Grade: 88%
AMC’s BREAKING BAD moves into its final
season this week with “Live Free or Die.” After the usual cryptic
opening set in the near future, the premiere does not set up a new
story. Instead, the events of the hour deal with the aftermath of last
year’s finale. With Gus (Giancarlo Esposito) recently killed, everyone
tries to process that news, and figure out their next step.
Gus may be dead, but Walt (Bryan
Cranston) and the others aren’t out of the woods yet. Remember that
video camera that followed Walt around the lab? So does he. But before
he can get his hands on the footage, Hank (Dean Norris) and the police
take Gus’s laptop as evidence. Locked up in a very secure evidence room,
it seems there is no way that Walt’s nefarious activities won’t come
out. Mike (Jonathan Banks) advises they all run.
Walter White has come a long way on his
journey to becoming a kingpin. In earlier seasons, the former chemistry
teacher would have panicked, or perhaps not known what to do. And Walt
will do something, because he has no intention of uprooting this life he
has built himself, or fleeing from anyone. While Mike doesn’t even
consider any other option, Walt remains calm, and quickly devises a
plan.
Actually, it’s Jesse (Aaron Paul) who
suggests the genesis of the scheme. Again, another character who has
shown a lot of growth. Jesse used to be an idiot junkie. But after
learning much about chemistry and attitude from Walt and Mike, he is
able to keep a clear enough head to remember that magnets can destroy
computers, and that might be something that they can use.
So after Jesse convinces Mike not to
kill Walt, the three of them embark on the crazy mission of driving a
giant junkyard magnet right up to the wall of police headquarters and
cranking it all the way up. This is effective, and while their ride is
sacrificed, they do make a clean get away. They are safe, for now.
Is there anyway that the magnet can be
traced back to them in the upcoming investigation? Many, many criminals
surely have things in the evidence room that they would like destroyed,
and surely there are multiple laptops, even if Gus’s is the only one
shown. But while the magnet may be nondescript, it shouldn’t take the
police long to find the one junkyard in town that has a new one. After
that, it is anyone’s guess how the employees at said junkyard will react
to an interrogation.
Long before that happens, though, there
might be a more immediate problem. The alliance between Mike, Jesse, and
Walt is temporary. Who will fill the power vacuum left by Gus? One of
them, or someone else? If it is someone else, they might stick together a
little while longer. If it’s one of the trio, someone will have to end
up dead, because these are some very strong personalities that just
won’t become subservient.
It won’t be Jesse. Jesse is a follower.
He naively trusts both Mike and Walt, and that will likely be his
undoing, sadly. He may suggest a course of action, but he believes in
them, is willing to stick his neck out for them, and is happy to take
orders, rather than give them. Walt has already used this against Jesse,
manipulating him by poisoning a child. Should Jesse realize this, the
tide may change. But until that happens, Jesse is blind to his friend’s
machinations, which means that he is putting his faith in someone that
he shouldn’t.
Surprisingly, perhaps, Mike has
developed a bit of loyalty towards Jesse. While Mike wants to shoot Walt
immediately, he stands down when Jesse gets in the middle. It could
also very well be that Mike only participates in the magnet plan to
protect Jesse. Their mentor-mentee relationship was formed as another
way to control Jesse, but if Mike’s affection for the lad wasn’t real,
why would he go along with this?
Maybe it will take Mike and Jesse to
bring Walt down, should the true depth of Walt’s dark soul ever be
exposed. Walt has everything that he needs, but after each
accomplishment, he only gets more over confident, and desires more power
and money. This cannot go on forever. Look at Gus, a true power player,
who is eventually stricken down. The play BREAKING BAD presents is a
tragedy if ever there was one, and Walt will not, can not, end up on
top.
Elsewhere, Ted (Christopher Cousins)
wakes out of his coma. This sends Saul (Bob Odenkirk) and Skyler (Anna
Gunn) into a panic, as just before Ted was injured, he was ready to
expose their money laundering. Only a lucky fall saved them then.
Skyler rushes to the hospital to
confront Ted, and see what must be done now. Given how disturbed Skyler
was by Ted’s accident in the first place, as well as her horror at what
Walt has become in killing Gus, it is unlikely she would sign off on any
plan that would cause Ted further harm, no matter what the consequences
to herself. Thank goodness Ted is now compliant, thinking his life is
in danger if he doesn’t keep his mouth shut. Which means that Skyler
shouldn’t have to follow her husband’s descent to protect her family.
What is more surprising is how Walt
reacts to learning about the Ted situation. Previously, Saul and Skyler
kept this issue from Walt. Saul tells Walt the story, and after a bit of
anger, where Walt is clearly threatening Saul, Walt returns home, hugs
his wife, and tells Skyler that she is forgiven. This is arrogant and
creepy, something that plays well on Skyler’s face. What has Walt
become? Does she even recognize who her husband is these days? And can
she ever love a man like this?
BREAKING BAD is a masterful character
study. With only fifteen episodes left, there is a real sense that some
things will soon be coming to a head. Each character is going to have to
figure out what they want, and what they are capable of doing to get
it. There has to be betrayal, because many of these goals will run
counter to each other. If the writing continues to be as good as it
consistently has been for the past four years, viewers are in for one
heck of a finale!
BREAKING BAD’s final season airs Sundays at 10 p.m. ET on AMC.
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