For me what you describe as "flat" was not flat, but the somber tone of leading to the inevitable conclusion of all that is Walt. Which I thought mixed beautifully with the usual tension and ratcheting to a breaking point that so many episodes in the series have had. I think everyone knew how it would end in the general sense (just not the how). And, if you still weren't sure Walt would meet his end in the end, you had to be after Hank's death and the fallout of that culminating in the complete loss of any lingering hope of the family somehow pulling through it all. The "villains" weren't "the" villains at all. Walt was the villain. (to me) They were little more than an extension of that. They were a representation of the byproduct of what Walt had created, what he had become, and what was left in his wake. They, as characters were relatively unimportant. It was what they represented that was important. So, I didn't feel like I needed to know them more. They were just opportunists as far as their characters are concerned. Their death was the burial of Heisenberg.
It was pretty much the "best" possible outcome that Walt could accomplish to the whole deal. He saw his family. He was finally honest with himself, and his wife about why he did it all. He provided for his son anonymously (something that he was not fond of in the early series), and he brought down what he had created. The final nail in the coffin of Heisenberg.
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I agree about the not checking the trunk (or him not accounting for it). I guess they weren't too terribly worried as they were likely under the impression that he looked like s*%t, was clearly dying or in a rough state, and was desperate. It would have been nice to even just have seen Walt account for it by showing how it sowed under the baseboard in the spare tire wheel well or something. But, for a show that has generally had such attention to small details in a fantastical world, it was a little thing. (i.e. When Walt looked at a little strip of paper before dialing Jesse's new Hello Kitty number that he wouldn't have had. They never had to show that two seconds, and we could have just assumed he had already gotten the number from Saul during an off-screen moment. But, the fact that they did... One of the things I really appreciated about this show was the attention to detail)
Thread: Breaking Bad
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09-30-2013 12:48 PM
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09-30-2013 01:08 PM
The thing is the actual climax of the series was a few episodes back. This is the denouement, the goodbyes and wrapping up of loose ends. This episode was almost just a formality. I imagine if you watched it all at once, instead of weekly, you'd feel that more. I didn't care if the Nazis were a little underdeveloped. Todd wasn't, and seeing him get his just desserts at Jesse's hands was immensely satisfying, as was Walt's cold sendoff of Lydia and his dealings with the Schwartzes. Someone pointed out the 5 seasons of Breaking Bad (5 and a half if you're being a stickler) conforms almost perfectly to Shakepseare's template for a 5 act tragedy, a rise and fall which climaxes in the middle rather than the end. I thought it ended perfectly.
"Money doesn't make films...You just do it and take the initiative." - Werner Herzog
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09-30-2013 01:48 PM
The Trunk -
The Nazi's thought he was coming crawling back to them, hat in hand. Not out for revenge. Todd would have reported back to them about how desperate he looked.
And it's not like these guys were masterminds. Hank was the real obstacle Walt needed to overcome this season. Once that was done with, the rest was just clean up.
Had Walt managed to hide the M.60 in his car somehow, I would have found that far more unrealistic.
This played out as it should have. Walt was a brilliant man, but far from perfect.
Despite his genius, he had to hand over the money to his son in a way he wouldn't have accepted himself, as charity.
Walt left the earth knowing that Walt Jr. just wanted him to die. He knew that he would never see Holly grow up, and that Skyler could never forgive him for what happened to Hank. All his plans and talk of providing for his family, gone. That was his intention starting out, until he became Heisenberg.
It's clear that he still wanted to provide for them and went to great lengths in the end to do just that.
Ah, had Jesse not turned into a rat things would have been very different. ;)
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09-30-2013 03:31 PM
Critic Matt Zoller Seitz called these last two episodes the most spectacular postscript ever, saying that Ozymandias was the spiritual finale.
A couple things I've noticed or read elsewere:
- Walt dying in the Nazi's lab will have police thinking he's been cooking the blue this whole time. His last gift to Jesse will be getting him off the hook for good. And it'll look like he was the only one capable, making his legacy even more legendary.
- Jesse is brought to the clubhouse in the middle of a cook. When Walt goes out there he checks out the work (taps the needle, etc) and makes no adjustments, seemingly indicating that Jesse has finally applied himself (reinforced by the flashback scene of the other time Jesse applied himself).
- Was Hank's fascination with minerals some insane foreshadowing that he would be returning to mineral form himself?
- Walt killing Jack like Jack killed Hank was sweet. I love that Jack was the one who begged for his life while Hank went out with his dignity in tact.
- In S01E04, Walt Jr disingenuously tells his dad to 'give up and die already' since he won't commit to treatment. In S05E15, he tells him the same thing and means it.
- This was the 3rd time Jesse pointed a gun at Walt and Walt encouraged him to "do it". I loved how Jesse wouldn't do one more favor or follow one more order.
- Badger and Skinny Pete summarize the show in 20 seconds:
Badger: You know, I don't exactly know how to feel about all this.
Skinny Pete: For real, yo. Whole thing felt kind of shady,you know, like morality-wise?
Badger: Totally.
(Walt holds up the money)
Walt: How do you feel now?
(They take the money)
Skinny Pete: Better.
Badger: Yeah, definitely improving.
- Full circle:
- Jesse is finally in control for where he goes:
- Walt finally built the robot:
- The evolution of Walter White with a gun in his face:
BTW, here is the apparent reference of Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium:
"When King Lear dies in Act V, do you know what Shakespeare has written? He's written "He dies." That's all, nothing more. No fanfare, no metaphor, no brilliant final words. The culmination of the most influential work of dramatic literature is "He dies." It takes Shakespeare, a genius, to come up with "He dies." And yet every time I read those two words, I find myself overwhelmed with dysphoria. And I know it's only natural to be sad, but not because of the words "He dies." but because of the life we saw prior to the words."Last edited by refocusedmedia; 09-30-2013 at 03:49 PM.
1 out of 1 members found this post helpful.
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09-30-2013 03:47 PM
"Money doesn't make films...You just do it and take the initiative." - Werner Herzog
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09-30-2013 04:09 PM
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09-30-2013 05:54 PM
i definitely saw it like that as well.
As for the nazis not checking the trunk, well that didn't bother me much. What I didn't quite buy is the way Jack was insulted and got Jesse brought into the house in order to show he wasn't lying about not being partners. I just didn't see Jack as the type of guy who'd give a rat's backside about this.
But anyway...
What an outstanding series. I never buy tv shows...I will buy this one.An endless stream of dead uncle Daves
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09-30-2013 06:12 PM
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09-30-2013 07:54 PM
Yes, indeed that is a quote from the film.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0457419/...item=qt0429657
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For Sale:
- BeSteady One Gimbal Stabilizer & Wireless Remote Control
- DP4 w/ EVF w/ Canon Battery Plate
- Canon 70D, 50mm f/1.8, 5 batteries, original box/accesories
- Lenses: Zeiss, Tokina, Fish Eye, More
- Zacuto Follow Focus
My most recent short: http://vimeo.com/39867336
http://www.corybraun.com
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm3715394/