totally agree on Nazis position ... but is he going back for atonement or to be the wrath of Walt? On Jesse because he's alive ( blue meth) or on Gretchen and Elliot for publicly belittling his part in company or Jack and the Nazis for taking his money ( of course forgetting that without Jack he would have no money and be in prison).
I partied with Walter White on Saturday night!
... in Villa Grove. Dude was a complete look-alike. But... had absolutely no idea who Bryan Cranston is & had never heard of Breaking Bad.
- no need to touch me.[/useless almost unrelated sidenote]
Yeah I just thought the scene where they let Walt go with his barrel of cash was too Hollywood. Not saying the whole show is completely realistic to begin with, but nothing had ever stood out as completely unbelievable until this happened.
Maybe I don't completely understand the whole White Power gang dynamic, but I do understand the criminal underworld mentality. To any gang involved in serious criminal activity, when 80 million in cash presents itself after the killing of 2 DEA agents, there's only one logical option. Kill anyone else that witnessed it, take the 80 million, and get the fuck out of dodge. Respect doesn't enter the equation, it's just too much risk to leave Walt or Jesse alive for that matter. 4 dead bodies in the desert, that is the safest option. We're talking about people that do hits for cash here... I think you're giving them too much credit for a moral code.
Agreed, but, I thought that all logic went out the window when those guys managed to kill eight prisoners in different prisons within a two minute time frame. Really. Only on TV.
A reader speculates in today's Wall Street Journal on the ending:
“Walt stops in a diner in New Jersey and interrupts a Soprano meal to team with Tony to stop the Nazis (also fixing the Sopranos ending)”
I just watched the ep again and noticed something interesting about the final scene. Walt is at the bar after calling the DEA and the TV announcer in the background says the word "turnovers" like three or four times, then there is a screeching accelerating sound, Walt visably flinches, and then the channel changes to gretchen and elliot on the charlie rose show. And yes they do deny Walt's importance in their company history but its Gretchen's statement at the end, about Walt's transformation and how he was once a sweet, wonderful friend, that seems to land the gut punch in Walt's expression. There's a cue there, some sort of narrative shift. It's the writer's deliberate choice to have the disembodied voice repeating "turnover" right as Walt totally hits bottom that got my attention. Reminds me of the accusing disembodied eye that was used several episodes in season two as Walt slides deeper. He is angry for a moment but then it looks like the wind goes out of his sails there because Gretchen's statement basically reminds him that he once knew right from wrong and had people who cared about him. The Walt we saw buying the M60 and retrieving the ricin capsule didn't seem to be raging. More like a sad resignation to a task ahead. There's a number of scenes in this ep that seem to symbolize Heisenberg is dying. Delusional, frantic plans to hire a team of hitmen and then a total physical collapse when he tries to intimidate Saul. The scenes with the hat. The realization that his money is not power and it now costs $10,000 an hour to buy a "friend". His pathetic scheme to get money to his family fails; he no longer has any charm over walt jr. And the final shot is that the drink and napkin are still there but the man (Heisenberg?) has vanished.
Any predictions?
If I wrote it, I'd have Walt prove his deviousness one last time at Todd and Uncle Jack's expense, shoot up the gang and destroy the lab and methylamine tank. He'd discover what was left of Jesse and in his shame he'd free him expecting Jesse to kill him but Jesse just limps away. Then Walt drag's his broken, dying self out to Hank's grave, apologizes to Hank and talks to the sky about what a fool he's been(you know, get in a good King Lear moment). Then he calls the DEA with the grave's location but takes the ricin because, even at the end, he's still to proud to let the DEA haul him in to face the music and too needful of control to lie around and wait to die from his cancer.
Last edited by neckdeep; 09-28-2013 at 12:52 AM.
...and Todd kills Lydia.
^^^after he has his way with her?
Neckdeep has stimulated my wife's interest. Great analysis.
Enough speculating 12 hours to find out what really happens!
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"If the road You followed brought you to this,of what use was the road"?
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Ottime
You're gonna need a bigger knife.
I'll make my prediction - Walt saves Jesse but Walt dies Tony Montana style, Jesse takes care of Walt's family.
Well done
www.apriliaforum.com
"If the road You followed brought you to this,of what use was the road"?
"I have no idea what I am talking about but would be happy to share my biased opinions as fact on the matter. "
Ottime
Yes/no? Not a gun guy. Realistic to some degree?
Awesome end. Pretty much perfect. "Baby Blue" Badfinger, nice touch
Last edited by soups818; 09-29-2013 at 09:39 PM.
Is this the Low Winter Sun thread?
That's how to end a series! Wish the Dexter writers could watch this and get a do-over.
Five minutes into the drive and you're already driving me crazy...
Way to tie up those loose ends in just 75 minutes. Well done.
C'mon, it's Walt...you knew when it was time to "say hello to my little friend", there had to be a trick worthy of Don Tio's booby trapped wheelchair. An M60 fires big ol' .308 slugs so yeah it could totally chop a flimsy house in half. Recoil tearing up the bot would be the real issue.
Satisfying end. About what I expected. Didn't think they'd send Walt out as a full on Macbeth/Richard III and his character was always too proud to go out with a wimper. He confessed (he didn't break bad, circumstances didn't make him do evil things, it was always there in him) but he didn't apologize.
Last edited by neckdeep; 09-29-2013 at 11:35 PM.
Solid. Fucking. Ending.
I just loved the part when Lydia put the Stevia in her tea and shit got all artistic. You just knew she was a goner right there. It got even better when Walt told her she was hosed.
Where the fuck did all of that money come from? He left the bar with a large shoebox of cash, and suddenly an entire stack is on the table?
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