It ends in a very huge, unapologetic, Breaking Bad way.
This.
Also,
"I did it! I killed Krazy 8, I ran over those two drug dealers, and I knew just how much Lily Of The Valley to Give Brawk soooah heee wouuuuuld nooot dieeeee!!!!"
=
The first time ever in this series that something has struck me as convenient and/or lazy writing.
Maybe my opinion will change over multiple viewings, but A+ otherwise.
Hate Jesse.
You're absolutely wrong on every level and I can't even begin to take you seriously if you believe that scene is jumping the shark. That's nice.
The ENTIRE series has given us time after time where Walt chooses his pride over logic; dat drunk dinner scene? In this scene Walt is in fight or flight mode and is under the impression that Jesse is burning his money, not to mention the fact that he has refused to kill him up until Jesse had become too out of control. He cares for him, he's angry and he is driving like a lunatic; that's believable dialogue. Everyone always brings up the **** they've done for the other person when they're arguing.
Sorry, jumping the shark? That's nice.
You're absolutely wrong on every level and I can't even begin to take you seriously if you believe that scene is jumping the shark. That's nice.
The ENTIRE series has given us time after time where Walt chooses his pride over logic; dat drunk dinner scene? In this scene Walt is in fight or flight mode and is under the impression that Jesse is burning his money, not to mention the fact that he has refused to kill him up until Jesse had become too out of control. He cares for him, he's angry and he is driving like a lunatic; that's believable dialogue. Everyone always brings up the **** they've done for the other person when they're arguing.
Sorry, jumping the shark? That's nice.
You're absolutely wrong on every level and I can't even begin to take you seriously if you believe that scene is jumping the shark. That's nice.
The ENTIRE series has given us time after time where Walt chooses his pride over logic; dat drunk dinner scene? In this scene Walt is in fight or flight mode and is under the impression that Jesse is burning his money, not to mention the fact that he has refused to kill him up until Jesse had become too out of control. He cares for him, he's angry and he is driving like a lunatic; that's believable dialogue. Everyone always brings up the **** they've done for the other person when they're arguing.
Sorry, jumping the shark? That's nice.
I heard that the next episode is supposedly the biggest and best episode of season 5, or maybe even the entire series.
It's going to be directed by Rian Johnson and, according to Gilligan, is the best episode of the SERIES.
I heard that the next episode is supposedly the biggest and best episode of season 5, or maybe even the entire series.
You're absolutely wrong on every level and I can't even begin to take you seriously if you believe that scene is jumping the shark. That's nice.
The ENTIRE series has given us time after time where Walt chooses his pride over logic; dat drunk dinner scene? In this scene Walt is in fight or flight mode and is under the impression that Jesse is burning his money, not to mention the fact that he has refused to kill him up until Jesse had become too out of control. He cares for him, he's angry and he is driving like a lunatic; that's believable dialogue. Everyone always brings up the **** they've done for the other person when they're arguing.
Sorry, jumping the shark? That's nice.
I still don't get how people think the "convenient confession" was just that, convenient. And detailed. Do people not realize how people react after certain situations or under certain circumstances. I dunno I still don't see any problem with it what so ever.
Posters here are acting as if we've never seen Walt do anything dumb out of vanity or arrogance.
You're nice.
You're also exactly right about one thing. Walt does react impulsively and emotionally when he's feeling insulted, panicked, or threatened. However, the dialogue in that scene had him laying everything out on a table complete with a silk tablecloth, lit candles, and a little card that says "Reserved", akin to the villain needlessly detailing his evil plan to the seemingly defeated hero only to have the hero use that information to save the day just in time.
First misuse of the spitting gif.