"When it comes to TV shows, it’s easy to forget the importance of perception. We can think of an episode, or an entire season, as a sort of single entity, and then act like that entity can be marked as “good” or “bad,” quality-wise. Simple enough, right? Like, “The third season of Breaking Bad is one of the best seasons of any show in the history of television.” That’s a bold statement, and it’s certainly possible to disagree with it, but nobody argues that you can’t say it at all. And once it’s said, if you do agree with it, that group of 13 episodes becomes more than its individual parts. You rewatch it, you see connections between scenes you might not have noticed before, that might not even have been intended by the show’s creators. And when you go into the next season, you expect that level of quality to continue, which is good and bad. On the plus side, it means every new scene, even the most mundane, will be viewed with an eye presuming genius. On the down side, if those new scenes don’t start delivering on the same (and I mean the exact same) promises the last season provided, people will get restless. It’s a dangerous line to walk."
--Zach Handlen (recapping the firs episode of Season 4 of Sons of Anarchy)
A proper analysis of "Problem Dog"
Aug. 29th, 2011 06:03 pmIt was an exciting episode and yes Aaron Paul was amazing once again. It's interesting that everybody and their uncle say that it's the best episode of the season so far, given that it was rather Walter-light.
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** ETA: I know, it turned into a long review, as usual.
How will Breaking Bad end?
Aug. 27th, 2011 12:45 pm"He's just a brilliant chemist with plenty of nerve and a few clever tricks up his sleeve. Beyond that, he's a mess, and from certain angles rather pathetic. Although he carries himself with a lot more confidence than he did before the cancer struck and unleashed his inner antihero, at times you look at Walt and see not Heisenberg, the dapper wraith, but Walter White, the guy who evangelized about carbon and winced whenever Hank reminded him of what a wimp he was.
Walt is at once overconfident and hopelessly neurotic. He remembers what it was like to be a white-collar enunch and beta-male punching bag and is terrified that he'll have to return to that place again. So he lets his pride eclipse his rationality and derail his self-preservation instinct. He's got that Willy Loman/Shelly "The Machine" Levine sense of desperation, that secret fear that everyone things him weak and useless, and that each time he opens his mouth he confirms the world's low estimate of his manliness. Sometimes these fears come through even when Walt's coming on like a demonically terrifying alpha male, a Wonder Bread avenger. You can see it in the eyes of drug dealers and crime bosses. They flinch when he's up in their faces, but there's always a bit of bewilderment in their eyes, because no man who looks and sounds like Walt is supposed to be talking to them that way. The experience doesn't compute. Walt's secret weapon isn't that he's scary. It's that he's so weird that he puts truly scary men on the defensive."
But I hope that Seitz is wrong about the way the series will end...( speculation )
To be or not to be the boss
Aug. 22nd, 2011 04:02 pm( Read more... )
All caught up
Aug. 13th, 2011 01:41 pmTim Goodman wrote a good analysis of the last two episodes and the themes of season 4 (thanks to
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I really should stop watching any other tv shows when Breaking Bad is currently on. It's so brillant, both in writing, acting and in regard to the cinematography, that it isn't fair to other series to be seen along.
Yet I still watched the True Blood and Torchwood episodes I had missed.
Concering Miracle Day, I must say that the two last episodes showed a certain improvement but that Americanized version of Torchwood just doesn't work for me. ( Read more... )
As for True Blood, it's a bit less boring now than in the beginning of the season and the series had its moments but it's hardly quality tv. ( Read more... )
I'm also watching 90's show these days...
I have been having an OZ dvd marathon (a birthday present!) for weeks and falling in love with the show all over again. It was truly a groundbreaking tv shows and a masterpiece in terms of originality and characters study. Eammon Walker was so gorgeous as Kareem Said, Dean Winters so charming as survivor and Iago-like Ryan O'Reilly, and I love Rita Moreno as Sister Pete, father Mukada...and oh Miguel Alvarez' tragic fate still breaks my heart!
And it's funny to notice that there were so many actors who would be on The Wire years later, who appeared there, either as regulars (Bodie used to be Kenny Wangler!) or guests playing hacks or prisoners (Daniels, Avon Barksdale, Carter, Herc, Lester!). Also, I had forgotten that Battista from Dexter used to be an inmate in Emerald City (when Dexter started I only recognised Gloria) .
Sometimes it's just soooo obvious that there's a huge gap between the greatest tv shows and entertaining and efficient tv shows (which are already so much better than most of the tv crap people watch).
That said, entertainment can be good too, when it's done well. I'm still watching my way through Babylon 5 (currently I'm halfway in season 2) and loving the ride. I wouldn't put the show in my pantheon and it has a bit aged already (much more than OZ), but it's a lot of fun and I've grown fond of the characters who are more subtle than it appeared at first. I rather adore Garibaldi, G'Kar and Lennier, I think that Londo's journey is quite interesting. I'm pleased that Sinclair has been replaced by Sheridan aka Bruce Boxleitner
I know, I really watch a lot of television this Summer...
