Product Description
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The phenomenon continues as Breaking Bad hits a stunning new
hight with its most suspenseful season yet! In his multiple Emmy®
Award-winning role, Bryan Cranston stars as Walter White, a
one-time mild-mannered chemistry teacher whose transformation
into a deadly criminal kicks into overdrive in the explosive
fourth season. As his young accomplice Jesse (Aaron Paul in his
Emmy® Award-winning role) turns increasingly distant and hostile,
Walt must deal with his estranged wife (Anna n), his
relentless DEA Agent brother-in-law (Dean Norris), and the
ruthless kingpin manipulating the entire operation (Giancarlo
Esposito) - culminating in a bombshell season finale that will
leave you speechless. Breaking Bad is executive produced by Vince
Gilligan and Mark Johnson.
.com
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The first murder happens barely five minutes into the episode
that opens this fourth season of Breaking Bad. There will be many
others. That's no surprise; this show didn't become one of the
most highly accled TV series of its time because of its light,
frothy tone, and central character Walter White (multiple Emmy
winner Bryan Cranston) won't remind anyone of Grandpa Walton.
Those who watched the first three seasons will be familiar with
Walt's story by now: a former chemistry teacher, he was diagnosed
with cancer and turned to manufacturing 99% pure methamphetamine,
ostensibly so his family could stay afloat after he died (the
cancer is now in remission). Walt's devolution into the hard-core
criminal known as Heisenberg is pretty much complete by now, but
the brilliance of this character is that he appears to be deeply
conflicted. Is he the tough guy he acts to wife Skyler (Anna
n), bragging about his role in "a business big enough that it
could be listed on the NASDAQ" and procling, "I am not in
danger--I am the danger"? Or is he just a dude in way too deep
who loves his family, and buys a he barely knows how to use,
and whose actions have collateral consequences he never imagined?
One thing is certain: Walt wants to stay alive, an increasingly
dicey proposition given his relationship with his drug-lord boss,
Gus Fring (Giancarlo Esposito). It takes the entire season for
that struggle to be resolved; by the end, we know a lot more
about Walter, and very little of it is good.
There's plenty else going on this season, of course. Walt is
forever struggling with his partner, the wayward Jesse (Aaron
Paul), especially once Gus tries to convince Jesse that he can
cook the meth just as well without Walt. Skyler, who last season
finally learned what her husband's up to, convinces Walt that
they should buy a carwash--mostly to launder money, not
automobiles (Walt also goes along with her plan to pretend that
he earned the money to buy the place by being a professional
blackjack hustler). And his brother-in-law, DEA agent Hank (Dean
Norris), who was badly injured in season three, recovers enough
to resume his investigation into the identity of the infamous
Heisenberg. Whatever the storylines, Breaking Bad continues to
feature superb acting by all, outstanding direction and
production values, and a wonderful eye for detail (one example:
when Walt takes over the carwash, he breaks open the frame
containing the prior owner's first dollar and uses it to buy a
Coke). The typically generous assortment of bonus material
includes audio commentary for all 13 episodes, eight featurettes,
deleted scenes, and 21 Inside Breaking Bad mini-docs, in which
cast and crew discuss various aspects of the show. --Sam Graham