Surprised Total Pro Mike would have gone along,
"I just do what I'm told."
Jesse doesn't want to be a user, he's just blocking out his unhappiness. If Gus/Mike can give him a sense of self-worth, he'll be able and relieved to stop.
― generous loller at dollies (sic), Tuesday, 16 August 2011 02:48 (fourteen years ago)
I understand the psychology. I just find the execution lame. They could have just bought Jesse an adorable puppy and told him "this is now your responsibility!"
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 16 August 2011 02:52 (fourteen years ago)
Haa
― generous loller at dollies (sic), Tuesday, 16 August 2011 03:11 (fourteen years ago)
BTW, anyone else catch Mike coughing some more, esp. in tandem with him telling Jesse not to smoke? Hmmm...
Yep, noted this. As for Gus's plan for Jesse, the two henchmen carrying it out could easily have been killed as well, which just seems totally sloppy and unnecessary.
― Number None, Tuesday, 16 August 2011 09:12 (fourteen years ago)
Loved this episode - so much happened it was crazy
- Sky and Walt back together (for the moment)- Hank nipping at Gus Frings' heels- Jesse possibly turning against Walt- Money laundering is GO
But like, dudes, Walt has now shown up at Los Pollos acting CRAZY and threatening and telling the people there his name. And they have had a loooong good look at him.
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 16 August 2011 09:45 (fourteen years ago)
Yeah, i don't know how Gus is tolerating it really
― Number None, Tuesday, 16 August 2011 09:49 (fourteen years ago)
Even if Gus tolerates it, what happens when Hank starts poking around? "Anybody suspicious been here lately?"
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 16 August 2011 09:52 (fourteen years ago)
Well the Pollos staff are pretty good at keeping their mouths shut
― Number None, Tuesday, 16 August 2011 09:58 (fourteen years ago)
Did they show the chicken restaurant napkin in Gale's apartment before? I can't remember if the numbers on it were explained yet or not.
― little mushroom person (abanana), Tuesday, 16 August 2011 10:07 (fourteen years ago)
Those conspicuous crazy Mexican Terminator twins hung out in Pollos all day. Plenty of people saw them there, and they were involved in the gunning down of a DEA agent mere days later.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 16 August 2011 12:05 (fourteen years ago)
Yes but they were very very quiet. And possibly merely hungry.
― DSMOS has arrived (kenan), Tuesday, 16 August 2011 13:24 (fourteen years ago)
I got the impression that the manager lady maybe knew a little about the business ops. At least enough to protect Gus from angry ppl coming for him in Pollos.
― ilx poster and keen dairy observer (Jenny), Tuesday, 16 August 2011 13:32 (fourteen years ago)
He should promote her to the new Victor.
― Jeff, Tuesday, 16 August 2011 13:34 (fourteen years ago)
It's a twist!
― Jeff, Tuesday, 16 August 2011 13:35 (fourteen years ago)
Oooh, and then we meet her kids.
― it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 16 August 2011 13:36 (fourteen years ago)
FFS what is so difficult about filling glasses with SOMETHING THAT LOOKS LIKE WINE
― Hadrian VIII, den 15 augusti 2011 05:31 (Yesterday) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
lol yes this always bothers me, wine never looks like wine on tv.
― sonderangerbot, Tuesday, 16 August 2011 13:43 (fourteen years ago)
you must not watch cheesy lifetime movies - tons of glasses of wine being sipped (and double clutched, but not as much as coffee cups). note to producers: it is possible!
― it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 16 August 2011 13:54 (fourteen years ago)
pollos manager chick is probably one of my favorite people. so by the book. you know gus LOVES her.i was wondering if everyone who works at that location has been seriously vetted by gus before being allowed to work there.
― tehresa, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 04:28 (fourteen years ago)
So why was Gus's car there anyway?
― little mushroom person (abanana), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 08:28 (fourteen years ago)
surprised at the complaints upthread, that dinner scene was typical of walt. he's always been full of hubris and up his own ass about his meth cooking. it's not that he wants to be a criminal mastermind, it's that he's such a possessive geek about chemistry and is disgusted by the idea anyone else could be better
Thank god someone said this before I could start eyerolling and FFSing. Walt doesn't want to be respected as a criminal mastermind, he wants to be respected as a chemist. Presumably driven at least in part by whatever killed his pre-teaching career. It must have needled to hear a good-but-not-great chemist like Gail being talked up as a genius while Hank was simultaneously talking about meth cooking being this enormous waste of potential for someone who could have done some good in the world. Walt's fatal flaw is his ego - that scene was completely in character.
