Breaking Bad Watch: The Divorce Papers Are in the Crib

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“A man provides.”

It is the diabolical wording – brainwashing really – used by one drug kingpin in luring a supplier back into the fray, fishing for any weaknesses in Walt’s decision to leave the business. Walt tells Gus he pursued a temporary career of cooking meth to provide for his children, and Gus uses that to push in even closer, to convince Walt that he must return to the business. Money is the only real measure of a man – says the drug dealer. And while Walt isn’t entirely convinced, he’s already in too deep to question his actions now.

In last night’s episode of Breaking Bad, we saw every character suddenly locked into a course of action they may no longer believe to be the right one. Walt, determined to win his family back, is amazed when Skyler allows him to tend to their fussy infant. But then he turns around to see her gone; she will allow him to be a father, but never again a husband. And so he goes back into cooking, whether he likes it or not, signing the divorce papers and leaving them in the baby’s crib (with the baby curiously absent). Walt’s moved out – and he’s taken his duffel bag of drug money with him. It’s clear the money is for him and his kids, not her. At least not anymore.

Hank, meanwhile, turns down the transfer to El Paso, only to realize that the case he stayed put to solve may now be dead in its tracks. But then, a last second clue leads him to the house that once was home to the RV, and to that photo of a junkie smiling right along with Jesse. This is the first solid link, that puts Hank within grasp of tracking down Walt. And I couldn’t quite remember, but doesn’t Hank already know that Jesse and Walt have some sort of connection?

Jesse, meanwhile, has embraced his new role as the bad guy, but when Walt confronted him in last night’s episode, telling him that he’s out, it’s clear that Jesse is rocked to the core. He might be able to handle flying solo, but to have Walt as an enemy? Jesse seems to crack. He chucks a rock at Walt’s car, smashes the windshield, and then almost looks bewildered by his own capacity to destroy. In past weeks, he has asserted himself proudly as the bad guy, but in that moment, he sure looked more like a scared kid, unsure of what his next move should be.

Skyler, too, spends the episode basically reconciling her new life. She has a lover, with an amazing heated bathroom floor, that she comes to despise.  She is mortified by the thousands of dollars she finds in a duffel bag in her house, but then seems equally startled when it’s gone. Between those two discoveries, she rationalizes to her lawyer the value of protecting her husband, and hears from her sister, who analyzes Hank’s behavior and says that confronting death changes a man. Skyler has never seemed more comfortable in accepting the state of things, including a drug kingpin as husband, but then she arrives home to find the divorce papers. Chuck the rationalization out the window; Now it’s her move.

So last night began and ended with some dramatic emotional ellipses. Walt wants to win back his family, but only seems capable of winning back his kids. Skyler reluctantly protects Walt, only to see him walk away. Jesse is willing to go on his own, with Walt out of the picture, only to realize that Walt is back – and has squeezed him out of the market. Hot on their trail is Hank, who has staked everything – both professionally and psychologically – on cracking the case.

“A man provides,” Gus says, but what exactly is he supposed to provide? Money? Security? Sex? Stability? Independence? It’s this question that continues to propel Breaking Bad, and after last night’s episode I’m left with more questions than ever – about whether Skyler will now walk away, about whether Walt will cook again, about what Gus’s real intentions are (surely he plans on stealing Walt’s techniques, yes?), about how far Hank will take this, in tracking down Jesse, and then his brother-in-law. Whatever direction we go next week, one thing’s for sure: The introspection is over. All hell is about to break loose.

What did you all think?

Related Topics: Breaking Bad, gus, jesse, walt, Television
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  • Rorschach

    Definitely agree that Gus just wants to steal the technique. I unfortunately forget the name of the commenter from last week who brought this up, but I think this is still playing along the lines of what happened to Walt before, at Gray Enterprises (that might be the wrong name). He’s getting ripped off from his own creation. Further, now scientist Walt is being given HIS OWN LAB. That’s a big deal.

    Big time redemption for Skyler this episode also. The episode name was Mas, I believe, and eeeveryone got greedy. Great episode.

  • archstanton68

    I wonder when Walt will start to resent the deal he made with Gus? Using the sale he made in season 2 as a reference (38 lbs for $1.2 million) that puts the value of the meth he’ll cook over 3 months at about $75 million (wholesale, not street value). Does anyone think that once he does the math he won’t feel like he’s getting shorted? Sure, for the guys who was recently making $40,000/year teaching, $3 million is a lot of money, but the one constant in the show is Walt’s rapidly expanding ego and over-inflated sense of self worth. As we also know, every resolution only creates more conflict for Walt.

  • Steven James Snyder

    Yeah, I agree that this is a fascinating turn in the series – as Walt shifts from entrepreneur to hired gun. But where do you see the redemption for Skyler? Because she let him take care of the baby? Or because she got the divorce? I’m intrigued….but what other series can give us such rich characters, where 10 of us could draw 10 different conclusions as to their actions. Skyler is such a complex character -

  • Steven James Snyder

    Great, great point; when will Walt start to realize that he is being severely underpaid? And how will that blow up? We’ve seen in the past that he REALLY doesn’t like getting screwed, and he definitely considers himself something of an untouchable artist. When will his ego over his process start to translate into ego over his salary? And given that Gus is the only one protecting him from the assassins, what happens when Gus and Walt clash?

  • Rorschach

    Not really moral redemption for Skyler, I just liked her and could root for her as a character again. The idea that she’s thinking of all the bad things Walt has done, and how dangerous he is to her family… but DAMN that’s a lot of money, and she would love to spend it. Adding that to putting the towel down and not using the heated floor, and then putting the plate down the second time for Walt without hesitation, I thought it was a great Skyler episode. Like you said, complex.

    @archstanton68 nice catch with the money discrepancy, I hope it becomes an issue and isn’t just an oversight (I doubt it is).

  • jwyze

    More than anything, what I saw in this episode is just how overmatched Walt is in dealing with Gus. I find Gus the most fascinating character on the show and well played by the always excellent and perpetually underrated Giancarlo Esposito (sp?). Assassins aside, I don’t think Walt even has the mixture of courage and emotional intelligence it takes to bring one’s self to clash a man who thinks the way that Gus does or could amass the resources that Gus has. I only wonder if Gus will be thorough enough now to tie up the loose end that Jesse has become and how Walt will feel when he realizes that that’s the logical next step.

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