First time Walt actually told the truth about something big. Unfortunately, by this point, with all the lies he’s told there was no way they were gonna believe him
Yeah, but at this point it's almost as if the truth is just a technicality. I don't think there's much difference to them between "I killed uncle Hank" and "I hired some white supremacists to kill my meth business associate and they ended up killing uncle Hank". Maybe Jerry Springer would prefer the latter
Really even if they knew the truth, it would be the same thing. Hank got killed but Walt tried to save him. Ok. Who killed Hank? How did Jack know even know about Hank or get near him?
@@MrTambourineMan. All Walt is concerned right now are two things 1- He didnt pull the trigger 2- He REALLY doesnt want to think about how he did aim the gun at Hank's head pretty much
nah. as always walt has to leave details out to fit his narrative. he forgot to mention that he tried to save hank from his own hitman call. master manipulator at work. it was always about protecting himself.
Imagine being in Flynn’s position. He literally went from another average day to suddenly finding out his father his a drug kingpin and murderer, and his mother was complicit. Literally his entire view on his parents changed in an instant. He still looks at life with that innocence of black and white. And then he gets home and finds Walt. And then he finds out that Hank, his idol and hero that he looks up to, is dead. And he believes his own father killed him. His entire world was changed forever in the span of a few hours. How would you react in his position?
The problem is him, still not fully understanding the situation, sides with Skylar and lies that Walt attacked her when the opposite transpired. Him calling the police is an L but his actions somewhat make sense.
@@KingFloch88 based department says calling the police on the person you think killed your loved one and you were just told was a meth kingpin is an L move
My favourite part of this scene is right after Flynn attacks Walt to protect Skylar, Walt yells “what the hell is wrong with you? We’re a family!” But then it shows Flynn and Skylar cowering in fear as the camera slowly pulls back to reveal Walt is all alone. He has no family. He’s made his choice. The camera pull back to show him alone is brilliant.
That camera shot of Flynn shielding Skylar as they both stare at Walt in sheer terror gave me literal goosebumps. Such a tragic and chilling scene. Followed by Walt's hearbroken whimpering "we're a family" is one of the most heartbreaking moments in the entire series. 😢😢
Ozymandias is such a smart name for the episode too, for those who don’t know it’s a poem about an ancient leader who loses all of his power and it’s meant to symbolise how having power will not last forever - for obvious reasons this is just like the episode edit: thank god I had high school English class so that I could analyse breaking bad more effectively
it also gives an interesting interpretation of the poem if we apply walt's situation, the "king of kings" was never much of a great man to begin with and his arrogant boast to "look upon my works ye mighty and despair" was just a small man's attempt to look big
The poem is bullshit, as the real life inspiration of it is exactly the opposite of what the poet implies. The country founded by The King of Kings is still a prominent political identity today, and he left a trail that'd be walked by those wishing to recapture his legacy for thousands of years after his death. Even still the Iranians of today patiently await the arrival of the next Saoshyant. The poet focuses entirely on the material aspect of the King of Kings' legacy, which is appropriate for a pretentious little ignorant western. The poem is not unlike reading hot takes on twitter, just worded in a way that sounds poignant and nice. Heisenberg similarly also left a trail which will have its fair share of aspiring criminals and his grave will be visited, like the tombs of the great conquerors of old to receive his blessing.
I hated Skyler at first. With retrospect, it might be one of the best character in the Serie. The producer wanted us to hate her while praising for Walt. Like you said tho, in this episode, everything flips upside down. Even if I hate Ryan Johnson, I can't deny the fact that he gave us great scenes at the right time and just the right amount of stuff. Sadly, it takes a bit of talent to write an episode about a fricking fly o.O
@@mr.monkey354 besides cheating on walt, i didnt find a single reason to hate her, like yeah she was bit annoying, but i think the fanbase is just misogynist shit
@@TomPlayczFnaFMcAostatni Launders money for Ted (no objective gain) Fucks Ted to get back at Walt (no objective gain) Gives money to Ted (no objective gain, it was a ramification of an earlier fuckup) Goes along with Walt's money laundering, doesn't report him to the police, takes advantage of the benefits but reaps none of the consequences. Huh. And that's just off the top of my head. Walter is a fucking terrible human being but assuming that Skyler holds any kind of moral high ground in this show absolutely baffles me. The only morally correct characters are Walt Jr and Holly.
I grew up around parents that fought a lot and I always thought this scene was horrifically accurate to what it was like. It’s genuinely one of the most uncomfortable things I’ve ever watched, especially with everybody’s performances.
100%. Walt yelling reminded me of my dad trying to convince my mom he was right, the tussle with the knife reminded me of watching my parents fall on the floor in a fucked-up wrestling match. It hits hard. I'm lucky and very glad they've changed. I hope you're doing alright.
Yes and the way Walt uses the bullshit family excuse, his oversaturated ego, and his decision to kidnap the baby reminds me of my dad too much to the point where I almost couldn't finish watching BB. Never seen anything like that on TV.
My parents fought a lot too.. cops and ambulances were always there! Mom was an alcoholic and dad was too but a meth head as well.. my siblings and I were always dragged into it everytime my mom would try to leave with her but my dad would yell and constantly wrestle her.. it was bone chilling here knowing how similar it was to mine.. the acting is phenomenal but the scene hit too close to home.. instead a knife it was a pipe that my dad viciously beat my mom up with.. she didn’t wake up I really thought she was dead but simply knocked out.. traumatizing.. breaking bad is one of the best shows ever
In the final scene with her running after Walt, you should watch the behind the scenes. It's very intense and she really struggled emotionally with that bit
@@revisjamesit’s a dark show I’ve watched lots of behind the scenes you can tell it’s a struggle to play such complex troubled characters it can feel so real Anna deserved better some people can’t tell reality from fiction
@Messwithmitchie you summed up my thoughts completely man. It's very hard to play a character as complex and well made as someone like Skylar or Walt. Making a technically morally correct character unlikeable is a hard line to walk and people should be praising it not sending death threats
To be completely honest, the thing that broke me when i saw this scene where the screams of Walt Jr. during the fight "Mom! Dad! Please stop! Mom!", the delivery on these lines are simply amazing. I always thought of Walt Jr. as one of my favorite characters in the show, he was just a teenager, doing teenager stuff, with an unfortunate disability, but you could clearly see that he was pure at heart, i would even dare to say he was the most innocent character on the entire show, but here he was watching his parents fight and was forced to choose. He also just found out his father is a drug kingpin and thinks he killed his uncle, who he always saw as a model compared to his father. The emotions just killed me when i saw this, i needed to pause the episode and lay on my bed for 5 minutes
It was always a meme to pick on all his parts as just "eating breakfast" or dinner or he's always just there, but that was always the intention I think. He is in fact just a teenager who never gets involved in any of the main plots of the show which makes this scene all the more heartbreaking because this is the moment he discovers the truth about his dad and it's when his dad is the biggest monster he can be. Imagine if Junior found out during Walt's battle of wits against Gus or after his kidnapping by Tuco. Would it have been as defensive or harsh of a reaction? Would he convince him to go to the cops like Skylar? That's not to say he should be "okay" with Walt's actions. But the fact he doesn't discover his dad's true identity until after Hank dies is very sad. He will never believe his dad at this point that he got involved in the drug business to secure finances for his family.
my favorite part in the whole series is his acting in this scene, specifically when he is on the ground shielding skylar from walt. breaks my heart every time
@@Rollwithit699 Is this bait? Walt jr isn't entitled or ungrateful he's a literal child going through some real traumatic shit between his parents. Not only that but he has a disability which makes him even weaker and sensitive by nature. It doesn't mean he's a bad character tho, that's what makes him a good character. You can really feel however u want about walt jr, but the common consensus is that he belongs in the character lineup just as much as anyone else
Sometimes I think that BB is getting overanalyzed and even Vince Gilligan would be like "wow that's actually cool, i didn't know that" But now I'm sure Vince is a genious
Can you imagine Vince looking at the comments section of a breaking bad clip and seeing a random guy with confederate flag profile pic explain how Walt is actually a good guy and Vince is a genius for writing such a great character lmao
Every time I rewatch the show I notice something with Skylar's attire. In the beginning of the show she dresses kind of flowy and free, almost youthful, in the middle she starts dressing sexier, possibly as a sign of rebellion from her marriage and a hint toward the oncoming infidelity. when she begins the laundromat sneaky business she dresses darker and more corporate, like she's now in on the dirty business her husband started. at the end, particularly in ozymandias, and in the scene when Hank nearly arrests her, she is dressed in pastels that reflect her timid, hopeless and submissive disposition while everything gets out of hand. I haven't heard anyone else notice this. am i just crazy?
Breaking Bad had tons of thought put into the costume design. I saw a wonderful video on how it utilizes colors, I’d recommend searching up “breaking bad color theory”. Apparently Vince told the costume designers specifically what colors he wanted in each scene to exemplify the characters best
@@salamanderhillbillyweasel1629 No hes not Vince Gilligan put a ton of thought into every outfit every character wore and when they wore it search up “breaking bad color theory”
the part where skylar says “put on your seatbelt it’s not safe” and walt jr says “ur shittin me right?” actually is the funniest piece of dialogue in breaking bad history in the most intense episode ever 😂
Skyler had some of the best lines in the whole show. She gave me goosebumps when she said "I don’t need to hear any of your bullshit rationales. I’m in it now. I’m compromised. But I will not have my children living in a house where dealing drugs and hurting people and killing people is shrugged off as ‘shit happens!"
Skyler's screams while she runs to save Holly haunts me to this day it never fails to give me the most gross heavy and devastating feeling. This is truly the greatest scene in media despite how depressing it really is.
What makes Ozymandias the best episode of television is that everything we thought that was going to happen from the first episode is payed off and showed in this episode. We didn’t know the exact details but we knew family will be destroyed in some fashion 5 years after the pilot aired. It’s like a slow but explosive reaction waiting to happen.
i think that the conflict in ozymandias felt so painful because it felt the most real. a shootout using turrets isn't an every day scene, while scenes of domestic abuse are. this is every day, and even not abuse but just the way walt insults skyler through the phone before returning holly, and especially skylers a thousand yard stare felt all too real for a show that's disconnected from reality for so many of us
@@rain-gx1lj that was the point of the shot of Skyler's face, stone-faced but listening intently, conveying that she understood that Walt was lying to protect them
@@Coldcloves As soon as he imitated Skylar in a completely out of character portrayal of her pontifications it was clear that Walt knew he was being listened and was portraying her as someone who was forced on doing any bad action she was involved as an accomplice.
One of my favorite aspects of this episode is that it isn’t the finale. Hell, it isn’t even the second to last episode. We get two whole episodes after, to just sit in our own shame at ever having rooted for Walt at any point.
Walt did shitty things throughout. Letting Jane die was an early one. He gets to the point where you completely hate him and he has given up, and then he does everything possible to make things right. Or if not right, better. Gets money to his family, apologizes to Skyler, avenges Hank by killing all of the Nazis, frees Jesse and died admiring chemistry equipment.
“If you knew about it this whole time, then you’re just as bad as him.” Holy shit we (the audience) are literally skylar in that moment. We’ve watched Walt let an innocent girl die, poison a child, and mentally abuse his wife, and yet we somehow still paint him as the good guy.
Because we, as skyler, also watch walt good side, and how he transformed, Marié and hank were close friends of the family, but they didnt live with walt. But anyways it happen with all villains, if the villain have a good backstory, we can think of him as a victim, and as a good person. But also there is the other way and walter didnt only manipulated his family but also the audience, so we are like a type of jesse.
