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When AMC broke into original programming, they didn't mess around, following up the acclaimed first season of "Mad Men" with a series about a high school chemistry teacher who starts cooking and selling crystal meth with one of his former students. Sounds like wholesome family programming, right? "Breaking Bad" became must-see TV from the pilot episode's riveting opening scene, and creator Vince Gilligan hasn't let up since. With a sensational cast, led by two-time Emmy winner Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul, "Breaking Bad" has emerged as one of the best shows on TV.

As you'll see below, we've been on the bandwagon from the get-go. Check out our interviews with Cranston, Paul, Gilligan and other castmembers, read through our reviews of the first and second season DVDs, and don't miss the recap of our set visit in Albuquerque, New Mexico, as well as our Breaking Bad Blog and more!

INTERVIEWS & FEATURES
Breaking Bad: Season Four Preview"Breaking Bad" is back, baby!
July 15, 2011
It’s been a long, cold wait for Walter White to start making meth again, but "Breaking Bad" is finally back on AMC. Will Harris previews the fourth season with a look at what's in store.
CastThe Cast of Breaking Bad
Bryan Cranston, Aaron Paul, Anna Gunn, Betsy Brandt | July 14, 2011

Bryan Cranston on the richness of the series: It's fascinating how we can evolve a crime story, a man's devolvement into this new world, and yet it's a family drama as well. It's like a hybrid of different concepts.

Bryan CranstonBryan Cranston
Walter White | Nov. 13, 2009

In the history of television, it's never been done before: to introduce a character with one set of circumstances and conditions, get to know that guy and who he is and how he thinks and how he walks and talks, and completely change him.

Aaron PaulAaron Paul
Jesse Pinkman | Jan. 14, 2010

Jesse goes through a huge change throughout season three. He kind of accepts who he is and maybe he accepts he's not really that good of a person. It's very sad. This season is really intense. It's much darker, if that's possible.

Vince GilliganAnna Gunn
Skyler White | June 15, 2010

On 'Breaking Bad's' everchanging scripts : You maybe start going down one road, and you say, “You know what? Let's veer off on this path over here'. It's quite like life: you don't ever really know what's coming around the corner.

Giancarlo EspositoGiancarlo Esposito
Gus Fring | July 08, 2010

('Breaking Bad') has provided an outlet for thinking man's television. It has truly encapsulated the form perfectly this year, and I hope to be involved in the fourth season and have more excitement go on that's equally as sublime and powerful.

Vince GilliganDean Norris
Hank Schrader | May 03, 2010

People love Hank as a common guy…and I love playing Hank as a common guy, too! Hank was so much more fun in Season 1 as a bit of comic relief to the dark stuff that was going on. Now he's become part of the dark stuff that's going on.

Jonathan BanksJonathan Banks
Mike Ehrmantraut | August 30, 2012

That was an emotional parting. When we were running lines, it was all of a sudden for the first time when I realized, “As far as the show, this is it. This is the last time we’re ever gonna see each other.” So that was tough. That was tough.

Vince GilliganVince Gilligan
Series creator | Jan. 25, 2010

My hat's off to anyone who sustains a series for more than a season or two, because it's tough. To me, the way you hook people is to parcel it out slowly. Don't fill the waters with every bit of chum you have. Just put a little bit of bait.

Bryan Cranston and Aaron PaulBryan Cranston & Aaron Paul dinner chat
Albuquerque, NM | Jan. 25, 2010

Aaron: When I read ('Breaking Bad'), I was, like, 'This is quite possibly the best thing I've ever read.' But I'm, like, 'AMC is never going to pick this up,' you know? 'How are they going to make this a series?'

Bob OdenkirkBob Odenkirk
Saul Goodman | Jan. 14, 2010

I think Saul gets taken out, but I don't know when or by whom…or if it'll happen, really. The other thing is, I've said that to a couple of people, and I've also had people say, 'Oh, no, no, no, no. Saul's the only guy who walks away!'

More Interviews

The "Breaking Bad" boys (06/20/2010)
Bryan Cranston, Aaron Paul and Vince Gilligan sat down for a roundtable chat in the days leading up to the Season 3 finale.

"Breaking Bad" roundtable (03/19/2010)
Will Harris sat in on a group discussion with Bryan Cranston, Aaron Paul, Anna Gunn and Bob Odenkirk during the Winter 2010 TCA Press Tour.

Aaron Paul (03/09/2009)
We first spoke to Aaron Paul after Season 1 had aired and the debut of Season 2 was on the horizon.

