Who gives a fark about reddit.
The call didn't make sense and changed direction multiple times in the one conversation. It is one of the few failings of the series but I can live wit it. Just was poorly scripted and equally poorly executed.
I think you might be the only one who thinks that?
Who gives a fark about reddit.
The call didn't make sense and changed direction multiple times in the one conversation. It is one of the few failings of the series but I can live wit it. Just was poorly scripted and equally poorly executed.
I think you might be the only one who thinks that?
Agree.
Probably one of the most intense 2-3 minutes of the whole show.
Check what this reviewer said.
What follows is one of, if not the best-written and most powerfully-acted scenes in the history of the show. It is a masterpiece of nuance and complexity that I really believe you could watch over and over again
You're quickly invalidating any opinions you have on the show. Or just trolling.
I take that back!
I have since rewatched it a few times and i think the missus must have knocked the mouse with her hand and skipped 30 seconds or so of the call when she sat up and said "NO WAY". my bad. my breaking bad.
I believe i was the first to post a thread on Breaking Bad long long ago and barely got any comments on it. I have since watched the whole series 3 times. I am very thorough with my thought processes when i watch tv shows. I HATE plot holes or 'stupidity' associated with characters that is only interwined to allow for plot to develop. The Walking Dead for example is fun enough to watch because its brutal and great makeup etc but its so poorly written a lot of the time and you just think WTF are you doing you idiot and they contradict things all the time and why dont all of them have knives on them 24/7. stuff like that i HATE.
Breaking Bad is so much cleaner, so much better. There are a few shows of this quality that are well thought out and dont take shortcuts to create plot direction.
Having watched this episode again, specifically that phonecall i am much more content with it and have told the missus to re-watch that scene and she also agreed something weird happened and we missed some of it.
Its clear that Walt in the moments after the knife fight realised that he had lost his purpose and lost his family through the haze of his own stubborness, greedyness, control freak ways. It became clear to him that his emotions had taken over this situation for quite a while and that where he was once dictating procedings, he was now always fighting and chasing to ensure that his own well being was protected.
The phonecall was one of surrender to his wife and surrender to what he had done. It was also one last act of love, protection but also pain. he could never recover what he had done to his wife and son, what he had forced them to endure and what they would have to endure for the rest of their lives. he relinquished her of her burden as much as possible but also made it known to her that he had ALWAYS wanted to do what was best for his family, even if it meant losing himself, given that is what he was expecting would happen anyway when he first got cancer.
it was a goodbye call to say im so so sorry, i love you, i absolve you, i wish you had trusted me. skyler realises this when she plays ball and says sorry. she says sorry to understand what he is doing and saying.
Final two episodes are 75mins long each.
Also, Emmy nominations are out. Bryan Cranston nominated for Outstanding Lead Actor, Aaron Paul, Outstanding Supporting Actor, Anna Gunn, Outstanding Supporting Actress and the show has been nominated for Best Drama.
All four should win, but Anna Gunn most likely won't. I thought she has been great this season, especially last episode.