Breaking Bad

Discussion in 'TV Board' started by LKRFN88jp, May 7, 2010.

  1. nexus

    nexus TMB’s TSO
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    I'm drawing a complete blank on who that is :idk:
    edit- not sure how I could forget that scene, one of the better/more suspenseful moments in season 3
     
  2. Perdido Beach

    Perdido Beach I'm also a human being
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    He makes Hank get a warrant to search the RV in the junkyard, delaying him long enough to avoid giving up the RV - and all the "evidence" inside.
     
  3. jrmy

    jrmy For bookings contact Morgan at 702-374-3735
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    Looks like a serial number.
     
  4. CC

    CC Waiting for moments that never come
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    [​IMG]
     
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  5. BearlyHere

    BearlyHere Is this thing on?
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  6. John McGuirk

    John McGuirk member of the blue tiger club
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    gonna start rewatching soon...maybe tonight
     
  7. AtlantaTerp

    AtlantaTerp Well-Known Member
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    No, Saul didn't set them up. The guy who fixed up the RV (Badger's friend), sent them to the old guy to get rid of the RV.
     
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  8. laxjoe

    laxjoe Well-Known Member
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    early review of the early episodes from Sepinwal
    (Note: This column contains mild spoilers for the upcoming season of "Breaking Bad." If you don't want to know anything at all, don't read.)

    Through four seasons of "Breaking Bad," Walter White has been many things: Teacher. Husband. Father. Cancer patient. Meth cook. Aspiring drug lord. Frustrated employee. Mentor. Killer.

    Most of all, though, he's been an escape artist.

    Time and time again, Vince Gilligan and the rest of the "Breaking Bad" writers have placed Walt in one trap after another where the only apparent outcomes have been death or prison. And time and time again, Walt has found a way out of the trap — sometimes through his skills as a world-class chemist, sometimes just through sheer force of will.

    These threats to Walt's life and freedom have been relentless, and they've only increased over time, peaking last season as he engaged in a battle of wits with his ruthless, calculating boss Gus Fring. That season concluded as it had to — and yet more memorably than anyone could have expected — with Walt figuring out how to kill Gus with a bomb in a nursing home.

    When Walt's wife Skyler — whose horror towards her husband has only grown the more she's learned about his second life as the drug dealer known as Heisenberg — asked him what had happened with Gus, Walt's answer was simple, and chilling:

    "I won."

    So we enter the series' fifth and final season (eight episodes will begin airing Sunday at 10 p.m. on AMC, and the remaining eight will air next summer) with Walt in an unusual circumstance: for the first time since he began cooking meth, no one is angling to kill him. And all of the major players in the local meth trade are now dead at either Walt's hand or Gus's. His cancer is in remission, he has no enemies that he's aware of, and as he looks out at the wide-open drug market, he says, "There is gold in the streets, just waiting for someone to come and scoop it up."

    This is Walt flush with victory, and even more arrogant than ever. There are still hiccups, still problems to be solved and straightjackets to be escaped, but he no longer acts like a cornered animal. Instead, he sees himself as the undisputed master of all he surveys, whose victories will now seem inevitable rather than improbable.

    When a colleague asks Walt why he should believe a plan of theirs has succeeded, Walt replies smugly, "Because I say so?"

    This is fascinating new terrain for "Breaking Bad" and its Emmy-winning star Bryan Cranston to explore. The series has carefully, brilliantly chronicled Walt's descent from unassuming teacher to the murderous Heisenberg. And though Walt's behavior has crossed one moral line after another over the years — last season, part of his plot to kill Gus involved poisoning a little boy (non-fatally, but just barely) to regain the loyalty of his partner Jesse — there's always been someone in his path who was even worse, relatively speaking.

    I don't expect Walt to stay unopposed for the remaining 16 hours of the series. Sooner or later, he'll run into trouble with Jesse, or with Gus's former henchman Mike, or Walt's DEA agent brother-in-law Hank. In the early going, though, there is no one to match the great and terrible Heisenberg.

