It's literally the most tragic death in the whole show
Quote from: ALIE on April 23, 2016, 11:24:14 PMIt's literally the most tragic death in the whole showNah man, that would be Mike's death.Mike dying pissed me off so much. He was so awesome.
Quote from: ALIE on April 24, 2016, 12:00:10 AMQuote from: Mmmmm Napalm on April 23, 2016, 11:34:07 PMQuote from: ALIE on April 23, 2016, 11:24:14 PMIt's literally the most tragic death in the whole showNah man, that would be Mike's death.Mike dying pissed me off so much. He was so awesome.I disagree. Mike's death was fucked up and senseless. It was when we truly saw how petty Walt was.Jane's was sadder, affected more people, and just way more important in the scope of the show. The way Walt just looks down, sheds a single tear and closes his eyes, and when he opens them they're now cold and glazed over instead of empathetic.I agree that Mike is kickass, though. Love him on BCS.You don't seem to understand why he shot Mike. He was tired of everybody treating him like a punk when he knows and proved he's better than everybody else.
Quote from: Mmmmm Napalm on April 23, 2016, 11:34:07 PMQuote from: ALIE on April 23, 2016, 11:24:14 PMIt's literally the most tragic death in the whole showNah man, that would be Mike's death.Mike dying pissed me off so much. He was so awesome.I disagree. Mike's death was fucked up and senseless. It was when we truly saw how petty Walt was.Jane's was sadder, affected more people, and just way more important in the scope of the show. The way Walt just looks down, sheds a single tear and closes his eyes, and when he opens them they're now cold and glazed over instead of empathetic.I agree that Mike is kickass, though. Love him on BCS.
It's funny you don't criticize Mike who was basically Gus' slave and killed whoever he was told to kill. He would've killed Walt for pretty much no reason other than Gus was threatened by him.
Quote from: Mmmmm Napalm on April 23, 2016, 11:34:07 PMQuote from: ALIE on April 23, 2016, 11:24:14 PMIt's literally the most tragic death in the whole showNah man, that would be Mike's death.Mike dying pissed me off so much. He was so awesome.Mike's death was a lot more tragic.Also the passengers of those planes that died as a result of Jane's death was pretty bad.I'd also like to throw Gale's death in there too.
Quote from: Fedorekd on April 24, 2016, 05:06:18 AMQuote from: Mmmmm Napalm on April 23, 2016, 11:34:07 PMQuote from: ALIE on April 23, 2016, 11:24:14 PMIt's literally the most tragic death in the whole showNah man, that would be Mike's death.Mike dying pissed me off so much. He was so awesome.Mike's death was a lot more tragic.Also the passengers of those planes that died as a result of Jane's death was pretty bad.I'd also like to throw Gale's death in there too.Everyone sweeps Jane's death under the rug. It was a turning point, in the plot and in Walt's character.
Quote from: ALIE on April 24, 2016, 05:34:59 AMQuote from: challengerX on April 24, 2016, 05:17:06 AMIt's funny you don't criticize Mike who was basically Gus' slave and killed whoever he was told to kill. He would've killed Walt for pretty much no reason other than Gus was threatened by him.Yeah, the point is that Mike's lifestyle wasn't a bad thing. He knew his place, he didn't have an ego.Killing people for a living isn't a bad thing?He probably drew the line at kids, but he showed several times he had no problem killing any man or woman. Because he did what he was told he's somehow more morally correct than Walt?You're missing the point. Nobody is morally correct in this show. It's about struggling with choices you've made and trying to reconcile with them. QuoteThe whole concept of the show revolves around Walt's inflated ego. He could've accepted Elliot and Gretchen's offer in the first place and never had to go into the business or take a single life. The big lesson of the show is disdaining the macho, egotistical, "provider" mindset. Walt was far from humble, he was vain, petty, and arrogant. He had many opportunities to do better for himself and his family but he willingly let his insecurities get the better of him.The irony of Walt's character is that while he prides himself on being professional and logical-thinking, nearly all his conflicts and his fate come from his fragile emotional shell.But the point being they (Elliot and Gretchen) only have what they have because of Walt. He's a guy that has been fucked by everybody his whole life. He's a genius, and he ends up being a high school chemistry teacher and having to work part time at a car wash yo make ends meet. His friends betrayed him and then they reap the rewards of his hard work, and you think he should accept charity from them?
Quote from: challengerX on April 24, 2016, 05:17:06 AMIt's funny you don't criticize Mike who was basically Gus' slave and killed whoever he was told to kill. He would've killed Walt for pretty much no reason other than Gus was threatened by him.Yeah, the point is that Mike's lifestyle wasn't a bad thing. He knew his place, he didn't have an ego.
The whole concept of the show revolves around Walt's inflated ego. He could've accepted Elliot and Gretchen's offer in the first place and never had to go into the business or take a single life. The big lesson of the show is disdaining the macho, egotistical, "provider" mindset. Walt was far from humble, he was vain, petty, and arrogant. He had many opportunities to do better for himself and his family but he willingly let his insecurities get the better of him.The irony of Walt's character is that while he prides himself on being professional and logical-thinking, nearly all his conflicts and his fate come from his fragile emotional shell.
It's been a while but as I recall walt didn't kill the heroine, he just let her choke on her own degeneracy. Sure he could have saved her in the moment but that would have just led to her and jesse's deaths later on from OD anyway.
