PHILADELPHIA — “The Sopranos” got a lot of hate in its early days. Several major networks rejected the series that would later earn countless “best TV show ever” titles, with some critics questioning why it was set in New Jersey. David Chase, the Jersey-raised showrunner at the center of the new documentary “Wise Guy: David Chase and The Sopranos,” was put in the familiar position of needing to defend the Garden State as a perfect location for his mob show, instead of the overplayed New York.
Recalling the rocky start to director Alex Gibney in the two-part documentary that premiered on HBO earlier this month, Chase remembered one critic in particular: Martin Scorsese. “‘I don’t get it, all these trees and s—,’” Chase recalls Scorsese saying, in the film. (In a 2019 interview, the director explained that he didn’t identify with the legendary series’ portrayal of mob culture.)
Filming the violent drama in bucolic suburbs like North Caldwell, where titular character Tony Soprano lived, made complete sense to Chase — and HBO agreed. “I knew there was a mob presence in New Jersey, kids whose fathers were heavy bookmakers, loan sharks,” he continued. “Where the Soprano house was, that was the town that we moved to when I was in eighth grade. There was a lot of woods and ponds — at the same time, some guy got blown up in his garage. Started his car, boom.”
“The most interesting thing to me was how personal this story was to David, and ultimately, in a kind of a roundabout way, for all of the other writers, particularly revolving around mommy issues,” Gibney told The Inquirer. “It came from a deeply self-reflective and honest place.”