@@ShFred Yeah, I was gonna say.. He had good reason letting her die. For his own personal privacy. It’s not morally good, but good for his goals and confidentiality maintenance. Because she essentially blackmailed Walt to give Jesse his money when he was under influence of cocaine. Threatening to expose Walt’s secrets and illegal activity. She wasn’t helpful or good for Jesse, and she was an extreme threat to Walt. So she is far from innocent. Some may say, oh wow. She’s actually innocent because she tried to expose a drug dealer. But just how moral is she if she does drugs anyway? A consumer of a product is no more innocent than a producer. In this drug related circumstance.
Walt chooses to tell Jesse that at that moment because he blames Jesse for Hank’s death so because that happened he decides to hurt and crush Jesse because Jesse just crushed Walt
@@JohnSmith-wh2ob also Jesse ratted him out to the DEA and teamed up with Hank against Walt which in Walt's eyes was the biggest form of betrayal. Even in Walt's confession he never mentions Jesse once. He was feeling so much pain, loss, betrayal, anger, and hatred he felt that was the only card he had left against Jesse. It's also worth noting Walt never intended for him to be a meth slave, he thought he'd be questioned, maybe beaten a little, and then killed. He never expected to send Jesse into that kind of suffering
@@poggerwhite can you blame him though? Walt was extremely exploitative of him. He never truly seemed to care about him, and never really seemed to take any of his problems seriously. I kinda stopped respecting Walt after he never tried to console Jesse for killing Gale, which was honestly so painful to watch for me. I sympathized with Jesse way more than Walt throughout the show
@@parkourguyyy I was more trying to rationalize Walt's mindset. Jesse IS the protagonist of the show and of course I was rooting for him all the way. The "I watched Jane die" line makes my stomach drop every time, the way he says it so cold while Jesse is surrounded by Neo Nazis and can't fight back. Its brutal and when I found out he poisoned Brock I wanted to throw something at my TV. But I understand Walt as well, he's objectively wrong but I understand it. No though, I don't blame Jesse for him deciding to give up Walt after everything he did to him
@@parkourguyyy I was soooo excited when Hank said "You really wanna burn him down? Let's do it together." That's one of the best lines in the show in my opinion
I love how you end the video with Flynn saying "If all this is true, and you knew about it, then you're as bad as him," with no commentary, because everyone watching now realizes he's not just talking to Skylar there.
I actually originally recorded a final line that said "Flynn was talking to us in the car." Had a big back-and-forth on whether or not to include it. Glad the point got across!
I feel like Ozymandias was a big ass slap to the face of the fans who thought Walter was the badass hero and Skyler the whiny bitch. Walter begging and sobbing his lungs out at the start, the phone call, Flynn's dialogue...it's too perfect.
i find mfs like u really interesting bro. i aint gon lie this jawn is kinda like a personal thing to me you get what i'm saying. it's just like a personal shirt u feel me, what's really crazy is you wouldn't even wanted this if you aint seen me post it u get what im saying. i dont even think u really dripping like that tbh bro. so go ahead find yourself something to wear bro go open your closet bro this not your closet bro this the internet u get what im saving. this shirt fire though shit
Along with many others, I was feeling the worst for Flynn in that scene. He was never even told what's going on before, and not because he's too young, but because it's illegal. And those memories of the real existing WW website to fund his medical treatment are still clear in my head.
I was thinking that too. It is already a traumatic experience regularly having to watch your parents fight, I can’t imagine how it must feel to watch your family fall apart before your own eyes and your parents descend into madness and violence against each other while you’re near powerless to stop any of it.
@@70sleadgarfieldmug and moments before that you just learnt that your beloved uncle is very possibly dead and you are really not sure if he was murdered by your father or not.
10:55 fun fact this scene made Anna Gunn, the actress for Skylar White, actually breakdown they almost cancelled it because it made her so emotional it was a disturbing scene to act and watch
In fact, Walt wasn’t even supposed to kidnap Holly, Bryan Cranston, the actor that portrays Walter White saw the opportunity and abducted her, the directors liked this SO much that they decided to keep it in the show Bravo Vince! Truly one of the moments of all time
@@randomuser1010 breaking bad wasnt even supposed to be a crime drama, it was meant to be a family-friendly sitcom but bryan cranston started cooking meth on set and vince liked it so much they rolled with it
She broke down because her screen partner of five seasons acted out a kidnapping? C'mon dude. In 9 cases out of 10 these "tHiS AcToR aCtUaLLy BrOkE dOwN" trivias are just bullshit their PR manager gets dumbass redditors to believe and spread to others to make the actor look better.
You forgot the shot after the fight... when walter sees his wife and son on the floor lookin at him in absolute fear and shock... and the camera does a zoom sequence showin how far apart he has come from them... confirming that this is the point he has completely lost his family and there is no going back... heartbreaking
The thing i find rhe most wild about all these video essays, is how often I hear "and we thought walt was the good guy".did that many people really view Walt as a good person? By the end of season 2 he was a monster. I watched to see how the monster would evolve. Protagonists don't need to be morally good.
I first watched the show in eighth grade (too young?), so I think a lot of the nuance and themes of the show went over my head the first time through. I wish that more people watched it with your attitude, to be honest, as I think it's the most accurate one, but if you scroll through these comments, about half of them are saying Walt did nothing wrong which is a little terrifying to me
You're supposed to sympathize with him. You're supposed to go down with him. You're supposed to excuse or even justify his actions. It's not until the end that you get a wakeup call and realize he was the villain all along. That's the main point of the show.
It was easy for me to keep rooting for Walt in the context of a fictional story. But for me the facade shattered after he let Jane die. My egotistical fantasies apparently have a limit! My mom said from the first time Walt lied to his wife she knew what kind of man he was, even if he never became Heisenberg. (And I am certain that was what Vince intended as well.) My mom has had a strong marriage for over 40 years now, forged through fire. There's no room for bullshit in that. On the same note she had a problem with Skylar being a bad parent, but it was never like what the audience did, hating on her in favor of Walt. She wanted them to live happily ever after of course, but there was no facade shattered for her, and I always found that really interesting. Elliots' offer was also another early foundation for Walt's character, take it or leave it. I apparently forgot about that huge moment in favor of fun times haha.
I loved how you pointed out how this episode was in contrast to all the "cool" moments of the show. This whole episode's message to me was "this was all not okay". Walt did terrible things and what happened was not cool or fun, it was horrific. A lot of the show was honestly light hearted despite the dark subject matter, and this episode showed how ugly it all really was.
@@jeffgayzose8129 for real it’s like the people who say cod turns people into mass shooters. If you can’t distinguish fiction from reality you are basically lobotomized
No matter how polished the script is, or how good and telling the cinematography is, Internet discussions about this episode are still some of the cringiest and most hilarious things on this website. It's all just people who missed the point by an astronomical distance, desperately trying to gaslight each other that Walter did nothing wrong and that everything would've been fine if only Skyler had been open to sit down and have sum coffee with her kingpin pathologically lying husband to calmly discuss the intricacies surrounding Hank's brutal murder.
Yeah, I remember watching the Breaking Bad Honest Trailer and both the video and the comments portrayed Skyler as an annoying, nagging bitch of a wife. So when I finally watched the series, I was so confused. Nagging bitch where? Her actions and inactions were overall valid and understandable. But even today, Walt fans vilify the hell out of the characte... and the actress too. It's quite concerning.
I didn't like Walt by the end of the show, but you have to admit that skylar attacking walt with a knife was a stupid decision on her part, especially to do it in front of walt jr.
This scene made me feel really uncomfortable and scared. I just assumed it's just because I'm super sensitive to domestic violence with children and stuff since it reminds me of a couple times when similar stuff has happened when I was a kid. But that explanation and breakdown of the scene made me really appreciate it a lot more now. Good video!
One of the most disturbing parts to me is the fact that he kidnaps Holly knowing that his own life is also in danger.After inadvertently having his brother killed he betrays his own family to prove a point and uses his newborn child as an excuse for his actions,in the illusion that he was trying to save her from their own family despite his own psychopathy.
I don't think he was trying to save his daughter from them, he was desperately trying to hold onto his family and Holly was his last option at that point. By taking her he gave up on Skyler or Walter Jr. ever forgiving him. It was a crime of passion, it wasn't premeditated like you're suggesting. He wanted to take Skyler, Walter Jr., and Holly with him in the truck, but Holly became his only choice after the fight
I think the reason he took Holly is simple. He wasn't planning on keeping her and raising her on the run. He took her because he loved her and knew he might never see his family again and so he stole one last moment with her. But mainly he wasn't thinking. One last selfish act.
@@kevinburch4932 that's what I thought too after I just rewatched it. It seemed like he just took her to spend SOME time with her since he knows his fate and will never be able to see her again. It's obvious how he holds her later, it made me sympathize with him again
um what? what point was he trying to prove? i think you missed the mark entirely on your idea of what happened but to each their own. He had given up on his family and thought the kid was the only thing left of it, he wasnt thinking "i need to take my kid to save her from my craaazy none drug making family!"
I can’t be the only one who ALWAYS saw that knife block as a Chekov’s Gun from the first time it was on the show. I noticed it right away in S1 and thought…. Those ain’t just for cooking
@@Zack29810 Ya, but it's shown clearly near the centre of the frame many times. This is breaking bad, they don't just put random things in a shot repeatedly for no reason
@@Zack29810 no it's not, look at the angle of the camera when it appears. I think it was kind of obvious when they showed them the last time before Skyler used them
@@lilequalityraps1232Planning on rewatching the show I'll keep that in mind but I don't think you need a setup or forshadow for a simple kitchen knife though
Imagine hating Skylar because of how she handled something that most people wouldn't be able to at all. I used to find her annoying until I started getting sober and realized that's how someone would act in true desperation feeling like they're trapped.
She's still an annoying character- you can’t exactly save her from that. And let me remind you that she ‘trapped’ herself by choosing, with her adult mind, to participate in the meth business, without anyone else forcing her to. She is not an innocent victim, and that is a really weird point of view to hold.
@@q3hdi her alternative was to turn Walt in to the DEA, something that would have exposed walts actions to his son, and cost him having a father in his life, same with Holly. while its arguable she got "greedy" trying to just go back to normal life after Walt quit the business, her options were limited. while she's not an innocent party, she is absolutely Walts most tortured victim, so I think we can give her a bit of slack when judging, her arc in the show is being worn down into things Walt was always ok with.
@@q3hdididn't really have much of a choice by the time she fully understood the situation. Most spouses aren't likely to put their partner in prison you know.
@@Listed_Gamer she ignored the advice of her divorce attorney, who would have provided her with all the evidence and protection available under the law. She had a free pass and the perfect opportunity to get out. She chose to delve deeper and deeper into crime as if it were a turn on for her, using the same "for the family" justification Walt had (paying Hank's hospital bills). You're only giving her a break because she's a woman and you think she's incapable of deciding what's right and wrong for herself. In the end, she couldn’t go full gangsta.
Honestly, the family fight is insane. Everything is done so accurately it makes it feel like I'm right there, watching a family have a fight, or like someone recorded an actual fight, or is livestreaming it. Everything is so real. The way things build up so suddenly yet so excruciatingly slowly, just like real life where you know it's going to happen yet it feels so sudden when it actually happens, and the best part? The camera angles and movements. This is almost exactly how I remember my childhood and the way my parents fought. Everything feels so blurry, so rushed, and you have no idea what to do. The sudden cuts and shakes of the camera really put everything into perspective, making the viewer also feel like a victim of Walt. Definitely the best show I've ever seen in my life.
i also like how when skylar chases walt, the shots are far, and it’s arguably the first moment in the show where the conflict between skylar and walt isn’t inside their house, sort of telling us that there’s no turning back now that everything is out in the open.
