KillThemCrackasBabies
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Oct 14, 2017
I really liked it, it does not seem to be going over well though.
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Thank fuck the colors didn't come back.
Well fuck me sideways, I went and jinxed it. In the end, Kim was what was really important, and he traded his freedom to get an approving nod from her. Aww!!!Honestly pleased they're managing to avoid some soppy simp bullshit like "SHE was what was really important to him all along!"
Even though I liked the ending, I have to agree with this part a ton. The show ended at fun and games. That was the full arc for this show, and the epilogue was unneeded. If I recommend this show to anyone, I'll probably just tell them to stop at fun and games.Don't get me wrong, it was definitely the best episode since the show 's real finale, Bob Odenkirk gave it his all, plenty of funny moments when negotiating, it was was nice to see Charles, Mary, etc... but if I ever rewatch that show, I'll stop watching at Fun & Games, no need for the epilogue, it just cheapens the story.
I dont really think Jimmy was being genuine in his conversations with Mike and Walt, or that he really was "always like that". I think the point of the Chuck flashback was to reveal, for the other two flashbacks, that the moment he was always thinking about going back to, both in the BCS era with Mike and the late BrBa era with Walt, was that conversation with Chuck. The bit about the two of them always having the same conversation, where Jimmy stonewalls Chuck about changing paths in life, that Jimmy wishes he'd actually seen it through and talked about it, but he wasn't ready to talk about it with Chuck, wasn't ready when Mike was thinking about taking a different path, and wasn't ready with Walt when he did the same. But ultimately, Mike, Walt, and Saul all wanted the exact same thing, Saul was just the last to consciously realize it, or admit it."Turns out Mike and Walter deep down were good people all along! They had a bad day, they broke bad, but really, they just wish they could have done thing right from the beginning! They weren't the monsters that we thought they were! Except for Saul, who was always like that! (PSYCHE, HE'S GONNA REDEEMS HIMSELF TOO)."
Mike doesn't really regret the criminal lifestyle. Yet he had already walked away once from it all and signed up to become a hitman. He feels bad that his son died and mistakenly thought drug money would heal the wound."Turns out Mike and Walter deep down were good people all along! They had a bad day, they broke bad, but really, they just wish they could have done thing right from the beginning! They weren't the monsters that we thought they were! Except for Saul, who was always like that! (PSYCHE, HE'S GONNA REDEEM HIMSELF TOO)."
The last four episodes torpedoed this show into nothing. Breaking Bad at least left definitive endings. Even with Jesse you can assume in BB, without watching El Camino, that he escapes and he goes to Alaska. And you can assume in BB, without watching BCS, that Saul goes to another place and lives a quiet life possibly even in Omaha managing a Cinnabon.God what a stupid ending
Well no, obviously, but that's what the first two flashbacks want to make you believe. 'Hey, Mike is clearly better than Saul, if he could he would take it all back!'. 'Hey, even WALTER is better than Saul, he would also take it all back!'I dont really think Jimmy was being genuine in his conversations with Mike and Walt, or that he really was "always like that". I think the point of the Chuck flashback was to reveal, for the other two flashbacks, that the moment he was always thinking about going back to, both in the BCS era with Mike and the late BrBa era with Walt, was that conversation with Chuck.
No, first he goes to say 'Stop the death of my son' but then he goes 'Stop the whole chain of events that led to the death of my son', meaning he would have stayed a cop and kept his nose clean and made sure his son did too.Mike doesn't really regret the criminal lifestyle. Yet he had already walked away once from it all and signed up to become a hitman. He feels bad that his son died and mistakenly thought drug money would heal the wound.
The last four episodes torpedoed this show into nothing.
You're all over the place. GoT is one of the worst endings of all time, and both The Sopranos and The Shield had some of the best finales of all time, we're talking maybe 10 top.This might not be a Game of Thrones level implosion. But this ending is just mediocre and flat. It is not even bad necessarily. Just dumb. And weak narratively. Out with a whimper. The Shield ended with a guy sitting at his desk essentially but was incredible for what it meant beyond a man rising from his desk at the sounds of sirens. Sopranos ended with the family eating at the diner yet everything around them is obsessed over like the Zapruder film by fans to this day.
Why do people like you delude yourself into thinking the show is making itself out to be some machiavellian masterpiece of subtlety and intrigue, just to get pissed and start screeching about it in all caps in the internet when it's not? It wasn't being subtle, it literally zoomed right in on the title of the fucking book at the end of the flashback. It was a simple reveal, the other shoe dropping that gave the first two flashbacks a purpose, that's itWell no, obviously, but that's what the first two flashbacks want to make you believe. 'Hey, Mike is clearly better than Saul, if he could he would take it all back!'. 'Hey, even WALTER is better than Saul, he would also take it all back!'
Then comes the third flashback designed to make you go OOH THATS THE POTTERY MACHINE THAT STANDS IN FOR REGRETS JIMMY HAS BEEN TALKING ABOUT, IN CONJUNCTION OF CHUCK'S TALK ABOUT CHANGING HIS WAYS IT EXPLAINS WHY HE'S GONNA THROW AWAY HIS DEAL!! IN ALL CAPS BECAUSE OF THE SUBTLE POTTERY.
It was about as subtle as an indian gangrape.
At the very least we can be happy knowing 2 things.Oh and speaking of the gay pottery, Saul going from managing a cinnabon to making buns in prison.
BRA-VO.
the show is making itself out to be some machiavellian masterpiece of subtlety and intrigue
Yeah, there was no comeuppance. It was the happiest possible ending Saul could have had from the choices that led him to where he was.Fuck you, Vince you asshole. It's a really fucking cheap way to get out of it. It's not a redemption for Jimmy, sure he admits it in public and he gets shafted for the next 86 years (maybe out with early behavior), but he's a prison legend, he's not spending his day worried the law is gonna catch up with him... and all this for a nod and a smoke from m'lady
Sopranos ending was dogshit lmfao, complete nothing burger made so that redditors think they are deep by doing the writers job.No, first he goes to say 'Stop the death of my son' but then he goes 'Stop the whole chain of events that led to the death of my son', meaning he would have stayed a cop and kept his nose clean and made sure his son did too.
Walt is also clearly saying that if he had stayed with his company, once he got sick with cancer he would have had the money to get the best medical care he could. he never would have had to do any of that and he could have kept being a chemist and doing what he wants legally.
Let's not go to far. See it as a useless epilogue, the same way El Camino was to Breaking Bad. You can entirely skip it and ignore it, and the real finales of both are still intact. (In BCS's case, said finale being Fun & Games)
You're all over the place. GoT is one of the worst endings of all time, and both The Sopranos and The Shield had some of the best finales of all time, we're talking maybe 10 top.
This episode doesn't deserve to be spoken alongside any of them. It was just... meh.