For anyone interested in having more of a hand in deciding video topics, there is a set of donation goals for various potential videos that's been added to the Patreon! I don't expect that many will be interested, but it's an unobtrusive something extra to add to the incentives to reward current Patrons a bit more while giving the option to Non-Patrons as well. Link to details below, check it out if you're interested. And aside from that, hope you have a great day! www.patreon.com/posts/new-requests-49752200?
I just realized that two of your Breaking Bad analysis videos have FF7 and FF9 music in them. What made you choose Uematsu's music for your videos? Just curious.
@Heyab Hagos Show ended in September 29 2013... count. 2014. 2015. 2016. 2017. 2018. 2019. 2020. It's seven years and a few months. Once it's September 29 in 2021, then it'll be eight years. Does that clear things up for you?
i was 5 when this show came out im 18 now and saw it for the first time 2 years ago by far the best thing my eyes have witnessed and i have see plenty of tv lol
@@TheMasterQuestsno the show blew up at season 4, Bob odendirk( the actor that plays Saul Goodman) literally said barely anyone watched the show up until season 4
Agreed! Season 2 is better than 1 and while season 3 has bigger highs, I think season 2 is way more consistent and has smaller but more classic moments. Also, the divorce ark in season 3 is a fucking drag.
The contrast and fade in those opening scenes is so sad.. "Everything you did, you did for your family!" *fades to that family scared of him and fending him off with a knife* "....Right?"
Yeah it's crazy, when I re-watched El Camino, I thought Jesse was way to caring of Walt, patting his back and stuff but put into context of what they had just been through and the literal high point of their relationship, it just goes to add onto the already insane continuity of the show. Bravo 👏
You should start Better Call Saul if you really liked BB, because I feel like it adds a lot more depth and world building into the world of BB. And plus, characters like Saul, Mike, and Gus gets flushed out even more. It's def a slow burn, but I think it's so fucking worth it.
face off is my favorite episode. also, it is kind of funny that arron paul's favorite episode was the one where he did everything wrong, and wasted all of their water.
As someone mentioned, this is Aaron Paul's favourite episode. He says it's a great representation of who Walt and Jesse deep down and how much they need each other at this moment in time. And as you aptly pointed out, that wonderfully weird and dark dispenser scene is the cherry on top.
@@Aleczandxr There is a quote that best sums up this scene. “I did it for me. I like it. I was good at it. I was alive.” If he really did for the family, he would feel nothing but happy with his cancer result but he’s angry because the prospect of living longer undermined his purpose of cooking meth (doing something he loves) in the first place.
The fact that Jesse calls Walt Mr. White during the entire series shows, even though in the end he pretty much hated Walt, he still had respect for him! Walt saves Jesse's life from Uncle Jack and he even gets to kill Todd. I like how in the end so much is silently communicated between them. They don't have to say anything because their body language is saying for them.
I'm 30 and when I run into an old teacher of mine I still call them Mr. Or Mrs. (Last name) 😂 I guess that's just what you know them by. But yes the last scene of this show was so good. So many things were said with so few words. Greatest show ever, I've been through the entire series at least 10 times, no exaggeration
@@dustinclouse6888 yes,I do too. But Walt and Jesse were more than just student and teacher. They were friends and business partners. Jesse saw Walt turn into Heisenberg but still saw him as Mr.White!
@@jamesjoe1690 Walter refers to Jesse as his son to Jane's dad in the bar. Walter genuinely cared for Jesse and wanted what's best for him, even if that meant letting the love of his life die.
The damaged dispenser comes back in a later season (forget which one) and it remains damaged, perhaps to further represent how Walt's transformation and the consequences of his actions are irreversible or just as a fun little call back. Not everything has to be symbolic, but it does makes things more interesting.
@@landlockedcroat1554 Vince Gilligan writes Breaking Bad in such masterful ways that literally anything can be symbolic or have an underlying meaning behind it, so you're wrong here, too.
Yea it comes back in the episode where Walt has 10 people killed instead of paying them off, which he could afford to do and still make a decent profit but chooses to kill them all anyway. Same episode he finds out his cancer is back which is why he's in the hospital bathroom again. Perfect time to bring back the symbolism of the fucked-up paper towel dispenser as a analogy for Walt's fucked-up soul and moral compass
Walt is such an awful human being, yet such a brilliantly written character. I was so confused by his anger at the end of the episode, but I grew to understand it more as the show went on. It deliberately hides things about Walt from the viewer and slowly unravels his motivations as time passes. It just so good
@@WetBoy Only in the way that every human has the capacity to be good. He took half measures his whole life and by the start of the story he's bitter and selfish but at the same time self-loathing, like so many people. But most of them don't poison children.
@@wats1841 he was lying when he said that cause he knew it was ultimately best for his family to paint him the villian cause they couldn't handle the fact that he did it for them
It's not like every problem has a magic genius chemical solution I know plenty of chemists and as far as I know, they don't regularly use their knowledge in their regular day to day life outside the lab
On the contrary, I was afraid after the first season that Waltz's strengths would all come down to magic science tricks being pulled off again and again. Thankfully they didn't, showing a complex yet relatable genius in Walt.
Walt gives Jesse a lot of science lessons early on in the show. I feel like that was something genuine between them and once their relationship becomes toxic and manipulative they abruptly stop.
I'd love this show to death but deep down i just want a non-canon different scenario series where walt and jesse trust in each other like father and son and its a light-hearted show. I just need more of that starting fresh feeling they had in S1
Imagine a version of the show where after Walt finds out he has more time to live he does a 180, still taking more control in his life but without hurting the people he loves. Skyler never finds out and Walt gets out of the Meth game with enough money to last his family long after he's gone, maybe he even keeps in touch with Jesse and gets him help like he did in the show. But that's just wishful thinking
That’s true. I have wanted and waited when they r going to be closer, when they start spending time together outside of work, when they will start hug…( and it breaks my heart that things ended up like in real life often could be: messy and raw, until the point when it’s unforgivable and unacceptable(( but that’s why it’s so touching your heart and leaves u with thousands of thoughts.
Man, for me my favorite scene of the whole show is probably when Walt has Jesse stay over for dinner with him and Skylar. Shit was the most awkward thing ever and Aaron played that scene so good to give the viewers 2nd hand embarrassment. I loved it
14:29 There's a scene in mid season 5 where Walt looks at his reflection here again but this time his expression is wildly different than the one here as if he was seemingly looking down on his past self: "Huh, I remember how silly I was at that moment, too afraid and powerless" basically after he became what the "old" Walt feared the most, it's kinda hard to put it into words
Yea it comes back in the episode where Walt has 10 people killed instead of paying them off, which he could afford to do and still make a decent profit but chooses to kill them all anyway. Same episode he finds out his cancer is back which is why he's in the hospital bathroom again. Perfect time to bring back the symbolism of the fucked-up paper towel dispenser as a analogy for Walt's fucked-up soul and moral compass
@@didncozosksma4466 after a bit of reading it would seem the coyote symbolizes self reflection, playfulness, and a lighthearted look at the world. The fact it’s dead in this scene is rather ominous. Notice the horizon line is shifting from day to night. I think the dead coyote symbolizes that the only path forward now is down. That the “innocence” of Walts situation is dead. I know how much effort is put into every frame of good TV and cinema, so I have no doubt to the intentionality of placement.