Being a child who grew up (still growing) in a very violent household, the fight between Walt and Skyler while Flynn is trying to stop them terrified me. The shot of Flynn protecting his mother broke me man.
I mean mom pulled the knife first so idk what ur talking about He doesn’t know anything about Heisenberg but yet they portrayed like he does Didn’t e spect people to be so angry it’s just an opinion I still live breaking bad I was just voicing my opinion
@@SenorCoupon true but he doesn't believe them it just doesn't make sense they portray Skylar as this innocent woman but she is pretty terrible and walt jr worships his dad the whole show and switches on him on a dime but not when his mom slashed his dad with a knife? bad directing this the only point in the show that sucked for me just not a good ending to these characters in my opinion stupid and didn't make sense
you so clearly see them as victims in this scene, far more than ever before in the series. the moment that they're breathing heavy after the fight and walt jr and skyler are cowering in fear below walter feels like that sharp breath and moment of clarity you have after a bout of adrenaline; you can feel walt's view shift as he sees that he's broken the family beyond repair... he sees, even if just for a moment, that he is the scary and evil boogeyman that his wife and son could never have even imagined. really intense. this scene is also such a stark contrast to the rest of the show because it is SO grounded in reality. it's real. families go through horrifically traumatizing things like this , whereas for most people, you're able to look at the rest of the show through lenses of fantasy.
The best shot of the whole series was in this scene and you skipped over it. Around 10:33 when Walter Jr with his arm over his mom looks frightened at heisenberg. Honestly the most heart breaking and confronting shot in the whole series.
Yeah, it's like they're reduced to genuine primal fear and you can see how much it messes with Walt when he sees his family in that state, due to his actions.
I think that scene is stupid Walter jr acted like an idiot in that scene straight up lied to the cops he doesn’t know anything about Heisenberg his mom pulled the knife
@@behindyou3689 lmao am not talking about the context. Yes walter Jr was a idiot. But the shot itself visually was beautiful and haunting. Even if you hate the show you admit. Also you literally sound like your 12 lmaooo. Most people would argue Walt was in the wrong in most of this season.
I like to think there is some form of symbolism in the fact that in his prime walt went from a normal SUV to a nice luxuries Chrysler 300. Then when he is at his breaking point of failure he has to drive a broken down old truck showing that his life couldn't be anymore worse.
I would say that my first time around watching this series, Ozymandias is the episode that did finally break down exactly how far into his monstrosity Walt had dug. I knew he was a monster, but the tone of the show makes you constantly manipulated into the same sick twisted fantasy he's having... believing he has any sort of victory. That his hole-filled plan had any semblance of sense from the beginning. When you watch Breaking Bad a second time, the tone changes. You don't forget this episode, not ever. It completely reshapes how you see everything Walt does, provides a sort of clarity.
I’m just reiterating what everyone is saying really, but the fight scene between Walt and Skylar is so deeply disturbing to me because it is just SO real. You hear the sharp breath, the struggling, the literal fight for survival. You’re watching the complete and utter destruction of a family, a family that will never be together again, whose relationships will never be repaired. It’s like you’re watching all of the characters die at once, or at least you’re watching parts of them die. It’s raw and it’s real and it’s terrifying, just like actual violence that occurs behind closed doors.
Best Breaking Bad scene ever. When Walt’s world crumbles right in front of him, he realises everyone he worked so hard for (or so he says) turn against him. “We’re a family…” it hits him! He’s now alone
In the first 15 seconds of the video, he used the phrase “toxic masculinity” once, and then never brought it up again. Somehow this threw a ton of people into a fit. If hearing that term hurts your feelings so much and makes you unable to sit through the rest of the video, you’re kinda weak.
There is such a thing as toxic masculinity but it is over used by Misandrists, if someone can describe non-toxic masculine traits without describing feminine traits can talk about it.
It's not too terribly subtle of course but I am personally fond of the shot of Walt backing out of their driveway in his decrepit, broken down truck, forcibly ramming into their family car (which is essentially a stereotypical suburban family-type vehicle) and pushing it out of the way so he can make his getaway. In the same sense, by nothing other than his own actions has he forced his family out of his life, with a "dent" that will never truly be repaired. Great video!
I remember dissolving into tears when he leaves with Holly. I have never, in my 50yrs, ever been that emotionally drained and cried that hard watching a television show.
The "Were a family" line killed me. Haven't cried more during any tv show or movie. And the way he says it twice realizing his family has finally turned on him is just so sad.
It hurts every time. It’s so sad. “We’re a family” as Skyler and Flynn are in fear and shock just completely terrified of Walt. The second time he whispers it is what makes it so strong and super sad
To me, his fear is now that now they know that his "we're a family" doesn't mean anything to them. Walt considered Hank family, too. Now Hank is dead and they know he had something to do with his death. They know that they are not safe from him. And that's when it also dawns on Walt that all hope to have them on his side is lost. He has lost and his only chance to have them not turn on him is to leave.
God, Holly’s blood curdling screaming and crying whenever she’s present during a verbal or physical altercation will stick with me for god knows how long.
Rian Johnson got a lot of (maybe deserved) hate for The Last Jedi, but if we learned anything from this episode, it's that he is a great director. Just keep him away from the writers room.
I think his work as director on Breaking Bad and Last Jedi is excellent, and his work as writer of Knives Out is great too, but visually the movie is kind of whatever. Waiting to see him combine those things, 'til then Ozymandias is as close as we have
I’m surprised to hear that people are supposedly still sympathising with him at that point. In my group of friends nobody had any sympathy left for him after season 2 or latest season 3.
Even though you can't justify most of his actions through the whole show, I believe that walt's family was his top priority until this scene. Of course becoming a cold criminal isn't a good to way show you care about your family, but the intentions of everything he's done was to keep his family safe and not have to worry about money. So I do feel bad for him to a certain extent.
6:05 what is note worthy in this shot is that Walt until this point almost always kept lying/not telling the truth. No matter how certain Skyler was he stuck with the act trying to decieve her. Here he almost immidietly give in, because he is not answering Skyler. You caused the death of Hank is almost certainly a thought he is currently dealing with. Skyler is strengthening the inner voice tellinh him that it is his fault, a thought he cannot bear, and he yells in denial because it's a reality he is not willing to accept. Not only does he not want he family to think that, he himself will not tolerate the thought for one second.
I don't get why Skyler is pinned the most hated character in the show..every time i watch it i have more sympathy for her character seeing her husband transform into a hardened criminal and put the whole family in danger. Plus Anna Gunn does such a phenomenal job bringing her character to life
Sht, we are able to see walt as a victim, and thats good writting, or maybe walt also manipulated the audience. But idk, we humans always see a villain like a victim if we see his backstory. Or maybe we can reflect ourselves in walt, how his life is miserable and how he wants to do something big, something to leave a mark, just like all of us wants, we all want to do more rather than just being happy with your shitty life we feel the hate of walt, the hate of being too good at something and end up doing crap.
I never noticed the intensity of the moment of Walt getting the upper hand before. The fact that in his pride he could have killer her had Walt Jr. not tackled him. Thanks for breaking this down and analyzing in such detail.
I really doubt he would’ve killed her. In the fight, she was the aggressor. Then jr lied about it. No matter what hank did, Walt was t willing to kill him. He was willing to go to prison instead, so why should we think he would’ve killed skyler?
@@bennywolfe4357 it’s less about him actually killing her and more about the threat. Plainly, Walt is way more dangerous than his family. With Walt Jr. knowing so little of what happened and thinking that Walt *DID* kill Hank, the threat of also being killed is present in the minds of Skyler and Jr.
Great analysis. Just a note about characters talking over each other - it also happens in another episode where Walt and Flynn are on the phone when Walt is trying to tell him that he's giving them money and Flynn yells at him for killing Hank. It has the crushing line at the end when Walt says "It can't all have been for nothing."
I liked this part of the series too, but I also wonder how it would look to the neighbors or someone who doesn't have any information on what's happening. There's a married couple who argue here and there, but most of it isn't seen by others. Then one day, there's a truck that no one has seen before, with a barrel that could be holding anything in it. The father gets into the truck with the youngest child and the mother is screaming and pleading. The father makes a dramatic exit as he drives off to who knows where, and the mother is yelling and crying in the middle of the street with blood on her clothes. If I was their neighbor or a passerby and I saw that happening, I would wonder what caused that to happen for a long time.
Gets even crazier than that, cause walts whole story was all over the news afterwards, so a in just a few days they'd know exactly what caused that to happen.
My take on the scene is that he took Holly for Skyler’s good. The next scene is where the police are at the house and skyler is on the phone with Walt. He knows that police will be listening to the call so he acts extra monstrous on the phone, threatening her and calling her a bitch, but the whole time he’s crying and you can tell he doesn’t mean what he’s saying. This would give Skyler a much better result in court since the police would believe that any involvement she had in the crimes was just to protect herself and the kids...
I think he initially took Holly because at that point, she was the only family member that still loved him. It isn't until the bathroom scene that he decides to leave Holly at the fire station and call Skyler in order to exonerate her.
@@personman1148 yea i agree. walt admitted that he did everything for himself, but that phone call was the only thing i could see that was genuinely for his family. sure he gave his kids millions of dollars but in a stupid and dangerous way that ended up tearing his family apart and killing a loved one
Breaking bad has been the only show to ever make me shed a couple tears, like fuck dude the connection this show gives you with all the characters and seeing what happened to Jessie and Walt’s family made me feel for them all, to the point where I have moments where I’m like “I hope their doing okay” even though their not real people but just characters in a tv show Like fuck I love this show so much, the characters, the pacing, the writing, the colors, the way it’s filmed, the everything. I honestly can’t thank Vince Gillian and the cast and everyone who worked on the show enough This show was so addicting to watch it’s like crack (I’m currently on the start of Better Call Saul after watching El Camino)
It should be a crime to direct and edit such a gripping piece of television. The scene where Skyler runs behind the truck is perhaps most gut wrenching performance ever seen.
I think the reason why they made this scene so disruptive and so different from all the other "cool" scenes of Breaking Bad is that this is the moment Walt finally has no point to make, no argument, no upper hand, no motive. For 5 seasons, we heard him say he was doing all the most hideous acts "for his family". After Hank's death and during this scene, he just can't use this argument anymore, so now we all know he's just doing all this for himself.
thanks everyone for the kind words! I've been making these video essays not thinking anyone would ever watch them, mostly just for my own fun and I'm pretty shocked this video's pulling over two thousand views. Or over twenty, for that matter. Especially considering my (lack of) audio editing skills. Anyway I'm just honored so many people liked my analysis! :)
I didn't notice any issues with audio edits because I was captivated by the analysis. I've watched the show 3 times through now and you picked up on a lot of detail I never would have thought of. Great job!
In all honesty the audio was the only (ONLY) issue with this video. The jumps between really quiet and loud was a bit frustrating but aside from that 10/10 video trust me. You’re gonna blow up man I’m telling you
Really interesting analysis. Made me think even more about my favourite show. I even picked up Skylar's choice of clothes - she was wearing all blue when on the phone to Walt but then when picking up the knife had just a hint of blue at her wrists. Glorious story telling
I remember the first time I seen the series I was 1,000% into the show and when I have seen this exact scene I was shedding tears as walt was backing up in a old pickup truck kidnapping his daughter in his nice sub urban neighborhood that was once a warm welcoming home to many of his friends and family.. that’s when I knew shit has gone through the roof with Walt, although I still praised him till the end.
