BDB wrote:has anyone prepared for the post finale depression that is going to set in after this show is done?
hate to be a downer with 7 weeks left, but man life is going to be tough without this show.
I had this problem after Lost then Breaking Bad came around.
All will be fine at some point if we let the healing begin.
BDB wrote:has anyone prepared for the post finale depression that is going to set in after this show is done?
hate to be a downer with 7 weeks left, but man life is going to be tough without this show.
I had this problem after Lost then Breaking Bad came around.
All will be fine at some point if we let the healing begin.
yeah, i barely remember Lost. I never saw it again though, so maybe that wound is still open.
theplatypus wrote:Loved the final shot of the episode. Putting it behind a spoiler in case someone who hasn't seen it happens to wander into this thread.
theplatypus wrote:Loved the final shot of the episode. Putting it behind a spoiler in case someone who hasn't seen it happens to wander into this thread.
Also pretty impressed they jumped into the final confrontation so quickly-- and yes, when the garage door came down-- that was some serious fucking tension. Absolutely gave me chills.
I think it speaks to where Walt is mentally these days that, upon realizing that he is being directly investigated by his DEA brother-in-law, he just marches on over there with the GPS tracker in his pocket. No pacing or scheming or hand-wringing or lying. He all but admitted his identity and yet admitted nothing; he made ominous threats, yet overtly threatened nothing. He's pretty much ice cold.
What's interesting is, looking back on the relatively sunnier days for the White family, I can see shades of this maniac, even in the semi-harmless scenes. Remember when he flexed on those bullies in the mall for ridiculing his son? Warranted, maybe, but no less an indicator of what he was holding back.
griffinxi wrote:Also pretty impressed they jumped into the final confrontation so quickly-- and yes, when the garage door came down-- that was some serious fucking tension. Absolutely gave me chills.
I think it speaks to where Walt is mentally these days that, upon realizing that he is being directly investigated by his DEA brother-in-law, he just marches on over there with the GPS tracker in his pocket. No pacing or scheming or hand-wringing or lying. He all but admitted his identity and yet admitted nothing; he made ominous threats, yet overtly threatened nothing. He's pretty much ice cold.
What's interesting is, looking back on the relatively sunnier days for the White family, I can see shades of this maniac, even in the semi-harmless scenes. Remember when he flexed on those bullies in the mall for ridiculing his son? Warranted, maybe, but no less an indicator of what he was holding back.
For sure which makes me wonder if Walt was inherently good or bad. Im not sure I get the "oh, its just a man down on his luck that chose the wrong path to deal with it all". I think he is just an evil bastard at his core and if it weren't the cancer etc.. it would have been any number of things.
griffinxi wrote:Also pretty impressed they jumped into the final confrontation so quickly-- and yes, when the garage door came down-- that was some serious fucking tension. Absolutely gave me chills.
I think it speaks to where Walt is mentally these days that, upon realizing that he is being directly investigated by his DEA brother-in-law, he just marches on over there with the GPS tracker in his pocket. No pacing or scheming or hand-wringing or lying. He all but admitted his identity and yet admitted nothing; he made ominous threats, yet overtly threatened nothing. He's pretty much ice cold.
What's interesting is, looking back on the relatively sunnier days for the White family, I can see shades of this maniac, even in the semi-harmless scenes. Remember when he flexed on those bullies in the mall for ridiculing his son? Warranted, maybe, but no less an indicator of what he was holding back.
Good observations. Great episode.
I loved the scene where Hank is going all A Beautiful Mind and trying to piece everything together. Then, his facial expression as he looks at the Heisenberg sketch.
VinylGuy wrote:Also, Walter lying to jesse again, now about Mike´s death...wtf..
Could just be setting something up - Jesse's obviouisly scared of Walt now, and that obvious lie could be something that pushes jesse to the edge where he feels the only way to escape his past etc - is to take Walt out. Those two have always had a tense dynamic
"I really enjoy sandwiches but the other guys are so good at making sandwiches that I don't make them. Now I make sandwiches."
VinylGuy wrote:Also, Walter lying to jesse again, now about Mike´s death...wtf..
Could just be setting something up - Jesse's obviouisly scared of Walt now, and that obvious lie could be something that pushes jesse to the edge where he feels the only way to escape his past etc - is to take Walt out. Those two have always had a tense dynamic
Maybe...i still dont know if he is scared of walter....he seems to gave up on everything at this point.
@SkitchP wrote:Hanks a pretty shitty cop if it took him 3 days to figure it out once the thought was in his head
I think he knew it but he was building a case. one just can't jump at an unsub without solid evidence for prosecuting!
You clearly watch a shitty criminal show. Try Criminal Minds.
hank has to build a case, because wouldnt the WW book not be admissible n court since it was not obtained via search warrant, and it still is a he said/she said case?
also you have to wonder why hank never took notice og the sketch of heisenberg before?