Rob wrote: “I did it for me. I liked it. I was good at it. I was alive.” That was always obvious for five seasons, but Walt's admitting it out loud to Skyler made for one of the best scenes in the whole series. That moment was almost required — it's no kind of ending if you don't have some version of that scene.
Agreed. Either Walt needed to say it, or someone needed to call him out on it. We got both, as Skyler (either her or Marie had to be the one) started to call him out on it, then he admitted it himself. Solid closure and a bit of a kick in the face to those that have defended Walt all this time as "he was doing it for his family", using the same twisted rationalization as he was.
Trey wrote:But this time it wasn't the same table she's always used in the past - every other meeting has been by the windows.
Also he's been gone for, what, six months or more? Enough of a stretch that he can still catch them meeting at this place at all, much less know which table she'll pick.
Not a dealbreaker, just a weak link in an episode that crossed all its t's nicely otherwise.
I'll have to re-watch that scene, but I thought it was the same table as usual.
My thing about that scene was that there was no reason for Walt to interact with them at all. He could have been sitting in the background, we could have gotten a little meaningless "update" conversation from Lydia & Todd, then at some point she sips her tea and Walt leaves quietly. It would take up slightly less screen time, and would be just as effective. In fact, there'd be some irony in that she would die via such a "hands off" approach that she's normally on the other end of. A little line between her and Todd would also explain why she was calling him later that evening, too.
Walt shows up at the camp and the guards draw guns and say "who the fu---oh, holy shit it's you!" a quick radio to Jack and he's let in, makes his pitch about a new method directly to Jack, and bam you're back at the same scene in the clubhouse as before.
Again, the scene wasn't terrible or anything, but very few times have I been watching BB and thought "There could have been a better way to handle this..." The fact that it happened in the finale was a bit of a bummer.
Also...was I the only one that thought the "I need to show him we're not partners with Jesse" felt a little contrived? Maybe it was because I was already a little disappointed with the episode so far, but I was fine with the convenient Charlie Rose interview, but this one bothered me. //shrug
Doctor Submarine wrote:I'm more interested in how Walt got the ricin in the packet.
The same way he got it into Brock's juice at school? 
Raven wrote:I liked the framing on the conversation with Skyler. Hiding Walt while she was on the phone was a nice touch but having the frame split down the middle by that column was a nice way to show that they were no longer "together."
Agreed! I especially liked how the column was just huge in the frame. It occupied nearly all the space between them. It wasn't subtle at all, and it shouldn't have been.
avatar wrote:I wonder how long Jesse can last on the run. He's a wanted fugitive. No money. Not a hardened criminal mastermind. Just a highly strung out kid.
What is Jesse a wanted fugitive for? He was busted earlier in the season for throwing the cash out of the window, but other than that, he's basically clean. The DEA never found the tape (I guess they could find it at the Nazi camp? Loose end) and with Walt dead on the floor of the Nazi lab, I imagine all the blue meth Jesse was making for Jack's crew would get pinned on Walt.
As far as I can tell, Jesse is getting away relatively clean.
Two final thoughts:
First...Felina was directly tied to the song "El Paso" by Marty Robbins. This was predicted by Andi Teran over at http://previously.tv/breaking-bad/break … explained/
Some of his predictions are off, but "El Paso" was the song playing in the car Walt stole, and it what he was singing to himself while building his garage door opener of doom.
Second, and lastly (for now)...
Can anyone explain how Walt got shot exactly? He was laying face down on Jesse, yet seemed to be shot in the stomach. If he was shot in the back, it would have meant the bullet had to go all the way through and would have hit Jesse. But being shot in the front while laying face down on top of Jesse seems rather unlikely.
It's a bit of a nit-pick, I guess...but BB is generally so good at details like this. I mean, to have Walt go out by some random ricochet and a wound that doesn't logically line up with the situation?
I must be missing something, right?