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Breaking bad 5x15♡Uncut Reaction &Review ♡

Granite State

Walt seeks Saul's help in getting his money back; Saul urges Walt to turn himself in; Walt struggles with his new identity and his new home in New Hampshire.

Link:

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/irw1o3cgv51q7y4tg3m8p/Breaking-bad-5x15.mp4?rlkey=0yn7wbdaluq1ng8k1ok4h5a6g&st=qm73u5xf&dl=0

Ps: Next episode is tomorrow.

Breaking bad 5x15♡Uncut Reaction &Review ♡

Comments

I think that the killing of Andrea was, for me, one of the most traumatic scenes in the entire series. Don't get me wrong, all the deaths were horrible but in a weird way, explainable. Andrea's death was brutal and shocking and truly sickened me.

Karl Ward

Something is wrong, I can't seem to open the videos on my account too. Check if you can download

safae mokadem

Is anyone else having issues getting Dropbox files to open? 😩

Shannon

Flynn said the same thing to Walt (Why don't you just die already? Just give up and die) in season one because he was so upset that he didn't want to undergo the cancer treatment. Now he says it because he really wants him gone. He was clearly hoping and waiting to finally hear some explanation from his father, only to have him talk about money like that would matter at all to him after he destroyed their family and (he believes) killed his Uncle. I can't even imagine how that would feel.

Ashley

About Brock finding his mom: It's possible a neighbor would have heard the gunshot and called the police, or looked outside their window to see what was going on.

Henry

The scene with the wedding ring slipping off Walter's finger was a brilliant touch, not just to convey his losing weight from the cancer, but also to symbolize the disintegration of his marriage and family life.

Henry

Honestly, your reaction to Andrea's death pretty much mirrors my own. No matter how many times I've seen this episode over the years, it's probably the most profoundly gut wrenching death on the show. Jane's death was mostly shocking because Walt let it happen when he could have saved her and how it devastated Jesse. And Hank's death was so awful and tragic but there was also an air of inevitably around it, by the nature of his job, he'd always be a cartel target ( even if Walt wasn't around, Gale would've eventually ended up on Hank's radar and then Gus). But Andrea had worked so hard to get herself clean and build a better life for her son and get him away from that lifestyle. Only to be horribly murdered like that. It's so senseless and as you said, the thought of Brock waking up to find his mom like that. And the ramifications that will have on his life going forward, literally horrific to think about. It's such a dark scene and Aaron Paul yet again shows how he's possibly the best actor on the show.

Land Howard Johnston

What an ending, eh? After the horrors of the last episode (and even this one), they still manage to make you root for Heisenberg one more time. So good! It sounds like you've already finished the finale, but when you get around to it, you should check out an 8 minute video on YouTube called "The Terrifying Brilliance of Breaking Bad’s “Granite State”. It basically praises the role that this episode plays in paying off the developments of Ozymandias while setting the stage for Felina. Other franchises sometimes have epic stories that are later undercut by pretending things didn't happen or they setup the next baddie by downplaying the strength of the previous one, like when the MCU's Loki series tried to prop up the time cops by downplaying the Infinity stones as play things (ignored and forgotten in cheap office desk drawers). But by doing so, they made a retrospective mockery of IW and Endgame. And too many shows like The Walking Dead have great episodes, but then they erase the memory of those stories by starting new ones that have no relation to the old ones. In Breaking Bad, however, Ozy and Felina remain as great as they do, in hindsight, because this episode didn't let either one of them down. And it's worth checking out how the writers did that.

Dan

There have definitely been more messed up deaths in Breaking Bad, but this was the most unexpected, most undeserved, and in some ways, most heart-wrenching of the series. The writer who killed Andrea admitted afterward that he didn't realize how big of an impact it would have on the audience, and he said he'd basically become desensitized to it all in the writer's room until he saw Aaron Paul's reaction to it and then it hit him and he felt terrible lol. As far as Todd, my head canon is that he's basically the grown-up version of the redhead kid in the Peekaboo episode. The kid was mute but polite, living in a hostile world of backstabbing but accustomed to the manners he'd seen on television. So it's all mimicry to him because he didn't have the kind of parents to help him internalize what feelings are supposed to feel like. Todd is a polite psychopath, a product of the kind of abusive neglect that Walt's business creates.

Dan


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