"Thirty-Eight Snub "
Jul. 25th, 2011 03:00 pmIt was again a very good episode and the opening scene with Jim Beaver and the lines he spoke had to be a nod at Deadwood !!!!
Oh and Jesse, Jesse, Jesse....Aaron Paul was amazing again.
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But as Alan Sepinwall said: "It helps, of course, to be working with a bunch of world-class actors in this scenario - to have Cranston and Paul and Giancarlo Esposito and Jonathan Banks be able to say so much when they're not saying anything at all."
By the way the quotation is from a good article which is a spot-on review: http://www.hitfix.com/blogs/whats-alan-watching/posts/breaking-bad-box-cutter-the-waiting-is-the-hardest-part
It wasn't the best BB episode but it was a great opener and it lived up to the reputation of what is the best tv series on television. And while keeping true to its spirit and identity, the show dared to change a few things we were used to...or, to use a chemistry metaphor, to slightly alter its own formula.
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Now I'm going to rewatch the episode again!
*ETA: ( Read more... )
1) Breaking Bad season 4. I watched "Peekaboo", "Negro y Azul"*, "4 days Out"(one of my favourites, I just love bottle episodes that focus on Walt and Jess and have them bonding), "ABQ" yesterday evening (yeah I went to bed very late, I blame the nap I had in the afternoon), and I skimmed through season 3 today before rewatching "Full Measures". I didn't rewatch "The Fly", best tv episode in years, because I had watched it not so long ago.
If I can't find the episode online tomorrow evening I will be like a meth-head longing for her dose! With the show being listed # 1 in almost all the Best 2010 tv series lists released in the media at the beginning of the year, the expectations about season 4 are very high.
2) Meeting up with Mr Magic tomorrow afternoon. I have reread certain notes I took and some parts of the chapters I translated from Latin, and I think I will able to talk about my topic and my work this year, without making a fool of myself...hopefully.
Okay, maybe I should reread a few things.
Can you tell that I'm a bit edgy?
* speaking of that episode I can't resist re-posting the video clip they made as the cold open! My crazy show, I love you so.
BB Marathon goes on
Jul. 16th, 2011 09:20 pmSince my last post I finisehd season 1 and started season 2, I watched "Cancer Man", "Gray Matter", "Crazy handful of Nothing", "A No Rough Stuff Deal", "Seven Thirty Seven", "Grilled". The beautiful cinematography, the dark humour, the funny lines and the clever writing of the show never cease to amaze me.
"Cancer Man" is mostly a filler, but "Gray Matter" provides insights, interesting background info, a nice parallel between our two "heroes" (and the title is so significant) and the hilarious "talking pillow" scene; "A No Rough Stuff Deal" and "Seven Thirty Seven" are bridge episodes between season 1 and season 2; but "Crazy Handful of Nothing" and "Grilled" are among the best BB episodes. They would deserve my attention...Unfortuantely I have to choose between watching and writing!
Here are a few thoughts about the end of season 1 and the beginning of season 2.
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I'm going to select my favourite S. 2 episodes from now on for I will never get it done before season 4 premieres!
ETA: I'm not the only one to think this is one of the best tv shows ever. Many articles on the return of the show tomorrow...
TV.com - Why Breaking Bad is better then everything else on TV
Newsday - Will Walter Profit on Breaking Bad?
Boston Globe - A Gripping Portrait of Change
AOL TV - Breaking Bad returns at the top of its game
Huffington Post - Breaking Bad: The best dramatic show on TV begins another season
Chuck Barney's review (via Kansas City Star) - Breaking Bad still unbroken
NY Daily News - Breaking Bad Review: Deep, dark story examines inner workings of good characters gone bad
Hollywood.com - Breaking Bad: Breaking the rules of television
Entertainment Weekly TV review - Breaking Bad
Washington Post - TV: On Breaking Bad, beautiful wounds in a land of disenchantment
The Hollywood Reporter - Breaking Bad: Dark side of the dream
City Weekly - Breaking Bad review
I Screen You Screen - Breaking Bad returns for fourth season: Thank the freaking Lord
NY Times - Shattering all vestiges of innocence
Time Mag - Elements of Style
BB marathon - season 1
Jul. 14th, 2011 05:31 pmI can't wait !
Jul. 5th, 2011 11:25 amThere's an excellent (yet quite spoilerish) article from Newsweek where Andrew Romano talks with lead actor Bryan Cranston about "the larger themes of the show, which traces the moral decline of Cranston’s character, Walter White, a timid high-school chemistry teacher who discovers he has terminal lung cancer and decides to pay his family’s bills by cooking the finest crystal meth in New Mexico.. "
Here are enlightening but non spoilerish bits:
"It’s a show—an unpredictable, cinematic, potboiling, page-turner of a show—about how people become dangerous. The key word is “become.” Since The Sopranos debuted a dozen years ago, the best characters on TV, from Deadwood’s Al Swearengen to Dexter’s eponymous serial killer, have been antagonistic protagonists—men and women who are neither wholly good nor wholly bad, but morally mixed up, like real people, and captivating for their complexity. At first glance, Walter White would seem to fit the voguish antihero mold. But unlike his cable counterparts, Walt started out a deeply sympathetic figure and then gradually morphed, over three seasons of escalating immorality, into an almost unrecognizable creep. [...]
