thehefner: (Default)
[personal profile] thehefner
Earlier tonight, I was ready to destroy the world because someone posted a key spoilery screenshot of the Breaking Bad season finale. Seriously, I was ready to spread destruction across the globe in my fury, as I'd been waiting all week and all night for the episode to pop up on SOME site, since I couldn't watch it when it aired due to fatherly duties. So when I saw that screenshot, I was in full-on KILL ALL HUMANS mode. I instantly knew that it was one of those moments that, had I seen it in the episode itself, would have utterly floored me in the way that Breaking Bad has floored me in ways that no one show in recent memory has, and I was furious that such a rare viewing experience was stolen from me.

But having seen the episode, even that jaw-dropping awesomeness was nothing, nothing compared to that last shot. In that instant, all my excitement was tempered with a bone-chilling twist in my gut that I must exorcise.

I know that most people haven't seen Breaking Bad (Best show that no one is watching? Probably), but I NEED to hash out that ending with people. If you haven't seen the show yet, please, for the love of god, don't click the cut-tag, don't read the comments, basically abandon this post entirely and either rent the series or watch it on Netflix Instant.



So... when do you think that Walter White--the Walter White who wept at the prospect of killing the petty criminal in episode 3--died entirely, leaving only Heisenberg? At what point did his moral center entirely rot away? When did he become the kind of monster who would put Rick from The Walking Dead to shame?*

Because I think it happened so gradually, through so many justifiable/sympathetic/understandable steps, that it's hard to say. I'd LIKE to guess that it happened the moment he burst out laughing in the crawl space, that that was the breaking moment. But then I wouldn't be taking poor Gale into account. Gale, whom I dearly loved, but whose ending I completely understood from Walt's perspective as no other way out based on the situation he found himself in thanks to Gus. It was so easy to place it all on Gus, to believe Walt when he put Gale's death on Gus' head in Season 4 Episode 1 "Box Cutter."

But what about Jane? All the way back to the end of Season 2, there was Jane. Now, it's been a while since I've seen the episode, but when I watched it with Mom, she actually said, "Good," approving of the way Walt let that potential mess neatly handle itself. I truly cannot remember how justified he was to do what he did, or rather, what he didn't do. Even still, it's clear from "Fly" that he shows deep remorse and guilt over Jane, or at least how much it ended up torturing Jesse. Even at that point, Walt was still Walt, no matter how far he'd fallen.

Can the case still be the same? Does it count that he let out a sigh of grateful relief when his poor oblivious neighbor called back safely, or when he got the news that Brock was going to be all right? Does it show any shreds of decency that he intended no maliciousness, that he lacks Gus' cold-hearted efficiency and still feels the pain of every horrible and evil decision he makes? Is there any humanity left in Walt, or had he finally embraced Heisenberg, now and forever?

I'd hate to think that, but then, that may have been the path he was inevitably on once he decided to start cooking meth. If you want to get truly moralistic, that single decision is what kicked off the irreversible degradation of his soul, even if wasn't sold outright at the start. And even if it's not entirely lost, it will be. I don't think there's any coming back for Walt now. But the show has surprised me in the past, no more so than in this episode, so maybe Vince Gilligan has a plan. Maybe Walt has a last-minute redemption in store. Or maybe there can be some happy ending for Skyler, Hank, and/or, most importantly, Walt Junior, who could somehow come away from all this without scars, without his father dragging him down along the way. Maybe Skyler's horror at the realization about Walt will keep Walt Jr. safe.

But Walt... Jesus, Walt. Deep down, I still wonder how he could have fallen this far. Vince Gilligan has said that he envisioned the show as "Mr. Chips becomes Scarface," but that never clicked for me because Walt never seemed like the Kingpin type. In fact, he STILL doesn't. He's too desperate, too emotionally-fueled to ever be half the Kingpin that Gus was. Gus' one failing--which Walt and Tio** beautifully exploited--was his sole emotional Achilles Heel of revenge cloud his impeccable business sense. Gus was a monster, but what he wasn't was sloppy. Walt is sloppy. Walt escapes his problems by the skin of his teeth, leaving death, destruction, and ruined lives in his wake.

