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  • Film & TV Moderators: ghostfreak

Television Breaking Bad

He may only have the ricin dose out for one person though?

the LD50 for ricin is 5mg/kg so yeah, entirely possible considering that little vial can't contain much more than a half gram



^ Damn, I like that second one. Really shows the theme of crippling despair and the loss of hope





Just rewatched the scene where Todd kills Andrea.. "Just so you know, this isn't personal". Are any of his killings personal? He seems like a nice, hard working guy until he puts a bullet in your skull and dissolves you in a vat of hydrofluoric acid. At least he tries to keep collateral damage down, right?
 
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Just rewatched the scene where Todd kills Andrea.. "Just so you know, this isn't personal". Are any of his killings personal? He seems like a nice, hard working guy until he puts a bullet in your skull and dissolves you in a vat of hydrofluoric acid. At least he tries to keep collateral damage down, right?

Speaking of the acid barrels, if the police found one of the barrels that had a dissolved person inside, is there anyway for them to know that there was a dissolved person inside? If yes would there be enough DNA (or other source material) that would lead to the identity of the person?
 
Speaking of the acid barrels, if the police found one of the barrels that had a dissolved person inside, is there anyway for them to know that there was a dissolved person inside? If yes would there be enough DNA (or other source material) that would lead to the identity of the person?

I don't think they'd be able to tell without already knowing a body was dissolved, but I'm sure that if they knew they could find a way to get some DNA. Or maybe the acid literally killed all the DNA as well.

Either way, like Folley said, they send the barrel's along with other kinds of toxic waste to be disposed of so theres no trace.
 
'Breaking Bad' end sure to please

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THE supply is running low and you know there won't be more.

Breaking Bad stands to leave its fans reeling.

For five seasons of wickedness, this AMC drama has set viewers face-to-face with the repellant but irresistible Walter White and the dark world he embraced as he spiraled into evil.

With the end imminent, who can say what fate awaits this teacher-turned-drug-lord for the havoc he has wreaked on everyone around him.

This is more than the end of a TV series. It's a cultural moment, arriving as the show has logged record ratings, bagged a best-drama Emmy and even scored this week's cover of The New Yorker magazine.

Up through the penultimate episode, Breaking Bad has been as potent and pure as the "blue sky" crystal meth Walter cooked with such skill.

Judging from that consistency in storytelling and in performances by such stars as Bryan Cranston (Walter White), Aaron Paul (his sidekick Jesse Pinkman), Anna Gunn (who just won an Emmy as Walt's wife) and Betsy Brandt, the end will likely pack unforgiving potency.


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The cast of Breaking Bad, from left, Bob Odenkirk, Betsy Brandt, Aaron Paul, Dean Norris and Bryan Cranston, right, congratulate creator Vince Gilligan, second right, after he accepted the Emmy award for outstanding drama series.

But one thing is dead sure: It will be beautiful.

Breaking Bad has often been described as addictive, and if that's so, the look of the show is its own habit-forming drug.

Michael Slovis, the series' four-times-Emmy-nominated director of photography, has been cooking up that look since the series' sophomore season.

"I go for the emotion in the scene, not to overtake it, but to help it along," said Slovis. "With Breaking Bad, I recognised very early that I had a story and performances that could stand up to a bold look."

The action is centered in Albuquerque, New Mexico, which invites sprawling desert shots and tidy manicured neighbourhoods; washes of light and jagged sun-drenched expanses.

The look of the show makes the most of its setting, and also the technology by which viewers see it: In an age of digital video, with the smallest detail and the sharpest resolution visible to the audience, Walter's battered mobile meth lab could be clearly discerned as a speck against a vista of deserts and mountains. A doll's disembodied eyeball bobbing in a swimming pool had chilling vividness.

And don't forget the show's visual signature: Breaking Bad was never afraid of the dark.

Slovis recalls how, his first week as DP, he was shooting in Jesse's basement.

"Jesse and Walter are down there cooking meth, and I turn off all the lights and turn the back lights on. There's smoke and shafts of light coming through the basement door and I go, 'This is what I came to do!'"

"We have some interesting extremes in lighting, thanks to Michael and his fearlessness," said Breaking Bad creator Vince Gilligan. He invoked the fancy artistic term for this, "chiaroscuro," which means the use of strong contrasts between light and dark.

"Breaking Bad has become known for beautiful bold lighting, and Michael became an indispensable part of the Breaking Bad equation," he said.

The imagery of Breaking Bad is second-nature to its viewers, whether or not they are conscious of Slovis' work. So when they swoon at the beauty of the desert outside Albuquerque, they may not know the complexion of this badlands was created in his camera.

