• Hey Guest. Check out your NeoGAF Wrapped 2025 results here!

Breaking Bad - Season 5, Part 1 - Sundays on AMC

Status
Not open for further replies.
Crazy to think that Mike was just something they wrote in because Odenkirk wasn't available for the episode. He's the best character on the show!
I think this show must be some kind of miracle.

It's crazy how many inspired things have happened on the show that were just happenstance. Fring wasn't originally going to be as big a player but they liked Giancarlo so much they wrote him to be the big bad. Tuco was supposed to last longer but the actor had to go back to The Closer. The original plan for season 1 after episode 8 was much different and according to Gilligan, very rushed and not very good, but the writers' strike allowed them to ditch it and spend more time coming up with what we got.
 
That wouldn't make sense since he considered it necessary to tell Jesse and Walt that he was out as soon as he realized he was being tailed.

The other post makes more sense and I must have not remembered that scene.

You can't throw tails forever.

I'm messing about, don't mind me.
 
It's crazy how many inspired things have happened on the show that were just happenstance. Fring wasn't originally going to be as big a player but they liked Giancarlo so much they wrote him to be the big bad. Tuco was supposed to last longer but the actor had to go back to The Closer. The original plan for season 1 after episode 8 was much different and according to Gilligan, very rushed and not very good, but the writers' strike allowed them to ditch it and spend more time coming up with what we got.

Wasn't Jesse supposed to just be in the first couple episodes, as well?
 
Still love how he was that dude in Beverly Hills Cop:

JBbeverlyhc.jpg
 
That wouldn't make sense since he considered it necessary to tell Jesse and Walt that he was out as soon as he realized he was being tailed.

The other post makes more sense and I must have not remembered that scene.

No, Mike says that he was being tailed for weeks when he tells Walt. But he says that they are going hardcore on his ass now with more tails, and that it's not safe anymore.
 
Walt trying to break free last night was the first time I was actively rooting against him. Up until then I've always been, "Yeah, but it's Walt...". I'm officially off the Walt train.

Yeah you can tell the writers are making it officially okay for everyone to hate him... so they can bring him down in the end, and have us all be ok with it.

I found him really sympathetic for nearly the entire series, but things like him whistling in the episode last night? That's almost cartoon villain territory. Nothing in the early seasons would have ever signaled his immorality in such a sharp way. (obviously the season 4 finale is a similar warning bell).
 
Still love how he was that dude in Beverly Hills Cop:

JBbeverlyhc.jpg

Holy crap! It's amazing how actors pop up in 'old' movies who I only now recognise from their later work. The same thing happened with Mark Christopher Lawrence in Terminator 2, though I only really knew the actor from Chuck.

Back to BB, I've been doing weekly reviews / analyses of the show if anyone's interested at my blog if anyone's interested, here's a link to the one covering 'Buyout'. Thought the episode was more interesting for what it prepared for the future than the content of the episode itself tbh, which retraced a lot of ground already covered this season. That said, there were some wonderful standout scenes, like the disturbing and stunningly shot pre-credits sequence and the dinner scene between Walt, Skylar and Jesse, whose dinner conversation (and guilty drinking) was fantastically awkward. So disappointed the series is going on a year-long break in only two episodes' time.
 
Oh shit.

Aaron Paul ‏@aaronpaul_8

Two more episodes to go this season of #Breakingbad and I am terrified for you all to see how it goes down. Get ready for the madness.
 
I've always thought the evolution of Walter from good guy with cancer to asshole with no cancer was a questionable strategy from a scriptwriting POV. The beginning of the series is so successful exactly because Walt is a good guy who is likely going to die soon from cancer and wants to leave his family with some cash. This puts an existential spin on his actions. Justifies them. Gives the show an urgency. He's not a normal "drug lord."

I also think they don't make use of Walt's Grey Matter jealously/regret often enough.

But whenever the cancer went away I felt something was lacking from Walt's character. And it's especially strong now because now he's just cruel and greedy.