    In the battle of the little monster versus the big monster, you tend to root for the little monster. But what happens when there's only one monster left, and he's the guy you've been rooting for all this time?

    Cranston embraces the opportunity to play a Walt seemingly without limits, and the rest of the cast continues to rise to match him. As Jesse, fellow Emmy winner Aaron Paul also gets to play multiple roles — at various points, he's been Walt's student, partner, surrogate son and enemy — but ultimately, he's Mr. White's emotional victim, and Paul finds new depths of pain to put on display as Jesse ponders all that he's been through and done, always feeling things more deeply than Walt can. Skyler is more knowing of what Walt's become than Jesse, and Anna Gunn does some of her best work in the role to date in the season's early episodes.

    And just as Gus only turned into the role of a lifetime for Giancarlo Esposito after plot logic forced Gilligan to bump off season 3's original villains ahead of schedule, Jonathan Banks gets added responsibility, and reward, as Mike has to adjust to a world where his omnipotent boss got half his face blown off by Walter freaking White. Banks' performance is so weary and lived-in that it barely even matters that Mike so often seems superhumanly competent.

    Even with Walt's apparent victory over all who would seek to deny him, his genius and his strength, "Breaking Bad" is still a perfect model of filmed suspense. There are still moments where you may forget to breathe, like a "Sopranos"-esque scene in a diner where a character is very concerned about who's coming through the front door. And it's still a series that trusts its beautiful visuals to tell the story, like a trip to a foreign country where the subtitles are almost besides the point.

    That international trip eventually leads us to the season's first major new character, Lydia, played by Scottish actress Laura Fraser. Without revealing too much about who she is and why she matters, I'll just say that she's the kind of character we haven't seen before on this show: a high-strung professional who's no doubt supremely confident in her own world, but whose nerves make her seem wildly unsuited to be anywhere near this business.

    Walter White, on the other hand? He was born for this business, even if we couldn't see that when "Breaking Bad" began. Like many niche cable dramas, the show's reputation has only grown over time, which means new viewers initially sample it well after the fact. I've gotten to witness many friends and relatives catch up on episodes I first saw years ago. Inevitably there's a moment in their marathon viewing where each of them will email me to express dismay that this guy they empathized with so much at the start has turned out to be such a horrible human being, but that moment varies from person to person.

    By the time this fifth season begins, though, there's no doubt we're watching a show about the bad guy, and one who's been absolutely corrupted by the absolute power that's close enough to taste.

    The only questions that are left are about how long he'll be able to hold onto that power, how many people around him will suffer in the process, and how many of them will figure out what we've come to know about The One Who Knocks.
     
  9. The Blackfish

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  10. Oracle of Omahawg

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    I think the 8 and 8 split is going to be 8 episodes of Walt getting completely out of control as Heisenberg and then the last 8 will be his spiraling downfall. Not sure how it is going to end though.
     
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  11. laxjoe

    laxjoe Well-Known Member
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    exactly. i'll spoiler my thoughts on that review so if people want to have no idea about anything, don't click
    really really looking forward to arrogant Walter and am excited to hear that the other actors are still elevating their games. i was watching half measure late last week and i forgot how much i liked Mike as a character - dude does a great job.

    with them having walt being unopposed to start out and being very arrogant about his "victory" i think we'll eventually see him in conflict with Mike, Jesse and Hank as the series comes to a close. seems like they're just setting him up to fall (maybe not be killed, but he's obviously going to be challenged - going out on a huge limb there, i know).
    where do you think the international trip is? mexico? columbia?

    basically i'm jsut really excited for sunday
     
  12. hamsterdam

    hamsterdam I wish I knew how to quit you.
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    i really want hank to find out. i am hoping for that result (just to see hank's reaction) more so than anything else.
     
