DEBBIE’S DOLL

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In this wonderful painting by Robert McGinnis, a tribute to John Ford’s film The Searchers, Ethan Edwards looks down at the doll which Debbie, his niece, dropped when she was abducted by Scar — a symbol of innocence violated.

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I believe that the teddy bear which falls into Walter White’s pool in Breaking Bad, from the mid-air collision of two aircraft, is a reference to Debbie’s doll, a similar image of innocence violated, for which Walt is indirectly but inescapably responsible.

Vince Gilligan, the creator of Breaking Bad, said that the ending of the series was a direct nod to The Searchers — offering Walt, like Ethan, a small measure of redemption.  In Breaking Bad, Walt is thus both Ethan and Scar, just as the two are in one sense mirrors of each other in The Searchers, two sides of what is in truth the same savagery.

SHOOTING STAR

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WARNING — Breaking Bad spoilers below . . .

There are lively discussions going on all over the place by people who’ve been following the series about the last episode of Breaking Bad.

Many have been troubled by the fact that Walter White was allowed to “complete his mission”, leave money for his family after he was gone — that is if you think his cockeyed scheme to intimidate the Schwartzs is going to hold up after his death.

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Others have been troubled that Walt was allowed to take out a slew of his enemies in a blaze of gunfire — like a desperate but existentially exultant Western anti-hero.

These aspects of the finale miss the point, I think. Walt got to pull off a couple of his trade-mark fiendish stunts, but the real finale to the show took place in two scenes of confrontation, with his wife and with his former partner Jesse.

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In the confrontations, Walt tried to give these people what he thought they needed — the truth, at long last, about himself, in his wife Skyler’s case . . . and a chance for revenge in Jesse’s case.

Emmy Nominations

Neither of them was able to make any response, beyond relief perhaps. They could not repay his gesture, could not give him anything in return for what he saw as gifts. Skyler let him have one last look at his daughter, but neither she nor Jesse could thank him for his “gifts” or tell him they loved him, as both probably still did on some level. They could only stare at him as though he had become a ghost.

Gilligan, who directed the episode, made a few visual allusions to Walt’s ghost-like persona.  Walt walks around the Schwartzs’ house like a wraith before they finally see him.  He’s discovered in a camera move reveal to be standing behind a pillar in Skyler’s kitchen while she talks on the phone about him, apparently alone.  He’s a posthumous figure already.

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I think of Bob Dylan’s great song about lost opportunities, failed love — “Shooting Star”, which contains the lines:

Guess it’s too late to say the things to you
That you needed to hear me say.
Saw a shooting star tonight
Slip away.

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And that’s what we watched in the last episode of Breaking Bad — a shooting star slip away, an empty man taking his leave of an empty life, the truth about himself revealed but meaningless.

BROKEN

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Listening again to the words of “Baby Blue”, the Badfinger song that played out the final episode of Breaking Bad, it seems clear to me that Walt’s “Felina” — “wicked Felina, the girl that I loved” — was the blue meth that gave him his power. It was his “Precious”, as Gilligan described it in a post-finale interview, referring to Gollum and the ring.

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That blue meth was the only thing Walt ever really loved — more than Gretchen, more than his family — the one true love of his life. As a last act he smeared his blood on a cooking cauldron — “one little kiss then . . . Felina, goodbye.” Walt wanted to kill Jesse because he was cheating on him with the blue meth — the blue meth that belonged only to him. (This is also echoed in the narrative of the song “El Paso”, from which the name Felina is taken.) It’s as dark an ending as one could imagine. The name of the group, Bad-finger, and its bleak, tragic history, added even more shadows to the finale.