)."Writers Honor 'Gosford Park,' 'Beautiful Mind'".Los Angeles Times.Archived fromthe originalon December 31, 2019.

Further reading

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