ENGL 6750/7750 Film Studies

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Film Studies
Film Studies
ENGL 6750/7750 Film Studies
ENGL 6750/7750 Film Studies
Bad
Boy
Vince Gilligan
ENGL 6750/7750 Film Studies
ENGL 6750/7750 Film Studies
ENGL 6750/7750 Film Studies
ENGL 6750/7750 Film Studies
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ENGL 6750/7750 Film Studies
ENGL 6750/7750 Film Studies
The Imagination Will Be Televised
Vince Gilligan
Bad
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ENGL 6750/7750 Film
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Film Studies
Local Color. Contemporary American television is undergoing what we might call a
“local color” movement, a mediated echo of a 19th century literary school. Once
most of American television was set, and filmed, on the coasts; now a fairly
successful sitcom can be called The Middle (ABC, 2009- ) and set in Indiana
(though filmed in California). Now television is enriched by series like Justified (FX,
2010- ), which takes place in Kentucky (though filmed in Pennsylvania and
California) and Big Love (HBO, 2006), which transpires in Salt Lake City, Utah
(though primarily filmed in California). Both draw on local color in atmosphere,
story, and character and invite national and international mindsets to occupy new
imaginal geographies. Not since The Sopranos—set and filmed in New Jersey—
however, has location, location, location been more integral to a dramatic series
than in Breaking Bad, which turns Albuquerque and the American Southwest into
a setting that functions as both text and context. [Go here to explore a Flickr
album of Bad locations.]
ENGL 6750/7750 Film Studies
The Claustrophic. Breaking Bad has shown itself to be especially adept at
suffocating, claustrophobic narratives, what Donna Bowman deems “harrowing
ordeal episodes”: Walt’s night spent in Jesse’s basement with Krazy 8, whom he is
supposed to kill (“...And the Bag's in the River,” 1.3); the terrifying, insufferable day
Walt and Jesse endure in the captivity of crazed, methed-up drug kingpin Tuco
(“Grilled,” 2.2) and his paraplegic, bell-ringing Uncle Teo; Jesse’s gone-awry
attempt-at-revenge stand-off in the decrepit house of druggie Spooge, his skanky
toothless, vindictive, rock whore wife, and a pity-inducing child (“Peekaboo,” 2.6);
the no water, battery-dead, stranded-in-the-desert after an epic cook ordeal of “4
Days Out” (2.9); Walt and Jesse’s overwrought, paranoid search for a buzzing
contaminant in Gus Fring’s secret, subterranean, state-of-the-art meth lab (“Fly,”
3.10). These episodes serve as narrative punctuation marks in the series, and their
oppressiveness bleeds over into the other, more mundane stories Bad tells.
ENGL 6750/7750 Film Studies
Tour de Force Set-Pieces. The DEA, including Walt’s brother-in-law Hank, discover
that a tortoise ambling along through the desert near El Paso, Texas carries atop
its shell the severed head of a drug cartel figure known as “Tortuga” who has sold
out to the Feds. "You look like you never saw a severed human head on a tortoise
before," Hank’s superior proclaims in a quintessential moment of Bad humor, just
before the booby-trapped monstrosity explodes, killing or injuring all but Hank,
who had fled the scene to vomit. Scene after Bad scene exhibits all the storyboarded complexity, the visual passion, the multifaceted mise-en-scène of the
best movies. Consider the following, highly cinematic, evocatively lit and edited
scene from the penultimate episode of Season Three. (The spoiler-averse should
perhaps avoid watching the clip.) Suffice it to say, that after this moment, nothing
on Breaking Bad, can ever be the same again.
ENGL 6750/7750 Film Studies
The Titles. Bad titles are clever and complex. One—“Kafkaesque” (3.9)—evokes
the Austrian writer whose fictions (Metamorphosis, The Trial) helped us to
recognize 20th Century absurdity. Several others are movie-derived allusions: the
second and third episodes of Bad’s first season—“Cat’s in the Bag . . .” and “. . .
And the Bag’s in the River“ break in two a Burt Lancaster line from The Sweet
Smell of Success (Alexander Mackendrick, 1957). “No-Rough-Stuff-Type-Deal” (1.7)
is a Jerry Lundegaardism from Fargo (Joel and Ethan Coen, 1996). “Crazy Handful
of Nothin’” (1.6) has its origin in a line from Cool Hand Luke (Stuart Rosenberg,
1967) in which Dragline (George Kennedy) uses the name to describe Paul
Newman’s title character. “Bit by a Dead Bee” sounds like a quotation, and indeed
it is: a line from the Hemingway adaptation To Have and Have Not (Howard
Hawks, 1944).
