watched the last 5 minutes over again...seems like hank is gonna die. Unless im picking up on the clues all wrong lol
Avoided this thread and anything BB related until I finally got to see the last episode today. Great episode and the ending was crazy. Some of the nitpicking posts in this thread are outright funny. You disregard reality with respect to a suburban chemistry teacher rising to the top of the drug world, including killing career criminals, but you have an issue with a shootout that seemed too unrealistic? Give it up and enjoy the ride. Excellent writing from beginning to end.
I have a feeling the ending will be rushed. How does Walt grow out his hair in three episodes? A flash forward would be disappointing....
We already know it's a flash forward. In the main timeline, it's maybe a couple of months after his 51st birthday. When he has the hair and beard, it's his 52nd birthday. So there's roughly a 6-9 month difference.
Saul on the finale... 'I’ve*been told that the ending is really surprising and really satisfying and you can’t believe the number of loose ends that get wrapped up. That’s all hearsay, though, because I*didn’t*read it. I dumped it in the trash, and then I dumped out the trash."
Or he probably gets out of town as soon as the Nazis take Jesse/Walt and kill Hank and Gomie. I don't think he dies.
I wonder what happens to Huel? . . . at the end of everything he still chilling in the hotel wondering what is going on . .. lol . Rocket River
He was quoted somewhere saying he only read his lines, then dumped the script for the last episode and doesn't know what happens because he wants to watch the ending as a fan. So I think the only assumption that can be made is he is in the last episode, but is not in the final scenes. Whether it's by death or bailing the **** out of town, who knows.
If he wasn't in the finale, why would he even have a script to begin with? Because Vince is a nice guy and wanted him to read it? Do you think Mike Ehrmantraut got a finale script?
He was in the finale, just probably not at the end (maybe the first 30 minutes). So, he memorized his lines and threw the rest out. Some directors will only give you your part and not the very end (and all Breaking Bad scripts are in 5 parts, just like the X-Files on which Gilligan used to be a writer: Teaser Act I Act II Act III Act IV But Gilligan probably figured that Odenkirk especially, he being a former writer for SNL (he was the one who wrote Chris Farley's famous "van down by the river" scene) would know not to "spill the beans" on the end.
Better Call Saul is happening! It will serve as a prequel to Breaking Bad. http://www.deadline.com/2013/09/breaking-bad-saul-goodman-spinoff-amc-series/