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  13. BearlyHere

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    How much does the sepinwall review spoil? I saw it this morning and wanted to read so bad but I also would like to go in without any preconceived notions of how the eps are gonna be
     
  14. Stylee

    Stylee Well-Known Member
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    Does anyone else feel like this is setting up for someone in WW's family to get killed? With them saying it's over, the attention Hank is going to get being portrayed as the hero, and the agents leaving his house, someone gon' be dead

    I think it happens early too
     
  15. laxjoe

    laxjoe Well-Known Member
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    not a whole lot really. talks about where the story is post Gus (and what that does to Walt's attitude) and talks about (vaguely) a trip but doesn't say when/where or why and mentions a new character describing her, but again, very vaguely. its only something you want to avoid if you want to have literally no idea about season 5.
     
  16. The Blackfish

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    Kind of gives you an idea of what mindset the characters are in in the first few episodes but doesn't spoil anything of consequence. I was happy I read it and I hate all things spoilerish
     
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  17. Jaqen H'ghar

    Jaqen H'ghar Valar Morghulis

    I've always thought that Walt Jr. (I'm not calling him fucking Flynn) would die as a byproduct of Walt's actions. That'll obviously be the end of the line for Skyler and would be a huge crossroads for Walt. I could see the first batch of 8 episodes ending with W2 dying or with Hank finding out about Walt. I also think it's likely that either Walt kills Hank (after he finds out) or Hank kills Walt (would obviously be the finale, and that's how he'd find out who Heisenberg was the whole time).
     
  18. BearlyHere

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  19. What's a good place to get big posters to hang up in the living room?
     
  20. SWIMFAN

    SWIMFAN Waiting for 2016: New President, New Coach
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  21. SWIMFAN

    SWIMFAN Waiting for 2016: New President, New Coach
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    i love reading those things in walt's voice

    JESS-E
     
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  22. SWIMFAN

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  23. Snakes

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    The Sepinwal review was beautifully written. Cannot wait until Sunday.
     
  24. Can I Spliff it

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  25. BearlyHere

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    47 straight, wolfpck and Snakes like this.
  26. BearlyHere

    BearlyHere Is this thing on?
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    just watched "shotgun" again where Walt is at the table with everyone and hank is talking about Gale and how he's a genius and Walt spouts off about how Gale isnt a genius and he thinks he is just copying someone else...holy :facepalm: I wish it showed Skylar slapping the shit out of him after
     
  27. GATOR NATION

    GATOR NATION Member

    Im calling it. walt dies of cancer
     
  28. Mix

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  29. laxjoe

    laxjoe Well-Known Member
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    interview with aaron paul
    http://www.hitfix.com/whats-alan-wa...ul-looks-back-at-jesse-pinkmans-greatest-hits
    'Breaking Bad' star Aaron Paul looks back at Jesse Pinkman's greatest hits

    Before season 5 begins, a look at memorable Jesse moments
    By Alan Sepinwall Wednesday, Jul 11, 2012 9:00 AM








    [​IMG]

    Aaron Paul as Jesse Pinkman on "Breaking Bad."
    Credit: AMC


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    Though "Breaking Bad" will have another eight episodes to run next summer after the eight that start airing Sunday night at 10 on AMC, this is technically the start of the show's final season. So when given the chance to sit down with the show's two leading men, I thought this might be a good time to let each of them revisit some of the most memorable moments for their characters, and what it was like to play those scenes. An epic Bryan Cranston interview is coming later this week (possibly in two parts), as we start with a chat with Aaron Paul about the ever-changing nature of Jesse Pinkman, what it's like to deliver those great monologues, how the famous robot line from "4 Days Out" came to be, and a lot more.

    Let's start at the beginning. I've spoken to Bryan before about how he created the character in part through the costume and hair and makeup choices. How much input did you have in coming up with the way Jesse looks and dresses? Because that's not you.

    Aaron Paul: Zero input. I had no idea. I had a preconceived notion of who I thought this kid was when I read the pilot and auditioned for it. But when I went out to Albuquerque and started trying on the clothes in the wardrobe fitting, I could not believe what he was wearing. But I loved it. It was great. It's literally a costume, like zipping on a different skin. It's exciting.

    So at what point in reading the script or working on that episode do you feel like you found Jesse's voice?