Krysten Ritter (10/24/2009)
See what actress Krysten Ritter had to say about the tragic end to her time as Jane on "Breaking Bad."

BULLZ-EYE VISITS THE "BREAKING BAD" SET

When you're an easily-amused TV critic, every day is filled with wonderful surprises which range from the arrival of an advance screener of an episode of one of your favorite shows to the opportunity to interview one of your favorite actors. Once in a while, though, something arrives via E-mail which blows your mind completely…and, in this case, it was a personal letter from Bryan Cranston inviting us to visit Albuquerque, NM, to tour the "Breaking Bad" set, talk to a few castmembers and, the highlight of the trip, join Cranston and co-star Aaron Paul for a night of authentic (and delicious) southwestern food, fantastic conversation and several pitchers of tasty margaritas. Check out our recap of the trip on the Bullz-Eye Blog!

DVD REVIEWS
Breaking Bad: Season 1Breaking Bad: Season 1

A shortened but brilliant debut season. You'll be hooked in the first few moments of the pilot.

Breaking Bad: Season 2 Breaking Bad: Season 2

Consequences galore as Walt and Jesse continue to build their Blue Sky empire.

Breaking Bad: Season 3 Breaking Bad: Season 3

Walt's personal and professional lives collide, leading to high drama, major tension, and plenty of action.

Breaking Bad: Season 4 Breaking Bad: Season 4

Walt shows his true colors as he faces off against Gus Fring and makes enemies with his only friends.

"BREAKING BAD" EPISODE BLOG (more)


Breaking Bad 5.08: Gliding Over All

There's a ridiculous amount to discuss from "Gliding Over All," the midseason finale of "Breaking Bad," but for now we've just got to cut to it. What's it? The chase. The ending. The cliffhanger. The biggest revelation by a fictional character since "." That's right, Walter White is Heisenberg, and Hank finally knows it, only Walt doesn't know Hank knows. What else?

It was the single biggest  in a show full of seemingly nothing but. If you don't know what I'm talking about, click the link, or reread the quote up top. In any half decent piece of narrative art, there is no wasted space. When it comes to a show like "Breaking Bad," that means not a single element is simply thrown in. Not a scene, not a line of dialogue, not a single shot, not a single piece of character background. When it comes to "Breaking Bad" specifically, that means the country's best meth cook wasn't going to  be found out by his DEA agent brother in-law. There was never not going to be a final confrontation between the two.

In case you missed any part of it, let's recap: Just prior to the ending, Walt has more money than he knows what to do with and is finally out of the meth business. The family's having a nice barbecue when Hank decides to drop a deuce. Once on the porcelain throne, he absentmindedly reaches back for some reading material to find a collection of Walt Whitman poems. Boring. Except that Walt was given this particular collection by one Gale Boetticher, his former partner, a man whose obsession with him bordered on religious.

You see, after he was killed, Hank was given Gale's file to look over. What he found was enough to convince him that Gale was Heisenberg, a notion Walt helped back up with some insightful chemistry knowledge in the fourth episode of season four, "Bullet Points" (if you've got Netflix Instant, click link and skip to the 20:50 mark). There was just one problem, the notebook included a dedication to "W.W.," and for the life of him, Hank could not discern who it referred to. "Who do you figure that is," Hank asks Walt, "Woodrow Wilson? Willy Wonka?" before jokingly adding, "Walter White?" Walt flipped the pages and found a spot where Gale had written down a poem, and told Hank that its author, Walt Whitman, was his W.W.

Fast forward to the finale. Hank finds a book of Walt Whitman poems, with an inscription from "G.B." to "W.W." in a handwriting he recognizes. Everything comes back to him as he suddenly recalls Walt's response to his joking accusation, "You got me." Hank realizes that not only has Heisenberg been staring him in the face this whole time, he's made the same mistake his former boss did with Gus Fring. Recall what that supervisor had to say, "That whole night we were laughing, telling stories, drinking wine... and he's somebody else completely... Right in front of me... right under my nose."

This is heavy stuff, because for Hank, the "Heisenberg problem" is beyond personal. In "Bullet Points," when Hank thought Gale was his man, the fact that he was dead still wasn't enough. "God, I wanted to get this guy... I mean me, personally, you know?" he tells Walt. "I wanted to be the one to slap the handcuffs on him, that kind of shit. Popeye Doyle waving to Frog One." Walt points out that in the first "French Connection" movie, Popeye never catches the bad guy, to which Hank responds "Yeah, I guess, me and old Popeye, huh? A day late and a dollar short." Hank may have been a day late, but now his chance to come out more than a few dollars ahead, and we can be certain he's not going to make the same mistake as his supervisor, not twice, not now that he sees the problem's been hiding in plain sight this whole time. In so many words: Shit's. Gon'. Go. Down.

