Whoever Did This

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"Whoever Did This"
The Sopranos episode
Episode no.Season 4
Episode 9
Directed by Tim Van Patten
Written by Robin Green
Mitchell Burgess
Cinematography by Phil Abraham
Production code409
Original air dateNovember 10, 2002 (2002-11-10)
Running time56 minutes
Episode chronology
 Previous
"Mergers and Acquisitions"
Next 
"The Strong, Silent Type"
The Sopranos season 4
List of episodes

"Whoever Did This" is the 48th episode of the HBO original series The Sopranos and the ninth of the show's fourth season. Written by Robin Green and Mitchell Burgess, and directed by Tim Van Patten, it originally aired on November 10, 2002.

Contents

Starring

* = credit only

Guest starring

Synopsis

Junior is hospitalized with a concussion after a boom mic sends him falling down the courthouse steps. He soon recovers and enjoys his hospital stay as a respite from the RICO trial. Tony recognizes this as a potential advantage and convinces Junior to feign dementia during his competency hearings. He gives a good performance but begins exhibiting actual signs of dementia in private.

Ralphie's 12-year-old son Justin is hit in the chest with an arrow while play-acting The Lord of the Rings with a friend, resulting in significant blood loss and brain damage. While delivering some cash to Tony, Ralphie cries openly. Expressing a desire for some kind of redemption, he meets with Father Phil and establishes a scholarship at Rutgers in Jackie Jr.'s name. Everyone sympathizes with him except Paulie. His mother recently received a traumatic prank phone call, and Paulie correctly suspects that it was from Ralphie, retaliating against him for ratting him out to Johnny.

At the stables, a fire breaks out, apparently caused by faulty electrical wiring. Pie-O-My is badly burned and has to be euthanized. Tony is devastated and immediately suspects Ralphie, later confronting him at his home over the suspicious timing of the fire: the $200,000 insurance pay-out would cover Justin's medical bills. Ralphie vehemently denies the accusation, but their argument escalates into a physical fight, culminating in Tony strangling Ralphie to death. Tony calls Christopher for help; he arrives late and high on heroin. Tony never outright admits to Christopher that he killed Ralphie, and Christopher never expresses outright suspicion. Together, they dismember Ralphie's body in his bathtub with a meat cleaver, and meticulously clean the place before leaving. They bury his severed head, toupee, and hands on a farm; they throw the rest of his body off a cliff into the water below, and into a flooded quarry. After the disposal, they clean up at the Bada Bing, where Tony passes out and wakes up alone the following morning.

Deceased

Title reference

Connections to prior episodes

Other cultural references

Music

True-crime influence

Jason Bautista was convicted of killing his mentally ill mother in Riverside, California, on January 14, 2003, then dumping her decapitated body with its hands removed off Ortega Highway in Orange County. Jason's half-brother, Matthew Montejo, who was 15 years old when Jason killed their mother, testified in court that he helped dispose of her body and that they got the idea to chop off her head and hands to hide the crime from this episode. [2] [3]

Awards

"Whoever Did This" was Joe Pantoliano's 2003 winning submission for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series, along with the episode "Christopher".

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References

  1. Hermanns, Grant (21 December 2021). "Sopranos Creator Reveals The Real Reason Tony Killed Ralphie". ScreenRant. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
  2. Derrik J. Lang (April 20, 2012). "'Call of Duty' latest fiction to inspire nightmare". The Boston Globe . AP. Retrieved July 27, 2012.[ dead link ]
  3. "Son sentenced to 25 years for mother's murder". North County Times . Santa Ana, California. April 9, 2005. Retrieved July 27, 2012.