"Breaking Bad" Ozymandias (TV Episode 2013) Poster

(TV Series)

(2013)

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10/10
I'm still sitting here...
benjamiser18 September 2013
Warning: Spoilers
...at least 10 minutes after ep14 ended. I don't know why, but I've spent the last 10 minutes in a bit of daze wandering around IMDb reading other people's reviews of BB and this episode, until I noticed that already over 10,000 people have voted on the ep, and it has scored a perfect 10.0. Not 9.9, but 10.0. Which means virtually not one person gave it a 9.

I don't know why, but this has snapped me out of whatever dream world I've been in. I mean, NOTHING anywhere on the internet can boast this form of universal approval. It's impossible. You could ask 10,000 anonymous people what they think of murder, and you can guarantee that a higher percentage than you think will not be so black and white. Life is always, ALWAYS, grey. Nothing anywhere in human society can unequivocally say with 10,000 out of 10,000 certainty that what they say, who they are and what they stand for is perfect.

Because let's face it. That is exactly what that 10.0 means. That the cast and crew of BB have created the single greatest 46 minute piece of entertainment ever. EVER....

There are two more episodes to go. BB has taken me on such a ride over the past 6 years that I just don't want it to end. However that's not how life works. All things must cease. It is right and proper and in keeping with the natural order of things.

But at least I can say that I've seen the impossible...

Thank-you.
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10/10
You will not breath for an hour
danzell2616 September 2013
The front cover for this season forcefully cries: 'Remember My Name' and 'Ozymandias' unquestionably made sure that this will stand as one of the best TV Shows of all time. This was without a doubt the best hour of television I have ever seen.

This episode is a drug, you will be experiencing; nausea, fear, sickness, disbelief, an overwhelming sorrow blooming inside the very core of your being. These symptoms will leave you paralyzed and unable to comprehend this hour of apocalyptic proportions.

Still shaking and pumped with adrenaline, I solemnly vow that I for one won't forget and will be remembering the name several years to come.
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The death of Heisenberg
NomAnor8616 September 2013
Warning: Spoilers
First of all, it was a fantastic episode, maybe the best of the entire series.

The point i want to make is that many people in the reviews apparently misinterpret the episode and the development of the Walter White character. He has not in fact become truly evil now. It is the exact opposite. First he tries to save Hank, because he is part of his family and then he tries to save his family when he realizes that all his efforts to provide for his family with drug money has shattered his relation to them. The final realization comes when he holds Holly in his arms and see that she needs to go back to her mother. The phone call at the end of the episode is just a "show" he puts on for the cops to convince them that Skyler was forced by him all along so that she doesn't have to go to jail when he disappears. This is made clear by the dialogue and his own expression during the call. So we have not seen the rise of an evil Walter White but the death of the Heisenberg and the end of his lies.
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10/10
Unbelievable
davebest200121 September 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I watched this episode with my wife. She had never sat through an episode before and was only vaguely aware of the story. When she saw the word "Ozymandias" come up, she said "Ah yes that's Shelley. The decline of a great leader". Very insightful I thought. After that I paused the show and I explained to her briefly what had gone on before. By the end of the show, she was an emotional wreck like myself. To call it shocking is a huge understatement. This had to be the best 47 minutes of television drama I had ever seen. It eclipses everything. For Hank to be dead and buried by halfway through the episode was a shocker in itself. But for this to be followed up by the knife fight with Skyler and the confrontation with Walt Jnr, added so much tension as well. When the baby said "Momma", my wife shed a tear. It was just perfect. One thing that she noticed that I failed to, was when Walt rang Skyler and threatened her on the phone. This was to get Skyler off the hook by pretending that she had nothing to do with the drugs. Another scene that was so powerful was when Skyler was presented with the knives or the phone. This was her choice as to how she was going to deal with the pivotal situation. The chessboard was brilliance as well, with the King piece surrounded. This was Shakespeare. This was Hitchcock. This was just incredible. We were simply blown away. We can't wait for the next two episodes. I have become an advocate for this show. So many people that I know have not seen it. I'm going to annoy them all so much until they do
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10/10
Why 9.9? It deserves 10
ahmadrahimkhan13 May 2019
The best episode ever, in the history of Television
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10/10
The Greatest Episode of the Greatest TV Show of all Time
finlayeasson3 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
This is the one. The episode that anyone who stuck with the lives of these characters had been waiting for. It could be said that Breaking Bad could have ended here: a torturous, dark and dread-filled hour of television. This is truly the culmination of five seasons of riveting drama.

