Sunday, August 11, 2013

The second half of Breaking Bad series 5 is finally with us. The bad news ? It's the last one.

By ALESSANDRA STANLEY

Television's most popular crystal meth dealers, Jesse Pinkman (left) and chemistry teacher Walter White (right)

Ever since “The Sopranos” ended on a slyly ambiguous note that kept viewers deconstructing it for weeks, shows with artistic ambition cannot come to a mere close. There has to be a finish so big it sets off a tsunami of second-guessing. Once upon a time fans didn’t want their favorite series to end; now audiences clamor for a denouement they can debate forever.

Walter White at work in one of his crystal meth labs

People are already discussing the end of “Mad Men,” and the penultimate season concluded in June: there is an entire season to get through before the curtain falls on Don Draper and his cohorts.
And that kind of anticipation sets the bar pretty high for “Breaking Bad,” the hit AMC series that has seven more episodes to go but is already awash in premature post-mortems. In this era of binge viewing, audiences feel the need to purge — the blogosphere is clogged with comments, communion and speculation.

With the discovery of Walt's copy of Leaves of Grass, local cop Hank realises the notorious drug dealer Heisenberg is his brother-in-law, Walter White

Anticipation is running so high that the show’s creators split the final 16-episode season into two parts. The first half left off last September with a kind of pre-ending: while on the toilet, the Drug Enforcement Administration agent Hank (Dean Norris) at long last realized that his meek, science teacher brother-in-law, Walt (Bryan Cranston), was the drug lord known as Heisenberg.

Sunday’s episode, technically the ninth but in spirit a premiere of the second half of Season 5, picks up the story with a flash forward that echoes that of the actual premiere of Season 5 in July 2012.

Walter and Jesse, flanked by Skyler White, Hank and Hank's wife (right hand side) and their lawyer and partner in crime (left hand side)

It’s about a year after Hank stumbled on the truth, and Walt has morphed again: he has a fake identity, his hair has grown in, his beard is bushy, he wears black-rimmed glasses and has returned to Albuquerque in a car with a New Hampshire license plate (“Live Free or Die”) and a machine gun in the trunk.

It’s not clear what happened to his wife, Skyler (Anna Gunn), his children or his cancer recurrence, but his old house is boarded up and chained, the abandoned pool used by teenagers as a skateboard rink. When his old neighbor sees him in the driveway, she stares, frozen with disbelief and terror, holding a bag of groceries. “Hello, Carol,” he says. The bag slips from her hands and her groceries fall to the ground.

Walter and his wife Skyler stare, stunned, at how much money his crystal meth business has made

And then the story goes back to where it left off a little more than a year ago, moments after Hank finally saw through Walt’s deception.

The series never traveled too far from where it all began: chemistry. In the very first episode, in 2008, Walt was still teaching high school science and didn’t yet know about the lung cancer that would kick off his criminal career. He told his students — the few who were listening — that chemistry is the “science of change” and broke life down to its essence: “It is growth, then decay, then transformation.”

In the years since, “Breaking Bad” has traced the growth of Walt’s empire, its decay and most of all his transformation. Throughout, one thing never changed: Crime didn’t pay.



Killers and liars don’t suffer immediate consequences in shows like “The Sopranos” or “Deadwood” or even “Dexter,” and plenty of bad deeds go unpunished. Cable shows have license to be transgressive, and that means flouting the mores that usually guides broadcast network shows.

For all its audacity, “Breaking Bad” was a throwback to a more elemental code of morality. There is a puritanical lesson to Walt’s life: he becomes a master criminal and ruthless killer with very little to show for it.



source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/12/arts/television/high-bar-has-been-set-for-the-finale-of-breaking-bad.html
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2389411/The-second-half-Breaking-Bad-series-5-finally-The-bad-news--Its-Here-Top-12-Most-Pivotal-Moments-regarded-best-time.html
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