
I agree about Ozymandias not being the finale. It would have felt very off and probably wouldn't be as well-received and critically acclaimed if it was.
Felina I feel like is damn good ending, especially the scene with Walt and Skyler.
And I guess since I'm stating my unpopular BB opinions, I kind of think the flash forward sequences were unneeded in retrospect. They did get attention and all, but since they basically just got glossed over again in the present time story they didn't really have much purpose. Would've been just better to incorporate that linearly into the story, I think.
I think it would've been similar to The Sopranos. A lot of people would've been pissed, but I think it's something that would've been more fondly looked at over time. I don't know, the whole finale felt kind of sterile to me. That's probably not a good word to use, since it implies something bad, which I don't mean it as bad, but I tend to be a fan of ambiguity. Like I said, I haven't rewatched it since the original airing, so I may feel differently when I watch those last episodes again.
That's when I lost it. When Walt visits her alone and smoking. Then she comments on how bad he looks. The way she says it was very touching. Later when Walt asks to see Holly and to see him so content, and to add to that the slight smile on Skylar's face to see Walt with their child. The whole scene was beautiful and was a goodbye between them. The saddest part was the last moments he had with his son.
You didn't even mention my favorite part of the show (and one of my favorite parts of the whole series).
"I did it for me."
Agreed. I always felt as if Walt saw Jesse as an heir to his "empire". He obviously couldn't leave the business to his son when he died. I think he wanted the Heisenberg name to live on with Jesse.There was no Heisenberg, Walt was Heisenberg. And if there was an Heisenberg, then he looked at Jesse as if he was his son.
I think it did have a purpose. It served as a nice bit of foreshadowing. Throughout the whole 5th season, you see him gaining more money than ever and instead of worry if that other shoe will drop, the flash-forward let you know that the beginning that things will fall apart. Instead of focusing as much on the if, you focus more on the when and how.
I also think the jarringly different appearance and the alternate identity emphasizes how far things have fallen, which is a nice (and escalative if that's a word) juxtaposition to how season 4 ended with his greatest victory, possibly in life.
Walt loved Jesse. Heisenberg didn't.

Thought this was interesting. Apparently someone filed a suit against Apple for buying a season pass for season 5. Some of you noticed (and there was some debate in here) that AMC/Sony, for some reason, really demphasized the fact that the last episodes were actually part of the fifth season, and eventually ended up dubbing them under "The Final Season". Well, this customer basically said that the pass he bought for season 5 promised the entire season, it was misleading when he had to drop another $22.99 for the last episodes. Apple has been issuing $22.99 in store credit for customers who bought the "Final Season" season pass. Here's the article I read about it:
http://www.darkhorizons.com/features/1687/dark-doctrine-heisenberg-s-last-victim
I thought it was odd how they kept walking around the fact that the season was split. I guess it was a marketing idea, they didn't want people thinking they were "only" getting half a season with a part attached to the title. Calling the last episodes "The Final Season" is especially deceiving, too. Guess it was a marketing idea that blew up, though. I wonder if this is going to reach to Amazon and other VOD places that do the season pass thing.