Posted on 09/10/2013 11:21:52 AM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum
Last night's Breaking Bad left off in the middle of a gunfight, with Gomez and Hank trying to fend off two cars' worth of Todd's Nazi family. Gomez had a shotgun; Jack and Kenny each had some kind of assault weapon. But there were Hank and Todd, each with a handgun. Bang, bang, bang. It was just the most recent instance of Todd mirroring another character. We've seen him be like Walt, we've seen him mirror Jesse, and then last night we saw him mirror both Skyler and Hank. For a very late addition to the cast, Todd sure has become important.
Early on, Todd was a mirror for Mike. In his first appearance as part of the Vamanos extermination front Todd spotted a nanny cam in the house Walt and Jesse were about to use as a onetime cook site. It was an instance of Mike-style attention to detail (think of Mike cleaning up Jesse's apartment when Jane died), with the same kind of modest presence that disguises an intense dark side. Two episodes later, in "Dead Freight," Todd works seamlessly alongside Jesse and Walt, pulling off the great methylamine heist of '12. And then in one of the show's most striking scenes, Todd pulls out a gun and kills a child.
But dirtbike-riding, tarantula-trapping Drew Sharp is not the first kid to be shot on Breaking Bad. There was Tomás Cantillo back in season three, who was shot and killed in "Half Measures," presumably at Gus's behest. If Todd and Gus ever crossed paths, we didn't see it, but when he killed Drew Sharp, it was a total Gus move. At that point, Jesse thought Gus had poisoned Brock so in Jesse's eyes, that was another Gus-style transgression. But Walt knew better; in his eyes, Todd was making a Walt-like move, and in its own sick way, that was flattering. Not unlike the Salamancas, Todd has an important professional criminal relationship with his uncle. Not a lot of solid father-son relationships on Breaking Bad! This is why so many characters seek out authoritative male approval and attention!
Since then, Todd's bounced between Jesse and Walt. He's a protégé so he's Jesse. But he's very precise and committed so he's Walt. He doesn't have a natural aptitude for meth-cooking so he's Jesse. But boy, is he ever applying himself back to Walt. When he helped Walt dispose of Mike's body, he channeled Saul: I don't need or want a full explanation; let's just get the dirty work over with. In this season's "Buried," Todd leads a blindfolded Lydia through a maze of corpses that she refuses to see or acknowledge, which is more or less how Walt led Sklyer through the first few seasons of the show. Denial's a hell of a thing.
So we've seen Todd channel the bad guys. But he's channeled the good guys, too. (Good being a relative term here; it's Breaking Bad, after all.) When he sat at breakfast bragging to his uncle Jake and associate Kenny about the train heist, he sounded just like a season one Hank bragging about his DEA busts; mostly telling the truth, leaving out the unsavory parts, and basking in the adoration of a rapt audience.
Todd's even able to echo parts of Skyler's story lines. Breaking Bad is a surprisingly desexualized show. Usually in this antihero genre that Walter White gets lumped in with, we see a tremendous amount of womanizing: We saw it from Tony Soprano, from Don Draper, from Vic Mackey. And often shows that have this much violence say, Game of Thrones or Dexter have a lot of sex and nudity to go along with it. Not so Breaking Bad. There's very little tenderness, very few loving relationships, and almost no eroticism. But then there was Todd's charged conversation with Lydia and his wistful examination of the lipstick stain she left on his These Colors Don't Run mug, and suddenly things were as sensual as they'd ever been. The only other time we've seen anything that overtly sexual was Skyler singing "Happy Birthday" to Ted, just before they rekindled their affair. And the way Todd cradled the mug felt like a direct callback to Skyler at the end of "Fifty-One," when she sat in the living room, ashing her cigarette into an Area 51 mug.
We see Hank in Todd, we Skyler in Todd, we even see Marie's perky telephone demeanor maybe sort of in Todd. We see parts of Walt and Gus and Mike and Jesse in Todd. And what they all add up to Todd himself is someone pretty awful. Oh, he's devoted, he's easy to work with, and he even seems to be enjoying himself at least some of the time. But Todd's also maybe a psychopath, or at least he's someone detached enough from the experiences of life that he's unfazed by murdering a child. He's a bad, bad guy. And with him, Breaking Bad is telling us that the bad side wins out add up all the good things about the show's universe, and add up all the bad things, and guess what? The bad part wins. The dangerous part, the criminal part, the cold part, the cruel part even when someone has goodness in them, when he or she is smart and passionate and reliable. Even then, the bad part is more powerful. Just ask Heisenberg.