Quote from: Mr. Psychologist on April 24, 2016, 06:14:03 AMIt's been a while but as I recall walt didn't kill the heroine, he just let her choke on her own degeneracy. Sure he could have saved her in the moment but that would have just led to her and jesse's deaths later on from OD anyway.He accidentally pushed her over onto her back. She was smart and slept on her side. He then saw his mistake when she started choking and instinctively reached to turn her back over. Then he stopped short, thought for a second, and decided to let her choke on her own vomit.Regardless of the justifications, how could you not consider that murder?The justification of "they would've died from ODing anyway" is a tired one, but the truth is that it would've been on them if that happened, and Jane was months sober before Jesse entered the picture. People paint her as some junkie bitch, usually to take blame off of Walt. But that's far from the reality.
Quote from: ALIE on April 24, 2016, 06:19:41 AMQuote from: Mr. Psychologist on April 24, 2016, 06:14:03 AMIt's been a while but as I recall walt didn't kill the heroine, he just let her choke on her own degeneracy. Sure he could have saved her in the moment but that would have just led to her and jesse's deaths later on from OD anyway.He accidentally pushed her over onto her back. She was smart and slept on her side. He then saw his mistake when she started choking and instinctively reached to turn her back over. Then he stopped short, thought for a second, and decided to let her choke on her own vomit.Regardless of the justifications, how could you not consider that murder?The justification of "they would've died from ODing anyway" is a tired one, but the truth is that it would've been on them if that happened, and Jane was months sober before Jesse entered the picture. People paint her as some junkie bitch, usually to take blame off of Walt. But that's far from the reality.Ah, well that would be a bit more damning then.I don't think it's murder really, maybe a form of manslaughter or malignant neglect (i.e not calling an ambulance) but he didn't set out to kill her, or harm her directly.She was a junkie, but there's not really any cause to describe them as a bad person. It's really quite simple, if they'd kept up skagging themselves silly every other day for a length of time then death is inevitable.Again it's been a while since I've seen it, but isn't the death of the little kid worse? Or did he survive the ricin thing, because I vaguely remember walt poisoning brock(?) to spite jesse.
She manipulated Jesse to get all of his money and run away to be druggies. If you really think she loved Jesse you're blind. Once the money ran out you think she would stay with Jesse? Or would she run back to daddy and "get sober again"?I'm not saying she was a bad person, she just didn't care for Jesse like he did for her. The death was still super impact tho.
Quote from: Dietrich Six on April 24, 2016, 08:49:48 AMShe manipulated Jesse to get all of his money and run away to be druggies. If you really think she loved Jesse you're blind. Once the money ran out you think she would stay with Jesse? Or would she run back to daddy and "get sober again"?I'm not saying she was a bad person, she just didn't care for Jesse like he did for her. The death was still super impact tho.Jesse didn't have any money, Walt was holding it from him. They had to leave the next morning or she was getting the cops called on her; that was why she borderline blackmailed Walt into giving Jesse his money. Not out of "manipulation". If they managed to tear through all of it, her father would be the last place she'd turn.I don't know why you think she didn't care about Jesse. She was clean before he came into the picture, and only started using with him out of sympathy after Combo died. If she only wanted the money, she would've done exactly what Walt did, but with Jesse. She reminded Jesse to sleep on his side, even after Walt already gave Jesse his cash. At that point, she could've let him die if she didn't care about him.They obviously loved each other. Say what you want about Jane as a person. She may have been weak and irresponsible, but she pretty much threw away all she had (stable job, clean of drugs, support group) because of Jesse.
Quote from: ALIE on April 24, 2016, 09:30:57 AMQuote from: Dietrich Six on April 24, 2016, 08:49:48 AMShe manipulated Jesse to get all of his money and run away to be druggies. If you really think she loved Jesse you're blind. Once the money ran out you think she would stay with Jesse? Or would she run back to daddy and "get sober again"?I'm not saying she was a bad person, she just didn't care for Jesse like he did for her. The death was still super impact tho.Jesse didn't have any money, Walt was holding it from him. They had to leave the next morning or she was getting the cops called on her; that was why she borderline blackmailed Walt into giving Jesse his money. Not out of "manipulation". If they managed to tear through all of it, her father would be the last place she'd turn.I don't know why you think she didn't care about Jesse. She was clean before he came into the picture, and only started using with him out of sympathy after Combo died. If she only wanted the money, she would've done exactly what Walt did, but with Jesse. She reminded Jesse to sleep on his side, even after Walt already gave Jesse his cash. At that point, she could've let him die if she didn't care about him.They obviously loved each other. Say what you want about Jane as a person. She may have been weak and irresponsible, but she pretty much threw away all she had (stable job, clean of drugs, support group) because of Jesse.The only thing she threw away was what her father wanted for her. She didn't start using again because she felt bad for Jesse, she started using again because that's what she wanted.She found out about the money and did a complete turn around.
Jane's death in Breaking Bad is seen as neccesary and unimportant to most viewers
Quote from: ALIE on April 23, 2016, 11:24:14 PMJane's death in Breaking Bad is seen as neccesary and unimportant to most viewersNot sure where you're getting this notion from, but I imagine most viewers recognize her death as a crucial point in Walt's downward spiral and the tragedy associated with that turn.