Nearly a week after the Breaking Bad finale aired, the ending of the megahit cable series continues to gratify, infuriate, and above all fascinate the moralists — professional and amateur — who constitute the audience’s fanboy core and who always framed the most vigorous debates about the show.
That’s understandable.
The series at its dark heart is a study of good and evil, and more specifically about how good people can do bad things, how they become bad, or whether we all have a seed of evil within us that can germinate and run amok under the right conditions.
It is further proof that the series’ drama is a profoundly religious one is the fact that theologically minded people are still fiercely disputing exactly what the ending meant, and what the series — and its anti-hero, Walter White — stood for in moral and metaphysical terms.
Is the chemistry-teacher-turned-meth-cooker an irredeemable monster? Or maybe he is just one of us — a struggling, middle-class worker bee who gets a diagnosis of lung cancer and, hearing how profitable the drug trade can be, uses his talents to concoct premium-grade drugs to make a quick score that will support his wife and children long after he’s dead.
Certainly the ending was inevitable and unsurprising: White dies, as he had to.
The show’s creator, Vince Gilligan, made it clear – yes, some held out hope over the course of five seasons — that “this story was finite all along.
It’s a story that starts at A and ends at Z.” But how Walt died, who he would take down with him — or spare — and whether he ended in a state of grace were burning questions for devotees of the series, as they are for all believers.
Eschatology, the study of our ultimate fate, is what all religious exploring points to. So do TV dramas.
“I want to believe there is some sort of cosmic balancing of the scales at the end of it all,” Gilligan said last year.
“I’d just like to believe there’s some point to it all. I’d like to believe that there is. Everything is just too random and chaotic absent that.”
Not surprisingly, many who watched the finale saw a light at the end of the series for Walt.
One genius of the show (there were so many) is that it co-opted viewers into rooting for Mr. White–as Walt’s co-conspirator Jesse Pinkman always called his onetime high school teacher–no matter how low he sank.
So despite the trail of carnage and ruined lives that Walt left behind, the hope that he would find grace at the end, that his death would somehow sanctify, was overpowering.
Critics as varied as Emily Bazelon in Slate and Allen St. John in Forbes declared that “Breaking Bad” was ultimately a “love story” because White managed to do what he set out to do in the first season: He found a way to provide for his family, and at the end he finally confessed his original sin in becoming the drug kingpin dubbed Heisenberg.
“I did it for me,” as he tells his devastated wife, Skyler. “I liked it. I was good at it. And I was really … alive.”
Writer Sonny Bunch even saw Gilligan slyly turning White into Jesus Christ–the wounds in Walt’s hand and side, his reference to the view of the Sangre de Cristo (Blood of Christ) mountains, his “sacrificing himself to save the people he loved,” his cruciform death pose.
White also “made peace with those who had wronged him and those he had wronged (one way or another) so as to prepare himself for the afterlife.”
Well, “making peace” may be pushing it.
White actually used his intellectual gifts one last time to build a Rube Goldberg killing machine and orchestrate a bloody–if improbable, without divine aid–denouement that destroyed all his enemies.
“His moment of clarity at the end doesn’t make up for all the hubris of Heisenberg,” Bazelon wrote. “But it did mean I could wholeheartedly root for his scheme of revenge.”
And that’s the theological problem. Continue reading
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