Its a modern sopranos
The "good" DEA character is Gomez, who is clearly intended to be a foil: Hank as he should have been. And I'm betting Gomie is dead...
It never did.
Because it’s a great show. Not pretty, but then again, neither is life.
I meant for people who are looking for it.
I took it as - she’s his employer, she’s dissatisfied with his product, and he’s trying to do better - or possibly “hey, if I can get her to like me, maybe she’ll be ok with 76%” - hahaha
Vince Gilligan did the underwear thing on purpose. It’s supposed to be symbolic of his having given up at a certain stage of emotional/moral development.
i didn’t think it was strange. i see it as the todd/lydia pair becoming stronger than the todd/walt pair. don’t think lydia won’t exploit this if need be.
i think this eventually comes into play in walt’s demise. sh1t happens, says todd. he dealt with mike. he was’going to deal with jesse. if walt’s’not cooking and lydia wants a loose end gone, well, nothing personal mr white...
i agree.
It looked like Gomey might have gotten shot. I agree that he is one of the few good guys on the show. The other one is Walt Jr.
My latest predictions:
Todd will kill Jesse.
Skylar will kill someone, probably Lydia
Marie will try to poison someone.
Walt will kill Jack, Todd and several of their henchmen.
Hank will die.
THAT’S the succinct description I have trying to pull together in my head. THANK YOU!! Walt really lost me when
he turned on Gus. He had the perfect set-up to just cook,
and not have to deal with moving the merchandise. But he
still wasn’t content. Right now, I want to see Walt suffer.
But I could change my mind, based on where things go, I guess. What a show. I also resisted watching it till this year.
Yes indeed. Though I think it’s easier to relate to the characters in BB than in Sopranos.
also, about not wasting anythng on screen....
watch out for something to happen with the remote-controlled car’by hank’s neighbor kid. that thing’s been on twice, once run over’by marie, the next time at walt/hank’s’fight. remote controlled kaboom.
I’ll admit I erred in saying he’s of the “highest” moral character but Hank has always been shown to be lawful. His obsession at some points in the show cause him to teeter close to falling apart and becoming a bad guy but he never goes beyond breaking like Walt did. At best, he’s a warning against obsession but he’s still a “good” character.
His greatest failings IIRC are towards Jessie. He has no concern for him but he isn’t allowing himself to cross the line and lie/kill/disgrace himself. He could easily just kill Walt secretly and leave him in the desert but even Walt know Hank isn’t a dirty cop.
Might start a trend.
you’d be surprised too if you saw a dead guy.
goes back to this gunfight, he is somehow able’to fake his death, with help or left for dead but isn’t.
That’s the only way I can see the show ending. They can’t let him get away with it, and Walt going to jail would be anticlimactic. The best way for them to end it is for Walt to die, probably in the course of trying to save someone else. That way, they can partially redeem the character, but he still pays some consequences.
So, yes, Walt did have this side of him within; but, it took something bad happening to him (terminal cancer) to bring out the worst. And, the worst was brought out because he had "good intentions" (the road to hell, anybody). He wanted, as Jesse said, to leave something for his "people". He had even figured out exactly how much he would need, and that was his goal, in the beginning.
And, that is when the Devil intervened to take those "good intentions" and produce a horrifying result.
So, yes, we all contain the possibility of such evil deeds; but, he did begin as a very bland kind-of character. High school teacher, lives in the suburbs, nice wife, nice kid (with some problems), exteneded family. Normal life, doing everything he is supposed to do, take care of his family, work hard at his job --- and, it was all for naught. He was dying, he snapped. As you say, harsh and stressful circumstances.
So, perhaps he was not a "good" person, because he has shown what was inside; or, perhaps he was just ordinary and circumstances brought out that very bad person that can live in all of us.
this is the brilliance and the realness of the show. it shows allthe people, that under different types of stress, the inherent weaknesses of their own humanity comes’through.
we all have weaknesses and all have different lines, and when stressed do things not in our normal moral scope, and also as you get used to doing them, those lines move. rationalization, 2nd greatest human drive.
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