Up until now, those lives were at least arguably criminal, thus giving Walt an excuse. But even if he KNEW for certain that the Lily of the Valley wouldn't have killed Brock (and his damming "Thank god" indicated to me that he didn't know for sure), the fact that he was willing to poison an innocent child, even in a scheme to ultimately protect his family, has pushed him into full-blown evil territory. While Gus was figuratively (and then literally) two-faced***, he never excused himself the way Walt has up till now, and if he tries to fill the power vacuum left by Gus, he will fail. Hard. And if even if he wins, god help anybody around him, because they're all expendable to him at this point.

So who deserves to take him down? The German cartel that Gus was involved with? No, not them. Not more drug dealers. Hank? Hank dearly needs vindication, which he may have now, but I don't want to see his reaction should he learn that Walt was lying and manipulating him all along. I cheer for Hank now, and that truth would crush him, just as it would crush Walt Jr. Skyler already knows the truth, and it's on her to preserve the myth of Walter White for her family, but even she wouldn't and shouldn't be the one to finish Walt off.

It has to be Jesse. He's come too far in this show, come into his own too much. He needs to learn the full extent of Walt's actions. He needs to know not just about Brock, but about Jane. Only he could understand every action Walt took, every reason behind it, and thus be the only one who can truly call out Walt and give him the comeuppance he deserves. Jesse has seen the depths of personal hell, and his final confrontation with Walt will be what finally sets him free. And who knows, maybe he'll have Mike along to help him out. That'd be nice.

This final season cannot come fast enough, and yet, a part of me is hesitant to witness the depths of degradation and ruin we'll be seeing by the end. Until then, I'm gonna rewatch the entire series by showing it to Henchgirl and Captain, to see if I can map out just where and just when it all went so irreversibly wrong.






*Rick from the comics, I mean, although I bet we'll definitely see it in TV's Rick too over the next season or two. Now there's a character you can dislike entirely while still understanding where he's coming from. You can hate him, but it's hard to judge him either way.

**I think Tio is the going to be the most awesome part of this episode that no one talks about. While everyone's all about Gus' death or the revelation of Walt's actions, what really sold the FUCK-YEAH awesomeness of the nursing home scene was the transformation in Tio's face. I've admired character actor Mark Margolis this whole time for performing while doing so little, but in those final moments, he was King Badass Motherfucker Fuck You. For such a loathsome character to become so awesome is a testament to the combined skill of Margolis, Gilligan, and Giancarlo Espositio.

***I believe in Gustavo Fring.

Date: 2011-10-11 01:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] heykidzcomix.livejournal.com
Myself, I wondered why Breaking Bad decided that NOW was the time to be "Funny Breaking Bad," but it made sense once I thought about it. I still don't quite buy Walt as a poisoner, though; it makes more sense to me that Gus would do this (the plan requires Walt to trust both Jesse and his own ability to talk his way out of a situation, the latter of which is clear but the former is pretty wobbly), and I still don't understand how Walt pulled it off. If he involved Saul (which, given that Huell is part of it, seems likely--and some people think perhaps Saul gave the kid the berries), this is EXACTLY the kind of thing that Saul would dismiss out of hand as A Bad Idea. Walt might be a murderer, but Saul wouldn't be willing to stick his neck out for anything this risky. Gus is a more elegant solution, but what's done is done, I suppose. That being said, an awesome episode all around. Gus is a goddamn Terminator, and once I saw what happened to him, I immediately knew that you would be going nuts over it XD.

As for when Walt went over the edge, I'd say it was the death of Jane. Jane wasn't a THREAT to him, just an inconvenience. He let the girl die because it would make his life easier; it's far more heinous than what he did to Brock or Gale. He was never a nice person, but that was the first truly evil thing he did--nothing else he's done since then has surprised me (except running over the drug dealers, but that was more of a WTF?! moment than anything else).

Now that Walt has more or less destroyed everyone in the underground who could hurt him, it falls to civilized society to take him down. Between the IRS, the German multinational, the FBI, the DEA, whoever's investigating the death(s?) of Gale and possibly Ted, and whatever scary motherfuckers back in Chile were keeping Gus alive, there are plenty of aboveground institutions that want to take a chunk out of him. I think Hank will probably be the one to back him into a corner, but I could see Walt taking the easy way out by committing Suicide-by-Jesse (while hacking up a bunch of cancer blood, why not). That way, he gives Jesse closure (like a good teacher would) while still going out on his own terms.

gaaaaaaaaaale

Date: 2011-10-11 03:55 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] heykidzcomix.livejournal.com
ALSO, how the hell would Walt feed the kid the berries without the kid knowing that some man (maybe one of Saul's guys) gave them to him? And more importantly than that, Walt's plant is in flower. Plants in flower don't have berries, and in neither scene did his have any berries visible. It seems like this one was sort of half-assed.