    Aaron Paul: I don't think I found it in the pilot. Because I had no idea where it was heading. I thought he was probably from some messed-up home. I didn't know his background. I felt like he was trying to be something that he really wasn't. I knew that in the beginning. I think finally now he's finding his own footing, and you can see the evolution of his clothes. His wardrobe has definitely changed. Midway through the first season, when you met his family, I felt I had a lock onto who this kid was.

    Vince has said often that Jesse was going to die in the first season. At what point did you know this? Or did you not find out until after the fact?

    Aaron Paul:
    I found out in the first season, towards the end. We were supposed to do nine episodes but ended up doing six plus the pilot. Vince was having lunch with the other writers, and they brought me over and said, "You know, we were going to kill Jesse off in the first season." And I still haven't read the next episode yet! And I go, "Yeah, what does that mean?" Vince says, "Well, that's not going to happen anymore." And I go, "Well, when is it going to happen?" I thought maybe in the next season. They said, no, that was always the pitch that Vince brought around to all the networks: the arc of the first season is that this kid brings Walter White into the drug world, then ends up dying a horrible death and leaves Walt hanging alone. I guess once he shot the pilot, that changed his mind. He wanted to keep Jesse around. Thank God.

    Did you ever find out specifics about how you were going to die?

    Aaron Paul: I feel like I did, but I kind of forget it. I'll just tell stories: I think he died in a crazy gun battle. Or I think it was a meth explosion.

    What was it like the first time you and Bryan were working together in the RV?

    Aaron Paul: It was extremely hot, but fun. The first scene that Bryan and I ever did together was outside of the bank where Walt is giving Jesse the money to buy the Winnebago. That was the first scene we ever shot. And it was instantly fun. The dialogue was, "You are not how I remember you from class — at all." That was the line where he says, "What are you, gonna break bad all of a sudden?" Working in that Winnebago was extremely difficult, because you're shooting in the middle of the desert with a bunch of people, with lights, cameras, extremely hot. But it was so sad to see it meet its demise in season 3. Watching it get crushed was like watching one of your favorite characters die.

    Let's stick with the Winnebago for a second. "4 Days Out," the battery runs down, and it's just the two of you stuck in the desert. You've done a couple of episodes like that. When it's just you and Bryan for an hour, either there or in the superlab chasing the fly, what's the atmosphere like?

    Aaron Paul:
    "4 Days Out," I think it's my favorite episode. It's just so fun. "4 Days Out" and "Fly" felt like a play. It's all on one location, or one set, and the atmosphere is so good. This show is the story of struggle: constantly trying to keep their head above water. With "4 Days Out," it was just a cook in the dessert, and then the battery dies. What are you gonna do? You're fucked. Really, we can't just jump it? No, because the generator caught on fire and you used up all the water. So now we have nothing to drink, and we're going to die here in the middle of the desert.

    I actually tried to not drink water during that shoot. I went almost three days, which is a horrible idea, with no liquid. And then I realized, "This is way too method right now." When I tried to drink water, it was actually too difficult. It was hard for me to swallow. But it's always fun riffing off of Bryan.

    That episode has one of my favorite Jesse bits: when Walt finally figures out how to get the RV started, Jesse starts cheering, "Yeah, science!!!!"


    Related

    Aaron Paul: "Yeah, science!" And the robot line.

    Yes, the robot line is even better.

    Aaron Paul: That was a Friday night, last shot of the night. They checked the gate and said, "That's a wrap." But Nick Shuster, our focus-puller, came up to me and says, "Oh, you should've said, 'What are we gonna build: a robot?' And I go, "Oh, that's brilliant!" And we tell them we need to do it again, there was a problem with the focus, so they called action, and I did it one time, and they decided to keep it in.

    And Bryan didn't break?

    Aaron Paul: No, no. It was great.

    Another one from season 2, where it's mainly you in an enclosed space is "Peekaboo," you're stuck in this horrible house with this horrible couple and their poor, filthy, neglected child, and Jesse is trapped with the horror of what he's wrought. How many days were you in that place?

