View Full Version : The Sopranos
ramin2999
03-22-2006, 11:21 PM
Hi guys this Thread is about the sopranos especialy the sixth season.
Warning potential episode spoiler when you scroll down.
If you havent seen it scroll down at your own disadvantage
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just did that for your own benefit so it dosent ruin the surprise
ok here i go>>>>>>>>
ramin2999
03-22-2006, 11:21 PM
ok lets get started what do you guys all think about the first two episodes?
mike435
06-11-2007, 01:05 AM
The Sopranos Finaly came to an end
any one intreseted in discussing it
donsaeid
06-11-2007, 03:22 AM
are they art or image?
wrong place dude!
RedWine
09-17-2007, 06:46 AM
The Sopranos and 30 Rock took top honors, as best dramatic and comedy series, respectively, but it was often "Silent Night" at the 59th annual Primetime Emmy Awards – where such stalwarts as Sally Field and Ray Romano had their onstage comments bleeped.
Grey's Anatomy star Katherine Heigl, who was named best supporting actress in a dramatic series, blurted out an expletive that was bleeped when her name was announced. "My own mother said I didn't have a shot in hell of winning tonight," she said onstage, "so I don't have anything prepared."
Heigl did say, though, that she'd been in the business since she was kid and had waited 17 years to win an Emmy – "I worked my *** off."
'American' Dream
Also heard from in a big way: America Ferrera, the winner of best actress in a comedy, for Ugly Betty. The 23-year-old said winning was "a dream come true," and that she couldn't wait to go to work tomorrow.
Field, winner as best actress in a dramatic series for Brothers and Sisters, was bleeped during her acceptance speech when she spoke about the war in Iraq.
"I said g--damn," she later told reporters backstage. "I wanted to say something about the mothers whose sons aren't coming home. I can't imagine. I can't imagine."
Romano's censored comments came at the outset of the show when he joked about what he was doing at home since Everybody Loves Raymond went off the air two years ago.
Mob Scene
Best actor in a dramatic series winner James Spader's remarks were left untouched. Clutching his third Emmy for his lawyer role on Boston Legal, Spader said, "I feel like I just stole a pile of money from the Mob, and they're all sitting over there" – referring to James Gandolfini and the cast of The Sopranos, which, besides winning the top prize, was also honored for its writing and directing.
Ricky Gervais was named best actor in a comedy series, for Extras, but because he was not at the event, presenters Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert joked that they were giving the Emmy to their pal, Steve Carell, who raced to the stage and embraced them.
But it was best comedy series 30 Rock that had the last laugh. Up on the Emmy stage of Los Angeles's Shrine Auditorium, the show's creator Tina Fey thanked the program's "dozens and dozens of viewers."
Support Group
Early in the show, Jeremy Piven, Terry O'Quinn and Jaime Pressly were among the first to take home the gold. "What an embarrassment of riches," said Piven, who collected his second consecutive Emmy as supporting actor in a comedy series for Entourage. "I want to thank the entire crew. I don't know any of their names," he joked.
Pressly also took her second consecutive Emmy, for supporting actress in a comedy series for My Name Is Earl.
Lost costar O'Quinn, who won as best supporting actor in a dramatic series, cracked in his speech: "Sometimes when we're rolling around in the jungle in the mud, hitting each other and stabbing each other, I wonder what it would be like to bake up a sheet of cookies on Wisteria Lane – and get one of their checks," he said, referring to the cast of Desperate Housewives.
RedWine
01-28-2008, 07:23 AM
Sopranos have SAG Awards hat-trick
The stars of 'The Sopranos' were the big winners in the TV categories at the Screen Actors Guild Awards in the US at the weekend.
James Gandolfini and Edie Falco were named Best Actor and Actress in a Drama Series respectively while the cast of 'The Sopranos' won the Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series award.
There were two awards for '30 Rock' with stars Alec Baldwin and Tina Fey named Best Actor and Actress in a Comedy Series respectively.
The cast of the US series 'The Office' won the Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series award.
Kevin Kline won Best Actor in a Television Movie or Miniseries for 'As You Like It' with Queen Latifah named Best Actress for 'Life Support'.
The stunt team on '24' won the award for Outstanding Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a Television Series.
RedWine
01-28-2008, 07:23 AM
"No Country for Old Men" won top honors at the Screen Actors Guild Awards on Sunday night, taking home a statuette for best ensemble in a motion picture.
Earlier in the evening, Javier Bardem won best supporting actor for his role in the gritty western as the cold-blooded paid killer.
Josh Brolin, who also stars in the film, accepted the award on behalf of the 47 actors who make up the film's cast. "It's a risky movie," he said, "and it's nice to have risky movies," adding that the studio emphasis on blockbusters is "backfiring awfully, and it's fun for us actors."
He said that Joel and Ethan Coen, who directed the film noir, "are freaky little people. And we did a freaky little movie, whether you liked the ending or not."
The double win for "No Country" comes on the heels of the Coen brothers receiving the Directors Guild of America Award on Saturday evening, and that makes them and their film front-runners for Oscars next month.
The best actor award went to Daniel Day-Lewis for his transcendent performance as a greedy oilman in "There Will Be Blood." Day-Lewis is also considered the front-runner for a best actor Oscar, having already won the Golden Globe and numerous other critics awards. "I'm very proud of this," said Day-Lewis, who then talked poignantly about Heath Ledger, who died suddenly last week.
Day-Lewis described Ledger as an actor who inspired and renewed his own passion for the craft.
"In 'Brokeback Mountain' he was unique, he was perfect," Day-Lewis said, adding that the final scene in that ground-breaking movie was as perfect an acting moment as he had ever seen. "I'd like to dedicate this to Heath Ledger."
In youth-conscious Hollywood, it was quite a night for veteran performers.
Julie Christie, 66, won best actress in a feature film for playing a woman losing her battle with Alzheimer's in "Away From Her," also boosting her chances of taking home an Academy Award for the same role. Ruby Dee, 83, won best actress in a supporting role for playing the mother of a mobster in "American Gangster." And 80-year-old Charles Durning received the Screen Actors Guild's 44th lifetime achievement award.
"This is my first time holding one of these boys," Dee said as she grasped her statuette. The diminutive Dee also accepted the award on behalf of her late husband, Ossie Davis, "because you know, he's working on things up there." Dee is also nominated for an Oscar for "American Gangster."
Durning was one of World War II's most decorated soldiers, a boxer and ballroom dancer -- all before becoming a performer. He was praised by Denis Leary, who plays his son on "Rescue Me," as "one of our industry's finest character actors. I'd say he's the best." Leary also pointed out Durning's passion for his craft, joking that it was humiliating to come to work every morning with an "80-year-old man who knows his lines and your lines when you don't."
A noticeably frail Durning was helped on stage to accept the award to a standing ovation and cheers.
"That's it?" he joked when he got there. "There's nothing more gratifying than receiving an award from one's peers," he said. Acting, he added, is a dream come true for him, and he still has much to learn. "I'm just getting the hang of it," he said to laughter.
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