Here's a bit of trivia for that very part of the scene: Take a look at the atmosphere of the outdoor shots, right after Walt pulls away. The cast and crew were fighting snow flurries to shoot those scenes, and it was actually below freezing that day. After I watched a behind the scenes video of that scene being shot, it put an entirely new feel on it for me knowing that it was so cold during those shots. Give that scene another watch and tell me what you think afterwards.
This whole sequence in the show blew my mind. I had never been so saddened, awed and horrified all at once while watching anything else on TV ever. My heart literally hurt watching Skyler fall to her knees in the street.
As a person who's went through some personal family issues of my own, I almost nearly cried while watching this scene because it made me relive those memories like no other show ever has, and I felt like, for a few seconds, I was right back to those times; it made me empathize with what walt's family was going through so effectively since I had also encountered similar situations to this one. this was one of the most intense and emotional scenes I had ever watched, and is the reason why i love this show
glad to hear someone felt the same way. things like these happen in homes everyday, maybe not to that dangerous extent, but these scene made me sympathize and relate to skyler more than anything
I appreciate the hell out of people that went to film school after having not really thought much about y’all my whole life. It’s neat having advanced things pointed out to me that I wouldn’t know, like the 30 degree cut rule. Totally can’t recall seeing many scenes violate it…and it has exactly the impact that the rule is meant to avoid.
The “you’re as bad as him” call back at the end of this video is such a savage mirror moment for us the audience! I laughed out loud understanding we all ARE as bad as him… as much as we can be in being ok to continue to watch a fictional character completely obliterate hundreds of lives… cheers you cheeky bastard!
The best part about the episode was that unlike the rest of it where Walt was relatively in control or could weasel himself out of trouble, this episode was realistic and showed the character as the caged hyena he was. It held no punches, very much the third act of the mob movies where everything goes to shit.
I’ve seen that scene of Walt driving off with Holley and I swear it hits me the same every time just as it did the first time. It feels like I’m standing there on the street watching this first hand. Another thing I’d like to mention is this show is easily the best show to ever been on tv. After watching this show any time my parents would have a disagreement at home I would notice myself actually get really scared. But I know it’s just a show. Amazing show will forever be one of my favoites
definitely always felt bad for walt jr as someone who grew up in a home with such hostility and secrets and violence, i could only imagine how constantly confused, hurt, neglected, and lonely he felt
Why would you say he “kidnapped” his own daughter? idk bro, from the way Skylar attacked Walt with a knife and his son lying to the police about what happened, I’d say Holly was in danger being around her mother and brother. Not only does Walt have the legal right as a parent to take his own daughter for a car ride, but Walt could’ve comfortably supported Holly for years with the money he earned. I’d say forget the hysterical wife and the lying, ungrateful son and just live a new life as a single father with his daughter. Those two made their choices by stabbing Walt with a knife and make a false report to the police, so screw ‘em. No money for them I’d say, but Walt has too big of a heart to go through with something like that, and he’s willing to forgive those who wronged him.
@@NiigoMeeks How is that bait? Walt was the one that was had his hand sliced by a hysterical wife that wrongly believed her husband murdered their brother in law, and then their son had the audacity to lie to the police and portray his father as the menace. Do you think the violent wife with a knife and the lying son are in the right here? I’m curious why you’d think so…
@@NiigoMeeks Ah I see, you’re some sort of role-reversing troll, where you troll others by deliberately making baseless troll accusations in order to cause outrage and confusion. That’s kinda clever, but your yawning emoji gave it away. I give your trolling a D+ for creativity, but I’m taking lots of points off since you gave it away in your second reply…
Very nice analysis and I agree pretty much completely with it. I had a very hard time watching this show because I always felt Walt was a bad person. I thought he was vile the whole show, from the very first episode onward and you can really tell the show is trying hard with all the stylization to make you root for him along the way. When I first watched this scene I remember thinking 'finally she's done dealing with this piece of trash'. Felt really bad for his son. His whole world came crashing down around him very rapidly. He makes his choice so quickly and immediately sides with Skylar against Walt that its perfect. In this scene, with the edits and stuff you mention here, Walt Jr. is who we all should always have been: able to look at the actions for what they are, destructive, and not caught up in the glamor and style.
i love this video, but imo the first detail about the difference in the way the scenes were shot was to make the house scenes feel more panicked and the car scenes to feel more tense
The thing I’ve always thought about in this scene is “what are the neighbors thinking right now?” I’ve been the guy the disrupts a quiet street, and I’ve also been the guy being disrupted. Neither are pleasant.
Ok nerd
Woah pinned but only written 4 hours ago on a year old video? Congrats!
based and redpilled
🤓
You gave some nerd a view and a comment..damn
based
“No, no, NO! I tried to _save_ him!”
Cranston earned that Emmy with this line.
it sounds so real, so desperate
@@skyguy1236 it does man, feels all to real
when he says,"were a family!"best line the show
Bryan Cranston is so good his voice is this scene is just Heart breaking. “No no NO!”
First time Walt actually told the truth about something big. Unfortunately, by this point, with all the lies he’s told there was no way they were gonna believe him
The most tragic thing is that this is one of the few scenes Walter is being 100% honest with his family and this time they dont believe a word he says
I mean it’s a classic boy who cried wolf case. He lied so many times, why would they believe him this time?
Yeah, but at this point it's almost as if the truth is just a technicality. I don't think there's much difference to them between "I killed uncle Hank" and "I hired some white supremacists to kill my meth business associate and they ended up killing uncle Hank". Maybe Jerry Springer would prefer the latter
Really even if they knew the truth, it would be the same thing. Hank got killed but Walt tried to save him. Ok. Who killed Hank? How did Jack know even know about Hank or get near him?
@@MrTambourineMan. All Walt is concerned right now are two things
1- He didnt pull the trigger
2- He REALLY doesnt want to think about how he did aim the gun at Hank's head pretty much
nah. as always walt has to leave details out to fit his narrative. he forgot to mention that he tried to save hank from his own hitman call. master manipulator at work. it was always about protecting himself.
Skylar's reaction to her child being kidnapped just about transformed breaking bad into a horror for a moment.
true
She did an amazing job honestly
ZAMN! Distraught at the sight of her missing infant 😍😍
I was rewatching again and felt more afraid of the characters this time. I noticed one episode had REALLY CREEPY MUSIC
@@elsemir breaking bad fans are something else
Imagine being in Flynn’s position. He literally went from another average day to suddenly finding out his father his a drug kingpin and murderer, and his mother was complicit. Literally his entire view on his parents changed in an instant. He still looks at life with that innocence of black and white. And then he gets home and finds Walt. And then he finds out that Hank, his idol and hero that he looks up to, is dead. And he believes his own father killed him. His entire world was changed forever in the span of a few hours. How would you react in his position?
Anyone who is mad at what Jr did here is genuinely psychotic
The problem is him, still not fully understanding the situation, sides with Skylar and lies that Walt attacked her when the opposite transpired. Him calling the police is an L but his actions somewhat make sense.
@@KingFloch88what 💀💀
@@KingFloch88 based department says calling the police on the person you think killed your loved one and you were just told was a meth kingpin is an L move
@@ceptemzorpus OK when you put it that way 💀
My favourite part of this scene is right after Flynn attacks Walt to protect Skylar, Walt yells “what the hell is wrong with you? We’re a family!” But then it shows Flynn and Skylar cowering in fear as the camera slowly pulls back to reveal Walt is all alone. He has no family. He’s made his choice. The camera pull back to show him alone is brilliant.
Don't call him Flynn. That was the most wack shit I have ever seen in a show. His name is Walt Jr.
This couple seconds literally is what makes this show feel so good to watch, my favorite moment in anything, ever.
They shouldn’t even be scared since skylar and JR attacked him first. They did put themselves in that situation tbh
Jr and Skyler are just some ungrateful and judge mental pricks. Walt was making money for the family and doing what he likes to do and is the best at.
@@Bogota02 why are there so many dumb ppl on the internet
My favorite part was when Walter white walked into sauls office and said “hello I am breaking bad” and Saul replied “well then you better call Saul!”
Is that real?
@@P1T4Bot yeah, it happens in season 7
💀
@@NEELZE99 me who just went to click the search bar and type season 7 and realizes there is no season 7
Greatest line in the greatest show of all time 🙏
That camera shot of Flynn shielding Skylar as they both stare at Walt in sheer terror gave me literal goosebumps. Such a tragic and chilling scene. Followed by Walt's hearbroken whimpering "we're a family" is one of the most heartbreaking moments in the entire series. 😢😢
We *were*
Goosebumps of how a lil b!tch skylar is. And how low here loyality was
Flynn lost repect from me in that episode.
@@KurosakiNexus FLYNN lost your respect? because he protected his mother from his father who is a confirmed murderer?
@@KurosakiNexus okay give me one reason. You can't POSSIBLY respect walter right?
Ozymandias is such a smart name for the episode too, for those who don’t know it’s a poem about an ancient leader who loses all of his power and it’s meant to symbolise how having power will not last forever - for obvious reasons this is just like the episode
edit: thank god I had high school English class so that I could analyse breaking bad more effectively
yeah they had bryan cranston read the poem for a teaser/promo when the show was airing. you could probably still find it on here too :+)
It was also set in a desert if I remember it correctly back from English lessons
it also gives an interesting interpretation of the poem if we apply walt's situation, the "king of kings" was never much of a great man to begin with and his arrogant boast to "look upon my works ye mighty and despair" was just a small man's attempt to look big
Whoa!!! Thanks!
The poem is bullshit, as the real life inspiration of it is exactly the opposite of what the poet implies. The country founded by The King of Kings is still a prominent political identity today, and he left a trail that'd be walked by those wishing to recapture his legacy for thousands of years after his death. Even still the Iranians of today patiently await the arrival of the next Saoshyant. The poet focuses entirely on the material aspect of the King of Kings' legacy, which is appropriate for a pretentious little ignorant western. The poem is not unlike reading hot takes on twitter, just worded in a way that sounds poignant and nice.
Heisenberg similarly also left a trail which will have its fair share of aspiring criminals and his grave will be visited, like the tombs of the great conquerors of old to receive his blessing.
when walt says “skyler im breaking bad” and skyler says “nooooo” i got the chills fr
Wish I had time to talk about that. Best line in the whole show
I just spent like 20 minutes trying to find the episode where he says this until I realized I'm pretty sure this is a joke
@@Jake-vr3tn no its not aj oke
I personally found the time he said to Skyler "I am the walking dead" to be more dramatic
I will now become the Breaking Bad (2008-2013)
Anna Gunn deserved all her praises for this scene. her performance as a mother who has just lost her baby in this scene is spine chilling
I hated Skyler at first. With retrospect, it might be one of the best character in the Serie. The producer wanted us to hate her while praising for Walt. Like you said tho, in this episode, everything flips upside down. Even if I hate Ryan Johnson, I can't deny the fact that he gave us great scenes at the right time and just the right amount of stuff. Sadly, it takes a bit of talent to write an episode about a fricking fly o.O
@@Kratos324354 The Fly is one of the best episodes
@@Kratos324354no, vince has stated multiple times that skylar was never meant to be hated
@@mr.monkey354 besides cheating on walt, i didnt find a single reason to hate her, like yeah she was bit annoying, but i think the fanbase is just misogynist shit
@@TomPlayczFnaFMcAostatni
Launders money for Ted (no objective gain)
Fucks Ted to get back at Walt (no objective gain)
Gives money to Ted (no objective gain, it was a ramification of an earlier fuckup)
Goes along with Walt's money laundering, doesn't report him to the police, takes advantage of the benefits but reaps none of the consequences. Huh.
