Season 4, Episode 11
It all comes
together
“It’s not all supermodels and speed boats, you know.”
-Hank
It all makes sense now. I don’t just mean the various
plot threads that have been existing concurrently this season, though I will
get to those soon. I’m talking about the subtle, character-driven long game and
Vince Gilligan and his team have been playing at. I have written quite a few
times this season about how I’ve found the move disorienting, if still
fantastic, but it still feels good to be back to the traditional Breaking Bad visceral style of
storytelling. There is something almost comforting about how unnerving those
last ten minutes were, about how uncertain it makes us about the characters’
futures, about the “hol-eeee sheeeeeiittt” it engenders in us.
This is most likely going to be one of those episodes
that becomes defined by its closing minutes, but for once, I’m okay with that.
Though entertaining as always, I didn’t feel as if everything that preceded
that closing segment was as tight and sharp as it could have been. Yet those
closing minutes make up for it, and what
really makes them work, what makes the sequence go that extra mile, is something
that I’ve always enjoyed watching TV show doing: finally setting off that long
domino train it’s been building up all summer, as all of the season’s element
finally click into place. Let’s recount all that the show has done to get us
this far:
Walt vs. Jesse.
Though it’s been around so long that you could almost consider it a staple of
the show, Walt and Jesse’s antagonistic relationship took a real turn this season,
a not just in the fact that the anger between the two seemed to increase. No,
this season became a real reflection time for the two of them, as both Gus and
the show have sought to keep them apart. Though it helped us get to this moment
narrative-wise, it was also subtly priming us for this moment on an emotional
level, so that we could let go of a relationship once so central to the show’s
proceedings.
Though the audience on some level must have known that
this time apart wasn’t going to end well for Walt, it’s hard to let go of that perceived
bond between the two of them. Walt and Jesse have been through a lot, and though
they more or less hate each other, they still feel an obligation to one
another, a sense to protect one another. I thought that was a truth we would
always be able to count on. But instead we had to watch as Jesse heartbreakingly
threw Walt out of his life, knowing full well that he was handing him over to
Gus’ men. Yes, Jesse did make sure that Walt didn’t die, but on some level he
also had to know that taking away Walt’s life would ruin him, and possibly send
him over the edge. And that’s even colder.
The Cartel Unrest.
Up until this point, Gus wasn’t such a bad dude. Sure, he was a criminal, but in the world of meth
dealers, he was calm and rational, someone who’s actions one could reasonably predict
his actions. But starting with “Box Cutter”, we saw a change in Gus, as his
problems with the cartel grew larger, he grew more and more rash, desperate, and,
in many ways, crazy.
After attempting to play nice failed, Gus suddenly
through caution to the wind, vigorously and violently going after the people
those that tried to destroy his business, the same people who were responsible
for the death of his best friend (and possible lover.) And then, after he had
destroyed his enemy had secured his business, risking his life in the process,
he had one final move to do before being safe again. He was on the warpath and he
couldn’t stop himself. He had to destroy the unpredictable Walt.
The Return of Ted.
Let’s face it, after season three, it seemed as if Ted’s role in the show was
over. He had helped to push Skyler and Walt as far apart as they would go, to
help reveal the antagonism and darkness that comes with a broken marriage, and eventually
a divorce. But by season’s end, they seemed to be on the mend, as they now had
a common goal to work towards with the carwash. For the past few weeks, Ted’s
return has seemed like an anomaly, something to help keep Anna Gunn busy while
the action was elsewhere.
I should have known better, really. In fact, I even
expected Ted’s actions to affect Walt in some way; but my fears were along that
of Skyler’s – that Ted’s inaction would have the IRS looking into Walt’s
largess. But Ted was never the problem. Skyler was. She pushed, and she pushed,
and she pushed, and then she sent thugs until Ted wrote the check to the IRS,
effectively freeing Skyler and Walt from having to worry about the government coming
after them. Only that final solution came at a very bad time, at a time that
Walt needed the money for a solution of his own.
