It's always shocking to hear about anyone dying before their time. I wasn't a great fan of The Sopranos - I abandoned the box set halfway through the second series, warned (on these boards, no less) that it became increasingly darker.
My memory of him is in the role of the General Miller in the British film In the Loop, derived from The Thick of It, devised by Armando Ianucci, and satirising Anglo-US preparations for an invasion of a country not dissimilar to Iraq .
I recall him sitting on a kid's bed in someone's house, chatting to a politician ,with whom he'd got away from the party crowd, about how many troops they would need to invade this fictitious middle east country, and doing the calculation on a child's calculator that beeped and called out encouragement.
At the same party, Gandolfini as the general in full uniform, is quizzed about his attitudes by someone who doubts his commitment to warfare. Gandolfini points to his uniform, barely missing a beat, and saying 'What do you think this is - the Village People?'. Classic delivery of a great line.
My memory of him is in the role of the General Miller in the British film In the Loop, derived from The Thick of It, devised by Armando Ianucci, and satirising Anglo-US preparations for an invasion of a country not dissimilar to Iraq .
I recall him sitting on a kid's bed in someone's house, chatting to a politician ,with whom he'd got away from the party crowd, about how many troops they would need to invade this fictitious middle east country, and doing the calculation on a child's calculator that beeped and called out encouragement.
At the same party, Gandolfini as the general in full uniform, is quizzed about his attitudes by someone who doubts his commitment to warfare. Gandolfini points to his uniform, barely missing a beat, and saying 'What do you think this is - the Village People?'. Classic delivery of a great line.
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