The last episode was quite beautiful.
Have you ever posted in this thread before?
The last episode was quite beautiful.
Yes.Have you ever posted in this thread before?
Yes.
^^ that's hilarious.
Also this avatar is so much better...I mean more you... This and wtf face I just love for you.
but....nothing happened![]()
Nothing happened?! Are we watching the same show? Given, it was a downbeat in the overall pacing--a breath after last week's insanity and some moving around of the chess pieces in advance of the finale--but even considering that, A LOT happened. The final scene was almost as affecting as the phone call scene from last week. (It might have been a better scene but it didn't affect me as strongly. I don't know if I'll ever see a scene I like better than that one; Bryan Cranston's ability to voice act one thing and face act nearly the opposite was pretty incredible.)
Overall: not quite as good as Ozymandias IMO but still very, very, very good. I cannot wait for next week. CAN. NOT. WAIT.
i don't like youTypical extrovert.
if you think about the history, nothing happened. the only relevant thing was the death of jesse's girlfriend, but that was just the 100th person he loves that dies, and i don't know why they did that, it's beginning to be a reductionist and stereotypical road for jesse. but there was nothing to make the action go forward. if you deleted the whole episode and moved simply towards the last one, nothing would change.
Wow, I...wow. In a superficial sense, I can see what you mean -- There wasn't much progression in terms of the story. Yet I think that episode was a very necessary character development piece. To me, I think it was the episode where Walt has finally ran out of chess pieces and completely backed into a wall, and once again we can see just how vulnerable he really is. The phone call with his Son is the ironic twist in which it's the first time he realizes that the money means nothing now that he's completely destroyed his life its acquisition.
Also, with Jesse, it's as if Vince Gilligan is pushing the character to his most extreme mental and emotional limitations, and it's just heartbreaking to watch the extent to which he pays for his sins after the beginning seasons were mainly based around everyone warning him to stray off the path at which was alluded way back then -- It's as if we all knew he'd be forced to endure, but it's still hard to watch. I just watch now and just hope they would really just kill him off, because I don't really see any way in which his character could ever have any semblance of normalcy in his life after all of this.
Anyways, another instance in which the story doesn't progress necessarily, but these episodes matter because they add the emotional investment needed to tie the viewer into the story progression scenes that do matter. I find it strange that anyone that is invested in the series would question the value of this.
Is Skyler complicit? Is Walt driven by greed? Is Walt really a bad person? Was all this inside him all along?
Who cares? Who cares, who cares, who cares? I'm not saying who cares about the show — I'm saying this is becoming the point of the show. What makes Breaking Bad one of the most moral shows in the history of television is that actions have consequences, whether those actions arise from pain or greed or fear or panic. You pay for your actions, not the operation of your heart. The psychoanalytical journey we could all choose to take — and that most of us have taken — with Walt is a bloodless exercise. It is a luxury afforded to people who can see selfishness and wickedness and violence in the abstract, the way you can when it's on television.
What these final episodes are doing is showing no mercy, because evil shows no mercy. That's not "Evil Shows No Mercy" in a tattoo-it-on-your-arm kind of way; that's reality. That's the reality of the fact that the reason to be a moral person is, in part, that brutal acts of violence do not take place inside a cage where the only ones hurt are the ones who deserve it — rats, or finks, or phonies, or fools. When you embrace doing whatever you want in order to get what you want, you cannot isolate the consequences. This is not a show that will ever be revealed to take place inside a snow globe; it's a show where everything spills everywhere.
Walt is as bad as bad gets. He is a sucking, mile-wide whirlpool that sinks aircraft carriers like Gus Fring, and working-stiff boats like Crazy 8, and reckless idiots on speedboats like Jesse Pinkman, and flawed, leaky sailboats like his wife, and Coast Guard patrol boats like Hank, and ultimately his own kids, out for a swim.
Wow, I...wow. In a superficial sense, I can see what you mean -- There wasn't much progression in terms of the story. Yet I think that episode was a very necessary character development piece. To me, I think it was the episode where Walt has finally ran out of chess pieces and completely backed into a wall, and once again we can see just how vulnerable he really is. The phone call with his Son is the ironic twist in which it's the first time he realizes that the money means nothing now that he's completely destroyed his life its acquisition.
Also, with Jesse, it's as if Vince Gilligan is pushing the character to his most extreme mental and emotional limitations, and it's just heartbreaking to watch the extent to which he pays for his sins after the beginning seasons were mainly based around everyone warning him to stray off the path at which was alluded way back then -- It's as if we all knew he'd be forced to endure, but it's still hard to watch. I just watch now and just hope they would really just kill him off, because I don't really see any way in which his character could ever have any semblance of normalcy in his life after all of this.
Anyways, another instance in which the story doesn't progress necessarily, but these episodes matter because they add the emotional investment needed to tie the viewer into the story progression scenes that do matter. I find it strange that anyone that is invested in the series would question the value of this.