Hank’s Solo
Adventures. Much like Ted, Hank’s return seemed as if it would meet up with
the A-plot almost tangentially, just another worry for Walt to deal with.
Which, given that that’s been Hank’s role for most of the show’s life, seemed like
an acceptable thing for him to do this season as well. But Hank’s accident had
awoken something in him. He became more focused, more obsessive, and when geodes
and crystals wouldn’t do it for him, he turned once again to solving cases. His
determination was so great that nobody – not Marie, not his bosses, not Walt – could
get him to stop. And it’s that determination that became the true thorn in Gus’
side, the thing that broke the camel’s back. It’s Walt’s inability to stop Hank
that led to Gus firing him.
Walter’s Pitiful
Nature. Except not really. All
season long, the show has been doing the counterintuitive but highly
fascinating move of slowly breaking down Walt’s badass exterior and replacing it
by revealing the pitiful, selfish, neurotic, petulant person inside. And as
much as Walt likes to make himself the victim, it’s his inability to play it
cool and be diplomatic that’s landed him in this latest debacle. He was the one
that bugged Jesse’s car out of paranoia, inflicting the final blow to their relationship.
It was his acting out, his refusal to keep his head down that landed him on Gus’
radar, which made him a factor worth eliminating. It was his insistence that he
could keep Hank away from Gus’ meth business – a goal he should have realized
that he couldn’t do – that was the final straw to Gus firing him.
And it was his insistence that he couldn’t die because
Jesse wouldn’t allow it, his one final attempt to prove he’s smarter than Gus,
that put Hank’s life in danger and had those of his family threatened. And that
meant turning to a plan B. But this Plan B wasn’t an escape plan so much as an
alternate route, and that rash decision meant that he had no safe stash of money
to count on. By failing to stow away money that no one else could touch, he has
effectively screwed himself. No wonder Walt, lying there in the dirty crawl
space beneath the house, finally defeated, stopped crying and started laughing
manically as the camera panned away, subtly shaking in time with the bouts of creepy
guffaws that rocked his body.
Quotes and Other
Thoughts:
Another awesome thing about tonight’s episode that I wasn’t
able to fit in above was that makeshift hospital that Gus has setup in Nowhere,
Mexico, complete with extra blood for him, Mike, and Jesse. And those doctors leaving
Mike to die in the car, while they saved Gus? They may be cold, but they also
know who butters their bread.
One thing I’m not entirely sure on: Where did all the
money go? I mean, I know Ted took away $600K and change, but I seem to recall
Walt admitting that he makes upward of $7 million a year. I’m guessing that the
money has to be somewhere (they were awfully worried about the attention it
might bring if they deposited it in a bank), and presumably they can go and get
it right? I’m probably forgetting something; Breaking Bad has never had problems with plot holes before.
Oh, and so Ted’s dead. Though that has no real impact on
Walt’s immediate situation – the money was gone by the time Ted was dead/Walt
needed it – but that dead body’s probably going to come back and bite them in
the ass at some point.
Man, BB really
likes breaking out that bleeped f-bomb in the “previously on” segment, don’t
they? It’s almost as if they’re touting their creative freedom over every show
that isn’t on basic cable.
I don’t know how they managed it, but that long shot of
Walt, Gus, et. al. in the desert, with the clouds passing by overhead and
shrouding them in shadow was just too cool for words.
“Frozen yogurt always taste like ice cream.” “Well then I
feel sorry for your tastebuds.”
“It kinda feels like one of those cones they put on a dog
to keep it from licking it’s balls.”
“Huell, you happy?” “Reason'bly.” “What would make you
unhappy?” “This little mofo not doing what he’s being told.”
“Unless you don’t have cable, in which case it’s gonna
suck.”
“You’re just pressing buttons and it’s making you do
magical stuff.”
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