Welcome to WeeklyWilson.com, where author/film critic Connie (Corcoran) Wilson avoids totally losing her marbles in semi-retirement by writing about film (see the Chicago Film Festival reviews and SXSW), politics and books----her own books and those of other people. You'll also find her diverging frequently to share humorous (or not-so-humorous) anecdotes and concerns. Try it! You'll like it!

Tag: Michael Gandolfini

"Ben's Sister" 18 minute short.

“Ben’s Sister” Screens at 56th Nashville Film Festival on September 20, 2025

"Ben's Sister" poster

“Ben’s Sister” poster.

Emma Weinswig, is a talented  Writer/Director/Actress who took home the SXSW Audience Award for “Ben’s Sister,” an 18-minute film that won the Narrative Shorts Competition at SXSW in 2025. The film depicts the high school antics of a group of teen-aged boys who are attempting to win the award for the Senior Scavenger Hunt. The Senior Scavenger Hunt has them doing a series of things that seem cool to senior boys and posting pictures of these antics online. What sorts of things must the young men do to win the Senior Scavenger Hunt?

SENIOR SCAVENGER HUNT POINTS

Poster for "Ben's Sister"

Poster for “Ben’s Sister.”

Make a halfcourt basketball shot: 30 points.  Swallow a goldfish: 100 points.  Kidnap a freshman:  500 points.  Get Rachel M. to flash you and get Sebastian’s mom to kiss you: 500 points. Defecate on the Redwood home plate: 500 points. Ding dong ditch and get Lea to meet you at the swimming pool to swim and, last but not least, hook up with a freshman girl for 2,000 points.

I may have gotten the points to be earned slightly incorrect, but the last one is the one that causes the trouble within the group of testosterone-fueled boys.  Ben discovers that one of his friends, Chase,  hit on his freshman sister, Emma, to earn points for the Scavenger Hunt. The discovery seems to open Ben’s mind regarding the double standard that he has been living, vis a vis  male/female relationships. It’s okay to behave like a predatory male animal when it’s somebody else’s sister, but when Ben thinks that his friend Chase has hit on his own freshman sister, Emma, his opinion  changes. The behavior we see Ben emulating doesn’t seem as cool in the light of reality. One wishes that the leaders of our country had similar “Eureka!” moments. The indisputable fact is that every under-age girl is someone’s daughter or sister.

MICHAEL GANDOLFINI

Michael Gandolfini

NEW YORK, NEW YORK – JANUARY 10: Michael Gandolfini attends HBO’s “The Sopranos” 25th anniversary celebration on January 10, 2024 at Da Nico Ristorante in New York City. (Photo by Dia Dipasupil/WireImage)

The role of Ben’s friend Chase is played by 26-year-old Michael Gandolfini, son of James Gandolfini. I’ve been following Michael Gandolfini since he appeared in 2021’s “The Many Saints of Newark” and in the 2024 hilarius short “Tea.” In “Tea” the young Gandolfini portrayed a Circuit City employee who is stung in the throat by a hornet. That 12-minute Blake Rice-directed short co-starred Olivia Nikkanen and was  as absurd as it sounds.

When the young Gandolfini began acting in 2011 he was only 12 years old. Now, as a 26-year-old,  Michael Gandolfini has amassed 21 credits, many of them shorts. It is only a matter of time until we see young Gandolfini dominating filmscreens, hopefully with the same charisma as his father.

MICHAEL GANDOLFINI TODAY

Michael Gandolfini

Michael Gandolfini today.

In the early years, young Michael did not look that much like his legendary father. As he has matured and filled out, he is resembling James, his father, more and more. It was remarkable, especially when I went back in the archives and looked at  earlier photos. He is shaping up to look remarkably like his Dad and is definitely on target to build an equally impressive career.

BEN & EMMA WEINSWIG

Ben & Emma Weinswig

Ben & Emma Weinswig

The lead in “Ben’s Sister,” Ben Weinswig, is actually the brother of Emma Weinswig, who wrote and directed this short. “Ben’s Sister” won both the Audience Award for a narrative short at SXSW and was also nominated for the 2025 Grand Jury Award in Austin.  The music (April Harper Gray), cinematography (Shane Bagwell) and editing (Will Noyce and William Lancaster) were excellent and all performers were totally believable in their roles….(even if one of then was 26 while portraying an 18-year-old.)

MAIN MALE CAST:

Male cast of "Ben's Sister," including Ben Weinswig, Sam Rechner, Brian Niles, Michael Gandolfini

Primary male cast of “Ben’s Sister,” including Ben Weinswig, Sam Rechner, Brian Niles, Michael Gandolfini

The main cast members were Ben Weinswig as Ben, Michael Gandolfini as Chase, Brian Niles as Sebastian “Sebi”;  Sam Rechner as Ryder; and Charlie Brady as Jasper. In the photo, Ben is bottom left, Sebi (Sebastian) is upper right, and bottom right is Michael Gandolfini.

