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Breaking Bad: The Complete Fourth Season (2011) [Blu-ray]
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Rated: |
R |
Starring: |
Anna Gunn, Betsy Brandt, Giancarlo Esposito, Bryan Cranston, Bob Odenkirk, Aaron Paul, Jonathan Banks, Dean Norris, R.J. Mitte. |
Director: |
Vince Gilligan |
Genre: |
Crime | Drama | Thriller |
DVD Release Date: 06/05/2012 |
Season (1) | Season (2) | Season (3) | Season (4) | Season (5)
Tagline: Warning: Extremely Volatile (season 4)
The phenomenon continues as Breaking Bad hits a stunning new high 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 Gunn), 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. Executive produced by Vince Gilligan and Mark Johnson.
Storyline: When chemistry teacher, Walter White, is diagnosed with Stage III cancer and given only two years to live, he decides he has nothing to lose. He lives with his wife and teenage son, who has cerebral palsy, in New Mexico. Determined to
ensure that his family will have a secure future, White embarks on a career of drugs and crime. He proves to be remarkably proficient in this new world as he begins manufacturing and selling methamphetamine with one of his former students. The series
tracks the impacts of a fatal diagnosis on a regular hard working man and explores how a fatal diagnosis affects his morality and transforms him into a major player of the drug trade. Written by WellardRockard
4.01 Box Cutter - Walt and Jesse are held hostage by Victor and Mike, anxiously awaiting Gus's reaction to the murder of Gale. Skyler fears the worst when she can't get a hold of Walt. Saul is paranoid about bugs,
wiretaps, and surveillance now, even hiring a personal bodyguard. Hank struggles with life at home after his injury, snapping at Marie and becoming more preoccupied with collecting and cataloging minerals. Gus shows up, changes into a lab suit, slits
Victor's throat with a box cutter, then changes back to his work clothes and tells Walt and Jesse to get back to making meth as he leaves. Walt is more shaken than Jesse, who later tells Walt that they don't need to worry about being killed when it's as
if, stuck in their situation now, they're already dead.
4.02 Thirty-Eight Snub - Walt illegally buys and begins carrying a Snubnosed revolver but Mike soon tells Walt he'll never see Gus again. Jesse, in an attempt to distract himself from having murdered Gale, buys an
elaborate stereo system and throws an ongoing party with Badger and Skinny Pete. Hank continues to push Marie away. Skyler attempts to buy the car wash but the owner angrily refuses. Walt goes to Gus's home, presumably to kill him, but receives a call
from Tyrus telling him to go home. Walt later follows Mike to a bar, tells Mike that he might be in danger as well, then asks Mike to get him in a room with Gus and Walt will "do the rest". Mike punches Walt, kicks him twice on the floor, then leaves.
Badger and Skinny Pete leave Jesse following a binge of partying at his house. Jesse sits alone in front of one of his speakers, visibly distraught.
4.03 Open House - Walt furiously notices that a motion-detecting surveillance camera has been installed in the lab. Later that day, Skyler convinces Walt in a meeting with Saul to buy the car wash by mentioning how the
owner insulted his manhood. She devises a plan to trick the owner into selling by having a hired-gun (supplied by Saul) pretend to be a water-tester who's shutting down the business out of concerns over contaminants. The owner promptly sells to her,
agreeing to an even lower price than her original offer. Jesse is still feeling numb from recent events, attempting to clear his head with nostalgic go-kart trips. He continues to open his house up for all-night drug fueled orgies, deliberately throwing
piles of money in the midst of the chaos. Feeling stressed from her husband's coldness, Marie renews her kleptomania. She starts stealing objects from real-estate open houses, where she also makes up elaborate stories about who she is, but is eventually
caught by a real-estate agent. A livid Hank pulls strings with a senior cop to get her out of being charged. The same cop drops by to leave the lab notes, found in Gale's apartment, for Hank to look at in case he can help them with their investigation.
Hank initially shoves away the notebook, but begins to read it later that night.