After pretty much binging Breaking Bad at an insane pace way after it aired, it's difficult for me to really remember it episode by episode. Really cool seeing how well episodes worked even as individual pieces.
In the scene where he punches the towel dispenser, his image and reflection is distorted. He’s already corrupted and has already changed, it’s too late to go back. But then if you watch the finale, as he dies and sees his reflection, it’s a lot more clear. As if he’s come to terms with himself and his decisions and then dies at peace. Man I love this show.. great video 👍🏻
@@abdullahaltuwaijri8550 How is he annoying? Comments like this are a clear sign of someone with no empathy, he's in a broken home and he's got cerebral palsy and never does anything wrong
@@matr1x. You're seriously condemning a teenager for lusting after a cool car? Come on. He's a great person who wanted a badass vehicle, that's all. And Walter enabled him anyway, he might not have even been serious.
This is probably my favorite episode of the entire show. He’s still pretty much Walt (not to much Heisenberg at that point), his family still loves him, it has a lot of Walt and Jesse moments (funny, fighting, comradery, wholesomeness, reflecting, and more), it has the iconic scene at the end and the majority of the episode is them in the RV, in the desert, with beautiful scenery, cooking meth, which is probably the most iconic image of Breaking Bad.
@@Orange_Swirl I mean it always depends on your situation but the best answer is typically to get help from people who love/care about you. And regardless, people need the self control not to take their anger out on others.
Woah that's freaky, I was just talking to someone yesterday about this very episode and feeling that it was special, although not for the same reasons as you explained. I thought the narrative direction of this episode by keeping the focus for the entire episode (or atleast the trip) on Walt and Jesse was a brilliant idea, not once does it cut away to Skyler or Hank or even Skinny Pete, it makes you feel like you're stranded in the desert WITH them, and I found that brilliant.
There's a flashback scene in El Camino where Walt and Jesse are in some sort of restaurant. Jesse's digging in, and mentions to Walt he should eat something to get electrolytes - which Walt mentioned in this episode they would be getting low on. So this BB episode itself is a good self-summary of the relationship between Jesse and Walt, and its glimmer of positivity... given that they basically destroy each other.
The scene you're mentioning from El Camino actually happens during the events of 4 Days Out, between them returning from the desert and Jesse dropping Walt off at the airport. They're wearing the same clothing
@@spiguyAs evil it is to poison a child, Jesse in rational view becomes the unreasonable one. He rejected Walt's help when he offered it, and only received help because Gus made Mike force it. Walt saw from the beginnong that Jesse was being manipulated and Jesse refused to hear it because it Gus made him feel special. I'm not saying that what Walt did there was justified, but it is hard to say it was completely evil since he had to do it to save himself from the problem that was caused by saving Jesse's life
@@anomalocaris2593Jesse was susceptible to that manipulation *because* of the way Walt treated Jesse. He would've never been in that position at all if it weren't for Walt and his manipulation. It's funny that the show often illustrates to us that in-universe Jesse is written off for superficial reasons, and then a large portion of the audience does the exact same thing.
@@bananasinfrench It is still not something that makes you feel that Walt has gone too far yet. My favourite thing in this show was the relationship these 2 had, while the ending is not a happy one I am glad they at least forgave each other in the end
You have no idea how much I appreciate your music choice, specifically Desert Wasteland. It's loneliness encapsulates those days Jesse and Walt spent in the desert perfectly for me.
Do you know the name of the music at timestamp 8:25? It is heard in other parts of the video, and is so haunting, even though it partly has a midi-like cheesiness to it.
@@guidofedeli851 Thanks for that. I did a RUclips search simply for 'Desert Wasteland' but kept getting other music (often also enjoyable) as I didn't know it was from FFVII.
@@shaunadamson4634 you really should. I'm the most biased person who could ever give this suggestion, as it's my favorite game of all time, but it's nevertheless a wonderful game with a great story and a magic system that I still think is almost unrivaled in its complexity and experimentation potential.
Ahhh more proof you're the best analyst out. Quality, voice, and choice of media all 10/10. Another great video under your belt, gonna have to rewatch BB again now.
Yeah man, Walt was praying to God that all the pieces of the broken plate would be there but they weren't, so he had to become a criminal or be responsible for the death of his family shortly after. Just outstanding writing and analogies
One of the only moments in Breaking Bad when i almost cried was when Walt's family heard the good news about his treatment. It just showed how much he means to them.
Makes it all the more sad how he only continued to distance himself from his family from there onward, while telling himself that he's doing everything for his family
@@zacfrancis6365 Oh? And how exactly was what I said hypocritical? Why did it even upset you? Do tell and expose your poor grasp of the English language.
I am so, so glad to see this episode get the attention it deserves. This is my favourite Breaking Bad episode ever, and you've brilliantly explained why that's the case. I've noticed that '4 Days Out' and 'Fly' seem to come as a pair in many people's eyes. They're both episodes that are almost entirely set in one location, and basically only star Walt and Jesse. This makes them very rewatchable. But there's a third episode that I associate with these two as well, and that's 'I See You' (or as I like to call it, the 'hospital episode'). This episode is also set in one location (the hospital), but this time it's just Walt with his family instead of Jesse. All this downtime gives room for some fantastically-written scenes, like when Walt is comforting Marie in the café, or when Walt. Jr is talking about Pablo Escobar. I especially love when Walt and Gus are talking business whilst being completely surrounded by cops. The scenes with Jesse alone in the lab are also hilarious! It's one of my go-to episodes. I absolutely love it.
5:09 ”After which, the only place to go is down”. Funny that the next episode is called ”Down” 😂 I always thought it was just because of the plane-thing.
this is the whole damn reason this serious hurts so much, their relationship is so well, hell, beautifuly developed that all the backstabs along the rest of their path hurt for real, might even make you physically feel bad, I blame it on the emotions displayed being so three dimensional that the drama that happens later feels too real
I'm also of the belief that Walter truly cared for Jesse (referring to him often as "son"), being closer to him than he was his actual son. In part, that's probably due to his having no one else to share in his victories and having something of a colleague. But even after Jesse quit cooking, I don't think Walt ever intended to kill him.