Maybe the cancer will come back, as Skyler hopes, and this will knock him back into the good Walt.
Your gross misinterpretation of the show is nothing short of awe-inspiring.
 
Yeah you can tell the writers are making it officially okay for everyone to hate him... so they can bring him down in the end, and have us all be ok with it.

I found him really sympathetic for nearly the entire series, but things like him whistling in the episode last night? That's almost cartoon villain territory. Nothing in the early seasons would have ever signaled his immorality in such a sharp way. (obviously the season 4 finale is a similar warning bell).

Yeah, it was kind of goofy to be honest, but also very creepy.
I guess they need to establish him as the absolute evil, for everyone catching up (since there seems to be still people thinking he's good, deep down) and they don't have many episodes left to do it and wrap it up.
 
Haha, I love how hyped he always is about his own show.

Just a tiny shame he doesn't end every tweet with '...bitch!', because that's a word he'll be hearing the rest of his life. Fantastic comedic performance from him at the dinner table, I assume someone's made .gifs of him guiltily munching his beans and glugging down that glass of water.
 
Anybody else notice that KFC is advertising for Breaking Bad now? Guess with Pollos Hermanos outta the way, they got no competition!
 
Why would Skyler or Flynn start doing meth? They don't even smoke pot. Gilligan would've had to plant a seed by now if they were going that route.

Some of the speculation in here is lunacy.

That said, the idea that
Hanks partner could be a mole of some sort doesn't seem so far-fetched given how his role on the show
, but my memory of him before this season is a bit fuzzy so maybe it wouldn't make any sense.
 
They were taking the sign down at the Madrigal headquarters.

Ah that's right. I guess they're dissolving the subsidiary.

I doubt we'll get it at this point but I am curious to know more about how the LPH/Madrigal relationship worked and how it started. Did Gus come to them or vice versa? Did he always plan to sell the company?
 
Crazy to think that Mike was just something they wrote in because Odenkirk wasn't available for the episode. He's the best character on the show!
I think this show must be some kind of miracle.

He is, which is why I'm on Team Mike. This season has been awesome, much better than I'd ever thought it would be with Gus gone. The spider jar may come back into play, but I'm putting more money on Walt's watch being a bigger factor in tipping off Hank. Speaking of Hank, I like him more as a pounding the pavement guy than a captain stuck at the desk guy.
 
Btw, who seriously isn't on Team Walt? When Walt's trying to pull off some crazy scheme or get himself out of a jam, who here isn't at least quietly hoping he succeeds?
 
Btw, who seriously isn't on Team Walt? When Walt's trying to pull off some crazy scheme or get himself out of a jam, who here isn't at least quietly hoping he succeeds?

Last night was the first time I wanted to see Walt's escape attempt fail. In the beginning, I liked that he was an average joe thumbing his nose at society and no longer being the nice guy who gets trampled on. And I would admire his intelligence and perseverance, but now he's just a dick head.
 
Did anyone notice that Mike was writing on post it notes and Gomie picked up lined notepad paper?

At least that what it looked like on first watch.
 
Wouldn't say I'm rooting for Walt, but am certainly compelled by him. If anything, I'm looking forward to seeing everything come crashing down around him.
 
I don't understand how anyone could root for Walt at this point. For the first four seasons of the show, he was a man doing what he believed he had to do at the time to provide for AND protect his family. Now that he's completely power-hungry, he has been dehumanized to the point that he is extremely unlikable. He doesn't care who he hurts, whether it's a child or even his own wife.
 
I don't understand how anyone could root for Walt at this point. For the first four seasons of the show, he was a man doing what he believed he had to do at the time to provide for AND protect his family. Now that he's completely power-hungry, he has been dehumanized to the point that he is extremely unlikable. He doesn't care who he hurts, whether it's a child or even his own wife.

that's probably exactly it. we rooted for him for 4 seasons and now we're trying to justify that.

honestly I really don't know...i want to root for him but at the same time I don't. I kind of feel like this sudden cartoonishly evil walt was a little too sudden but I kind of get it. No one like gus to keep him grounded.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom