The Walt we see in the first episode of this season left all of the components of making a bomb out on his kitchen counter, for hours, while he blew up Gus and dealt with the aftermath. This was exceedingly careless.
You can tell how careless it was, because he's literally just finished his cleanup and picked up his glass to start drinking when the front door opens and his family comes in. Had he been stuck in traffic, or been delayed talking to Jesse, or had car trouble, his family would have walked in on an entire bomb factory in their kitchen.
Walt has always been semi-careful, but never criminal mastermind careful. Mike has to tell him not to drive his personal car to Vamanos Pest. Mike has to prod him to remove the bug from the DEA. Skylar never manages to get him to stop spending money on stuff they can't afford. Keeping a book with a handwritten message is far from the dumbest thing we've seen him do, this is just the first time his stupidity has actually bit him in the ass.
What did Hank to this season? Hisenberg case was closed, it's at a dead-end. No clues to follow. Hank has nothing. But hold and behold, let him randomly discover key evidence by going to the bathroom. Top notch police work there. not a blatant move none so ever.You said that Hank did nothing related to police work to figure it out. That's factually untrue.
We also don't know all the details behind the book. How did it end up in the bathroom? Did Walt ever actually see the note in the book?
The usual comment that appears when any small amount of people dislike a few aspects of something wildly popular.trolls be out in force tonight.
Like I asked before, is it possible that Walt was so aloof to Gale that he never bothered to even see that there was a dedication, and that's why it's sitting in his bathroom? Or was there a scene with him seeing it?Hank consulted with Walt regarding the netbook so they both know the style of dedication that Gale used. That's the point of the flashback. So Walt kept an evidence he knew would tie him to Gale if Hank were to find it and why wouldn't Hank find it when he's Walt's family-member and would visit his home and bathroom all the time?!
Hank chased down Mike and Madrigal's men this entire season while combing through the remains of Gus's legacy.What did Hank to this season? Hisenberg case was closed, it's at a dead-end. No clues to follow. Hank has nothing. But hold and behold, let him randomly discover key evidence by going to the bathroom. Top notch police work there. not a blatant move none so ever.
And can we stop suggesting excuses? The writers did an awful job at this front. Let's not go 'but maybe Walt didn't know the book has this page', 'Maybe Skyler moved it from another place unbeknownst to Walt'...
Such a weak episode to end the season with. And such a terrible ending. Do we really need any more evidence that the show is overrated and has huge writing flaws that would have been ripped apart in every other show?
They should have ended the season with last week's episode. It would have served as a way better season finale. And this episode would have served much better at next season's opener.
The ending was crap. Deux ex machina all over the place. The writers have provided Hank with a present. 'Oh hey, we reached the final season and Hank is no where close to catching Walt so let's drop the evidence into his lap'. Pft.
Who will leave such an evidence lying there in the bathroom that serves anybody who visits the house, including his wife's sister's husband who is the head of the DEA. The both know about the notebook and the dedication written by Gale, but Walter doesn't mind leaving a book with the same style of dedication signed by the initials of a drug-cooker.
The same Walter who dumped half of his house in the opening episode so there won't be any possibility of connecting Gus' death with him, and even dumping the whole poisonous plant.
When it suits the writing team Walt is the cleverest guy in the world. And when it suits them elsewhere Walt is the dumbest guy in the world.
Yep, the writers consistently pull everything out of their asses to get the show to fit episode counts. It's become progressively worse each season since the second. Bringing up some forgotten bullshit from 2 seasons ago on the mid-season finale? Those two factors occurring together are not a coincidence. AMC not committing to an end-date for a show conceived with the ending in mind is almost certainly the cause.
That people consider this an opinion from Neptune is striking.
Should be next Sunday!
That people consider this an opinion from Neptune is striking.
Hank is going to take a 10 month shit CONFIRMED.
Normally I think flashbacks like that are lame but hearing the "you got me" line again was worth it
red dead redemption comes to mind.
everything seems to be good in the end ... BAM
btw i bet walt never saw gales note
And I wouldn't post a condescending gif or accuse you of trolling in response. I also do think that Breaking Bad is a great show, second best for what's on TV these days IMO. I'm concerned with the significant pacing issues because it harms the quality of what should be an even better show.You know, I don't really get what people see in The Wire. I watched most of it, waiting for it to become the Best Show On TV Ever and got tired of waiting for it to become that.
But you know what? My opinion on that is from Neptune. Something in the show doesn't resonate with me like it does with most people who watch it and that's ok. I occasionally like to prod at it and all, but mostly I don't really care.
So yeah, your opinion is from Neptune on this. This is a fantastic show. Not without its faults, because there has never been a story told that was completely flawless. But it is a great show and will go down in history as just that, and there will always be a minority that just doesn't get it.
Hank chased down Mike and Madrigal's men this entire season while combing through the remains of Gus's legacy.
And it's called "irony." It's a frequently used tool in drama in which expectations are built up and then subverted with an unexpected twist. This is commonly considered to be interesting, surprising, shocking, and/or humorous, depending on the context.
Nah, I think I won't jump to conclusions because I dislike a show.
It's not deus ex machina. Hank finding the book tells us something about Walt, and how at the end of the day, Walt himself was the last loose end.
And Blue Meth is still being made and he's no close to get to the bottom of it. All his 10 clues were murdered. 3 months has passed and obviously the case is long cold. Oops, we want X to happen right now even though we did no proper work beforehand so we'll just drop Hank the evidence right into his lap. Irony? What was the irony here other than the lame attempt to have Hank get on Walt's trail minutes after Walt supposedly retires. Good to see you care more about unexpected twists than solid writing.
It's called Deux Ex Machina - when writers bluntly intervene to save\lead characters where they want (check last season's of Dexter for example, or indeed Hank being saved from death in S3). This is seen as one of the biggest sins a narrative can make and is considered as a testament of poor writing.
Mysteriously, when it occurs in BB the majority of the fanbase tries to sweep it under the rug or rationalize it in amazing ways, thought they take no issues with crucifying other shows who do the same.
And Blue Meth is still being made and he's no close to get to the bottom of it. All his 10 clues were murdered. 3 months has passed and obviously the case is long cold. Oops, we want X to happen right now even though we did no proper work beforehand so we'll just drop Hank the evidence right into his lap. Irony? What was the irony here other than the lame attempt to have Hank get on Walt's trail minutes after Walt supposedly retires. Good to see you care more about unexpected twists than solid writing.
It's called Deux Ex Machina - when writers bluntly intervene to save\lead characters where they want (check last season's of Dexter for example, or indeed Hank being saved from death in S3). This is seen as one of the biggest sins a narrative can make and is considered as a testament of poor writing.
Mysteriously, when it occurs in BB the majority of the fanbase tries to sweep it under the rug or rationalize it in amazing ways, thought they take no issues with crucifying other shows who do the same.
And Blue Meth is still being made and he's no close to get to the bottom of it. All his 10 clues were murdered. 3 months has passed and obviously the case is long cold. Oops, we want X to happen right now even though we did no proper work beforehand so we'll just drop Hank the evidence right into his lap. Irony? What was the irony here other than the lame attempt to have Hank get on Walt's trail minutes after Walt supposedly retires. Good to see you care more about unexpected twists than solid writing.
It's called Deux Ex Machina - when writers bluntly intervene to save\lead characters where they want (check last season's of Dexter for example, or indeed Hank being saved from death in S3). This is seen as one of the biggest sins a narrative can make and is considered as a testament of poor writing.
Mysteriously, when it occurs in BB the majority of the fanbase tries to sweep it under the rug or rationalize it in amazing ways, thought they take no issues with crucifying other shows who do the same.
And Blue Meth is still being made and he's no close to get to the bottom of it. All his 10 clues were murdered. 3 months has passed and obviously the case is long cold. Oops, we want X to happen right now even though we did no proper work beforehand so we'll just drop Hank the evidence right into his lap. Irony? What was the irony here other than the lame attempt to have Hank get on Walt's trail minutes after Walt supposedly retires. Good to see you care more about unexpected twists than solid writing.
It's called Deux Ex Machina - when writers bluntly intervene to save\lead characters where they want (check last season's of Dexter for example, or indeed Hank being saved from death in S3). This is seen as one of the biggest sins a narrative can make and is considered as a testament of poor writing.
Mysteriously, when it occurs in BB the majority of the fanbase tries to sweep it under the rug or rationalize it in amazing ways, thought they take no issues with crucifying other shows who do the same.
But it is a great show and will go down in history as just that, and there will always be a minority that just doesn't get it.