I remember watching breaking bad for the first time in 2017 - 2018 when I was in 10th grade chemistry and this episode among others in season 2 were my favorites. That was a good time for me, breaking bad helped me to really get interested in the chemistry class I was in at the time.
What about that moment when Jesse hugged Walt tightly and cried after the death of Jane Margolis?That's the time when we see how much Walt loves Jesse and how much Jesse loves Walt.Thats a father-son moment. ❤️
I love this breakdown. I've watched this episode so many times, I show it to people who've never watched the series and have no plans to because you can get so much out of with without the context of the rest of the story. But what I love most is what you've outlined. I've always watched that fit of rage he has and just simply thought he was pissed that he wouldn't be dying, that it wasn't part of his plan, and that even his own death is not within his control. This video adds so much more to that moment though and now I feel like I can watch it again with a fresh perspective. Thank you! Fantastic work.
10 years later and I’m still slightly obsessed,I saw it in real time but it’s like the finale just happened. The time feels as long ago as it was but the show still feels fresh
BB ruined tv for me. It set the bar SO HIGH for any series in my eyes. I loved Better Call Saul, but I literally mourned for months after it ended. I cried my head off and would randomly burst into tears when someone would mention BB to me lololol. I'll admit I'm still obsessed with BB and lost count of how many times I've rewatched it. It's gonna take a miracle to beat BB imo 💙💚🤍🩷
4 days out is my favorite episode by far. The camera work, the scenes, the environment, and the whole plot of the episode was some of the best work I have ever seen imo
Brilliant video. As someone who has just finished watching the show, I completely agree that this was the episode that upped the show in its quality. When I watched 4 Days Out, it felt...special. You felt like Walt and Jesse had come to a new understanding about each other, and their desperate situation is what drove them closer together in that episode. In many ways, this is the moment Walt began to view Jesse like a second son. Oh, and you're goddamn right about this being the last of the 'good times'. There really is a dramatic shift in tone and plot going into season 3, and you kind of long for the simpler times of seasons 1 and 2. :)
@@kebnymcnugget1950 there was a high school chemistry teacher (I think also named Walter White) who was secretly who distributed meth and made a lot of money out of it. However, the rest of the series is complete fiction
Along with "The Sopranos," this was my favorite series. Everything about the show was fantastic, the videography, sets, actors, scripts...on and on. Something that the great authors would be proud of since it tells such an epic story. Man against nature, man against man, and man against himself. Somebody told me that once and said it covers the greatest books ever written. You gave an excellent analysis of deep insights into the show. Thank you.
starts out father and son duo making meth together but went to dowhill because of walt’s greed and power, destroying his own families and best friend betrayal this is truly tragic for walter white life
“You either die a hero or you live long enough to see yourself become the villain”. Even dying before, Walter would have never could be a hero, but that were what he wants when he finally passes away. Eventually, he found in himself the villain that he tried prevent to become, because he lived enough time to become one.
I always found myself going back to “4 days out” just to watch that episode, I’ve probably watched that episode 100 times & never knew why I enjoyed it so much.
This episode stuck with me more than most on my first watch and it was one of my most anticipated upon my first re watch. You put into words my thoughts on this episode and I thank you lol
Excellent analysis. A true surprise. I'm not much of an anime viewer now but if this is the level of thought you bring to your videos then I am here for it.
This episode is just full of great moments. The cook montage, the calculating and celebration of the future profits, and the ending "good news". Not to mention it's peak Jesse/Walt chemistry and lite conflict. Just bickering and friendship. Best early episode imo.
Four Days Out has always been one of my all time favorite episodes of television EVER. It is indeed a masterpiece. Recently rewatched the series again. And again, this episode more than stands up, and has truly not just stood the test of time, but has gotten better with time. Mostly because we now know how it all ends up, the inevitable fall of all that’s to come. But partly because of its own stand alone power. It could have been a short film and been great. But because it was a two year build up to an apex in what we now know is one of the greatest shows of all time, it was all the more better for being a tv show. This episode, heavy on my nostalgia heartstrings now, is what Walter once described as “a perfect moment in time”. Which he discusses with Jesse in another of my favorite episodes, Fly, in regards to regretting that he had lived past that moment, and in doing so, he’d lived to long.
just wanted to say you had the perfect mix between your voice and the backing music! so many vids today have the music loud enough that its distracting, lol
This one goes straight from my Watch Later playlist to my Favorites. I'm surprised I don't think I've seen your videos before, looking forward to seeing more.
A tv show can get you more invested in a character then a movie ever could...breaking bad is the best thing I’ve ever seen and I’ve seen a lot of movies and tv shows
Loved this analysis! Been on a BB-RUclips scene/analysis binge and this definitely highlights an episode I previously didn't think much about when thinking about the entirety the series and my favorite moments. Also - datFF7 track? 👌🏾 A1 usage.
I recently rewatched, and this episode really stuck out to me too. My reaction was "nothing much happens, but at the same time, everything happens". This episode is a turning point in Walt's psyche.
That episode is somehow funny and serious at the same time. The idea of them getting stuck in the desert through stupidity and arguing, Jesse's makeshift antenna and Skinny Pete going the wrong way, always makes me laugh... But then you realise, that they're in a life threatening situation where they're going to die of thirst and Walt mistakenly thinks his Cancer is getting worse.. and even when he finds out that he's actually getting better, he's still miserable, which is quite a dark concept.
Jan 1st 2022. Time to start the new year off right, with my 7th rewatch of Breaking Bad! Came across a few of your vids today and now i really wanna watch lmao
For me the scene where he punches the towel dispenser very much reflects Walt’s words in the fly episode, where he laments that he missed the perfect timing to die and had lived for too long. A part of him (a larger part than he knew) actually hoped that the scan results would be bad, so that he could go out like a tragic hero while his family still loved him and remained oblivious to the person he had become. Yet, more time to live gave his family more time to suspect, to grow distant from him, to realize what horrible things he had done for a reason that simply couldn’t be justified anymore.
So, I discovered your channel just last night and am already resuming my binge this morning of all of your BB videos I can find. Not only do I find your commentary and analysis so beautifully spot on, but I really enjoying reading your comments section. I am moving thru my binge much more slowly, because of this. I feel as if I have found my BB home and true family....such a thoughtful, funny and intelligent community! While I have never been a fan of anime and video games, (therefore ignorant of these genres of potential bliss?).....now I am intrigued about these worlds as well! After all, if you all love and appreciate the BB world as much as I do, then you gotta have great taste, right?? I'm so curious and intrigued. Thanks to all of you! I'm very glad to have found you.