    Aaron Paul: It was six days, I think. And they actually cleaned the place up a little bit. The person that owned it was a hoarder and had 15 cats, I think. There was just feces all over the place. The smell was unbelievable. But it really put you in that environment. It really showed the audience that Jesse has a heart, that moment where he sees the kid. And that's what's so devastating, is there are so many kids out there like that. And when Jesse saw that little boy, he knew that he had to get this kid out of there. And I loved that.

    I have different friends who come to watch the show at different times, and there always comes a different point for each of them where their sympathies switch from Walt to Jesse. Where do you feel in the show that moment is? Or are you too biased to be able to tell?

    Aaron Paul: I think I might be too biased. But at the beginning of the show, everybody seemed like they hate Jesse. They'd go, "Ohmigod, this idiot!" I'd get that from fans all the time: "You are such an idiot! I hate you!" And I'm like, "Well, okay, thank you?" But now it's so different: "Jesse's such a badass!" Definitely for our female fanbase, "Peekaboo" was the episode where it became, "Ohmigod, I love this character." And some guys were like that, too, but others were, "Whatever, he's going to get everyone killed." But I think by the end of season 2, everyone feels for Jesse. I can't imagine; if you didn't, wouldn't you be kind of a messed-up person? But Jesse wakes up with his girlfriend dead next to him. He's really going through a lot.

    (I've omitted the next minute or so of conversation because it inadvertently wound up suggesting too much about what's coming in the next eight episodes, but in it, Paul briefly discussed Jesse confronting Walt in "End Times" about the poisoning of Brock.)

    I want to ask you about another scene where Jesse actually confronts Walt about all the bad things that have happened to him as a result of their partnership, which is the speech in the hospital bed from "One Minute." What was it like, first reading that when you got the script, and then doing it?


    Aaron Paul: Oh, when I first read that, I was blown away, and then very excited to be able to play that. Jesse has just gone through so much, and it's nice to be able to release all of that inner turmoil on the character that's caused all of this. It's fun, and very rewarding and exhilarating.

    Getting back to Jane, what kind of rig did they put you on for the heroin scene? How was that done?

    Aaron Paul:
    This guy Crow, one of our crew members, built this rig. It was just this platform, the shape of my body, a little smaller, and they just lifted it up. It was so fun! It was incredible. That's what's so great about this show is it's so artistic on every level. They try to push the artistic boundaries. We always have those token "Breaking Bad" shots, the camera underneath the table, or --

    Shovel cam!

    Aaron Paul: Shovel cam! Or the scene where you're inside the dryer, drying the money. Just interesting shots.

    It seems like there's been a steady character progression for Walt, while Jesse seems to change personae much more frequently, not just in each season, but multiple times a season. He starts off the second one, he's the screw-up, then he realizes he can take charge, then he's in the relationship with Jane, then the junkie. How hard is it playing this guy who is so many different people in such a short period of time?

    Aaron Paul: You just take it day by day. What's great about the show is it's honest. You're a product of circumstances. We all are. So a certain thing happens is going to cause you to react a certain way in the future, and it's going to change you. It's exciting. And it can be fun to play the junkie, the character who's messed up and high. But I'm glad I'm not playing that high always. It's nice to play kind of a schizophrenic, crazy character.

    Because the emotions you have to play as this guy are so intense, is it ever hard to leave it at the office?

    Aaron Paul: It is. Sometimes, I used to take it home with me and try and stay in that skin as long as I could. But you realize you don't necessarily have to do that. The writing's so good on this show, they make it easy. What makes it hard is when the writing's not on the page. But sometimes you do take it home. You have to work on your stuff for the next day or week, so you're in that headspace anyway. But it's nice to just wash your face, get in the shower and relax, and not have it within you for a couple of hours. And then jump back into it. Jesse, he's just constantly getting beat down. So it's exhausting to play this character.

    What's the atmosphere like on the set, what's going through your head, when Jesse shoots Gale?