And that's just off the top of my head. Walter is a fucking terrible human being but assuming that Skyler holds any kind of moral high ground in this show absolutely baffles me. The only morally correct characters are Walt Jr and Holly.
I grew up around parents that fought a lot and I always thought this scene was horrifically accurate to what it was like. It’s genuinely one of the most uncomfortable things I’ve ever watched, especially with everybody’s performances.
100%. Walt yelling reminded me of my dad trying to convince my mom he was right, the tussle with the knife reminded me of watching my parents fall on the floor in a fucked-up wrestling match. It hits hard. I'm lucky and very glad they've changed. I hope you're doing alright.
Same that shit hit very close to home growing up in a rough hosehould it made it very hard to watch
In a good way
Yes and the way Walt uses the bullshit family excuse, his oversaturated ego, and his decision to kidnap the baby reminds me of my dad too much to the point where I almost couldn't finish watching BB. Never seen anything like that on TV.
My parents fought a lot too.. cops and ambulances were always there! Mom was an alcoholic and dad was too but a meth head as well.. my siblings and I were always dragged into it everytime my mom would try to leave with her but my dad would yell and constantly wrestle her.. it was bone chilling here knowing how similar it was to mine.. the acting is phenomenal but the scene hit too close to home.. instead a knife it was a pipe that my dad viciously beat my mom up with.. she didn’t wake up I really thought she was dead but simply knocked out.. traumatizing.. breaking bad is one of the best shows ever
Anna Gunns acting in this scene is beyond incredible, so tragic and cruel how the fandom treated her
In the final scene with her running after Walt, you should watch the behind the scenes. It's very intense and she really struggled emotionally with that bit
@@revisjamesit’s a dark show I’ve watched lots of behind the scenes you can tell it’s a struggle to play such complex troubled characters it can feel so real Anna deserved better some people can’t tell reality from fiction
@Messwithmitchie you summed up my thoughts completely man. It's very hard to play a character as complex and well made as someone like Skylar or Walt.
Making a technically morally correct character unlikeable is a hard line to walk and people should be praising it not sending death threats
First watch: Everyone is team Walt
Second watch: any reasonable person would be team Skyler
The fact that people hate her show how great she played the role
Anna Gunn said the scene when Walter takes Holly and she’s in the street she said was the hardest scene she had to do, and she did it damn well.
To be completely honest, the thing that broke me when i saw this scene where the screams of Walt Jr. during the fight "Mom! Dad! Please stop! Mom!", the delivery on these lines are simply amazing. I always thought of Walt Jr. as one of my favorite characters in the show, he was just a teenager, doing teenager stuff, with an unfortunate disability, but you could clearly see that he was pure at heart, i would even dare to say he was the most innocent character on the entire show, but here he was watching his parents fight and was forced to choose. He also just found out his father is a drug kingpin and thinks he killed his uncle, who he always saw as a model compared to his father. The emotions just killed me when i saw this, i needed to pause the episode and lay on my bed for 5 minutes
THANK YOU Walt jr is literally one of the best characters and he kinda gets shit no reason
Walt Jr. is a spoiled, entitled, ungrateful, annoying weak link in this series. I have to FF through his scenes. Wish this wasn't true, but it is.
It was always a meme to pick on all his parts as just "eating breakfast" or dinner or he's always just there, but that was always the intention I think. He is in fact just a teenager who never gets involved in any of the main plots of the show which makes this scene all the more heartbreaking because this is the moment he discovers the truth about his dad and it's when his dad is the biggest monster he can be. Imagine if Junior found out during Walt's battle of wits against Gus or after his kidnapping by Tuco. Would it have been as defensive or harsh of a reaction? Would he convince him to go to the cops like Skylar?
That's not to say he should be "okay" with Walt's actions. But the fact he doesn't discover his dad's true identity until after Hank dies is very sad. He will never believe his dad at this point that he got involved in the drug business to secure finances for his family.
my favorite part in the whole series is his acting in this scene, specifically when he is on the ground shielding skylar from walt. breaks my heart every time
@@Rollwithit699 Is this bait? Walt jr isn't entitled or ungrateful he's a literal child going through some real traumatic shit between his parents. Not only that but he has a disability which makes him even weaker and sensitive by nature. It doesn't mean he's a bad character tho, that's what makes him a good character. You can really feel however u want about walt jr, but the common consensus is that he belongs in the character lineup just as much as anyone else
Sometimes I think that BB is getting overanalyzed and even Vince Gilligan would be like "wow that's actually cool, i didn't know that"
But now I'm sure Vince is a genious
Yeah sometimes it's like that lol. But things like the knife holder could not be a coincidence
BRAVO VINCE
Can you imagine Vince looking at the comments section of a breaking bad clip and seeing a random guy with confederate flag profile pic explain how Walt is actually a good guy and Vince is a genius for writing such a great character lmao
@@SalvageET walter is a good guy tho
@@kaiser6332 he aint
Skylers acting is so underrated
Bro whaaaat?? Did you read any of the comments and actually know she got an Emmy, wtf.
Skyler is not even a real actress.
You must not know what the word underrated means! She has won multiple Emmy’s for her work.
@EVONOPOLISwhat’s your opinion on Aaron Paul?
Every time I rewatch the show I notice something with Skylar's attire. In the beginning of the show she dresses kind of flowy and free, almost youthful, in the middle she starts dressing sexier, possibly as a sign of rebellion from her marriage and a hint toward the oncoming infidelity. when she begins the laundromat sneaky business she dresses darker and more corporate, like she's now in on the dirty business her husband started. at the end, particularly in ozymandias, and in the scene when Hank nearly arrests her, she is dressed in pastels that reflect her timid, hopeless and submissive disposition while everything gets out of hand. I haven't heard anyone else notice this. am i just crazy?
that's pretty cool. how people wear their clothes reflects their state of mind
Breaking Bad had tons of thought put into the costume design. I saw a wonderful video on how it utilizes colors, I’d recommend searching up “breaking bad color theory”. Apparently Vince told the costume designers specifically what colors he wanted in each scene to exemplify the characters best
Veavo vince
You’re just crazy
@@salamanderhillbillyweasel1629 No hes not Vince Gilligan put a ton of thought into every outfit every character wore and when they wore it search up “breaking bad color theory”
the part where skylar says “put on your seatbelt it’s not safe” and walt jr says “ur shittin me right?” actually is the funniest piece of dialogue in breaking bad history in the most intense episode ever 😂
Facts 😂😂😂 the way he just said that out of nowhere
I mean, 'this is my own private domicile and I will not be harassed ... Bitch!' probably has it beat
@@rjuniperr Ahhhh.. Wire
Skyler is desperately grasping for a moment of normalcy.
My name is Skyler White YO
no gore in media will ever compare to how uncomfortable I felt during that fight scene, and him taking Holly.
Ted’s birthday scene:
Skyler had some of the best lines in the whole show. She gave me goosebumps when she said "I don’t need to hear any of your bullshit rationales. I’m in it now. I’m compromised. But I will not have my children living in a house where dealing drugs and hurting people and killing people is shrugged off as ‘shit happens!"
Insane foreshadowing of what todd said in S05E06
'Somebody has to protect this family from the man who protects this family.
My name is Skyler White yo.
I know I already commented two weeks ago but I just remembered my favourite 'These obvious desperate breakfasts!'
Skankler*
Skyler's screams while she runs to save Holly haunts me to this day it never fails to give me the most gross heavy and devastating feeling. This is truly the greatest scene in media despite how depressing it really is.
That whole part--the screaming, the shot of Holly through the window, the truck backing out of the driveway, her running after it--still gets to me.
me when i exaggerate
@@TheBBCSlurpee fr 😭😭
yeah its almost as haunting as when Walter told Mike he broke bad
@@NaeOnYT it accomplishes what so many horror movies today cannot
What makes Ozymandias the best episode of television is that everything we thought that was going to happen from the first episode is payed off and showed in this episode. We didn’t know the exact details but we knew family will be destroyed in some fashion 5 years after the pilot aired. It’s like a slow but explosive reaction waiting to happen.
granite state and winner better
We ain't snitches :P
that's kinda what my favorite episode of television is like too (season 4 finale from the wire)
i think that the conflict in ozymandias felt so painful because it felt the most real. a shootout using turrets isn't an every day scene, while scenes of domestic abuse are. this is every day, and even not abuse but just the way walt insults skyler through the phone before returning holly, and especially skylers a thousand yard stare felt all too real for a show that's disconnected from reality for so many of us
The insult was his plan to take all the blame.. and let them know hank was dead.. this saved walts family from getting arrested..
@@Coldcloves at the end it was, but before that it felt fucking real
@@rain-gx1lj Really? He was crying while forcing himself to insult her. It was obvious from the beginning what his plan was. It never felt real.
@@rain-gx1lj that was the point of the shot of Skyler's face, stone-faced but listening intently, conveying that she understood that Walt was lying to protect them
@@Coldcloves As soon as he imitated Skylar in a completely out of character portrayal of her pontifications it was clear that Walt knew he was being listened and was portraying her as someone who was forced on doing any bad action she was involved as an accomplice.
One of my favorite aspects of this episode is that it isn’t the finale. Hell, it isn’t even the second to last episode. We get two whole episodes after, to just sit in our own shame at ever having rooted for Walt at any point.
Speak for yourself.
@@garyjones2561 +1
yeah binging this whole show in 2 weeks, immediate depression on the last 6 episodes
Walt did shitty things throughout. Letting Jane die was an early one. He gets to the point where you completely hate him and he has given up, and then he does everything possible to make things right. Or if not right, better. Gets money to his family, apologizes to Skyler, avenges Hank by killing all of the Nazis, frees Jesse and died admiring chemistry equipment.
@@garyjones2561 I would not be bragging about this 😬
With such an oversaturated subject of analysis, this video stood out as uniquely engaging and informative. Good work!
Indubitably.
Apparently
I N D E E D
Yep, this was really fascinating. Lots of technical mastery I had overlooked.
Your Goddamn Right
“If you knew about it this whole time, then you’re just as bad as him.” Holy shit we (the audience) are literally skylar in that moment. We’ve watched Walt let an innocent girl die, poison a child, and mentally abuse his wife, and yet we somehow still paint him as the good guy.
Because we, as skyler, also watch walt good side, and how he transformed, Marié and hank were close friends of the family, but they didnt live with walt.
But anyways it happen with all villains, if the villain have a good backstory, we can think of him as a victim, and as a good person.
But also there is the other way and walter didnt only manipulated his family but also the audience, so we are like a type of jesse.
"Innocent" is a stretch for Jane.
@@ShFred Yeah, I was gonna say.. He had good reason letting her die. For his own personal privacy. It’s not morally good, but good for his goals and confidentiality maintenance. Because she essentially blackmailed Walt to give Jesse his money when he was under influence of cocaine. Threatening to expose Walt’s secrets and illegal activity. She wasn’t helpful or good for Jesse, and she was an extreme threat to Walt. So she is far from innocent.
Some may say, oh wow. She’s actually innocent because she tried to expose a drug dealer. But just how moral is she if she does drugs anyway? A consumer of a product is no more innocent than a producer. In this drug related circumstance.
@@-12Sided Agreed.
@@TheMaztercom no we are not many people aren't drug dealers selling meth with horrible people as careless as Jesse parents.
This episode nearly made me feel sorry for Walt when Hank died
But then he said “I watched Jane die.”