― Matt DC, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 08:46 (fourteen years ago)
otm
lol, i started watching BB early on, dropped out during season two, caught up this year. i thought that ep was awesome* and completely consistent. a lot of what happens is 'implausible' (like the ploy with jesse, like hank getting warned about the two cartel guys), and a lot of it -- all of it? -- is black comedy, like the dinner party scene.
― cloud computing, robotics, 3G wireless connectivity, Skype, (history mayne), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 08:53 (fourteen years ago)
purpose of explaining my history: i step back in the thread after this sweet ep and errbody's saying it's jumped the shark :/
It's something about the micro nature of the way TV drama is discussed on the internet, when we don't have any idea where it's going or how a scene or episode fits into the wider plot or the overall pacing of the series or whatever. Once I've finished a series of something this cohesive (as opposed to, say, Lost) I never go back and break it down episode-by-episode. Actual dud scenes, fair enough, but Breaking Bad has very few of those.
I took the Jesse/Gus/Mike stuff as Gus testing Jesse's loyalty. They need him there to keep Walt onboard but they have no idea whether they can trust him - he's just killed several of their key guys, he seems to be going completely off-the-rails and doesn't care about whether he lives or dies. After the stick-up Jesse could easily have seen his opportunity, fucked off with the car and money and got the hell out. But he didn't, he returned the car to Mike.
Alternatively, Gus is lulling him into a false sense of security, or trying to drive a wedge between him and Walt. Either way Jesse and Mike in the car was hilarious, I will never tire of seeing bored Jesse dicking around like a restless four-year-old.
― Matt DC, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 09:05 (fourteen years ago)
Also it prolonged the tension of having no idea whether or not Gus or Mike were going to have Jesse killed.
― Matt DC, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 09:06 (fourteen years ago)
I took the Jesse/Gus/Mike stuff as Gus testing Jesse's loyalty.
This is how I saw it too. And for those worried about the different ways it could have gone wrong, I figured Gus hired some local muscle, said "put a scare into these guys - bring a gun but don't load it". If shitheel Jesse actually managed to kill one of them, well, that would just be a bonus.
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 09:11 (fourteen years ago)
Agree that the dinner table scene was totally plausible. I was surprised Walt didn't say anything to Hank when he first read the lab notes, I actually think the writers were careful to ensure that Walt was given several motivations for acting recklessly (the Beneke mug, Jesse hanging out with Mike, Hank's relationship with Walt Jr, Hank bigging up Gale's work AND the drinking) before he said what he did.
Walt's ego and his impression that everyone else is way dumber than him and therefore he can do/say what he likes without consequence has been pretty well established, I think that besides everything else he thinks Hank is beneath him intellectually and doesn't see that Hank is pretty fucking shrewd beneath his bullshitting/jock-ish exterior.
― peligro, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 09:45 (fourteen years ago)
I know this doesn't matter, but in the first episode don't we see Gale's actual notebook? Before Walt ever got involved? Implying that the notebook is Gale's formula, rather than a set of cribnotes for Walt's formula?
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 09:50 (fourteen years ago)
Yeah that's the impression I had. I wondered if maybe Gus had given Gale some of Walt's blue meth to analyse before the two even met, and that the notebook was Gale's approximation of how it was made (it was close to Walt's recipe but flawed somehow)
― peligro, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 09:57 (fourteen years ago)
my memory's a bit cloudy but they'd worked together before this series right? could have made notes then.
― cloud computing, robotics, 3G wireless connectivity, Skype, (history mayne), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 09:59 (fourteen years ago)
what peligro said is how I remember it
― tehresa, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 11:20 (fourteen years ago)
gale said he couldn't get it as pure as walt's and asked gus to work with him
― tehresa, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 11:21 (fourteen years ago)
Gale's notes are from his own research and working with Walt, I'm sure - especially when Gus told him to finish learning in four days instead of six weeks or w'ever
― generous loller at dollies (sic), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 11:36 (fourteen years ago)
That dinner scene was so plausible it didn't need to happen. Which is to say, it's kind of lazy to spend so much time showing Walt getting sloshed on cheap wine just to excuse such an egregious example of his hubris/arrogance/ego run amuck, which anyone who has ever seen this show is so well aware of they didn't really need to underscore it anymore. It was just a weak excuse (but I suppose excusably weak excuse) to get the Hank case rolling again. Which itself was sort of lazy, since earlier in the exact same ep they had Hank finding closure and moving on. They couldn't even wait until the next ep!
Walt's relationship to both Hank and Marie seems to be the pretty standard in-law tolerance. Though they've never established any outright antagonism between them. Hope we get a PT montage of Hank learning to walk again so that he can hit the streets and bring this guy down. He'll be like Columbo on crutches.