All the pieces fall into place here. The consequences of Walter White's journey are laid bare: his family is torn about, Hank is killed, Jesse is taken hostage and his empire is tarnished. What is left is a broken shell of a man, leaving behind his Heisenberg persona and going on the run.

Rian Johnson (now of Star Wars: the Last Jedi fame) has crafted a beautifully horrific and cinematic work here: every shot is perfect and fitting, every decision, every piece of music. His cinematography perfectly encapsulates the horror and angst of the characters that we know and love or fear. The writing is tight and woundly crafted: each motivation, each character's action is perfectly clear yet complex.

Does anything need to be said about the performances? Dean Norris has never been better in the last minutes he has on-screen: accepting the inevitable but staying the morally upstanding cop that he is. Aaron Paul is at his most despairing as he finds out the true nature of Jane's death. Anna Gunn is perfect as she finally stands up to the man she once knew as her husband, at once horrified and eventually grateful at Walt letting her off the hook. And finally...

Walter White. The greatest character in TV history. This is his low point, the fall of his kingdom. Only Bryan Cranston could have ever played this character. There are truly no words to describe his performance. Every nuance, every delivery is perfect. Displaying such control over his voice and facial expressions, Cranston conveys such complexity of emotion that few could imagine was able to be acted. The climactic phone call, in which Walt must put on his Heisenberg persona in order to prove Skyler as innocent, is outstanding and perhaps his best moment in the show, other than the Crawl Space climax. Jumping between true deep loathing to devastation to regret, Cranston proves that he is one of the greatest actors in a long time. He is Walter White.

Every scene is perfect. Hank's death. "I watched Jane die". Telling Jr the truth. The knife fight. The kidnapping of Holly. The phone call.

This cannot be topped surely.

This is the episode that proved that Breaking Bad is perhaps the greatest tv show in history. Thank you Vince Gilligan. You did it.
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10/10
The episode that has solidified Breaking Bad's status as the greatest show of all time
kurtzcaptain16 September 2013
Every scene was scripted perfectly and shot beautifully, even surpassing the standards Vince Gilligan's work has laid out in the past 5 series. I firmly believe this is Bryan Cranston's greatest piece of acting he has put on show for us...and that is saying a lot considering he has demonstrated some of the most engaging performances an actor has depicted during the show.

The emotion carried throughout this episode is on a completely new level and literally there is shock after shock...Perfection

I just have that feeling, quite a sad feeling actually... what you will witness and go through this episode..experience...has never been matched and will never be matched on another TV show. The Show is coming to an end...all I am going to do is savour it, and possibly cry
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10/10
not what you might expect...
siray14 September 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I will keep this review free of spoilers and I will especially not discuss the beginning of this episode so feel free to read if you haven't watched it. All I can say is I read each and every theory posted on IMDb on how this episode will begin but trust me,most of them turned out to be not true. We were left on a cliffhanger,the most intense cliffhanger in the entire series,the lives of the main characters were on the line. I see fans all over the IMDb board raving about their favorite character and posting about who they want to see die,cussing Jesse for ratting on Walt and much more,that's because breaking bad is so well written it feels almost real. The writers of this show are absolute geniuses. Frankly speaking, it surprises me how they are able to achieve these new heights. Every time a new episode arrives, I am just waiting for the writers to make a mistake. But, every time they are able to wrong me with amazing confidence.

