Foreshadowing or just following events?
Walt was cornered, now he's moving out of it.
Honestly, if this was on purpose, it just furthers the fact that this is the best show ever made.
Foreshadowing or just following events?
Walt was cornered, now he's moving out of it.
And he's using his kid(s) and wife as pawns.
It's almost like he, oh, I dunno, broke bad, or somethin'.
See: Sopranos.
Nice, nice.
I dunno. I'm not sure how Gilligan could squeeze a Gus revenge storyline into the final two eps after hardly any mention of it, if at all, this entire season split.
An amazing ep, though. Wow.
- Hank going out like a boss.
- Walt's reaction to the whole thing/bomb drop to Jesse.
- The phone call.
- The pic in the new meth lab.
Just...greatness, all around.
Beautiful.
Tony shot dead.
Meadow probably killed by the escaping gunman.
Cunty Carmella loses her meal ticket
AJ looking like the next Jackie Jr
Junior even dumber than Bobby now
You read reddit too, huh?
Patsy the boss of New Jersey..
It would be really ty storytelling to even try, at this point.
Exactly. It's not really his way. It's one thing to foreshadow, which he does masterfully; it's quite another to just throw at a wall to see what sticks.
It would also be asking a LOT of the audience to believe the cartel or some unmentioned group of Chileans waited almost a year to seek retribution so they'd be just in time to complicate things right as the situation with the Nazis has escalated to full blown cluster .
whoever plays chess and is left with two pawns and a knight should not play chess![]()
The events set in motion long ago come to a conclusion is simply referring to the show in general. The events are Walt's foray into meth cooking to begin with. Its not some clue about the cartel.
you want foreshadowing, this might it:
Anyways. here are the ing vague as episode descriptions for the last 2
Granite State: The fates of everyone involved in Walter White's life are set to change with the nearing conclusion of the various events that were set in motion long ago as the small enterprise started by the once humble teacher reaches its critical point.
Felina: The story of Walter White and his illegal empire reaches its end as the chaos that surrounded his life settles into a calm aftermath that will be remembered by everyone unlucky enough to have known about the crazed kingpin.
It was a better show when he was slightly incompetent, tbh.
being specific would be asinine![]()
Last edited by leemajors; 09-18-2013 at 06:25 AM.
Well the show takes place all in one a year up to this point, the flash forwards are a year later (52), so events long ago could just be referring to what just went down since its been a year in the flash forwards.
Actually, it's been closer to 20 months. They mention Holly is 18 months old when setting up the Amber Alert and Skyler was seven months pregnant at the start of the series. There's a lapse of time between the last episode and the flash forwards, but it's not that big of a jump.
Which goes back to Krazy 8 telling Walt that this type of business isn't the place for him to be.
Oscar from the office.
Why hasn't anyone put this together yet!?!?
CuckingFunt kind of hit on it earlier when discussing that she thought that Jesse would never learn that Walt watched Jane die... but what happens? Walt tells Jesse in a cruel and menacing tone, "I watched Jane die". This, along with the Brock incident should maximize the hatred Jesse feels for Walt.
The fact that Jesse was left alive gives us one big probable ending.
Walt comes back to save his family from the Nazis, NOT Jesse.
The last scene of the entire series will be this, MARK MY WORDS:
Jesse pulling the trigger of a gun aimed at Walter White's head. Done, El Fin. .... oh and I'm sure the word is muttered.
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