Nice to see Walt, Jr. getting so many lines, so much screen time.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:13 (fourteen years ago)
And btw, history mayne is OTM that this whole show has been nothing but black comedy.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:14 (fourteen years ago)
a lot of it -- all of it? -- is black comedy
Oh yeah. Body in the bathtub, meth head under the ATM machine, never forget.
I'm glad folks are defending this last episode. I still really, really enjoy this show immensely and am still affected by it (it is straight up embarrassing how much of it I watch with my face half hidden behind a pillow to try to filter out the intensity).
i was wondering if everyone who works at that location has been seriously vetted by gus before being allowed to work there.
I was, too! On the one hand, it seems reckless to tell too many people about your giant drug cartel, but on the other, you can't run a giant drug cartel without a lot of employees. I'm thinking he vets his employees and pays them really well, promotes from within into the internal workings of the business if they have the aptitude for it. Basically Gus is a really good manager.
Also I kind of wondered if he maybe has an escape route out of his office and that's why his car was there and he was gone, or maybe he saw Walt coming and had New Victor (what is his name?) pick him up.
― ilx poster and keen dairy observer (Jenny), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:15 (fourteen years ago)
I dunno if he necessarily has to tell them he's running a giant drugs cartel
― Number None, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:17 (fourteen years ago)
(it is straight up embarrassing how much of it I watch with my face half hidden behind a pillow to try to filter out the intensity).
As soon as Walt came back to the dinner table and Hank was going on about what a genius Gale was I had to pause the TV and leave the room and sort of compose myself. It is that excruciating
I'm sure Gus has various ways to escape
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:17 (fourteen years ago)
I am so happy you said that. Seriously I was dying all through that scene.
― ilx poster and keen dairy observer (Jenny), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:20 (fourteen years ago)
yeah i often kinda wonder whether the three quarters of the posters on this thread always knit picking shark jumping are like actually watching the show
― ice cr?m, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:23 (fourteen years ago)
See for me, so much of the tension left the show once Walt confessed to Skyler. It feels like it's lost a lot of it's momentum. Probably doesn't help that i can't stand her and find her scenes increasingly unbearable.
― Number None, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:23 (fourteen years ago)
and yes, i am actually watching the show
― Number None, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:24 (fourteen years ago)
The show changes. They couldn't have sustained a whole nother season of Walt/Skyler secrecy/lies/domestic-tension/when-will-she-find-out. I loved that season but I'm glad it's moved on.
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:32 (fourteen years ago)
Oh, i know it had to happen. That doesn't mean i like where the show is right now. I trust the writers though.
― Number None, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:36 (fourteen years ago)
i couldn't disagree with this more.
― LocalGarda, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:51 (fourteen years ago)
plus earlier you weren't saying it was plausible....
― LocalGarda, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:52 (fourteen years ago)
since earlier in the exact same ep they had Hank finding closure and moving on.
nah this is just silly - Hank wasn't finding closure, he wasn't happy about the case being resolved, and he knew his conclusion was too pat, too easy, too unearned, and wrong. The so-called "closure" was just more tension about how unsettled and unhappy he is: he finally started to be ~Hank~ again when he let himself be an actual detective.
― generous loller at dollies (sic), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:53 (fourteen years ago)
exactly...and the whole point was that he was allowing his narkiness to obscure his own common sense. which is why the dinner scene with walt's hubris doing the same thing was interesting, two smart guys letting their own perennial hang-ups
― LocalGarda, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 13:00 (fourteen years ago)
letting their own perennial hang-ups get in the way
See for me, so much of the tension left the show once Walt confessed to Skyler. It feels like it's lost a lot of it's momentum.
The opening episodes of each season are always lower on momentum, they ramp it up as it goes along. But I don't really understand how this could be the case unless your only area of interest was "what will happen when his wife finds out?" Last season had more momentum than most TV I've ever seen.
In any case there's loads of stuff that Skylar doesn't know about just yet. She doesn't know that her husband was nearly killed, she doesn't know that he's at loggerheads with the gang boss and under constant threat, she doesn't know that she and her children might also be in danger. The "no more secrets" pact in this last episode was completely false from Walt's point of view.
And it's going to be painful when Walter Jr realises that both his parents are involved in a gigantic drug operation.
― Matt DC, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 13:21 (fourteen years ago)
Yeah, I'm sure at some point she is going to find out that he has killed people. Going to be interesting to see how she handles that.
― Jeff, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 13:23 (fourteen years ago)