I don't need to tell you guys 'don't miss it' or 'best episode of the season' because we all know every episode is great and there is no way any of you will miss it. Instead,I have a message for anyone who hasn't watched breaking bad ever and is reading this. Like they did with me, people will tell you how great Breaking Bad is; you should listen to them, because they are right. Breaking Bad continues this journey with confidence, compelling story-telling and characters that are written with convincing development and actions. It is great stuff.
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10/10
I Am Oxymandias, King of Kings: Look on Me Ye Mighty and Despair
Hitchcoc13 May 2018
Warning: Spoilers
This is Walt trying to put together something one more time. Hank and his partner followed Walter into the desert to find where he buried his money. But the paid thugs showed up. The consequences are horrible. Marie received a call from Hank that Walter was handcuffed and being brought into custody, so she believes everything is great. What ensues is a devastating endgame for our guy. In his messed up head, he believes Skyler and Walter, Jr. Will leave with him. I don't normally react to fiction, but this has slipped my underpinnings.
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10/10
Ozymandias- even the most powerful fall...
jaglenac-honda16 September 2013
Just finished watching the episode and I'm speechless.

This was a mesmerizing and engrossing piece of television which did nothing wrong.

It was sad, dynamic, heartbreaking, full of action.

A classic Brekaing Bad episode.

I've said it before and I'm saying it now- Breaking Bad is a masterpiece and as much as I'm anxious to see how it ends I don't want it to end.

This is one of the best episode of the show full of great ones. What will happen next? Can't wait to see.
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10/10
Ozymandias ... The Best Hour of TV. Ever.
seghers16 September 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Breaking Bad is of course the best show on TV now, and perhaps ever. This hour is the best hour of the series so far (with 2 to go).

I knew Hank would die from the voice mail he left his wife at the end of the last episode. It had a final "goodbye" feel to it. Farewell to a great character, and a fitting end it was.

Many people I think will misunderstand the phone call Walt makes to Skylar at the end... a "Bookmark" to the call at the beginning of the show (which appears in flashback). Walt isn't immersed in evil, as it seems on the surface... look deeper, listen to the words... he is freeing her from blame by 1) pretending not to know that he is being traced, and 2) painting her as the victim to his ruthlessness, all the way down to borrowing Holly for awhile to really make it stick.

The writing, the casting, the acting, the production, the care to the script, conflict... this is QUALITY TV that I hope will be copied by many in the near future. When you CARE about the viewer, it really makes a difference.

Kudos, Gilligan and the gang. Incredible accomplishment, however it ends.
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7/10
Not worth the high rating
mark-511-60995023 July 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Whilst this is still good as always it's also disappointing and frustrating. Disappointing because we lose one of the best characters and in my opinion the best actor in the entire programme. Frustrating because Walt, who we know is a very clever/intelligent person, suddenly becomes the biggest moron you could imagine. Not only does he fall for the trap instantly without even examining the photo on his phone which he would have noticed was fake because he has a very good eye for detail, but then when he finally realises he's been tricked he doesn't do the sensible thing and simply drive away and maybe keep stopping in various spots to leave a false trail? No, he abandons his car and sends the exact co-ordinates to his money to the evil neo-nazis! If it weren't for the unnecessary deaths that weren't required for the story but just put in for the 'shock' factor which too many programmes do nowadays it would have been laughable.
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5/10
An episode that completely contradict the entire show.
ipoweri24 March 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Breaking Bad is a show that has one of the most extreme character development every witnessed in television history. Unfortunately this episode pretty much ruins that...

Walt begins as a loyal and affable chemist teacher but eventually turns into a greedy, cowardly, narcissistic, manipulative psychopath that put little or no values in others lives, although the show sometimes try to portray that he does, although all his actions suggest he doesn't.

Perhaps the biggest point of the entire Breaking Bad is how drug business can turn a normal person into a monster.