    Aaron Paul: So much is going on. What I do when I take on roles is I try and truly live through the person's skin. So to put myself in that place was very hard. Obviously, I've never killed anybody. But it was difficult, because you know this character didn't want to do this, but he felt he had to. He's killing quite possibly the nicest character that has ever existed on television! Let alone "Breaking Bad." He didn't want to do it. He was terrified, he was scared, but he felt like he had to do it. Jesse was willing to be a martyr in the episode prior, go out guns blazing, and then all of a sudden Walter White shows up and runs those guys over and saves his life. Because Jesse would have died, for sure. He might have gotten off a couple of shots, but he'd have died. So Walt saved his life, and Jesse felt he owed him.

    After this happens, Jesse goes through a kind of nihilist phase, just trying to dull himself out and turning the house into this hellpit. What was it like on set when you're on the set, and the Roomba is flitting about and the speakers are thumping?

    Aaron Paul: It was pure chaos. He has to keep his mind busy, he has to be preoccupied with a lot of stuff. He couldn't be lost in his own thoughts, because then he's just living a nightmare.

    What kind of direction are all the extras in this party being given?

    Aaron Paul: My God. These extras. The background players in the party were brilliant. There was this couple, there's a close-up shot of them having sex in the middle of the living room, and there's blood dripping down the person's back. And they're actually doing that. You can see other scars on his back — this is a thing they do — and she's scraping her nails, and I thought, "That is makeup! There is no way that's real!" And it was real. You realize you were in that environment, and it was very disconcerting. Very hardcore.

    After that, Mike takes Jesse under his wing. Jesse just wants some kind of father figure, right?

    Aaron Paul:
    Yes, he wants to be told what to do. He's striving for that. And he wants a father figure. His parents completely bailed on him. So he needs that in his life.

    You had several years where you and Bryan were very much in sync, then you're doing a lot with Jonathan Banks. What's he like to work with?

    Aaron Paul: Unbelievable. He's brilliant. I love that man and I will be friends with him forever. He's incredible. Just like with Bryan. They're both such mentors of mine, on and off set. I hope to be them when I'm older. It's great. We are blessed to have the cast that we have.

    The last one is the problem dog speech in NA with Jere Burns. They started giving you a lot of speeches after a while. Was there a point where you realized, "Hey, this is something they like to have me do"?

    Aaron Paul: We all get these speeches. I hate to toot my own horn, but we're so blessed to work with this dialogue. The writers on our show are just top-notch. When I read that speech, written by Peter Gould, I went, "Oh my God." When they'd give me one earlier in the series, I'd be terrified: "That's four pages of dialogue. I hope I can pull this off." Like in the hospital bed, I was trying to figure out how to do this, because there's so many different ways. You don't want to do it one note. There are so many layers. With this one, it's perfect because it was a confession. It gave Jesse an opportunity to confess his sins, and he absolutely needs to do it to someone. Even though he was talking about a dog, he was able to confess to everyone and say, "No, it's not okay! It's not about self-acceptance! Fuck you! What you're teaching us is wrong!" And Jesse believes that he should never be forgiven, ever. He needs to be punished. It was really, as an actor playing this character, it was a nice release.

    A lot of the time when you do these speeches, the camera's got you in a pretty tight close-up, and yet in the scene as constructed, you're delivering it to Bryan or Jere or whomever. Are they there beside the camera, or are you playing it to the camera as if it's them?

    Aaron Paul:
    No, they're there. Sometimes they're behind the camera. But I have to say, all the background players in that scene were so great. They were all just in the moment as well. They weren't just sitting there. It really helped. I really felt like I was there. That's the goal: to feel like you're transported into a different world. It's all about make-believe, and playing pretend. And that's why we do it.
     
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  30. bic

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    Also watched "Half Measures" the other night when it was on late on AMC and remembered how much I like Mike. Really hoping he plays a significant role for the rest of the show.
     
  31. Lorne Malvo

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    Mike is badass, have always enjoyed his character.
     
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  32. miles

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    Looks like theyre moving Walter into full badass mode.
     
  33. miles

    miles All I know is my gut says, maybe
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    "Im gonna need some assurance." (You won't kill me)

    "I assure you I could kill ya from way over here."
     