When I watched the scene where Walt gets the news for the first time, I felt like his relief was faked on behalf of his family. to me, the face he makes as he embraces Skylar is one of pain and worry rather than relief, and he's having genuine anxiety over the fact the he may have to face the consequences for his actions, rather than let it all wash away with his death.
That’s an interesting interpretation but I can’t say I agree. I think his reaction is one of pure genuine relief upon hearing that he’s in remission, particularly because he assumed the opposite. The acting indicates that to me. And then only when he’s alone does the rage begin to come in, because he can properly, genuinely reflect on what this means with regards to his meth production. Makes logical sense as well.
@@Aleczandxr interesting to me how the scene can be interpreted so differently. One thing is for sure Bryan Cranston's performance is amazing. Thanks for the reply, loved the video. Always felt like something was special about the episode but could never place my finger on what.
Walt was devastated by the news of his remission because if you watch season one he got into the cooking meth business because of his lung cancer and he felt that he'd be dead or dying anyway when cops catch up with him.
Walt constructing the battery doesn’t have any of the thematic significance that was the point of this video. It was obviously cool, but spending any more time on it than I did given the point of this video would’ve been redundant and unfocused IMO.
The reason we the viewers keep coming back to watch the show is that the writers never underestimated us. Every character behaves in a way that allows us to discover the motivations little by little
The "build a robot" line was apparently from the film crew, they threw it out as an idea and filmed it once principle shooting concluded. Vince Gilligan saw it and loved it. One of the more memorable misguided Jesse summations out there. Along with the magnets bitch moment.
For anyone interested in having more of a hand in deciding video topics, there is a set of donation goals for various potential videos that's been added to the Patreon! I don't expect that many will be interested, but it's an unobtrusive something extra to add to the incentives to reward current Patrons a bit more while giving the option to Non-Patrons as well. Link to details below, check it out if you're interested. And aside from that, hope you have a great day!
www.patreon.com/posts/new-requests-49752200?
How far along is the Better Call Saul one?
Edit: Ah I see that it just started up, my bad. I'll kick a dollar to that one.
What a coincidence, I just started rewatching
I just realized that two of your Breaking Bad analysis videos have FF7 and FF9 music in them. What made you choose Uematsu's music for your videos? Just curious.
@@michaelyu6250 it got me right in the feels both times
you should check out sopranos. Its one of the most well written and deep shows ever
This episode contains the single most brilliant line spoken in any piece of fiction ever:
*Ah...wire*
ONE OF MY FAVOURITE LINES
*A robot?!*
I actually laughed at 3:20 just because it reminded me of that scene.
(Also known by experts as the genesis of Heisenberg.)
Ahhhhh wire
I always laugh my ass off at this scene.
This episode is “the good old days” point of the show
it really is fuck
You're goddamn right
It’s where El Camino flashbacks to as well, so you’re def right.
Thats a really good way of puttin it
It's the episode that made us love them but also showed their flaws
The fact that people still talk about this show after 8 years just shows how memorable and deep it was.
it is
Can’t top breaking bad, it has flaws like every show but the emotional punch is too strong
7 years* but yeah
@Heyab Hagos Show ended in September 29 2013... count. 2014. 2015. 2016. 2017. 2018. 2019. 2020. It's seven years and a few months. Once it's September 29 in 2021, then it'll be eight years.
Does that clear things up for you?
i was 5 when this show came out im 18 now and saw it for the first time 2 years ago by far the best thing my eyes have witnessed and i have see plenty of tv lol
The reason that tumor shrink to 80%. Is because Walter ate a Funyun when Jesse and Walt are sitting looking at the sunset.
Wait what
And also he inhaled some of Jesse's cigarrete smoke... That must have helped too right?
@@JulioCesar-wr3ch yeah, smoking cures cancer you didn't know that?
We need more funding for Funyun research, stat!
Jesse was right, Funyuns are awesome
"A robot?" "Ah, wire!" Two best lines. Spoiler: Strangely Walt does end up building a sort-of robot at the end of the series that shoots.
Love your videos man
crazy seeing your channel here lol
@@MedicBroh the fart of guitar
@@MedicBroh it's totally crazy that RUclips suggests videos to you that are related to your interests and the channels you watch? MIND BLOWN!
@@nikkingman bruh
Season 2 is so under appreciated. It often gets ranked pretty low but I love how simple and down to earth it’s stories are.
That’s when the show blew up though
@@TheMasterQuestswh
@@TheMasterQuestsno the show blew up at season 4, Bob odendirk( the actor that plays Saul Goodman) literally said barely anyone watched the show up until season 4
If that was the case then it wouldn't of gotten past two seasons. I'm sure it was doing ok for itself at least@@zxrytags9344
Agreed! Season 2 is better than 1 and while season 3 has bigger highs, I think season 2 is way more consistent and has smaller but more classic moments. Also, the divorce ark in season 3 is a fucking drag.
The contrast and fade in those opening scenes is so sad..
"Everything you did, you did for your family!" *fades to that family scared of him and fending him off with a knife*
"....Right?"
Aaahh
@@abhijeetashiya8856 wire
@@kbscheme 😆
ur goddamn
@@kbschemecopper.
The El Camino flashback being during this episode was kind of a flag to me of how much it really was a turning point episode in a lot of ways.
Yeah it's crazy, when I re-watched El Camino, I thought Jesse was way to caring of Walt, patting his back and stuff but put into context of what they had just been through and the literal high point of their relationship, it just goes to add onto the already insane continuity of the show. Bravo 👏
@@bigsnooze4018 mabrove binvce
i recently finished breaking bad... what a masterpiece
recently rewatched it and I agree completely
Same here, finally got around to watching it a month or two ago and, just, wow
I finished it recently and I wasn't in love with it, like most but I do think it's a great show it just wasn't for me
You should start Better Call Saul if you really liked BB, because I feel like it adds a lot more depth and world building into the world of BB. And plus, characters like Saul, Mike, and Gus gets flushed out even more. It's def a slow burn, but I think it's so fucking worth it.
@@abinjjaimon yeah listen to this guy, better call Saul is the best show on TV rn I put off watching it for way too long
It is Aaron Paul's favorite episode. He really enjoyed doing the diner scene with Bryan Cranston in El Camino
face off is my favorite episode. also, it is kind of funny that arron paul's favorite episode was the one where he did everything wrong, and wasted all of their water.
Do you have a source for that? I believe you but I'm just curious
As someone mentioned, this is Aaron Paul's favourite episode. He says it's a great representation of who Walt and Jesse deep down and how much they need each other at this moment in time. And as you aptly pointed out, that wonderfully weird and dark dispenser scene is the cherry on top.
I wonder if one of the stars directed it - just like some of the best better call Saul episodes.
I love walt's face when Jesse Rolls up to the airport in the meth lab 🤣 the sheer "what the fuck is he doing?" It's so relatable yet hilarious
I swear Vince knows how to put comedy in these serious shows, I love that scene probably my favorite episode
Fantastic analysis. Had forgotten how good that scene of Walt punching the towel dispenser was.
Thanks, and absolutely! It's so brilliant and conflicting.
i had forgotten entierely it happened. There's so many great moments
It’s been years but that scene still gives me chills. Absolutely masterful
The towel dispenser comes back in a later episode, which is very cool.
@@Aleczandxr There is a quote that best sums up this scene.
“I did it for me. I like it. I was good at it. I was alive.”
If he really did for the family, he would feel nothing but happy with his cancer result but he’s angry because the prospect of living longer undermined his purpose of cooking meth (doing something he loves) in the first place.
The fact that Jesse calls Walt Mr. White during the entire series shows, even though in the end he pretty much hated Walt, he still had respect for him! Walt saves Jesse's life from Uncle Jack and he even gets to kill Todd. I like how in the end so much is silently communicated between them. They don't have to say anything because their body language is saying for them.
I'm 30 and when I run into an old teacher of mine I still call them Mr. Or Mrs. (Last name) 😂 I guess that's just what you know them by. But yes the last scene of this show was so good. So many things were said with so few words. Greatest show ever, I've been through the entire series at least 10 times, no exaggeration
@@dustinclouse6888 yes,I do too. But Walt and Jesse were more than just student and teacher. They were friends and business partners. Jesse saw Walt turn into Heisenberg but still saw him as Mr.White!
@SufferF.E.1.7 very true.
@SufferF.E.1.7idk if I'd go that far, they just seemed like friends to me
@@jamesjoe1690 Walter refers to Jesse as his son to Jane's dad in the bar. Walter genuinely cared for Jesse and wanted what's best for him, even if that meant letting the love of his life die.
The damaged dispenser comes back in a later season (forget which one) and it remains damaged, perhaps to further represent how Walt's transformation and the consequences of his actions are irreversible or just as a fun little call back. Not everything has to be symbolic, but it does makes things more interesting.
not everything has to be symbolic or represent something
@@landlockedcroat1554 that's quite literally what the guy said at the end of the comment douche lizard
As well as that, his reflection in the dispenser is distorted, representative of his soul’s corruption
@@landlockedcroat1554 Vince Gilligan writes Breaking Bad in such masterful ways that literally anything can be symbolic or have an underlying meaning behind it, so you're wrong here, too.
Yea it comes back in the episode where Walt has 10 people killed instead of paying them off, which he could afford to do and still make a decent profit but chooses to kill them all anyway. Same episode he finds out his cancer is back which is why he's in the hospital bathroom again. Perfect time to bring back the symbolism of the fucked-up paper towel dispenser as a analogy for Walt's fucked-up soul and moral compass
14:27 I don't know if the show intended this metaphor or if you created it but either way its a beautifully ominous observation. geeez
Honestly I'm more amazed by the 15:43 line.
It is a quite common trope, a character undergoing change and staring at themselves in a broken or distorted mirror. It is very likely intentional.
@@REALwoombath he also says in that scene that chemistry is the study of change, or something along those lines
@@itsemachine it’s like the producers and writers knew it would be so good that people would rewatch it!!
It was absolutely intended.
Walt is such an awful human being, yet such a brilliantly written character. I was so confused by his anger at the end of the episode, but I grew to understand it more as the show went on. It deliberately hides things about Walt from the viewer and slowly unravels his motivations as time passes. It just so good
Genuinely a good guy
@@WetBoy Only in the way that every human has the capacity to be good. He took half measures his whole life and by the start of the story he's bitter and selfish but at the same time self-loathing, like so many people. But most of them don't poison children.
@@comicconcarne his heart was in the right place the whole time
@@WetBoy nah he admits in the end that he did it all for himself
@@wats1841 he was lying when he said that cause he knew it was ultimately best for his family to paint him the villian cause they couldn't handle the fact that he did it for them
I wish chemistry was used more to solve his problems. The way he explained the homemade battery to Jesse felt like he was his teacher again
It's not like every problem has a magic genius chemical solution
I know plenty of chemists and as far as I know, they don't regularly use their knowledge in their regular day to day life outside the lab
On the contrary, I was afraid after the first season that Waltz's strengths would all come down to magic science tricks being pulled off again and again. Thankfully they didn't, showing a complex yet relatable genius in Walt.
@@Max-px5ym same
I think they did that to show His transformation from a chemistry teacher to a drug lord
Walt gives Jesse a lot of science lessons early on in the show. I feel like that was something genuine between them and once their relationship becomes toxic and manipulative they abruptly stop.
I'd love this show to death but deep down i just want a non-canon different scenario series where walt and jesse trust in each other like father and son and its a light-hearted show. I just need more of that starting fresh feeling they had in S1
This is why I love S2 so much!
Imagine a version of the show where after Walt finds out he has more time to live he does a 180, still taking more control in his life but without hurting the people he loves. Skyler never finds out and Walt gets out of the Meth game with enough money to last his family long after he's gone, maybe he even keeps in touch with Jesse and gets him help like he did in the show. But that's just wishful thinking
That’s true. I have wanted and waited when they r going to be closer, when they start spending time together outside of work, when they will start hug…( and it breaks my heart that things ended up like in real life often could be: messy and raw, until the point when it’s unforgivable and unacceptable(( but that’s why it’s so touching your heart and leaves u with thousands of thoughts.
Fixing Good:
Man, for me my favorite scene of the whole show is probably when Walt has Jesse stay over for dinner with him and Skylar. Shit was the most awkward thing ever and Aaron played that scene so good to give the viewers 2nd hand embarrassment. I loved it
"This episode has no explosions."
Me wondering what the Jesse generator scene was: 🤔🧐
LOL, fair...
Video literally unwatchable now
You just RUINED this video for me, I HOPE YOU’RE HAPPY NOW /s
“ it’s either you die a hero or live long enough to see yourself become the villain”
14:29 There's a scene in mid season 5 where Walt looks at his reflection here again but this time his expression is wildly different than the one here as if he was seemingly looking down on his past self: "Huh, I remember how silly I was at that moment, too afraid and powerless" basically after he became what the "old" Walt feared the most, it's kinda hard to put it into words
Yea it comes back in the episode where Walt has 10 people killed instead of paying them off, which he could afford to do and still make a decent profit but chooses to kill them all anyway. Same episode he finds out his cancer is back which is why he's in the hospital bathroom again. Perfect time to bring back the symbolism of the fucked-up paper towel dispenser as a analogy for Walt's fucked-up soul and moral compass
o m
I’ve watched this series numerous times, and I’ve never noticed the dead coyote at 11:18
Good eye. I wonder if it has a meaning since both BB and BCS have many meanings and symbols.