It's called Deux Ex Machina - when writers bluntly intervene to save\lead characters where they want (check last season's of Dexter for example, or indeed Hank being saved from death in S3). This is seen as one of the biggest sins a narrative can make and is considered as a testament of poor writing.
It's not deus ex machina. Hank finding the book tells us something about Walt, and how at the end of the day, Walt himself was the last loose end.
I fucking love it when people use the phrase "deus ex machina" when they have absolutely no idea what it means.
Vince Gilligan has mentioned on the podcast that he's not afraid to use coincidences. He said that if a coincidence help the main character of a TV show toward making his goal easier, then it is bad writing, so he tends to avoid those, but if it impedes the main character - as this one is doing - that it is fine as long as it meshes with the rest of the story. It's really up to the viewer if it did that. I loved the ending of this season, but people have opinions, yo.
There's a difference between a coincidence and a deus ex machina. It's like the TDKR thread all over again.
When you naysayers thought Hank was gonna find out about Walt, how did you exactly imagine it?
The amount of times I read about deus ex machina and Mary Sue characters on the internet is hilarious.
No, no, no. A DEM in this show would have to be something like Walt's machines exploding inside a house, breaking it bad, with the police being outside the (possibly a neighbor's) door.A deus ex machinas would have been if a brand new character popped into Hank's life and said after meeting Walt once "hey, that brilliant chemist brother in law of yours sure is kinda shifty isn't he? What if HE'S MAKING METH?!?!" Hank having all the pieces and a mistake on Walt's part forcing him to put them all together? That's completely reasonable and not at all a 'great sin of storytelling'.
With Hank opening Gus's laptop and seeing Walt walk in on the recorded footage. Same epiphany, less awkward and boring.
Oh come on. Let's use the most obvious example, Walt's plan in S4. That's the most contrived set of actions and response I've seen on an acclaimed show like Breaking Bad.It isn't anywhere close to deus ex machina. I really hate when people use this phrase so loosely. A coincidence is not the god in the machine. Coincidences are almost essential to creating a story that doesn't come off as overly contrived, especially in stories that focus on criminals and cops.
A deus ex machinas would have been if a brand new character popped into Hank's life and said after meeting Walt once "hey, that brilliant chemist brother in law of yours sure is kinda shifty isn't he? What if HE'S MAKING METH?!?!" Hank having all the pieces and a mistake on Walt's part forcing him to put them all together? That's completely reasonable and not at all a 'great sin of storytelling'.
The most typical and ridiculous straw man brought out when anyone doesn't like an aspect of a product or service.Just stop watching the show if you don't like it man.
Happening at least two seasons ago as the result of actual police work, not another insight from god to Hank. Especially not after eight episodes of relatively sitting on his ass.When you naysayers thought Hank was gonna find out about Walt, how did you exactly imagine it?
Also more obvious. I'm glad they went with the book.
that is what is being assumed since he got scanned and then they show the papertowel dispenser in the bathroom had gotten amare stoudamired
When you naysayers thought Hank was gonna find out about Walt, how did you exactly imagine it?
Skylar flip!
Especially not after eight episodes of relatively sitting on his ass.
Remember that bullshit first episode where Walt just so coincidentally has a boisterous and adventurous DEA brother-in-law willing to give ride-alongs, and just so coincidentally has a former student who makes and deals drugs that gives him a way into the business? And later, he coincidentally happens to live in the same city as other high-profile meth dealers in the Southwest?
Deus ex Mary Sues all over the place.
Wasn't that the paper towel dispenser Walt had smashed previously?
Still, seems to be alluding to cancer.
Note: not arguing that some of Saty's wording may not be off.The most typical ridiculous straw man brought out when anyone doesn't like an aspect of a product or service.Happening at least two seasons ago as the result of actual police work, not another insight from god to Hank.
I hope people are still arguing about this in next July.
Vince Gilligan is a genius for putting a moment like that right before an extended break.
With Hank opening Gus's laptop and seeing Walt walk in on the recorded footage. Same epiphany, less awkward and boring.
Obvious doesn't always have to be a bad thing. There's a fine line between obvious and a little too coincidental, and the book crosses it.
Like he wasn't proving most of the DEA wrong about a respectable, local businessman being a violent drug kingpin at the end of S4 while disabled. After this he takes (fairly uncharacteristically) a desk job and finds his next huge piece of evidence while sitting on a toilet.It's like season 5 never existed.