4.04 Bullet Points - Mike is patiently waiting inside a refrigerated truck, seemingly with advance knowledge that it will be hijacked. After the armed hijackers stop the truck and fire automatic weapons into it, Mike
shoots them both and emerges with a wounded ear. Walt and Skyler craft an elaborate story of gambling addiction to explain why they have enough money to purchase a business. They rehearse the story and even attend a support group for gambling addicts, but
Walt remains too distracted to put much effort into the charade. During a family dinner, Hank tells Walt that he is informally consulting on a murder case for the local police and reveals evidence that implicates Gale as cook of the high grade blue meth
that's been turning up in the Southwest. Jesse's detached complacence leads to over seventy-thousand dollars in cash being stolen from his house. Jesse seems genuinely apathetic about the loss, but Mike recovers the money and warns Jesse that he's on thin
ice. Gus and Mike have a brief meeting, shortly before which, Mike can be seen focusing on a small pen-knife resting in a cup on Gus's desk, showing a growing concern for his safety, or a growing desire to preserve it. Regardless, Mike reports back that
Jesse has become "incautious" and something needs to be done. The episode ends with Mike driving Jesse to an unknown destination.
4.05 Shotgun - Fearing for Jesse's safety, Walt tries to confront Gus at Los Pollos Hermanos, but Gus is not there. Mike assures Walt that Jesse is safe, and he takes Jesse with him while he collects drug money for Gus.
Walt and Skyler purchase the car wash, after which they have sex. Following this, Skyler asks Walt to move back into the house. Jesse fights off two attackers at one of the money collections, appearing to be a hero. He informs Walt that he will be making
pick ups with Mike as a second job from now on. Gus and Mike discuss the attack on Jesse, and reveal that Gus set up the attack, planning for Jesse to win the confrontation. When Hank suggests to an intoxicated Walt that Gale was a genius, Walt's pride
gets the better of him and he tells Hank that he believes Gale more likely copied another's work. Hank's pursuit of the case is renewed, and he expresses his puzzlement at finding a Los Pollos Hermanos napkin in Gale's belongings, as he was a vegan.
4.06 Cornered - When Walt wakes with a hangover, Skyler tells him she thinks his scoffing of the Gale-is-Heisenberg theory to Hank was a self-sabotaging "cry for help." Walt angrily denies that, telling her he's not in
trouble because "I am the danger." Alarmed, Skyler leaves. Walt, worried, buys a flashy new car for Walt Jr. Walt picks up the keys to the car wash from Bogdan, who tells him he must be a "tough" boss; Walt, seething, refuses to let Bogdan take his framed
first dollar from the business. He breaks the glass and uses the dollar to buy a soda from the vending machine. Rather than wait them out with Mike, Jesse cleverly tricks two meth-heads into surrendering product stolen from one of Gus's shipments. The lid
has a message from the opposing cartel and Gus, preferring to maintain a "cold" war, tells Mike to arrange a sit-down. Walt tells Jesse that he suspects Gus is driving a wedge between him and Jesse and Jesse's heroic stopping of the stick-up was a set-up;
he tells a fuming Jesse that "it's all about me!" Skyler drives to the Four Corners and flips a coin—it lands twice on the Colorado side but she reluctantly decides to return home. She tells Walt he must return Walt Jr.'s new car tomorrow and that
"Someone has to protect this family from the man who protects this family."
4.07 Problem Dog - After Skyler tells Walt she's negotiated the return of the car to the dealership, Walt, angry, drives the Challenger to a parking lot near the airport, burns donuts and crashes into a parking block,
then stuffs the ownership papers in the gas tank, lights them afire, and blows up the car. Saul covers up the outburst, which costs Walt $52,000. When Walt drops off more than $250,000—his bimonthly take—to Skyler, she's stunned by the amount, unsure how
she'll launder his meth-lab earnings (over $7 million annually) through their car wash. Walt convinces Jesse to kill Gus and concocts a ricin poison in the lab that Jesse then hides in one of his cigarettes. At the sitdown with the cartel, though, Jesse
hesitates and doesn't add the poison to the coffee he makes for Gus. The sitdown involves only a flat ultimatum from the cartel, rejected by Gus. Jesse returns to the 12-step group; during his turn, he angrily disagrees with the organizer about not
judging oneself, noting he had used the group as potential meth-buyers and recently killed a "problem dog"—believing he should be judged for what he has done. Hank visits Gus's restaurant with Walt Jr. and slyly obtains Gus's fingerprints from a cup,
which he uses to confirm that Gus had been in Gale's apartment; he reveals his evidence to his DEA chief, suggesting they now know who's funding Heisenberg.