I have no problem with Walt being a poisoner; the problem I have is that this is exactly the kind of thing that depends very heavily on the characters involved in order to make it work. Even if Walt wanted to do this, he would need to rely on Saul to pull it off--and that's where I run into trouble. Knowing what we do of Saul, is it really possible for him to stick his neck out for Walt, a man he despises, and possibly expose himself to a murder rap or worse (worse being whatever Gus does to him when he finds out his role in all this)? Whenever he's done something he considers ill-advised, it's never been at direct risk to himself--so what's changed now? And don't tell me he's afraid of Gus and willing to take a crazy risk; Saul Goodman is ALL ABOUT mitigating risk.

Date: 2011-10-11 10:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thehefner.livejournal.com
I recently started showing BB to Henchgirl, who was a huge fan of Vince Gilligan's work in The X-Files, particularly the Lone Gunmen. We're only five episodes into the first season, but while she thinks it's fantastic, she's a touch disappointed that it's not funnier.

But then, she's the kind of girl who saw the melting bathtub scene and pretty much thought, "Well what did you EXPECT to happen, idiot? Sheesh" rather than my own "AAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA AWESOME." Because she's more practical and sensible when it comes to body disposal, I imagine.

I can accept Walt as poisoner only if I can accept that he's been capable of doing that for some time (for reasons I already mentioned above), or that he became capable in his last-minute desperation following Jesse's rejection, the "I WILL KILL YOUR INFANT DAUGHTER," and the meltdown in the crawl space. Can I accept that Walt's relentless self-justification for anything he does allow him to do that? I don't want to, but I'm not sure I can deny it, know what I mean?

But the biggest hurdle is the logistics, and I think (don't quote me on this) that even Gilligan pretty much admitted that they hadn't quite figured out how Walt pulled it off. Now, I clearly missed something, but how is Huell involved here? I've heard some theorize that Huell took Jesse's smokes, which I don't recall.

...the plan requires Walt to trust both Jesse and his own ability to talk his way out of a situation, the latter of which is clear but the former is pretty wobbly

It's way wobbly, but then, I think Walt has always been wobbly. Like I said, he makes it by the skin of his teeth, without any of Gus' efficiency. Walt is a messy, messy man, but at least before, he was a messy, messy antihero, who made it look like he did the best in a series of bad situations he found himself in for reasons outside his control. Now, he's poised to become a messy, messy kingpin. Even if he's switched fully from good to evil, that ain't gonna make him a better businessman or tactician.

I know I previously thought that there was NO WAY that Walt could have done it, but even at the risk of making myself foolish a second time, there's NO WAY that Saul would do that. Or maybe there's a way. No, no, you're right, it's a classic Bad Idea, and while Saul may be many things, he's surprisingly sensible about matters that count (see also: Skyler pwning his stupid Laser Tag idea and being generally right about everything until she was HORRIBLY STUPIDLY WRONG about Asshat Ted, the worst character in existence).

Now that Walt has more or less destroyed everyone in the underground who could hurt him, it falls to civilized society to take him down.

Yes. This exactly.

That way, he gives Jesse closure (like a good teacher would) while still going out on his own terms.

That sounds like the the ideal, perfect ending. Let's see if this show delivers on that, or throws us another curveball.

Date: 2011-10-11 02:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] heykidzcomix.livejournal.com
That curveball? MIKE SUPREMACY

Date: 2011-10-11 03:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thehefner.livejournal.com
Seriously! How kind of Gilligan to have Mike shot up and left safe in Mexico, because otherwise he'd surely be as dead at Tyrus, Gus, and Thug #2 and #3!

Thing is, Mike is also damn sensible. Makes me wonder if he'll just settle into retirement, or the odd job for Saul, rather than work for Walt or take Jesse under his wing again to go and solve/create crimes as a wacky father and son team!

September 2012

S M T W T F S
      1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
232425 26272829
30      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 10th, 2025 05:13 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios