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Doesn't come close to "Breaking Bad": the pale ending of "Trust Sol" | Israel today

2022-08-18T07:47:51.498Z


So while the Breaking Bad spinoff deserves to be considered an integral part of the world of the parent series, its finale was mostly bland and bland, a far cry from the original show's dramatic and mysterious ending.


If you watched "Breaking Bad" - you already knew that Sol cannot be trusted.

Nothing good will come of this charlatan lawyer.

And yet, there are those who held their breath for the final episode of the series, which claimed to close all the open ends of the universe that was created at the time in "Breaking Bad".

Series endings are sometimes a bit tricky.

The creators want to leave a mark, or leave an opening for a future comeback, and in many cases they get involved.

The ending of "Dexter" is considered one of the threats in history and was recently used as a motive to produce a continuation season that would provide an alternative ending to the series.

The finale of "Lost" resonates to this day as an example of what not to do.

In "The Sopranos", for example, they preferred to avoid marking the fate of Tony the mobster, so they cut the scene abruptly - ending the series with a black screen and providing fertile ground for conspiracy theories.

The goal was to avoid an ending that proves that crime does not pay, because any other choice (prison or death) would have conflicted with the multitude of episodes that showed why crime actually does pay.

Sorry.

"Trust Sol",

Above the finale of "Trust on Sol", which has been available since yesterday to watch on all platforms, the word "remorse" hung big.

She was the one who influenced the way the series chose to close the story, and was also present in the conversation between Walter White and Saul Goodman - in a flashback scene that was integrated into the episode and brought us back to the end of "Breaking Bad".

They talked to each other about regrets.

Each gave an example of the biggest regret in his life, but Sol's was casual and egotistical and was meant to explain that his heart is cold and money shapes his life.

Returned to the flashback.

Walter,

And now a big spoiler: at the end of the story Sol experiences an inner transformation, takes the full blame, gives up a convenient plea deal to confess his crimes and end his life in prison.

So far from the dramatic death of Heisenberg or the mysterious disappearance of Jesse Pinkman across the border.

This ending is far from the spirit of "Breaking Bad" and conflicts with the general atmosphere of "Trust Sol".

He is righteous, arrogant and quite predictable.

If you try to understand the gap between the success of the original series and the shuffling and boredom of the subsidiary series, it is hidden in these differences.

Although it is customary to combine the two into one continuous work, "Breaking Bad" provided inspiration, influenced the industry and did not fly on its own.

Sol's series insisted on riding on its predecessor, took its unusual elements and inflated them.

The future was projected in black and white, the past winked at the "Breaking Bad" legacy, and the tedious slowness hid plots that were smeared.

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Source: israelhayom

All life articles on 2022-08-18

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