4.08 Hermanos - In a flashback, Gus visits Hector (Tuco's uncle) and informs him of the death of his nephews after their attempt to kill Hank. In the present, Gus is questioned by Hank and the DEA, but has explanations
for all their questions. These explanations are accepted by the DEA and local law enforcement, however a still suspicious Hank has Walt drive him to Gus's restaurant; once there, he tells Walt of his suspicions and tells him to slip a tracking device onto
Gus's car. With instruction from Gus, Walt plants the device and Gus later removes it. Walt, alarmed by Hank's investigation into their boss, tells Jesse to poison Gus as soon as possible but he suspects Jesse's been putting it off. Gus is reassured by
Mike that Hank is acting on his own, after being informed by an inside source. In another flashback, Gus and his business partner Max meet Hector when they approach drug kingpin Don Eladio, requesting to go into meth production with him. At Don Eladio's
instruction, Hector shoots and kills Max as a warning to Gus.
4.09 Bug - Walt drives to Gus's restaurant with an eager Hank to retrieve the tracking bug he left on Gus's car. Hank's suspicious when the bug only shows Gus driving between home and work: "He's so clean he must be
dirty." Skyler is alarmed when Ted, whose company's cooked books Skyler signed off on, visits to tell her the IRS is auditing him. She pretends to be his ditzy, untrained accountant, putting off the investigation so long as he pays the fines and back
taxes, which Ted tells her he doesn't have the money to do. Hank's research uncovers Gus's depot, so Jesse is brought in to help clean and move all the product out of it. While there, one of the cartel's top lieutenants, sniping, kills one of the workers,
but Mike pulls a shock-stilled Jesse to safety. Gus calls the cartel, giving in to their demands; Gus invites Jesse over for dinner and asks him if he can cook Walt's formula. The next night, Jesse calls Walt to come over; he then explains that Gus is
sending him to Mexico to show the cartel how to cook Walt's formula. Walt responds by asking him if he poisoned Gus; Jesse says he didn't see him. Walt knows he saw him, he says, because he put a bug on Jesse's car that showed he was at Gus's. Jesse,
furious at Walt's distrust, throws the bug at him, cutting his forehead open. The two fight and Jesse gets the upper hand, punching Walt repeatedly in the face, then telling him to leave and never come back.
4.10 Salud - Skyler shows Walt Jr. his sixteenth-birthday present, a PT Cruiser, but he's quietly disappointed. He goes to his dad's and Walt, recovering from his fight, lies about his injuries, saying they came about
because he was gambling again; he breaks down, confiding to his son: "I made a mistake. It's my own fault." Skyler has Saul concoct a story about an inheritance to give Ted enough money to pay off his back taxes, but Saul follows up and finds that Ted
immediately spent some of it on leasing a new Mercedes. She urges Ted to pay the IRS, but he refuses; Skyler finally tells him that she gave him the money. Jesse, Mike and Gus fly to the cartel's meth lab in Mexico where Jesse acts tough in front of the
cartel's condescending chemist and Jesse's replication of Walt's formula results in an impressively 96.2% pure product; however, Jesse is then informed that he now belongs to the cartel. When Jesse, Mike, and Gus go to Don Eladio's estate to celebrate
their alliance at a party with all of Don Eladio's capos present, Gus gives Don Eladio a rare, but poisoned, tequila. All but Mike and Jesse drink a glass, but Gus has previously taken an antidote. He goes to the bathroom soon after drinking, forcing
himself to vomit it up as, poolside, Don Eladio and his men begin to die. During the trio's escape under fire from the estate, Tio's grandson Joaquin shoots Mike. Jesse kills him and drives away with Mike and Gus, who is still mortally ill despite his
precautions.
4.11 Crawl Space - Jesse drives Mike and Gus to a clandestine medical clinic; prearranged by Gus, who is brought to a full recovery but Mike must stay there for a week. Gus tells Jesse he can run the lab now but Jesse
tells him not to kill Walt. Ted refuses to take the money from Skyler; desperate, she calls Saul. Gus visits Hector again, telling him Don Eladio and his crew are all dead before showing him Jesse, who killed Hector's grandson and last relative Joaquin;
Hector still refuses to look at Gus. Walt drives Hank to scope out the depot again but, en route, Hank tells him to go to an industrial laundry he's linked to Gus and Gale. Walt, panicking that he'll find the meth lab there, pulls into oncoming traffic,
causing an accident and giving Hank whiplash. Saul's henchmen visit Ted and force him to write a check to the IRS but then Ted tries to flee, tripping over a rug and crashing headfirst into a counter. Walt realizes someone's been cooking in the lab, goes
to Jesse's house, and begs him for help, saying Gus will kill him if Jesse replaces him. Jesse spurns Walt, and Gus's henchmen stun-gun him, driving him to the desert, where Gus tells Walt he's fired. Walt retorts that Gus can't kill him because Jesse
won't let him. Gus says he'll now take care of Hank and, if Walt interferes, his family will die. Walt rushes to Saul and gets the number of a man who'll disappear him and his family; he tells Saul to tip off the DEA about a hit on Hank. When Walt gets
home and goes down into the crawl space, he finds there's not enough money for disappearing; Skyler tells a frenzied Walt that she gave it to Ted. Walt, in disbelief, starts laughing hysterically as Skyler, horrified, takes a call from Marie about sudden
police-protection of Hank after there was a tip that the cartel's gunning for him.
4.12 End Times - Skyler, Walt Jr., and Holly go into DEA protection at Hank's on Marie's insistence. Hank harries ex-partner Steve into investigating the laundry; as Steve looks around there, Gus calls Jesse in the lab
to tell him what's happening is Walt's fault, but Jesse still refuses to "sign off" on eliminating Walt. Saul summons Jesse to his office, where he's anxiously packing up, saying it's the "end times"; he gives Jesse's savings to him and tells him Gus
threatened Walt's family. Jesse is called to the hospital by Andrea because her son Brock is in critical condition with a mysterious flu-like illness. Jesse, suspecting what has happened, fishes for a cigarette, finds the ricin vial missing and tells
Andrea to have the doctors treat Brock for poisoning. Jesse goes to Walt's house, where Walt has barricaded himself inside with just a revolver for protection. As Walt rambles, Jesse picks up the gun and accuses Walt of poisoning Brock; Walt pleads for
his life and tells him Gus must be behind the poisoning, using it to get Jesse to kill Walt. He presses the revolver against his forehead, daring Jesse to kill him but Jesse can't, as he believes Walt. Jesse is now determined to kill Gus but Walt tells
him to let him help. He rigs small explosives and plants them on Gus's car while Gus meets with Jesse in the hospital chapel, where he tells Jesse to return to work immediately. But Jesse faces him down, telling him only that Brock has been poisoned; Gus
tells Jesse he may return next week. As he walks back to his car in the garage, though, while Walt watches from a nearby rooftop through binoculars, ready to detonate the explosives, Gus seems to suspect something and walks away from his vehicle, dashing
Walt's plan.
4.13 Face Off - After Walt's car bombing fails, Jesse is brought in for questioning by detectives because of his remark that Brock may have been poisoned by ricin. Walt pays a hefty bribe to Saul's secretary to get in
touch with Saul, and with Jesse's help they realize that Gus may be vulnerable if he visits Hector at the nursing home. Walt visits Hector and offers him a chance for revenge against Fring: "I know that you despise me, but I'll bet that I know someone you
hate even more." Hector then requests a meeting at the DEA office, but tells them nothing, only crudely insulting Hank. Tyrus has been tailing Hank and sees Hector leave the DEA office, and informs Gus. Jesse is released after no ricin is found in Brock's
bloodwork. As he leaves the police station, Jesse is kidnapped. Tyrus visits Hector's room and sweeps it for any bugs; he informs Gus that it's clean. Gus arrives and berates Hector for speaking to the DEA, calling him a "crippled rata" and prepares to
kill him. Hector finally looks him in the eye and then rings his bell, detonating a bomb that he has allowed Walt to plant in his wheelchair. The door is blown off of the room and Gus walks out into the hall and straightens his tie, apparently unharmed.