@@didncozosksma4466 after a bit of reading it would seem the coyote symbolizes self reflection, playfulness, and a lighthearted look at the world. The fact it’s dead in this scene is rather ominous. Notice the horizon line is shifting from day to night. I think the dead coyote symbolizes that the only path forward now is down. That the “innocence” of Walts situation is dead. I know how much effort is put into every frame of good TV and cinema, so I have no doubt to the intentionality of placement.
Wow, I never noticed that before!
@@vgamepuppy1 that’s crazy, that makes so much sense!
What about the smuggler 'coyote' being killed by the cousins in the desert in season 3
After pretty much binging Breaking Bad at an insane pace way after it aired, it's difficult for me to really remember it episode by episode. Really cool seeing how well episodes worked even as individual pieces.
Me too lol
In the scene where he punches the towel dispenser, his image and reflection is distorted. He’s already corrupted and has already changed, it’s too late to go back. But then if you watch the finale, as he dies and sees his reflection, it’s a lot more clear. As if he’s come to terms with himself and his decisions and then dies at peace.
Man I love this show.. great video 👍🏻
The sad truth was that Jessie was always treated like a son from Walt, yet Walt hardly ever got to know his own son
It's still only Walt's illusion of a son. The moment Jesse goes against that notion Walt very quickly becomes bitter and manipulative towards him.
Can’t blame him, his son is annoying af
@@abdullahaltuwaijri8550 How is he annoying? Comments like this are a clear sign of someone with no empathy, he's in a broken home and he's got cerebral palsy and never does anything wrong
@@seemonuzumaki723 he is kinda greedy thats my only problem..remember the car scene?
@@matr1x. You're seriously condemning a teenager for lusting after a cool car? Come on. He's a great person who wanted a badass vehicle, that's all. And Walter enabled him anyway, he might not have even been serious.
This is probably my favorite episode of the entire show. He’s still pretty much Walt (not to much Heisenberg at that point), his family still loves him, it has a lot of Walt and Jesse moments (funny, fighting, comradery, wholesomeness, reflecting, and more), it has the iconic scene at the end and the majority of the episode is them in the RV, in the desert, with beautiful scenery, cooking meth, which is probably the most iconic image of Breaking Bad.
"That's how it starts. The rage. The feelings of...powerlessness. That turns good men...cruel."
But then doesn't that beg the question, how should someone deal with feelings of powerlessness and rage in a healthy way?
@@Orange_Swirl I mean it always depends on your situation but the best answer is typically to get help from people who love/care about you. And regardless, people need the self control not to take their anger out on others.
I love BvS
Woah that's freaky, I was just talking to someone yesterday about this very episode and feeling that it was special, although not for the same reasons as you explained. I thought the narrative direction of this episode by keeping the focus for the entire episode (or atleast the trip) on Walt and Jesse was a brilliant idea, not once does it cut away to Skyler or Hank or even Skinny Pete, it makes you feel like you're stranded in the desert WITH them, and I found that brilliant.
There's a flashback scene in El Camino where Walt and Jesse are in some sort of restaurant. Jesse's digging in, and mentions to Walt he should eat something to get electrolytes - which Walt mentioned in this episode they would be getting low on. So this BB episode itself is a good self-summary of the relationship between Jesse and Walt, and its glimmer of positivity... given that they basically destroy each other.
The scene you're mentioning from El Camino actually happens during the events of 4 Days Out, between them returning from the desert and Jesse dropping Walt off at the airport. They're wearing the same clothing
Yeah, I mean Jesse interfered with Walt's plans but Walt perpetually made Jesse's life worse.
@@spiguyAs evil it is to poison a child, Jesse in rational view becomes the unreasonable one. He rejected Walt's help when he offered it, and only received help because Gus made Mike force it. Walt saw from the beginnong that Jesse was being manipulated and Jesse refused to hear it because it Gus made him feel special. I'm not saying that what Walt did there was justified, but it is hard to say it was completely evil since he had to do it to save himself from the problem that was caused by saving Jesse's life
@@anomalocaris2593Jesse was susceptible to that manipulation *because* of the way Walt treated Jesse. He would've never been in that position at all if it weren't for Walt and his manipulation. It's funny that the show often illustrates to us that in-universe Jesse is written off for superficial reasons, and then a large portion of the audience does the exact same thing.
@@bananasinfrench It is still not something that makes you feel that Walt has gone too far yet. My favourite thing in this show was the relationship these 2 had, while the ending is not a happy one I am glad they at least forgave each other in the end
You have no idea how much I appreciate your music choice, specifically Desert Wasteland. It's loneliness encapsulates those days Jesse and Walt spent in the desert perfectly for me.
Do you know the name of the music at timestamp 8:25? It is heard in other parts of the video, and is so haunting, even though it partly has a midi-like cheesiness to it.
@@shaunadamson4634 yup, it's the aforementioned Desert Wasteland. It's from FFVII's soundtrack.
@@guidofedeli851 Thankyou for your help, I enjoyed listening to it. Never played FFVII though now I kinda want to play it even more.
@@guidofedeli851 Thanks for that. I did a RUclips search simply for 'Desert Wasteland' but kept getting other music (often also enjoyable) as I didn't know it was from FFVII.
@@shaunadamson4634 you really should. I'm the most biased person who could ever give this suggestion, as it's my favorite game of all time, but it's nevertheless a wonderful game with a great story and a magic system that I still think is almost unrivaled in its complexity and experimentation potential.
Ahhh more proof you're the best analyst out. Quality, voice, and choice of media all 10/10. Another great video under your belt, gonna have to rewatch BB again now.
Thanks very much!
I’m going to rewatch because of this man AND your comment
I think the episode that really hooked me on BB was S1E3. The whole conflict with Krazy-8 showed us exactly how this series was gonna pan out.
Same. Such a deep episode, missing plate piece scene was genius
The dinner plate scene is what made me realize what geniuses the writers are
Yeah man, Walt was praying to God that all the pieces of the broken plate would be there but they weren't, so he had to become a criminal or be responsible for the death of his family shortly after. Just outstanding writing and analogies
One of the only moments in Breaking Bad when i almost cried was when Walt's family heard the good news about his treatment. It just showed how much he means to them.
Makes it all the more sad how he only continued to distance himself from his family from there onward, while telling himself that he's doing everything for his family
@@sarahm4669more than that, the irony that they would come to wish for his death, just a few months after celebrating his remission.
Ayyyyye, finish Breaking Bad yesterday and now I'm watching Better Call Saul. Sheesh, BB is a quality series and I ignored the hype! Shame on me!
BCS is quality , just takes time to get into
One of those few shows that live up to the hype...
yeah i missed the hype too i actually started watching it when better call saul was about to air they had breaking bad marathong on tv for days
@@8bitmagic it exceeded it
“4 Days Out” is literally my favorite episode out of the entire series.
Not the best episode, but definitely the most underrated
@@gupoll They said it was their favourite, not that it was the best.
@@zacfrancis6365 Oh? And how exactly was what I said hypocritical? Why did it even upset you? Do tell and expose your poor grasp of the English language.
@@zacfrancis6365 what are you talking about man, how was he hypocritical lol
@@zacfrancis6365 you don’t know what “hypocrite” means. Maybe sign up for an English class.
Maybe I was just staring at the sunset and shadows but I never realized walt threw away the chips, which is hilarious
This was the best television show/episode analysis I’ve ever come across on RUclips. Thank you. You covered your three main points very thoroughly.
You’re very welcome, happy you enjoyed!
My favorite episode might just be the pilot. So much happened in that first episode that was just draw dropping, incredible show!
I am so, so glad to see this episode get the attention it deserves. This is my favourite Breaking Bad episode ever, and you've brilliantly explained why that's the case.
I've noticed that '4 Days Out' and 'Fly' seem to come as a pair in many people's eyes. They're both episodes that are almost entirely set in one location, and basically only star Walt and Jesse. This makes them very rewatchable. But there's a third episode that I associate with these two as well, and that's 'I See You' (or as I like to call it, the 'hospital episode').
This episode is also set in one location (the hospital), but this time it's just Walt with his family instead of Jesse. All this downtime gives room for some fantastically-written scenes, like when Walt is comforting Marie in the café, or when Walt. Jr is talking about Pablo Escobar. I especially love when Walt and Gus are talking business whilst being completely surrounded by cops. The scenes with Jesse alone in the lab are also hilarious! It's one of my go-to episodes. I absolutely love it.
11:03 "Is he trapped once again as a passenger without any say on how things turn out". This hit me hard.
5:09 ”After which, the only place to go is down”. Funny that the next episode is called ”Down” 😂 I always thought it was just because of the plane-thing.
The next episode is called “Over”
@@slambotv1334 .....oh, right... Wait how the hell did I get 54 likes then?!?!
this is the whole damn reason this serious hurts so much, their relationship is so well, hell, beautifuly developed that all the backstabs along the rest of their path hurt for real, might even make you physically feel bad, I blame it on the emotions displayed being so three dimensional that the drama that happens later feels too real
I'm also of the belief that Walter truly cared for Jesse (referring to him often as "son"), being closer to him than he was his actual son. In part, that's probably due to his having no one else to share in his victories and having something of a colleague. But even after Jesse quit cooking, I don't think Walt ever intended to kill him.
I remember watching breaking bad for the first time in 2017 - 2018 when I was in 10th grade chemistry and this episode among others in season 2 were my favorites. That was a good time for me, breaking bad helped me to really get interested in the chemistry class I was in at the time.
"It is growth, then decay, then transformation!"
The writing in this show is genius
What about that moment when Jesse hugged Walt tightly and cried after the death of Jane Margolis?That's the time when we see how much Walt loves Jesse and how much Jesse loves Walt.Thats a father-son moment. ❤️
I love this breakdown. I've watched this episode so many times, I show it to people who've never watched the series and have no plans to because you can get so much out of with without the context of the rest of the story. But what I love most is what you've outlined. I've always watched that fit of rage he has and just simply thought he was pissed that he wouldn't be dying, that it wasn't part of his plan, and that even his own death is not within his control. This video adds so much more to that moment though and now I feel like I can watch it again with a fresh perspective. Thank you! Fantastic work.
This was the episode that made me realize I was in it for the father/son relationship between Walt and Jesse.
"Maybe he likes Breaking Bad"
Who doesn't!
I literally knew in first 1/2/3 episodes that this show is great and will be big.
Its just unique and great.
10 years later and I’m still slightly obsessed,I saw it in real time but it’s like the finale just happened. The time feels as long ago as it was but the show still feels fresh
BB ruined tv for me. It set the bar SO HIGH for any series in my eyes. I loved Better Call Saul, but I literally mourned for months after it ended. I cried my head off and would randomly burst into tears when someone would mention BB to me lololol. I'll admit I'm still obsessed with BB and lost count of how many times I've rewatched it. It's gonna take a miracle to beat BB imo 💙💚🤍🩷
4 days out is my favorite episode by far. The camera work, the scenes, the environment, and the whole plot of the episode was some of the best work I have ever seen imo
Brilliant video. As someone who has just finished watching the show, I completely agree that this was the episode that upped the show in its quality.
When I watched 4 Days Out, it felt...special. You felt like Walt and Jesse had come to a new understanding about each other, and their desperate situation is what drove them closer together in that episode.
In many ways, this is the moment Walt began to view Jesse like a second son.
Oh, and you're goddamn right about this being the last of the 'good times'. There really is a dramatic shift in tone and plot going into season 3, and you kind of long for the simpler times of seasons 1 and 2.
:)
More people need to watch Breaking Bad. It's probably one of the best fiction ever made
Dude it’s nonfiction
@@grobble7321 breaking bad isn't based on actual events
@@kebnymcnugget1950 some of is
@@AlmissaGaming wait really? Which ones?
@@kebnymcnugget1950 there was a high school chemistry teacher (I think also named Walter White) who was secretly who distributed meth and made a lot of money out of it. However, the rest of the series is complete fiction
Along with "The Sopranos," this was my favorite series. Everything about the show was fantastic, the videography, sets, actors, scripts...on and on. Something that the great authors would be proud of since it tells such an epic story. Man against nature, man against man, and man against himself. Somebody told me that once and said it covers the greatest books ever written. You gave an excellent analysis of deep insights into the show. Thank you.
starts out father and son duo making meth together
but went to dowhill because of walt’s greed and power, destroying his own families and best friend betrayal
this is truly tragic for walter white life
“You either die a hero or you live long enough to see yourself become the villain”. Even dying before, Walter would have never could be a hero, but that were what he wants when he finally passes away. Eventually, he found in himself the villain that he tried prevent to become, because he lived enough time to become one.
I always found myself going back to “4 days out” just to watch that episode, I’ve probably watched that episode 100 times & never knew why I enjoyed it so much.
dude i JUST was watching breaking bad and looked up videos going in-depth in some episodes. i was expecting videos years old- i was just in time!!
I love that there’s still video essay type videos about this show so far after the ending. It proves how great it was
This episode stuck with me more than most on my first watch and it was one of my most anticipated upon my first re watch. You put into words my thoughts on this episode and I thank you lol
Excellent analysis. A true surprise. I'm not much of an anime viewer now but if this is the level of thought you bring to your videos then I am here for it.