It makes NO sense that Walter wants to spare Hank's life given the situation they are in and the fact that he offers them all his $80 million in cash if they promise not to kill him completely contradicts the entire character development you have seen over the five seasons.

Walt has already made numerous decisions over the seasons that clearly proves that he does NOT value the safety of his family as dearly as he try to convince everyone. His greed has won over his desire for family safety on several occasions, so he suddenly offering to give up essentially everything he has earned to spare Hank effectively ruins almost the entire character development we have witnessed.

Killing Hank would give him some possibility to escape his problems and not killing would guarantee a game over. Considering all the sacrifices Walt has made over the five seasons it just make no sense whatsoever that suddenly, out of the blue, he is suddenly willing to give up flat on his stomach (which it would be if they did not kill Hank).

Breaking Bad started off as the greatest action-drama series I have ever seen over the first two-three seasons. But sadly, it quickly lost quality and logic from mid-season 3 and season 4 and 5. This episode tops this off by effectively ridiculing the great character build-up the show had...

And yes I know this comment will probably be very disliked since 95% up people here appear to be extreme unconditional Breaking Bad fans.
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It took a long time for me to recover
Ihesedsxd29 March 2019
An episode that cannot be measured by scores,That's all I can say.
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10/10
the best episode in history of television
kingjado_916 September 2013
"oh my god", "holy sh*t', "fu**kk". no i haven't lost it, those are my reactions every 5 minutes through this episode. all of us have been waiting eagerly for this episode to find out what will happen after that amazing ending of last week's episode. and boy what a show! i mean after this one i can truly say that BB IS the best show ever! everything is so perfect in this episode. multiple changing points in just one episode. and when you expect that the beginning of it is amazing and shocking.. wait till you see the rest of it! i mean wawww!! the best scenes of the show are in this episode, tension rising up so quickly that other shows might do a whole season just to produce the same level of tension and i mean it! so really no one have a damn clue what will happen next, really cant wait till next week! 10000/10.
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10/10
I feel sick
josepht-216 September 2013
Like a crystal meth user, watching Breaking Bad gives me the same mix of both euphoria and a feeling of intense despair.

I watched this episode over 2 hours ago, and I still feel sick.

Heart rate: Up. Respiration: Up. Trembling: Intense Fear and anxiety: Immense. Desperately waiting and counting the hours until the next fix.

I am hooked. I am ruined. I am destroyed.

I am bad...

As I have journeyed through the series of Breaking Bad, I have nervously watched as Walt fought cancer, cooked his meth, evaded the establishment, built his wealth, lost his wealth, built it again, dispatched his foes and always prevailed. His loyalty to Jesse always seemed to prevail.

Like me, did you find yourself moving away from Walt, and heading towards Jesse, and perhaps even Hank? I think I even felt a pang for Skyler.

And now? I still feel sick
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10/10
It deserves the 10.0
tunesplitter17 August 2022
This was one of the best TV Episodes i have ever seen. The actors are more than high class, the writing is perfect. I can't say anything bad about this episode. Well done.
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10/10
Collapse following greatness
TheLittleSongbird12 July 2018
'Breaking Bad' is one of the most popular rated shows on IMDb, is one of those rarities where every season has either been very positively received or near-universally acclaimed critically and where all of my friends have said nothing but great things about.

Very few shows in recent memory had me so hooked from the very start that before the week was over the whole show had been watched, especially when for a lot of shows now airing watching one episode all the way through can be an endeavour. 'Breaking Bad' had that effect on me, and its reputation as one of the best, consistently brilliant and most addictive shows in many years (maybe even ever) is more than deserved in my eyes. Its weakest season is perhaps the first season, understandable as any show's first season is the one where things are still settling.

Actually everything is established remarkably from the very start, but once the writing and characterisation becomes even meatier the show reaches even higher levels.