FEMALE MAIN CAST:

Emma Weinswig (also Writer/Director/Star) as Emma (Ben’s Sister); Alex Costello as Lia; Siena Werber as Stella; Alexis G. Lall as Lizzy; Natalie Rousseau as Ava; and Emma Kuhlman as Tallulah.

Other members of the Mill Valley, California T-High class were Sophia Grace Macy as Alyssa, Miles Elliot as Jack, Steve Weinswig as Mr. Pavolick, Madeliene Smith as Rachel M, Rachel Turner as Celeste, Lindsay Nelson as Emily and Luke Yellen as Turtle. “Ben’s Sister” will screen on Saturday, September 20th at 2 p.m. in Regal Green Hils Theater #14 at the 56th Nashville Film Festival and will stream to ticket holders from September 22nd (8 a.m.) until midnight on September 29th, 2025.

“The Many Saints of Newark” Strolls Down “Sopranos” Memory Lane

“The Many Saints of Newark” is a prequel to the well-loved television series “The Sopranos.” We could justifiably expect to learn all about the early years that shaped young Anthony Soprano, played in his youth by Michael Gandolfini, the son of James Gandolfini. The elementary-school-aged Tony is played by William Ludwig, who is also good in the role.

The Big Come-on in this David Chase-directed drama is that the biological son of James Gandolfini—Michael Gandolfini—-a young actor with 10 professional credits who played Joey Dwyer on “The Deuce” in 2017—is going to provide the Gandolfini vibe, in the same way that Liza Minelli’s channeled her mother, Judy Garland.

There is a resemblance in Gandolfini’s eyes, although they are far from “dead ringers” for each other, as Cindy Crawford’s daughter Kaia Gerber is for her famous model Mom in the new “American Horror Story” series.

Writer/Director David Chase has commented on the Gandolfini eyes:  [on James Gandolfini as Tony Soprano] “His (Gandolfini’s) eyes are very expressive. There’s something about him that’s very caring, which you see in him no matter what he’s doing. There’s a sadness there. As cynical, bullying, vulgar and overbearing as he could be, there’s still a little boy in there. He did a lot of mean things, and he enjoyed vengeance, but he didn’t seem mean. Somewhere he believed that people are good. There were some roads he was not going to go down, because there was no coming back.”

So we were all drawn to this prequel to “The Sopranos” to see if the Gandolfini “eyes” have it. They do, but we don’t get to see as much of young Tony Soprano’s eyes as we do of the other stock characters that we remember from the television series. And some of them—since Silvio and Big Pussy and the boys are played by other actors here—are not that recognizable. Nancy Marchand, who played Livia Soprano, has now shuffled off to that theater in the sky and has been replaced here by Vera Farmiga, who does a great job as the reincarnation of David Chase’s real mother, Norma, whom he described as “abusive.”

Chase has been mining his family pain for years (he is now 76) and is described as so depressed when in college that he had panic attacks and slept 18 hours a day. I remember him onstage in Chicago shilling for the only film he has directed in the past decade since “The Sopranos,” “Not Fade Away” (which did fade away). He would have been voted the person you would least like to be trapped in an elevator with. He was withdrawn, taciturn and spoke very little. His nickname is  Cylinder Machine.

In 2012, David Chase (real surname DeCesare) directed a movie, “Not Fade Away,” set in the sixties about a young boy who wants to be in a successful rock band. This, too, is autobiographical from Chase’s youth in the sixties, when he really did want to play drums and bass in a rock band. His parents were not supportive of that career choice, nor of his desire to make movies.  His success came about writing for television for “The Rockford Files” in the early seventies. It was his real-life therapy that he wove into Tony Soprano’s story on “The Sopranos.” The huge success of the series surprised many people, including Chase.

Chase has a fairly low opinion of television and Hollywood, historically, seems to have had a fairly low opinion of him. As he has said, “I wrote many, many, many a script and they never got made. I could not get arrested, as they say. Nothing started to click movie-wise for me. All the scripts were either too dark or too this or that. Their appetite for me didn’t get whetted until The Sopranos (1999), and once they see you are someone who can make a billion dollars, they let you do anything. That’s all it comes down to.”

Since “The Sopranos” went off the air, Chase has made just one feature film (“Not Fade Away,” 2012) and created one additional television series (“Altindagli,”2013). Now he has returned to television with this star-studded vehicle, with voice-over by Michael Imperioli, who portrayed Christopher Moltisanti on “The Sopranos” series. (“Moltisanti” translates to “many saints” and explains the title of the film.)

This time out, Chase is the producer. The writer is Lawrence Konner, based on Chase’s “Sopranos” characters. The directing is by “Game of Thrones” alumnus Alan Taylor. I enjoyed the stroll down memory lane, although the disjointed plot with emphasis on everyone except Tony drove many of my friends into critical carping territory. It was a fairly entertaining, if non-linear, look into the past.

 

 

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