Would love for you to do a better call Saul video it needs more attention
This episode is just full of great moments. The cook montage, the calculating and celebration of the future profits, and the ending "good news". Not to mention it's peak Jesse/Walt chemistry and lite conflict. Just bickering and friendship. Best early episode imo.
I just finished my third rewatch of the show and my god it’s just the greatest thing on television ever
Four Days Out has always been one of my all time favorite episodes of television EVER. It is indeed a masterpiece. Recently rewatched the series again. And again, this episode more than stands up, and has truly not just stood the test of time, but has gotten better with time. Mostly because we now know how it all ends up, the inevitable fall of all that’s to come. But partly because of its own stand alone power. It could have been a short film and been great. But because it was a two year build up to an apex in what we now know is one of the greatest shows of all time, it was all the more better for being a tv show. This episode, heavy on my nostalgia heartstrings now, is what Walter once described as “a perfect moment in time”. Which he discusses with Jesse in another of my favorite episodes, Fly, in regards to regretting that he had lived past that moment, and in doing so, he’d lived to long.
A: GREAT video.
B: Casually noticed some FFIX music playing lightly around the 4 minute mark- cool to see another fan of a criminally underrated game
Clearly the pilot is when the show became a masterpiece
just wanted to say you had the perfect mix between your voice and the backing music! so many vids today have the music loud enough that its distracting, lol
Thanks!
It's been half a decade since I watched this show and every time I watch it, it somehow gets better. The best show ever. Nothing comes close.
This one goes straight from my Watch Later playlist to my Favorites. I'm surprised I don't think I've seen your videos before, looking forward to seeing more.
Great video as usual, appreciate the use of the Corel theme from FF7 to give off that desert vibe lol
Thank you!
A tv show can get you more invested in a character then a movie ever could...breaking bad is the best thing I’ve ever seen and I’ve seen a lot of movies and tv shows
My wife and I love this episode too, we always quote Jessie, "wait...we're making a robot?" Lol hilarious
Loved this analysis! Been on a BB-RUclips scene/analysis binge and this definitely highlights an episode I previously didn't think much about when thinking about the entirety the series and my favorite moments.
Also - datFF7 track? 👌🏾 A1 usage.
This episode was Breaking Bad tackles slice of life in the desert with just enough grimdark existential crisis tragedy to make things interesting
I recently rewatched, and this episode really stuck out to me too. My reaction was "nothing much happens, but at the same time, everything happens". This episode is a turning point in Walt's psyche.
That episode is somehow funny and serious at the same time.
The idea of them getting stuck in the desert through stupidity and arguing, Jesse's makeshift antenna and Skinny Pete going the wrong way, always makes me laugh... But then you realise, that they're in a life threatening situation where they're going to die of thirst and Walt mistakenly thinks his Cancer is getting worse.. and even when he finds out that he's actually getting better, he's still miserable, which is quite a dark concept.
Jan 1st 2022. Time to start the new year off right, with my 7th rewatch of Breaking Bad!
Came across a few of your vids today and now i really wanna watch lmao
Probably my favorite episode from the first half of the series
For me the scene where he punches the towel dispenser very much reflects Walt’s words in the fly episode, where he laments that he missed the perfect timing to die and had lived for too long. A part of him (a larger part than he knew) actually hoped that the scan results would be bad, so that he could go out like a tragic hero while his family still loved him and remained oblivious to the person he had become. Yet, more time to live gave his family more time to suspect, to grow distant from him, to realize what horrible things he had done for a reason that simply couldn’t be justified anymore.
Loved the scene where Walter explains to Skyler, that he is the breaking bad.
Bravo Vince
So, I discovered your channel just last night and am already resuming my binge this morning of all of your BB videos I can find. Not only do I find your commentary and analysis so beautifully spot on, but I really enjoying reading your comments section. I am moving thru my binge much more slowly, because of this. I feel as if I have found my BB home and true family....such a thoughtful, funny and intelligent community! While I have never been a fan of anime and video games, (therefore ignorant of these genres of potential bliss?).....now I am intrigued about these worlds as well! After all, if you all love and appreciate the BB world as much as I do, then you gotta have great taste, right?? I'm so curious and intrigued. Thanks to all of you! I'm very glad to have found you.
When I watched the scene where Walt gets the news for the first time, I felt like his relief was faked on behalf of his family. to me, the face he makes as he embraces Skylar is one of pain and worry rather than relief, and he's having genuine anxiety over the fact the he may have to face the consequences for his actions, rather than let it all wash away with his death.
That’s an interesting interpretation but I can’t say I agree. I think his reaction is one of pure genuine relief upon hearing that he’s in remission, particularly because he assumed the opposite. The acting indicates that to me. And then only when he’s alone does the rage begin to come in, because he can properly, genuinely reflect on what this means with regards to his meth production. Makes logical sense as well.
@@Aleczandxr interesting to me how the scene can be interpreted so differently. One thing is for sure Bryan Cranston's performance is amazing. Thanks for the reply, loved the video. Always felt like something was special about the episode but could never place my finger on what.
Watching this, I thought the same about his reaction: that the news of his remission left him stranded on an island of his own making.
Walt was devastated by the news of his remission because if you watch season one he got into the cooking meth business because of his lung cancer and he felt that he'd be dead or dying anyway when cops catch up with him.
And this was the moment Walt quit the Meth business and slowly laundered his half of the 4 day cooking session until he died of old age.
I am a huge fan of this show (for the past decade have been recommending this to anyone and everyone).
Loved your analysis.
Awesome.
Great to hear that, glad you loved it :)
you didnt say enough about him constructing the battery that blew me away i loved it
Walt constructing the battery doesn’t have any of the thematic significance that was the point of this video. It was obviously cool, but spending any more time on it than I did given the point of this video would’ve been redundant and unfocused IMO.
Walt's look of pure bewilderment when Jesse picks him up at the airport in the RV always makes me laugh
I love that you used a FF7 remake track. great video!
The reason we the viewers keep coming back to watch the show is that the writers never underestimated us. Every character behaves in a way that allows us to discover the motivations little by little
Breaking bad clips and analysis videos keep popping up in my feed. Guess it's time to binge watch all series for 3rd time
Enjoy the journey....that is this amazing Series.
"You brought a meth lab to the airport?" LMAO Brilliant
Every episode I loved. Even the episode "Fly" cause it is like you get to see some of their emotion in a more calmer setting
"maybe he likes breaking bad"
As he should, it's a great show
There is such elegance to the directing of this show.
The "build a robot" line was apparently from the film crew, they threw it out as an idea and filmed it once principle shooting concluded.
Vince Gilligan saw it and loved it. One of the more memorable misguided Jesse summations out there. Along with the magnets bitch moment.