Walt chooses to tell Jesse that at that moment because he blames Jesse for Hank’s death so because that happened he decides to hurt and crush Jesse because Jesse just crushed Walt
@@JohnSmith-wh2ob also Jesse ratted him out to the DEA and teamed up with Hank against Walt which in Walt's eyes was the biggest form of betrayal. Even in Walt's confession he never mentions Jesse once. He was feeling so much pain, loss, betrayal, anger, and hatred he felt that was the only card he had left against Jesse. It's also worth noting Walt never intended for him to be a meth slave, he thought he'd be questioned, maybe beaten a little, and then killed. He never expected to send Jesse into that kind of suffering
@@poggerwhite can you blame him though? Walt was extremely exploitative of him. He never truly seemed to care about him, and never really seemed to take any of his problems seriously. I kinda stopped respecting Walt after he never tried to console Jesse for killing Gale, which was honestly so painful to watch for me. I sympathized with Jesse way more than Walt throughout the show
@@parkourguyyy I was more trying to rationalize Walt's mindset. Jesse IS the protagonist of the show and of course I was rooting for him all the way. The "I watched Jane die" line makes my stomach drop every time, the way he says it so cold while Jesse is surrounded by Neo Nazis and can't fight back. Its brutal and when I found out he poisoned Brock I wanted to throw something at my TV. But I understand Walt as well, he's objectively wrong but I understand it. No though, I don't blame Jesse for him deciding to give up Walt after everything he did to him
@@parkourguyyy I was soooo excited when Hank said "You really wanna burn him down? Let's do it together." That's one of the best lines in the show in my opinion
what made this scene even more tragic for me was seeing Flynn without hesitating drop his crutches to protect his mother
Flynn was extremely brave. As soon as he got the clear picture he did the right thing without a second of hesitation.
I love how you end the video with Flynn saying "If all this is true, and you knew about it, then you're as bad as him," with no commentary, because everyone watching now realizes he's not just talking to Skylar there.
I actually originally recorded a final line that said "Flynn was talking to us in the car." Had a big back-and-forth on whether or not to include it. Glad the point got across!
I feel like Ozymandias was a big ass slap to the face of the fans who thought Walter was the badass hero and Skyler the whiny bitch. Walter begging and sobbing his lungs out at the start, the phone call, Flynn's dialogue...it's too perfect.
@@l.pietrobon3925 ozymandias honestly kind of reinforced that idea for me 💀
@@conniefan123 It is the first episode of season 5 where Walter isn't cartoonishly evil tbf
literally iconic
My favorite scene is when Hank said "It's you Walt! You're the Albuquerque Heisenberg!" and Walt replied "It's cooking time".
Such an iconic exchange.
i find mfs like u really interesting bro. i aint gon lie this jawn is kinda like a personal thing to me you get what i'm saying. it's just like a personal shirt u feel me, what's really crazy is you wouldn't even wanted this if you aint seen me post it u get what im saying. i dont even think u really dripping like that tbh bro. so go ahead find yourself something to wear bro go open your closet bro this not your closet bro this the internet u get what im saving. this shirt fire though shit
i remember when I broke bad
"Every bad has its break"
- Jack Breakingbad
This was the exact moment that Walter white told hank its cooking time
hesienburger
Along with many others, I was feeling the worst for Flynn in that scene. He was never even told what's going on before, and not because he's too young, but because it's illegal.
And those memories of the real existing WW website to fund his medical treatment are still clear in my head.
Suddenly 5 seasons worth of events need to be learned at once
I was thinking that too. It is already a traumatic experience regularly having to watch your parents fight, I can’t imagine how it must feel to watch your family fall apart before your own eyes and your parents descend into madness and violence against each other while you’re near powerless to stop any of it.
@@70sleadgarfieldmug and moments before that you just learnt that your beloved uncle is very possibly dead and you are really not sure if he was murdered by your father or not.
The website is still up too
This scene is my favorite due to the fact that even me watching an ANALYSIS of it it gives me uncomfortable chills.
When Walt said “With great meth comes great methability” I felt that
@Miscellaneous Viewing when you wrote that reply to that comment, I also read it, well a month later.
@HotWheel_Bernard when you wrote that reply to a reply to a reply to a comment, i read it too. Well, 21 hours later
@@ssh0na398 when you wrote that reply to a reply to a reply to a reply to a comment, i read it. well, 10 days later.
@lavajakob when you wrote that reply to a reply to a reply to a reply to a reply to a comment, I read it. Well, 1 hour later
😂
10:55 fun fact this scene made Anna Gunn, the actress for Skylar White, actually breakdown they almost cancelled it because it made her so emotional it was a disturbing scene to act and watch
In fact, Walt wasn’t even supposed to kidnap Holly, Bryan Cranston, the actor that portrays Walter White saw the opportunity and abducted her, the directors liked this SO much that they decided to keep it in the show Bravo Vince! Truly one of the moments of all time
@@randomuser1010 this was the moment Bryan Cranston broke bad
@@randomuser1010 breaking bad wasnt even supposed to be a crime drama, it was meant to be a family-friendly sitcom but bryan cranston started cooking meth on set and vince liked it so much they rolled with it
@@nutsackreviews 💀
She broke down because her screen partner of five seasons acted out a kidnapping? C'mon dude. In 9 cases out of 10 these "tHiS AcToR aCtUaLLy BrOkE dOwN" trivias are just bullshit their PR manager gets dumbass redditors to believe and spread to others to make the actor look better.
You forgot the shot after the fight... when walter sees his wife and son on the floor lookin at him in absolute fear and shock... and the camera does a zoom sequence showin how far apart he has come from them... confirming that this is the point he has completely lost his family and there is no going back... heartbreaking
When walt said “Jesse, its time to juju on that beat” I about teared up 😢
LMAOOOOO
STOPPP 😂😂
is that a fucking goons reference
The thing i find rhe most wild about all these video essays, is how often I hear "and we thought walt was the good guy".did that many people really view Walt as a good person? By the end of season 2 he was a monster. I watched to see how the monster would evolve. Protagonists don't need to be morally good.
I first watched the show in eighth grade (too young?), so I think a lot of the nuance and themes of the show went over my head the first time through. I wish that more people watched it with your attitude, to be honest, as I think it's the most accurate one, but if you scroll through these comments, about half of them are saying Walt did nothing wrong which is a little terrifying to me
You're supposed to sympathize with him. You're supposed to go down with him. You're supposed to excuse or even justify his actions. It's not until the end that you get a wakeup call and realize he was the villain all along. That's the main point of the show.
Thanks. I knew Walt was a 'potential monster' when he didn't take Elliot's offer. God, the Hubris!
It was easy for me to keep rooting for Walt in the context of a fictional story. But for me the facade shattered after he let Jane die. My egotistical fantasies apparently have a limit!
My mom said from the first time Walt lied to his wife she knew what kind of man he was, even if he never became Heisenberg. (And I am certain that was what Vince intended as well.) My mom has had a strong marriage for over 40 years now, forged through fire. There's no room for bullshit in that. On the same note she had a problem with Skylar being a bad parent, but it was never like what the audience did, hating on her in favor of Walt. She wanted them to live happily ever after of course, but there was no facade shattered for her, and I always found that really interesting.
Elliots' offer was also another early foundation for Walt's character, take it or leave it. I apparently forgot about that huge moment in favor of fun times haha.
Walt wasn't a good guy, but not a bad guy either. Just like the other characters in this show.
I loved how you pointed out how this episode was in contrast to all the "cool" moments of the show. This whole episode's message to me was "this was all not okay". Walt did terrible things and what happened was not cool or fun, it was horrific. A lot of the show was honestly light hearted despite the dark subject matter, and this episode showed how ugly it all really was.
nah it was cool as fuck tbh
@@TheBBCSlurpee hell yeah, like anybody in their right mind would think it's ok or even possible
@@jeffgayzose8129 for real it’s like the people who say cod turns people into mass shooters. If you can’t distinguish fiction from reality you are basically lobotomized
No matter how polished the script is, or how good and telling the cinematography is, Internet discussions about this episode are still some of the cringiest and most hilarious things on this website. It's all just people who missed the point by an astronomical distance, desperately trying to gaslight each other that Walter did nothing wrong and that everything would've been fine if only Skyler had been open to sit down and have sum coffee with her kingpin pathologically lying husband to calmly discuss the intricacies surrounding Hank's brutal murder.
They're not a big fan of women defending themselves
Yeah, I remember watching the Breaking Bad Honest Trailer and both the video and the comments portrayed Skyler as an annoying, nagging bitch of a wife. So when I finally watched the series, I was so confused. Nagging bitch where? Her actions and inactions were overall valid and understandable. But even today, Walt fans vilify the hell out of the characte... and the actress too. It's quite concerning.
@@gardengloop1060 idk, Jesse also gets a ton of shit.
@@magencrisis1682 I haven't seen a single person complain about Jesse, and if they were it wouldn't be in comparison to skylar
I didn't like Walt by the end of the show, but you have to admit that skylar attacking walt with a knife was a stupid decision on her part, especially to do it in front of walt jr.
This scene made me feel really uncomfortable and scared. I just assumed it's just because I'm super sensitive to domestic violence with children and stuff since it reminds me of a couple times when similar stuff has happened when I was a kid. But that explanation and breakdown of the scene made me really appreciate it a lot more now. Good video!
I hope things are a lot better nowadays!
great profile picture choice btw
Life is a dream don’t be too attached to this reality
The scene is supposed to make you feel uncomfortable.
Off topic but Niko from OneShot profile picture? Cool. Awesome game
One of the most disturbing parts to me is the fact that he kidnaps Holly knowing that his own life is also in danger.After inadvertently having his brother killed he betrays his own family to prove a point and uses his newborn child as an excuse for his actions,in the illusion that he was trying to save her from their own family despite his own psychopathy.
I don't think he was trying to save his daughter from them, he was desperately trying to hold onto his family and Holly was his last option at that point. By taking her he gave up on Skyler or Walter Jr. ever forgiving him. It was a crime of passion, it wasn't premeditated like you're suggesting. He wanted to take Skyler, Walter Jr., and Holly with him in the truck, but Holly became his only choice after the fight
I think the reason he took Holly is simple. He wasn't planning on keeping her and raising her on the run. He took her because he loved her and knew he might never see his family again and so he stole one last moment with her. But mainly he wasn't thinking. One last selfish act.
@@kevinburch4932 that's what I thought too after I just rewatched it. It seemed like he just took her to spend SOME time with her since he knows his fate and will never be able to see her again. It's obvious how he holds her later, it made me sympathize with him again
um what? what point was he trying to prove? i think you missed the mark entirely on your idea of what happened but to each their own. He had given up on his family and thought the kid was the only thing left of it, he wasnt thinking "i need to take my kid to save her from my craaazy none drug making family!"
Hank is the husband of Marie which is the sister of Skylar. Hank isn't Walters brother.
I can’t be the only one who ALWAYS saw that knife block as a Chekov’s Gun from the first time it was on the show. I noticed it right away in S1 and thought…. Those ain’t just for cooking
that’s a massive reach. every single kitchen has one of those things.
@@Zack29810 Ya, but it's shown clearly near the centre of the frame many times. This is breaking bad, they don't just put random things in a shot repeatedly for no reason
@@Zack29810 no it's not, look at the angle of the camera when it appears. I think it was kind of obvious when they showed them the last time before Skyler used them
@@lilequalityraps1232Planning on rewatching the show I'll keep that in mind but I don't think you need a setup or forshadow for a simple kitchen knife though
@@Zack29810 Gus Fring's kitchen had a knife block, too.