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In keeping with the series’ local color, titles in Spanish appear frequently: “Negro Y
Azul” (black and blue) (2.7), for example, or “No Mas” (no more) (3.1) and “Mas”
(more) (3.5), and "Caballo Sin Nombre" (horse with no name) (3.2). The episode
"Abiquiu" (3.11) takes its name from a small New Mexican town where painter
Georgia O’Keefe had a studio (O’Keefe’s work is discussed in the episode by Jesse
and Jane).
Four episode titles from Season Two reveal, when strung together, the mystery of
the season’s incrementally recurring teasers and the season’s climactic event:
“737” (2.1) “Down” (2.4) “Over” (2.10) “ABQ” (2.13)
Bad titles are consistently clever, self-referential, intertextual, highly literate, very
much appropriate to the series whose narrative segments they name.
In 1980, “No mas” became part of American vocabulary when Panamanian boxer
Robert Duran walked away from his championship fight with American Sugar Ray
Leonard by announcing to the referee “No mas”—no more, this losing by a TKO
(technical knockout).
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Better call Saul: Minor Characters. As in HBO dramas like The Sopranos,
Deadwood, The Wire, Six Feet Under, and the best of network television as well,
from Buffy to Lost, Bad takes considerable care to make even its minor characters
wonderfully rich and three- perhaps even four-dimensional. Sleazy “criminal”
attorney Saul Goodman (Bob Odenkirk) and Mike the Cleaner (Jonathan Banks),
for example, are two of the most interesting minor players on television today.
Both are made indelibly real with a few strokes of the Bad writers’ pens. (Think of
Saul’s intertextual lament about Mike’s betrayal of him in “Full Measure” or coldblooded killer Mike’s delivery of balloons for his granddaughter’s birthday just
prior to the slaughter of three drug cartel henchmen.) Both deserve Emmys for
Best Supporting Supporting Actor in a Drama (if there was such an award).
“That's like Thomas Magnum threatening the little prissy guy with the mustache
[Higgins],” Saul kvetches. “I am seriously rethinking my pricing. . . .”
ENGL 6750/7750 Film Studies
The Cold Opens. Perhaps Breaking Bad’s most emphatic, most distinctive
signature has been its visually stunning, narratively ingenious (and enigmatic)
“cold opens.” Pre-title teasers without pre-established contexts, these minisodes
demand we be seated and in place the second a Breaking Bad begins, and they
leave us riveted, not even thinking about changing the channel.
ENGL 6750/7750 Film Studies
As the series’ most astute critic Donna Bowman suggests (in contemplating “Fly”),
Breaking Bad
is a remarkable show because of its capacity to craft top-notch chapters out
of many different kinds of situations and intensity levels. There are fantastic
episodes that are action-packed, contemplative, concentrated, diffuse, and
even nearly static. . . . Gilligan and his team produce television whose riveting
effect cannot be reduced to any one of the elements out of which narrative is
constructed. As with chemistry, it's the interactions and changes—small or
large, visible or invisible—that carry the deepest meaning.
ENGL 6750/7750 Film Studies
The periodic table—Bad’s graphic seed crystal—thus stands as more than just a
foundational logo. Recall how, in the production credits superimposed in each
episode on the scenes that emerge often seamlessly from those often brilliant,
often cold opens, the chemical symbols buried in, first the title of the show itself,
then the very word “Created,” then the names of each contributor, from key
actors to the casting director to the director of the episode, are foregrounded in
green, as if each contributed to Bad’s complex alchemy, as if each were involved in
some elemental synergy, collaboration and quality at its finest.
ENGL 6750/7750 Film Studies
is the greatest job in the world. Yeah, it’s exhausting, and there’s not enough time,
and you can get hung up very easily on all the things that are wrong and all the
things that didn’t work out quite like you’d hoped they would. I’ve fallen victim to
that before and I’ll probably do it again. But if you’re being honest about it you
have to say to yourself, “I’m the luckiest son of a bitch in the world.” It’s amazing.
Television is a great job for a writer in the way that movies used to be, way before
my time. Back when writers in Hollywood were on staff or under contract at any
given studio and you’d write movie scripts and then the movies would get made
within a few weeks, such that you could be a working writer in the movie business
back in the '30s and '40s and '50s and have a hand in writing five or six movies a
year that actually got produced. The only thing remotely like that in the 21st
century here in Hollywood is working in the TV business.
“My writers and I,” Gilligan adds, “sit around and dream this stuff up and then we
see it executed a week or even days later, and it’s a wonderful feeling and it’s
magical.” Breaking Bad is full of that magic.
ENGL 6750/7750 Film Studies
Bad Episodes
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Cold
Open
At 37:00
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