Boardwalk Empire: “New York Sour” (Episode 4.01)
Photo by Macall B. Polay, courtesy of HBO
In the world of Boardwalk Empire, the more things change, the more they stay the same. Or, at least, they try to; whether or not they succeed is a bigger question, and one this season sets out to answer. But it’s striking that in contrast to the opening of season three, and its emphasis on Gyp Rossetti’s incensed strongman routine, here we have Nucky Thompson negotiating for peace with Masseria (and Luciano) and Rothstein. What he wants is a return to normalcy, despite everything that he went through eight months before, with his wife leaving him, his girlfriend dying in a bomb blast, and his entire empire almost destroyed. But there’s no hard feelings here; rather, there’s an attempt at pretending Atlantic City is the same as ever, and what’s more, Nucky is willing to put up the money to say so.
This desire for normalcy within the crime world is far from unique in Boardwalk Empire, but few other shows contrast its characters’ actions with such complete destruction of their familial relationships, and what passes for normal in its world is, at this point, never domestic bliss. It took Tony Soprano nearly six seasons to murder his surrogate son; it took Nucky Thompson two, and it would’ve come earlier had he been trying. As the third season begins, Nucky has moved locations once more, out of his office or the house he lived in with Margaret and into a room overlooking Chalky White’s Onyx Club. Even he’s forced to admit that it’s sometimes a lonely existence, but Nucky still wants to pretend nothing has happened and is back to making rounds with actresses. However, it isn’t long before the actress he’s courting misreads the situation entirely and insults his previous relationship for Billie as career-based prostitution. What’s more, it’s a reminder of his past entirely at a time when Nucky wants to move on and pretend that living alone, above a club, is what he always did. Nucky disappears almost immediately while his butler asks her to leave the premises. If she isn’t going to play along with him, Nucky has no use for her.
I was surprised to see Gillian return this season, not only because it seemed like she might be dead, but also because Boardwalk Empire has never really known what to do with her—in fact, material about the Darmodys has generally been the show’s weakest. Here we see her make a return to prostitution under the guise of selling her house, though now the only thing she has left to prostitute is herself. She also makes an attempt at getting her grandson back under her custody, but presumably that went nowhere. Despite her addiction, she’s finally cut a break at the end of the episode as a wealthy man named Roy Phillips, who wishes to introduce Piggly Wigglys to the area, misinterprets her intentions and takes her for what she pretends to be, at least for the moment.