Imagine hating Skylar because of how she handled something that most people wouldn't be able to at all. I used to find her annoying until I started getting sober and realized that's how someone would act in true desperation feeling like they're trapped.
Wow, I’m glad you can share your enlightenment with the rest of us.
She's still an annoying character- you can’t exactly save her from that. And let me remind you that she ‘trapped’ herself by choosing, with her adult mind, to participate in the meth business, without anyone else forcing her to. She is not an innocent victim, and that is a really weird point of view to hold.
@@q3hdi her alternative was to turn Walt in to the DEA, something that would have exposed walts actions to his son, and cost him having a father in his life, same with Holly. while its arguable she got "greedy" trying to just go back to normal life after Walt quit the business, her options were limited.
while she's not an innocent party, she is absolutely Walts most tortured victim, so I think we can give her a bit of slack when judging, her arc in the show is being worn down into things Walt was always ok with.
@@q3hdididn't really have much of a choice by the time she fully understood the situation. Most spouses aren't likely to put their partner in prison you know.
@@Listed_Gamer she ignored the advice of her divorce attorney, who would have provided her with all the evidence and protection available under the law. She had a free pass and the perfect opportunity to get out. She chose to delve deeper and deeper into crime as if it were a turn on for her, using the same "for the family" justification Walt had (paying Hank's hospital bills). You're only giving her a break because she's a woman and you think she's incapable of deciding what's right and wrong for herself.
In the end, she couldn’t go full gangsta.
Honestly, the family fight is insane. Everything is done so accurately it makes it feel like I'm right there, watching a family have a fight, or like someone recorded an actual fight, or is livestreaming it. Everything is so real. The way things build up so suddenly yet so excruciatingly slowly, just like real life where you know it's going to happen yet it feels so sudden when it actually happens, and the best part? The camera angles and movements. This is almost exactly how I remember my childhood and the way my parents fought. Everything feels so blurry, so rushed, and you have no idea what to do. The sudden cuts and shakes of the camera really put everything into perspective, making the viewer also feel like a victim of Walt. Definitely the best show I've ever seen in my life.
i also like how when skylar chases walt, the shots are far, and it’s arguably the first moment in the show where the conflict between skylar and walt isn’t inside their house, sort of telling us that there’s no turning back now that everything is out in the open.
its "skyler"
Being a child who grew up (still growing) in a very violent household, the fight between Walt and Skyler while Flynn is trying to stop them terrified me. The shot of Flynn protecting his mother broke me man.
Sorry to hear that
But on the flip side, 69 likes. Nice.
I mean mom pulled the knife first so idk what ur talking about
He doesn’t know anything about Heisenberg but yet they portrayed like he does
Didn’t e spect people to be so angry it’s just an opinion I still live breaking bad I was just voicing my opinion
@@behindyou3689 other than the fact that he'd been told everything by his mom and aunt directly before this?
@@SenorCoupon true but he doesn't believe them
it just doesn't make sense they portray Skylar as this innocent woman but she is pretty terrible and walt jr worships his dad the whole show and switches on him on a dime but not when his mom slashed his dad with a knife?
bad directing this the only point in the show that sucked for me
just not a good ending to these characters in my opinion stupid and didn't make sense
you so clearly see them as victims in this scene, far more than ever before in the series. the moment that they're breathing heavy after the fight and walt jr and skyler are cowering in fear below walter feels like that sharp breath and moment of clarity you have after a bout of adrenaline; you can feel walt's view shift as he sees that he's broken the family beyond repair... he sees, even if just for a moment, that he is the scary and evil boogeyman that his wife and son could never have even imagined. really intense.
this scene is also such a stark contrast to the rest of the show because it is SO grounded in reality. it's real. families go through horrifically traumatizing things like this , whereas for most people, you're able to look at the rest of the show through lenses of fantasy.
Living in a family with a crazy member who has gone after us with a knife multiple times, that scene was extremely realistic
Everyone turns on you when you disarm them?
so true....
@@bennywolfe4357 lol 😂
The best shot of the whole series was in this scene and you skipped over it. Around 10:33 when Walter Jr with his arm over his mom looks frightened at heisenberg. Honestly the most heart breaking and confronting shot in the whole series.
Yeah, it's like they're reduced to genuine primal fear and you can see how much it messes with Walt when he sees his family in that state, due to his actions.
I think that scene is stupid Walter jr acted like an idiot in that scene straight up lied to the cops he doesn’t know anything about Heisenberg his mom pulled the knife
@@behindyou3689 lmao am not talking about the context. Yes walter Jr was a idiot. But the shot itself visually was beautiful and haunting. Even if you hate the show you admit. Also you literally sound like your 12 lmaooo. Most people would argue Walt was in the wrong in most of this season.
@@behindyou3689 well, to say he had quite a bit to digest in that scene is putting it lightly, he could not think straight lol
@@behindyou3689 yeah, no matter who was in the right or wrong it kinda makes no sense that Flynn sided with Skyler in that situation
I like to think there is some form of symbolism in the fact that in his prime walt went from a normal SUV to a nice luxuries Chrysler 300. Then when he is at his breaking point of failure he has to drive a broken down old truck showing that his life couldn't be anymore worse.
Also in the kidnapping scene when Walter rams into Flynn's car and drives away, and that's the last time Fynn ever sees him.
That wasn’t Flynn’s car
Above me is right it’s Walt Junior’s car….😂
@@AlcoholicJugg⬆️
I would say that my first time around watching this series, Ozymandias is the episode that did finally break down exactly how far into his monstrosity Walt had dug. I knew he was a monster, but the tone of the show makes you constantly manipulated into the same sick twisted fantasy he's having... believing he has any sort of victory. That his hole-filled plan had any semblance of sense from the beginning. When you watch Breaking Bad a second time, the tone changes. You don't forget this episode, not ever. It completely reshapes how you see everything Walt does, provides a sort of clarity.
"you don't forget this episode" as if i'd forget any episode to begin with.
I’m just reiterating what everyone is saying really, but the fight scene between Walt and Skylar is so deeply disturbing to me because it is just SO real. You hear the sharp breath, the struggling, the literal fight for survival. You’re watching the complete and utter destruction of a family, a family that will never be together again, whose relationships will never be repaired. It’s like you’re watching all of the characters die at once, or at least you’re watching parts of them die. It’s raw and it’s real and it’s terrifying, just like actual violence that occurs behind closed doors.
its "skyler"
Best Breaking Bad scene ever. When Walt’s world crumbles right in front of him, he realises everyone he worked so hard for (or so he says) turn against him. “We’re a family…” it hits him! He’s now alone
In the first 15 seconds of the video, he used the phrase “toxic masculinity” once, and then never brought it up again. Somehow this threw a ton of people into a fit. If hearing that term hurts your feelings so much and makes you unable to sit through the rest of the video, you’re kinda weak.
Dude, he made an entire other video about it
@immort4l lol I know
There is such a thing as toxic masculinity but it is over used by Misandrists, if someone can describe non-toxic masculine traits without describing feminine traits can talk about it.
what do you expect from breaking bad fans lol.
Cool story, but no one cares.
It's not too terribly subtle of course but I am personally fond of the shot of Walt backing out of their driveway in his decrepit, broken down truck, forcibly ramming into their family car (which is essentially a stereotypical suburban family-type vehicle) and pushing it out of the way so he can make his getaway. In the same sense, by nothing other than his own actions has he forced his family out of his life, with a "dent" that will never truly be repaired. Great video!
I remember dissolving into tears when he leaves with Holly. I have never, in my 50yrs, ever been that emotionally drained and cried that hard watching a television show.
The "Were a family" line killed me. Haven't cried more during any tv show or movie. And the way he says it twice realizing his family has finally turned on him is just so sad.
It hurts every time. It’s so sad. “We’re a family” as Skyler and Flynn are in fear and shock just completely terrified of Walt. The second time he whispers it is what makes it so strong and super sad
To me, his fear is now that now they know that his "we're a family" doesn't mean anything to them. Walt considered Hank family, too. Now Hank is dead and they know he had something to do with his death. They know that they are not safe from him. And that's when it also dawns on Walt that all hope to have them on his side is lost. He has lost and his only chance to have them not turn on him is to leave.
God, Holly’s blood curdling screaming and crying whenever she’s present during a verbal or physical altercation will stick with me for god knows how long.
Rian Johnson got a lot of (maybe deserved) hate for The Last Jedi, but if we learned anything from this episode, it's that he is a great director. Just keep him away from the writers room.
Nah, look at Knives Out
I think his work as director on Breaking Bad and Last Jedi is excellent, and his work as writer of Knives Out is great too, but visually the movie is kind of whatever. Waiting to see him combine those things, 'til then Ozymandias is as close as we have
I think Looper is Rian's best work. Both as writer and director. Such an amazing minimalist take on time travel and science fiction.
TLJ good
@@colinftp3288 Nope
I’m surprised to hear that people are supposedly still sympathising with him at that point. In my group of friends nobody had any sympathy left for him after season 2 or latest season 3.
Even though you can't justify most of his actions through the whole show, I believe that walt's family was his top priority until this scene. Of course becoming a cold criminal isn't a good to way show you care about your family, but the intentions of everything he's done was to keep his family safe and not have to worry about money. So I do feel bad for him to a certain extent.
Yes same here. We were eager for his downfall. It’s insane to me that people knew he poisoned a child and were still rooting for him 😭
Which is why he’s one of the best characters in TV history
I supported him just because he's cool
walt is goated bro get off your high horse
6:05 what is note worthy in this shot is that Walt until this point almost always kept lying/not telling the truth.
No matter how certain Skyler was he stuck with the act trying to decieve her.
Here he almost immidietly give in, because he is not answering Skyler.
You caused the death of Hank is almost certainly a thought he is currently dealing with.
Skyler is strengthening the inner voice tellinh him that it is his fault, a thought he cannot bear, and he yells in denial because it's a reality he is not willing to accept. Not only does he not want he family to think that, he himself will not tolerate the thought for one second.
I don't get why Skyler is pinned the most hated character in the show..every time i watch it i have more sympathy for her character seeing her husband transform into a hardened criminal and put the whole family in danger. Plus Anna Gunn does such a phenomenal job bringing her character to life
Because they're teenagers that hate women and think Walter can't do anything wrong.
Cuz breaking bad fans are emotionally stunted bitter losers who hate women because stacy rejected them in 10th grade
@@emporioalnino4670seems like you're projecting, bud.
@@freshrockpapa-e7799because she’s annoying.
@@emporioalnino4670bro is projecting
Sht, we are able to see walt as a victim, and thats good writting, or maybe walt also manipulated the audience.
But idk, we humans always see a villain like a victim if we see his backstory.
Or maybe we can reflect ourselves in walt, how his life is miserable and how he wants to do something big, something to leave a mark, just like all of us wants, we all want to do more rather than just being happy with your shitty life we feel the hate of walt, the hate of being too good at something and end up doing crap.
I agree with you
I never noticed the intensity of the moment of Walt getting the upper hand before. The fact that in his pride he could have killer her had Walt Jr. not tackled him. Thanks for breaking this down and analyzing in such detail.
I really doubt he would’ve killed her. In the fight, she was the aggressor. Then jr lied about it. No matter what hank did, Walt was t willing to kill him. He was willing to go to prison instead, so why should we think he would’ve killed skyler?
@@bennywolfe4357 it’s less about him actually killing her and more about the threat. Plainly, Walt is way more dangerous than his family. With Walt Jr. knowing so little of what happened and thinking that Walt *DID* kill Hank, the threat of also being killed is present in the minds of Skyler and Jr.