It took Walt a long time to finally get where he wanted: a place that could satisfy his terrible arrogance, one where he was in total control, answering to no one, and making more money than Skyler could count, let alone launder. After Walt spent the first half of "Gliding Over All" tying up what he thought were his final loose ends, the second half showed him occupying the position he'd wanted so badly. But Walt finds that the "empire business" is just another grind, a feeling made more poignant by his conversation with Hank regarding a summer job the latter had back in high school. So when Skyler shows Walt the pile of green paper on the storage room floor, he's ready to quit, and he returns to his original goals: family, security, stability.

As that first half rolled along, we all waited patiently for something to go wrong, for that arrogance to be Walt's ultimate undoing. What we got was, well, nothing. It seemed Walt really was as good at running a criminal empire as he though he'd be. Lydia's offer to make Walt the foremost methamphetamine supplier of the Czech Republic makes him a boatload of cash and allows him to put aside his plan to use ricin to poison her. He engineers a prison massacre, as the ten people with enough knowledge to put him behind bars are killed within two minutes. Walt even pays Jesse the $5 million he owes and stays a while to reminisce. Jesse is surprised as we are to find nothing but cash in the duffel bags left outside his door. A discovery which causes him to toss his gun and fall back against a wall, almost in tears. All the stars align and everything is right in the universe. Walt's going to get out , arrogance in tow.

But he doesn't. He can't. As the Whites and the Schraders sat around the table in the backyard, we still knew that was going to happen. It had to. The fucked-up mind this show has given me had me searching everywhere, would Walt Jr. slip and knock the baby in the pool? Was there poison in that sunscreen that Walt had forgotten about?

Nope. In the end, it wasn't anything like the first half's enormous displays of hubris that were Walt's undoing. Instead, it was another, smaller event that occurred in the third episode of this season: As Walt unpacked his things after moving back into the house, he finds a Walt Whitman book, his lips curl into the tiniest of smiles, and he places it on his bedside table. After all that's occurred, everything Walt's done over the past four and a half seasons, it was this casual act that will lead to his downfall. As of yet, it seems the biggest tragedy of Walter White's life has not been "flying to close to the sun and getting his throat cut," but returning to Earth and realizing that he was his own loose end, that he couldn't stick the comfortable landing he'd worked so hard to create, and that the lower you are, the harder you fall.

So that's it, another ten months without "Breaking Bad" are before us. Since you've got all that time to spare, you might want to go back and watch the first four and a half seasons before returning to this last episode. "Gliding Over All" contained so much imagery and so many parallels that I couldn't begin to list them here (let alone launder them). I also recommend checking out FX's "Sons of Anarchy" (the first three seasons are on Netflix Instant if you need to catch up). Check back here on September 12, the day after the show's fifth season premier, and you'll find a post just like this one discussing it. "Sons" is no "Breaking Bad," that much is certain, but it'll help kill the time.

TV POWER RANKINGS
TV Power RankingsTV Power Rankings: 2012 Edition
Ranked #1

With an end date now in sight, the series has grown more gripping than ever, and there’s little doubt that we’ll see Hank (Dean Norris) figure out what Walt (Cranston) has been doing behind the back of him and his fellow DEA agents.

TV Power RankingsTV Power Rankings: Fall 2010
Ranked #7

The character relationships on "Breaking Bad" are among the most fluid of just about any series on television, but then, so are the characters themselves.

TV Power RankingsTV Power Rankings: Spring 2010
Ranked #3

We've been psyched for Season Three of 'Breaking Bad' ever since Season Two ended. Thus far, we have not been disappointed.

TV Power RankingsTV Power Rankings: Spring 2009
Ranked #6

When you think about it, 'Breaking Bad' is a lot like Walt and Jesse's outrageous drug-dealing business model – the formula is just crazy enough to work.

"BREAKING BAD" ON THE WEB

AMC's official "Breaking Bad" site
Find videos, photos, cast and character information, downloads, trivia and more on the show's official site.

Walt's Warning
Think Walt's really a nice guy? Perhaps this cool interactive experience will change your mind. Don't piss Mr. White off!

"Breaking Bad" on Wikipedia
All of the information you've come to expect from our Wiki friends, including season recaps, episode guides, awards info and more.

"Breaking Bad" on IMDb
Learn more about the show's castmembers, plus find episode recaps, quotes, trivia and other cool tidbits.

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