![]() Breaking Bad is one of the most beloved shows in the Prestige TV-era, so it’s only fitting that El Camino‘s first full-length trailer premiered during tonight’s Emmys. 3,000-plus), but the per-theater should be staggering. ![]() The overall gross won’t be as high as Downton (it’s a couple hundred screens vs. As our own Dustin Rowles theorized, the movie’s success (especially among The Olds) “bodes well for the eventual Rick Grimes’ The Walking Dead movies, based on a series with much bigger ratings.” It could mean good things for the adaptation of another AMC show, El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie, which is getting a limited release in cinemas on October 11, the same day it comes out on Netflix. Downton Abbey earned a shocking $31 million at the box office this weekend. Read my new sci-fi thriller novel Herokiller, available now in print and online. I don’t think Breaking Bad really needed an epilogue, and it does feel strange to return to the series all this time later, particularly since I’ve not done a recent rewatch, but I enjoyed it, and Gilligan and Paul are both at the top of their game here.įollow me on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. So yeah, if you’re a fan of the series, you might as well watch El Camino. ![]() Interestingly, of all the cameos we see in El Camino, Saul isn’t one of them in either the flashbacks or the present day events. Gilligan is still making new episodes of Better Call Saul, which balance storylines that mostly focus on Saul’s life before the events of the show, with a few brief glimpses at what comes after when he’s trying to start over with a new identity. It’s just an odd project all around.Īnd of course, Breaking Bad is still not technically over, even after this. I certainly don’t think El Camino damages the legacy of Breaking Bad in any way, and I think most fans will like it because A) it’s nice seeing the old cast members again, and B) it’s Vince Gilligan, and the guy can’t produce anything bad these days. Here, he does get that ending, and it’s spelled out this time. We all assumed Jesse would be free after Walt helped him escape and we could picture in our mind what his happy ending might look like. In the end, I don’t know that this movie needed to exist. The only trouble I had with this was that the main bad guy is played by Scott MacArthur, who I’ve been watching be the villain in HBO’s Righteous Gemstones, which is what I kept thinking of every time he was onscreen. This guy and his partner know that Todd stashed money away, and Jesse has several run-ins with them including a final confrontation that is easily one of the best scenes in the film. In present day, they had to create an entire new villain in the form of a former associate of the Nazi group who helped build Jesse’s “latch him to the ceiling” meth-cooking rig. First, there are extended flashbacks to Jesse’s time in captivity, and in those sequences, we get extended interactions with our good friend Todd again, which are genuinely some of the best parts of the film. ![]() One interesting thing about El Camino was the problem of a lack of a villain, considering they’re all dead, which the film solves in two ways. But bad news for conspiracy theorists, as if there’s one thing the movie makes explicit, it’s to confirm that Walter White was found dead at the scene of the gang massacre, in case the original ending didn’t make that perfectly clear. Walt tries to talk to Jesse about his future to no avail, though it’s there to be relevant to what Jesse is going through in present day. A flashback near the end has hoodie-era Jesse talking to Walt in a diner with the meth-lab RV parked outside.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |