Trooper Proctor admits he 'dehumanized' Karen Read in texts boston.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from boston.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The ghost of James Gandolfini in Enough Said Nicole Holofcener’s 2013 romantic comedy captures Gandolfini’s spirit and irrepressible charm. This winter, I watched all 86 episodes of
The Sopranos. Too young to catch it when it first aired in 1999, I’ve spent a three-month stretch of restricted socialising and rubbish weather inside with James Gandolfini’s Tony Soprano, a New Jersey gangster in therapy for depression and panic attacks. I came to care deeply for this failed family man stretched to the limits of his sanity. This was partly due to Gandolfini, a mercurial screen presence who could modulate between goading and gentle, cruel, funny, sexy, wounded and imperious, sometimes all in a single episode. Gandolfini’s range made me curious to return to the first film I had seen him star in, Nicole Holofcener’s 2013 romantic comedy