So far, the “experiment”—Gilligan’s term—has paid off: the darker Walt has gotten, the brighter the show’s prospects have become. “Our show is like our drug,” Cranston says as we walk through Walt’s dormant meth lab. “It’s addictive.” He’s right: Breaking Bad’s black wit and lavish cinematography—director of photography Michael Slovis loves to linger on New Mexico’s ochre deserts and streaking cirrus clouds—make it seem less like a cable drama than some lost Coen Brothers thriller. Which may help explain why the ratings for the season-two premiere exceeded the previous season’s average by more than 40 percent, and the season-three opener added another 40 percent to that number, putting it roughly on par with AMC’s flagship, Mad Men. Meanwhile, Cranston has won three consecutive outstanding lead-actor Emmys, and Aaron Paul, who plays Walt’s maladroit sidekick, Jesse Pinkman, added his own supporting-actor statuette in 2010. No less a narrative ace than Stephen King has called Breaking Bad “the best scripted show on television.” I’d go a step further and say that, right now, it’s the best program on TV, period. [...]
When Breaking Bad returns, it should have the sort of momentum that helped convert cult favorite The Wire into a canonical drama at the same stage in its run; years of “you have to watch this” buzz, both in the press and around the water cooler, seem poised to pay off. But the show’s structure poses a huge risk as well. Every time Gilligan and his team nudge Walt closer to the dark side, they make it harder for viewers to care about his fate. Which means each season is trickier to create than the last. “Breaking Bad hopefully gains new viewers with every episode,” Gilligan says. “But if I’m being honest, I have to think that we’re losing viewers as well. There are some people who shake loose and say, ‘This guy is too damn dark. I can’t root for him anymore.’ The secret is to make sure Walt’s always fascinating, even if people find it tougher and tougher to sympathize with him. [...]
Unlike most other television dramas, which tend to peak early, Breaking Bad has gained steam with each season. [...]
Throughout, the two male leads have been masterly, maintaining the credibility and comic spirit of their scientist-meets-street-punk relationship through some of the most wrenching plot twists ever attempted on television. Paul in particular has blossomed in recent years, transforming his character from a rather one-dimensional brat (who was originally scheduled to die early on) into what Gilligan calls the “moral center” of the show. [...]
But at heart, it’s Walter White’s ongoing transformation that hooks us. That’s the addiction: getting to know a person so well, through television, that when he goes bad, we can begin to comprehend something that real life simply doesn’t allow us to comprehend—how people become dangerous. ”
The article makes very good points but I would have added that the secret is that, although Walt has been becoming darker and darker, and quite unredeemable as a person, the relationship between Walt and Jesse has become so gripping, twisted and yet endearing, that you can't stop watching. No matter how unlikable and manipulative Walter White becomes and how toxic he is for people around him, there's love still, and humanity is there, through that bond he shares with others, especially with his "meth son", Jesse Pinkman. I can't think of another "tv couple" that touching and powerful!
Now should I watch the final season of Deadwood before BB returns or should I save it for later when I will suffer from BB withdrawal?
Go Team Science , yo!!!!
Jan. 4th, 2011 11:26 amToo bad I can't embed the youtube video, you'll have to click on the link, but this anime is perfect. The final dedication made me all "awwww"
I scored 100%, BITCH !!!!
10 best television episodes of 2010, yo!
Dec. 21st, 2010 12:03 pm![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-syndicated.gif)
I would have added an episode from FRINGE (probably "The Plateau") but I'm rather satisfied, and "Fly" was indeed an unforgettable moment of television.
1. Fly, “Breaking Bad.” Two guys spend a night in a secret meth lab, chasing a fly. That shouldn’t work as an engrossing episode of television, yet Fly is the single best hour of TV this year. What could be dull or silly in pedsetrian hands managed, instead, to showcase everything that is amazing about “Breaking Bad,” from the writing to the direction to the consistently wonderful performances of Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul. One Minute almost made this list and, yes, it’s a fanstastic episode with the most intense minute of television this year, but there’s a quiet beauty in Fly which we rarely get to see on TV.
Usually I don't want to know what kind of relationship actors have in real life. Part of the magic, either in movies or on tv, is believing in a love that actors only pretend to feel.
However Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul obviously love each other and it's extremely endearing. Cranston had tears in his eyes while Aaron was receiving his Emmy on stage and there's this picture showing how happy and proud he was.

I know it's silly but hearing Cranston say that Aaron is like a son to him made me feel good. It's life imitating art since Jesse is Walter's surrogate son.

