justinleecampbell--disqus
Justin Lee Campbell
justinleecampbell--disqus

Of course. I appreciate the entertainment element of Walt's character, but I also appreciate analysis of a character's transformation. In fact, character analysis, whether done in a living room in front of a TV or in a classroom with an open book of Shakespeare's plays, also entertains me. Oh the joys of being able to

Thanks for your question, Dr Dastardly. I think I was holding onto that hope because I kept remembering the nobility, reasoning, and honor in Walt's original purpose for cooking meth before his ego became bloated and less noble, reasonable, and honorable purposes revealed themselves. Every time Walt has been cornered

Thanks for your comment, Strelnikov. I agree with your argument that the existence of the series revolves around Walt's metamorphosis, or some might say devolution, into a villain, and I enjoy his brilliant, yet ultimately deadly and immoral, problem-solving skills as much as the next fan. However, your comment is a

Before "Confessions," I was holding onto the small, but to me still existent possibility, that Walter had traces of morality that would influence some of his decisions in the final episodes in order to complete the narrative that he is a good person - he was just dealt a bad hand and made a fatefully bad decision that

Whenever a contestant wins a nice sports car, my grandmother rhetorically asks, "CAN YOU IMAGINE HOW MUCH THE INSURANCE AND TAXES ARE ON THAT CAR?!"

The Skyler, Marie, and Holly scene is a top ten of Breaking Bad moments.  Skyler's worst fear was about to come true.  Marie's daring Skyler to call the police was chilling.  And the look on Hank's face revealed his realization, at least subconscious one, of how tragic the situation is. Need I mention the great