The camera angle changes, revealing that Gus has been mortally injured, the entire right side of his face having been blown off. Gus falls to the floor, dead. Jesse is working at the lab under duress and under guard when Walt arrives and executes Jesse's
two captors. Walt and Jesse then flood the lab with chemicals and set it ablaze, wiping their fingerprints off the door as they leave. Later, Walt meets Jesse at the hospital parking garage, and Jesse tells him Brock's going to pull through and was
poisoned by a Lily of the Valley plant, not ricin. When Jesse leaves, Walt calls Skyler, who's watching coverage of the nursing home bombing on the news; she asks, "Was this you?" Walt replies, "It's over. We're safe. I won." As he leaves the parking
garage he smiles at Gus's car, still parked there. In the final scene, on the deck of Walt's swimming pool, the camera slowly zooms in on a potted plant—a Lily of the Valley. .
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Cast Notes: Bryan Cranston (Walter White [62 episodes, 2008-2013]), Anna Gunn (Skyler White [62 episodes, 2008-2013]), Aaron Paul (Jesse Pinkman [62 episodes, 2008-2013]), Dean Norris (Hank Schrader [62 episodes, 2008-2013]), Betsy Brandt (Marie
Schrader [62 episodes, 2008-2013]), RJ Mitte (Walter White, Jr. [62 episodes, 2008-2013]), Bob Odenkirk (Saul Goodman [43 episodes, 2009-2013]), Jonathan Banks (Mike Ehrmantraut [28 episodes, 2009-2012]), Steven Michael Quezada (Steven Gomez [28 episodes,
2008-2012]), Giancarlo Esposito (Gustavo 'Gus' Fring [26 episodes, 2009-2011]).
User Comment: thebrainflow from USA, 21 January 2008 • The age of Bryan Cranston has returned. Once universally lauded for his work in Malcolm In The Middle, there had yet to be a good vehicle for this man's particular talents. He has
that rare gift of generating sympathy and manic-energy at the same time.
For those that would be content to label this show a Weeds knock-off, bear in mind that Breaking Bad is a new kind of monster. It touches on the very same themes, "living realistically as a middle class in the United States" which often makes us resort to
extremes to survive. Like the mother and daughter team that robbed that bank. But the weed selling antics of Showtime's hit show is really nothing like "Bad." The Pilot was about as perfect a Pilot as I've ever seen, and much of it rests on Bryan
Cranston's shoulders.
Cranston plays Cheimstry teacher Walter White. He has a loving wife, a child with Cerebal Palsy and another is on the way. He also happens to be dying from an inoperable lung cancer situation, which happened although he "never smoked." His finances in
disarray, the once great student of science turns to crime to solve his problems.
He cooks Crystal Meth with a good for nothing ex-student. From the antics of the first episode, the show is leading towards a dark place, but a place of truth. This is a no nonsense black comedy.
For people that love Tarantino or the Coen's, this might be your cup of tea.
Summary: Brilliant Character Work In Pitch Black Comedy-Drama.
IMDb Rating (11/19/12): 9.4/10 from 145,593 users
Additional information |
Copyright: |
2011, Sony Pictures Home Entertainment |
Features: |
• 5 Uncensored Episodes
• The Extended Version Of The Season Finale
• Deleted Scenes
• Extended & Alternate Scenes
• Gag Reel
• 13 Cast And Crew Commentaries
• 8 Featurettes
• 21 Episodes Of Inside Breaking Bad
• Face Off: Inside the Explosive Finale
• Gale's Karaoke Video
• "Better Call Saul" Commercials
• 13 Video Poscasts |
Subtitles: |
English SDH, English, French, Spanish |
Video: |
Widescreen 1.78:1 Color Screen Resolution: 1080p Original aspect ratio: 1.78:1 |
Audio: |
ENGLISH: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
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Time: |
10:10 |
DVD: |
# Discs: 3 -- # Shows: 13 |
UPC: |
043396389007 |
Coding: |
[V3.5-A4.5] MPEG-4 AVC |
D-Box: |
No |
Other: |
Directors: Vince Gilligan; running time of 610 minutes; Packaging: HD Case.
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