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After ‘The Many Saints of Newark,’ where will the ‘Sopranos’ universe go next?

A bunch of men in business attire look angry in a doorway
From left, Billy Magnussen, Jon Bernthal, Corey Stoll, John Magaro, Ray Liotta and Alessandro Nivola in “The Many Saints of Newark.”
(Barry Wetcher / Warner Bros.)
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Warning: The following article discusses plot details of “The Sopranos” prequel film “The Many Saints of Newark,” including the ending. If you haven’t seen the film, we suggest checking out our review or this feature on how the film reimagined the characters and coming back here after you’ve watched the film.

David Chase famously (or infamously) doesn’t like to tie things up neatly with a bow.

As the creator and mastermind of HBO’s beloved mob series “The Sopranos,” Chase deliberately let some storylines trail off into ambiguity, and even after 86 hours of richly detailed storytelling, there were plenty of questions that were never fully resolved.

Who really killed Christopher Moltisanti’s father, Dickie? What happened to the lamp that the FBI bugged after Meadow took it to college? Did the Russian mobster that Christopher and Paulie Walnuts pursued into the woods in the classic episode “Pine Barrens” live or die? And, most importantly, what ultimate fate awaited the Sopranos clan in the series finale when the screen suddenly — and, to many, maddeningly — cut to black?

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We may never get answers to most of those lingering questions. But now with the “Sopranos” prequel film “The Many Saints of Newark,” which hits theaters and HBO Max today, Chase has returned to the scene of the crime and filled in at least a few key gaps, while creating potential new avenues to explore in the future.

The ‘Sopranos’ prequel film resolves a long-standing debate among fans about what happened to a key character, but it may not be who you think.

By end of “The Many Saints of Newark,” we have a clearer sense of the forces that shaped the young Tony (played by the late James Gandolfini’s son Michael) and set him on the path toward a life of crime.

But the film’s ending also leaves some threads that could be explored in future chapters in the “Sopranos” saga — assuming Chase has the appetite to go further. “The Many Saints of Newark” concludes with a key death that leads to a symbolic passing of the torch.

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And then, during the credits, we see that Harold McBrayer (Leslie Odom Jr.), a former associate turned rival to boss Dickie Moltisanti (Alessandro Nivola), is still working to build the Black criminal empire that is threatening the domination of the Italian mafia.

Two men outside an auto repair shop
Leslie Odom Jr. as Harold McBrayer and Germar Terrell Gardner in “The Many Saints of Newark”
(Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures)

Between the ending of “The Many Saints of Newark” and the beginning of the “Sopranos” series lies a gap of two decades in which other stories could potentially be explored, from the war between the Black and Italian gangs to Tony’s further forays into crime to his burgeoning relationship with future wife Carmela (seen briefly in the film as his high school girlfriend).

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But it remains to be seen which of those stories, if any, Chase will want to tell.

How David Chase recast old ‘Sopranos’ characters — and introduced new ones — for the big screen prequel ‘The Many Saints of Newark.’

Many “Sopranos” fans — and perhaps some HBO executives as well — would undoubtedly love to see the prequel film kick off a new series focused on the young Tony’s rise to power. But while working on the film, Chase was adamant that it would be a one-off project, according to his producing partner, Nicole Lambert.

”He was very, very opposed [to future ‘Sopranos’ installments],” Lambert told The Times in August. “He was like, ‘One and done. Never doing this again.’”

But speaking to The Times in August, Chase said that while he was not interested in doing a prequel series, he has warmed to the idea of extending the “Sopranos” universe a little further.

A man in a denim jacket inside a phone booth
Michael Gandolfini as the young Tony Soprano in “The Many Saints of Newark”
(Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures)

“I wouldn’t do a series but I might do a sequel to this movie,” Chase said. “I’d really like to work with [‘Sopranos’ executive producer and writer] Terence Winter again, the two of us together. If that was to work out, that would be important. If it wasn’t, I’m not sure I would want to do all that work myself.” (While nothing has been officially set, Winter has said he would welcome that prospect.)

With “The Sopranos” still a popular choice for the greatest TV series of all time, Lambert believes there is ample appetite among fans to justify plowing ahead.

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“A lot of people who’ve seen the film have said, ‘Please, I want more,’“ Lambert said. “I’m excited that people want to revisit it. Hopefully it means we’ve done our job.”

Indeed, so rich and sprawling is the universe of “The Sopranos,” if diehard fans had their way even relatively minor characters would get a future turn in the spotlight.

“Someone on Twitter said, ‘I would watch the hell out of a Rosalie Aprile origin story,’” Lambert said with a laugh. “I was like, ‘Yes, I’d watch that movie!’”

“The Many Saints of Newark” revisits HBO’s seminal TV drama “The Sopranos,” but the rich material would have been better off as a limited series.

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