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  34. Clutch

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    so how can i get ready for the next season in the next 4 days?
     
  35. BearlyHere

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    I'll spoiler this for the people who didn't watch the video in the link I posted, but I recommend you do

    I had thought Jesse and Walt were gonna be going head to head this last season, but the preview made it seem like Jesse was once again back on team Walt and was gonna be his sidekick again.
     
  36. BearlyHere

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  37. Lorne Malvo

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    Torrance.
     
  38. Clutch

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    No way i'm watching that many episodes in the next few days
     
  39. Todd Bonzales

    Todd Bonzales Sex with old ladies for money aaaand bear traps.
    Donor
    Ohio State BuckeyesCleveland BrownsUSA RugbyTiger WoodsOhio BobcatsCleveland CavaliersCleveland IndiansOlympics

    You can do it. We believe in you.

    Honestly, if you start watching the first season, the rest will take care of itself. You'll up up at 3am thinking, "Weh...well...maybe jus...maybe just one more episode."
     
    wes tegg likes this.
  40. DeToxRox

    DeToxRox Uncle T
    Staff Donor TMB OG
    Detroit PistonsDetroit LionsDetroit Red WingsWolverhampton WanderersDetroit Tigers

    Because you are so busy getting laid and stuff right?
     
  41. Lorne Malvo

    Lorne Malvo Aces!
    Staff Donor TMB OG

    What the hell else are you doing clutch?
     
  42. Clutch

    Clutch Thanks
    Donor
    Buffalo BillsNew York KnicksNew York RangersEvertonNew York Yankees

    baseball, grad parties, going to Siena
     
  43. Lorne Malvo

    Lorne Malvo Aces!
    Staff Donor TMB OG

    None of those are as awesome as Breaking Bad.
     
  44. Todd Bonzales

    Todd Bonzales Sex with old ladies for money aaaand bear traps.
    Donor
    Ohio State BuckeyesCleveland BrownsUSA RugbyTiger WoodsOhio BobcatsCleveland CavaliersCleveland IndiansOlympics

    I don't see "working" on that list, so you have plenty of time.
     
  45. BearlyHere

    BearlyHere Is this thing on?
    Donor
    Baylor BearsHouston AstrosHouston Oilers

    yeah fuck face if I can roll through season 4 for the second time whilst working 40+ you can do it..quit being a pussy
     
  46. Stylee

    Stylee Well-Known Member
    Donor
    Miami HurricanesMiami MarlinsMiami Dolphins

    Your user name used to be BlueberryMuffins... You have time.
     
  47. NCHusker

    NCHusker We named our yam Pam. It rhymed.
    Donor TMB OG
    Nebraska CornhuskersChicago CubsDenver NuggetsKansas City ChiefsAvengersUnited States Men's National Soccer TeamUSA BasketballBig 8 ConferenceBig Ten ConferenceNebraska Cornhuskers alt

    and by 3am you mean 5 am
     
  48. slhorn

    slhorn Well-Known Member
    Donor

    Rewatching season 4 with my buddy who has never seen it before. This is my second time through this season. I can't wait till Sunday
     
  49. Can I Spliff it

    Can I Spliff it Is Butterbean okay?
    Donor

    This is a really strange position for Walt, isn't it? No one above him setting rules. Now he has total authority rather than fighting authority. All he has to do is avoid vice at this point and get a handle on the drug lord thing.
     
  50. spagett

    spagett Got ya, spooked ya
    Donor

    Walt hinted at that tonight when he was on Letterman
     
  51. Buster Mahomes

    Buster Mahomes "Don't buy a Lincoln you'll look like a pimp."
    Donor
    Iowa HawkeyesChicago CubsLos Angeles LakersKansas City Chiefs

    As I posted awhile back, I was going to try and run through seasons 1-4 again before season 5 began. I just finishes season 1 last night so I decided to forgo seasons 2-3 and just start season 4. Hopefully I'll be able to finish it by the time season 5 begins. Knocked out 2 episodes tonight... it's gonna be tough.