Big Pussy Bonpensiero, desperate to regain Tony’s trust while secretly working with the FBI, finds the location of Matt Bevilaqua. Tony and Pussy track Matt down and execute him together.
After being clinically dead for about a minute, Christopher awakens and claims he visited Hell (or Purgatory). He describes an Irish bar where it is always St. Patrick's Day and conveys a cryptic message to Tony and Paulie: "Three o'clock" .
The title is a play on the 1953 film From Here to Eternity . By changing "Here" to "Where," the episode underscores the characters' uncertainty regarding the afterlife and their own moral standing. It explores the "soldier" justification for their crimes—Tony argues to Dr. Melfi that they are soldiers at war and therefore immune from eternal damnation.
Big Pussy Bonpensiero, desperate to regain Tony’s trust while secretly working with the FBI, finds the location of Matt Bevilaqua. Tony and Pussy track Matt down and execute him together.
After being clinically dead for about a minute, Christopher awakens and claims he visited Hell (or Purgatory). He describes an Irish bar where it is always St. Patrick's Day and conveys a cryptic message to Tony and Paulie: "Three o'clock" .
The title is a play on the 1953 film From Here to Eternity . By changing "Here" to "Where," the episode underscores the characters' uncertainty regarding the afterlife and their own moral standing. It explores the "soldier" justification for their crimes—Tony argues to Dr. Melfi that they are soldiers at war and therefore immune from eternal damnation.