@@AlmightyArceus not really he was about to get cut again and saved himself
@@bennywolfe4357 yeah I fucking hate how Jr lies to the police
I don’t think he would have killed her.
Great analysis. Just a note about characters talking over each other - it also happens in another episode where Walt and Flynn are on the phone when Walt is trying to tell him that he's giving them money and Flynn yells at him for killing Hank. It has the crushing line at the end when Walt says "It can't all have been for nothing."
My eyes well up with tears every time I watch Skyler running after Walt and Holly. BEST ACTING EVER by Anna Gunn.
I liked this part of the series too, but I also wonder how it would look to the neighbors or someone who doesn't have any information on what's happening. There's a married couple who argue here and there, but most of it isn't seen by others. Then one day, there's a truck that no one has seen before, with a barrel that could be holding anything in it. The father gets into the truck with the youngest child and the mother is screaming and pleading. The father makes a dramatic exit as he drives off to who knows where, and the mother is yelling and crying in the middle of the street with blood on her clothes. If I was their neighbor or a passerby and I saw that happening, I would wonder what caused that to happen for a long time.
Gets even crazier than that, cause walts whole story was all over the news afterwards, so a in just a few days they'd know exactly what caused that to happen.
That was great analysis. You just made me wanna binge the series again.....for about the sixth or seventh time.
*#lolz*
Just did that, my 4th time and it's like watching it again for the first time sometimes.
My take on the scene is that he took Holly for Skyler’s good. The next scene is where the police are at the house and skyler is on the phone with Walt. He knows that police will be listening to the call so he acts extra monstrous on the phone, threatening her and calling her a bitch, but the whole time he’s crying and you can tell he doesn’t mean what he’s saying. This would give Skyler a much better result in court since the police would believe that any involvement she had in the crimes was just to protect herself and the kids...
THAT he did for his family.
@@saulgoodmanKAZAKH i mean yeah saul you even told him after that the phone call was smart
I think he initially took Holly because at that point, she was the only family member that still loved him. It isn't until the bathroom scene that he decides to leave Holly at the fire station and call Skyler in order to exonerate her.
I interpreted it as the phone call was when he decided to do so. It was his one moment of "clarity" where he does one thing for his family.
@@personman1148 yea i agree. walt admitted that he did everything for himself, but that phone call was the only thing i could see that was genuinely for his family. sure he gave his kids millions of dollars but in a stupid and dangerous way that ended up tearing his family apart and killing a loved one
I’ve never seen this show but it sounds really wholesome with a man returning home to his family, I hope they all end up safe, happy, and healthy…
Breaking bad has been the only show to ever make me shed a couple tears, like fuck dude the connection this show gives you with all the characters and seeing what happened to Jessie and Walt’s family made me feel for them all, to the point where I have moments where I’m like “I hope their doing okay” even though their not real people but just characters in a tv show
Like fuck I love this show so much, the characters, the pacing, the writing, the colors, the way it’s filmed, the everything.
I honestly can’t thank Vince Gillian and the cast and everyone who worked on the show enough
This show was so addicting to watch it’s like crack
(I’m currently on the start of Better Call Saul after watching El Camino)
It should be a crime to direct and edit such a gripping piece of television. The scene where Skyler runs behind the truck is perhaps most gut wrenching performance ever seen.
me when i exaggerate
Knowing Breaking Bad is an overall masterpiece and learning how it is even greater with those videos
I think the reason why they made this scene so disruptive and so different from all the other "cool" scenes of Breaking Bad is that this is the moment Walt finally has no point to make, no argument, no upper hand, no motive. For 5 seasons, we heard him say he was doing all the most hideous acts "for his family". After Hank's death and during this scene, he just can't use this argument anymore, so now we all know he's just doing all this for himself.
thanks everyone for the kind words! I've been making these video essays not thinking anyone would ever watch them, mostly just for my own fun and I'm pretty shocked this video's pulling over two thousand views. Or over twenty, for that matter. Especially considering my (lack of) audio editing skills. Anyway I'm just honored so many people liked my analysis! :)
Fantstic video bro, ceaser approves
good stuff!
I didn't notice any issues with audio edits because I was captivated by the analysis. I've watched the show 3 times through now and you picked up on a lot of detail I never would have thought of. Great job!
In all honesty the audio was the only (ONLY) issue with this video. The jumps between really quiet and loud was a bit frustrating but aside from that 10/10 video trust me. You’re gonna blow up man I’m telling you
You misunderstood Walt and it makes this analysis obsolete.
Really interesting analysis. Made me think even more about my favourite show. I even picked up Skylar's choice of clothes - she was wearing all blue when on the phone to Walt but then when picking up the knife had just a hint of blue at her wrists. Glorious story telling
I remember the first time I seen the series I was 1,000% into the show and when I have seen this exact scene I was shedding tears as walt was backing up in a old pickup truck kidnapping his daughter in his nice sub urban neighborhood that was once a warm welcoming home to many of his friends and family.. that’s when I knew shit has gone through the roof with Walt, although I still praised him till the end.
Here's a bit of trivia for that very part of the scene: Take a look at the atmosphere of the outdoor shots, right after Walt pulls away. The cast and crew were fighting snow flurries to shoot those scenes, and it was actually below freezing that day. After I watched a behind the scenes video of that scene being shot, it put an entirely new feel on it for me knowing that it was so cold during those shots. Give that scene another watch and tell me what you think afterwards.
Kidnapping? I don’t remember him kidnapping his child.
@@bennywolfe4357 parents can kidnap their kids. It's all about the context, and this context is a meth drug dealing king pin
@@bennywolfe4357 dude im tired of you heisenberg fanboys intentionally missing the point and trying to play semantics about this word.
The scene of skyler screaming for walt to bring the baby back is bone chilling. Its incredibly hard to watch, its painful to see.
When he said "Don't call me Breaking, call me Bad" I almost cried 😭
These jokes got old
i would lose for sure if i was in a "least funny joke on earth" competition with you
@@ketaminepoptarts I would lose if I was in a loser contest with you
@@KidneysHurt loser? We aren't in the 90s anymore, no one that I've met uses that as an insult lol
@@lukeaustin4465 Your existence is an insult to our society, loser
the way walt says we’re a family is so sad and powerful
This whole sequence in the show blew my mind. I had never been so saddened, awed and horrified all at once while watching anything else on TV ever. My heart literally hurt watching Skyler fall to her knees in the street.
My favorite part was when Heisenberg left his house and said "It's breaking bad time" and started breaking bad all over the place.
He broke that bad really well 11/10 scene!
Omg yeah I’m season 13!!
Something about Ozymandias just felt so visceral and real. It gave me a very uneasy feeling.
That episode was so heavy for me to watch. Like it actually weighed on me emotionally and made me tear up. Such brilliant acting and writing
As a person who's went through some personal family issues of my own, I almost nearly cried while watching this scene because it made me relive those memories like no other show ever has, and I felt like, for a few seconds, I was right back to those times; it made me empathize with what walt's family was going through so effectively since I had also encountered similar situations to this one. this was one of the most intense and emotional scenes I had ever watched, and is the reason why i love this show
exactly. hearing Flynn’s pleas to his parents took me straight back to my childhood. absolutely masterful scene
glad to hear someone felt the same way. things like these happen in homes everyday, maybe not to that dangerous extent, but these scene made me sympathize and relate to skyler more than anything
I appreciate the hell out of people that went to film school after having not really thought much about y’all my whole life. It’s neat having advanced things pointed out to me that I wouldn’t know, like the 30 degree cut rule. Totally can’t recall seeing many scenes violate it…and it has exactly the impact that the rule is meant to avoid.
The “you’re as bad as him” call back at the end of this video is such a savage mirror moment for us the audience! I laughed out loud understanding we all ARE as bad as him… as much as we can be in being ok to continue to watch a fictional character completely obliterate hundreds of lives… cheers you cheeky bastard!
that's good, I didn't catch that
The best part about the episode was that unlike the rest of it where Walt was relatively in control or could weasel himself out of trouble, this episode was realistic and showed the character as the caged hyena he was. It held no punches, very much the third act of the mob movies where everything goes to shit.
I’ve seen that scene of Walt driving off with Holley and I swear it hits me the same every time just as it did the first time. It feels like I’m standing there on the street watching this first hand. Another thing I’d like to mention is this show is easily the best show to ever been on tv. After watching this show any time my parents would have a disagreement at home I would notice myself actually get really scared. But I know it’s just a show. Amazing show will forever be one of my favoites
The part where Holly says her first words, those being “mama” just broke me to another level, I never cried during the show but this was just too much
This scene is so brutal. All the crazy shit that happens in this show, this is the only scene that can make me cry every time I watch it.
definitely always felt bad for walt jr as someone who grew up in a home with such hostility and secrets and violence, i could only imagine how constantly confused, hurt, neglected, and lonely he felt
Not gonna lie, the bit where walt kidnapps holly really hit me hard. I rarely cry on tv shows and whatnot, but that had me in *tears*.
Why would you say he “kidnapped” his own daughter?
idk bro, from the way Skylar attacked Walt with a knife and his son lying to the police about what happened, I’d say Holly was in danger being around her mother and brother. Not only does Walt have the legal right as a parent to take his own daughter for a car ride, but Walt could’ve comfortably supported Holly for years with the money he earned.
I’d say forget the hysterical wife and the lying, ungrateful son and just live a new life as a single father with his daughter. Those two made their choices by stabbing Walt with a knife and make a false report to the police, so screw ‘em. No money for them I’d say, but Walt has too big of a heart to go through with something like that, and he’s willing to forgive those who wronged him.
@@UndertakerU2berbait
@@NiigoMeeks
How is that bait? Walt was the one that was had his hand sliced by a hysterical wife that wrongly believed her husband murdered their brother in law, and then their son had the audacity to lie to the police and portray his father as the menace.
Do you think the violent wife with a knife and the lying son are in the right here? I’m curious why you’d think so…
@@UndertakerU2ber 🥱
@@NiigoMeeks
Ah I see, you’re some sort of role-reversing troll, where you troll others by deliberately making baseless troll accusations in order to cause outrage and confusion.
That’s kinda clever, but your yawning emoji gave it away. I give your trolling a D+ for creativity, but I’m taking lots of points off since you gave it away in your second reply…
0:01: This is the exact moment the video starts.
It's actually 0:00
👣
Thank you bro I needed that
Bravo Vince
Thanks bud
Very nice analysis and I agree pretty much completely with it. I had a very hard time watching this show because I always felt Walt was a bad person. I thought he was vile the whole show, from the very first episode onward and you can really tell the show is trying hard with all the stylization to make you root for him along the way. When I first watched this scene I remember thinking 'finally she's done dealing with this piece of trash'. Felt really bad for his son. His whole world came crashing down around him very rapidly. He makes his choice so quickly and immediately sides with Skylar against Walt that its perfect. In this scene, with the edits and stuff you mention here, Walt Jr. is who we all should always have been: able to look at the actions for what they are, destructive, and not caught up in the glamor and style.
I've watched Breaking Bad probably over 8 times and this sequence of events still gets to me emotionally. Genuinely loved this analysis. Subscribed.
“No no NO NO!”
“I tried to save him!” It’s lowkey super sad everytime because you can hear the pain in Walt’s voice
i love this video, but imo the first detail about the difference in the way the scenes were shot was to make the house scenes feel more panicked and the car scenes to feel more tense
I don't disagree with that at all. I'd say it achieves both effects
The thing I’ve always thought about in this scene is “what are the neighbors thinking right now?”
I’ve been the guy the disrupts a quiet street, and I’ve also been the guy being disrupted. Neither are pleasant.