"The desert on the show has a tonality that doesn't exist in real life," he said with a laugh.

This colour is achieved with a so-called "tobacco filter" clamped on the lens.

"I don't pay much attention to reality when I light or even when I shoot exteriors. But nobody questions the colour, because it becomes part of the storytelling."

You would have a hard time finding many stylistic links between Breaking Bad and some of Slovis' other credits, which include CSI (for which he won an Emmy), Fringe, AMC's short-lived noir thriller Rubicon, and lighter fare including Running Wilde and Royal Pains.

(Nor his additional credits as a director, which range from four episodes of Breaking Bad to Chicago Fire and 30 Rock.)

Instead, he said he strives to let each project suggest its own look.

Now 58, Slovis is soft-voiced and lanky, with a head whose baldness rivals Walt White's in Heisenberg mode.

He got the photography bug while growing up in Plainview, New Jersey, where he became the school photographer and won a state photography contest. He was invited to study at the Rochester Institute of Technology.

He imagined himself a fine-arts photographer but he loved movies and storytelling, and, after graduate school at New York University, he landed jobs shooting music videos and commercials, then got nibbles from feature films.

But in 2001 he found movie offers drying up, and, though he had never seen TV in his future, he gratefully accepted a call from the NBC series Ed.

The timing was terrific. For decades, TV's hasty, assembly-line production schedule proved an obstacle to giving a series its own visual style.

"Film had been just a way to record the TV picture," Slovis said.

A further barrier to getting too creative was the low resolution and squarish shape of the old TV receivers, which conversely had a negative impact on theatrical films, whose wide-screen format was forced to conform (with lots of medium and close-up shots) to movies' eventual small-screen telecast.

Slovis hails pioneering exceptions such as Twin Peaks, Law & Order and The X-Files, and credits CSI as "one of the first times that cinematography became a real character on a show. TV began changing around us."

Gilligan agreed that "the advent of flat-screen TV really allowed Michael's work to shine in a way it wouldn't have, 20 years ago."

Now the end of Breaking Bad is nigh. But through Sunday's final fade-out, Slovis' influence will remain, capturing the "Bad" times you can't turn your eyes from.

He's a series star who's out of sight, yet controlling what you see.


Read more: http://www.news.com.au/entertainmen...se/story-e6frfmyi-1226728000967#ixzz2g3Pvx3HC
 
Same. In a few episodes, esp when shes yelling at mike for her life you can hear a bit of un native american sounding tonalities. Shes still pretty hot tho.
 
I didn't realize how often they had used that music that played when Walt found his Heisenberg hat in New Hampshire. There was that cool shot from behind Walt as he puts on the hat. It's been similar to other shots they've had in past scenes with the hat. Is that the Heisenberg theme song or something? Rewatching during the marathon I've noticed they played that song in at least two other instances where Walt had put the hat on and then proceeded to Heisenberg it up.
 
^ That was my point before, they obviously went out of their way to show "Mr. Lampert" turning to Heisenberg. As always, he turns to his first instinct.. trying to help his family. When that fuh-fuh-fails he has nothing left... until he sees that news report, and realizes the only thing he hasn't lost is his ego. It seems he refuses to let them take that as well..
 
Yea that music when he has the hat on is great. My parents wanted to come help with this party they are throwing tmrw for a family friend but ive been stuck to the tv for the past few days...i might be off bl for a while after sunday lol. Doing some private crying hahaha. Remember in the na meeting jesse is talking about how if he had all the money he needed hed work with his hands, made wooden boxes...wood working? Hmm.
 
^ That was my point before, they obviously went out of their way to show "Mr. Lampert" turning to Heisenberg. As always, he turns to his first instinct.. trying to help his family. When that fuh-fuh-fails he has nothing left... until he sees that news report, and realizes the only thing he hasn't lost is his ego. It seems he refuses to let them take that as well..

But he didn't do anything when he put the hat on. He walked to the gate and then said, "Tomorrow", except he never went the next day either. It showed he couldn't conjure up Heisenberg anymore even if he wanted to. He thought he could when he had the hat, but when he walked to the gate he just knew he didn't have it in him then.
 
But he didn't do anything when he put the hat on. He walked to the gate and then said, "Tomorrow", except he never went the next day either. It showed he couldn't conjure up Heisenberg anymore even if he wanted to. He thought he could when he had the hat, but when he walked to the gate he just knew he didn't have it in him then.

Yeah he needed some kind of catalyst to summon Heisenberg. He got it when he saw the Gretchen and Elliot interview. ;)
 
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