"Ozymandias" (referencing the poem by Percy Byssche Shelley) is another incredible 'Breaking Bad' episode, perhaps the best episode of the fifth season and one of the show's biggest achievements. The sizzling tension and emotional impact are only a couple of truly great things and even more the rich subtlety and story advancing twists that will leave one reeling.

Visually, "Ozymandias" is both stylish and beautiful, with photography and editing that are cinematic quality and put a lot of films today to shame, where there are a lot of visually beautiful ones but also some painfully amateurish looking ones. The music always has the appropriate mood, never too intrusive, never too muted.

The writing in "Ozymandias" is a fine example of how to have a lot of style but also to have a lot of substance. The dialogue throughout is thought-provoking and tense, while also have a darkly wicked sense of humour, nail-biting tension and heart-tugging pathos. The story is texturally rich, intimate, tense and layered, with the pace of it consistently deliberate but taut.

Can't say anything bad about the acting. Bryan Cranston is phenomenal as one of the most fascinating anti-heroes, or even of any kind of character, in either film or television. Aaron Paul has never been better and Anna Gunn is affecting. The supporting cast are both intriguing and entertaining, Dean Norris giving one of his best performances perhaps of the show. The characters are compelling in their realism, likewise with their chemistry, and the episode is superbly directed.

All in all, another episode that is difficult to find fault with. 10/10 Bethany Cox
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10/10
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair
Tweekums8 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
The pre-credit sequence takes us back Walt's first trip to the desert where he is cooking his first batch of meth with Jesse; we are then brought back to the present with a jolt; agent Gomez is dead, Hank is wounded and Walt Jesse is nowhere to be seen. Walt pleads for Hank's life but it is to no avail. Todd's Uncle Jack takes all but one barrel of Walt's money along with Jesse, who was found hiding under a car. While Walt figures out how to get out of the desert with his barrel Marie pays a visit to Skyler. She tells her that Walt is in custody and Skyler must tall Walt Jnr about his father unless she wants him to learn from the police. Having told Junior the truth Skyler returns home with him and finds Walt is back; he urges them to come with him but she refuses; a fight ensues and he fleas with baby Holly.

There have been plenty of ten out of ten episodes so far but this turns things up to eleven. Bryan Cranston is on top form as Walt; he could so easily have become a totally evil character but even now we see his humanity as he pleads for Hank's life and later when he makes an apparently threatening and vitriolic phone call to Skyler knowing that by doing this he is moving any blame away from her. Dean Norris's final scene as Hank was great as he believably portrays his character's refusal to beg for his life. Anna Gunn, Betsy Brandt and RJ Mitte also put in fine performances as Skyler, Marie and Walt Jnr as we see the emotional fallout from the recent events.

The tension is kept up throughout the episode; Hank's death seemed inevitable but once it happened it felt that no main character, with the exception of Walt, was safe. This is particularly true of Jesse once captured and Skyler when she confronts Walt with a knife. Despite the constant sense of danger there are still some feel good moments; most obviously the utterly delightful scene where we learn Walt has left his daughter in a fire engine. Over all a truly great episode; I'm glad I managed to avoid any spoilers before watching it.
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10/10
Shock after shock to the fullest excess
WalterSoprano15 September 2013
If you thought the previous episode was a shock you have seen nothing yet. This episode has at least 3 shockers each more shocking than the next. This episode is beyond un believable.

This show as I stated before has reached new heights and isn't coming back down but only going higher I couldn't have been more right. It has launched so high that the meth users on the show aren't as high.

This episode is legendary and is going to be very high when it comes to ratings. Watch this episode only after watching the episodes previous. And you will be just as shocked as me and everyone else who has watched this episode. Literally so shocking it could put you into tears.
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10/10
The best episode in history of television
Azulagoodman327215310 July 2022
Just finished watching the episode and I'm speechless. It was amazing, heartbreaking, full of action. A instant classic tv episode. I'm crying man just Breaking Bad is a masterpiece all in this show are great the photography is beautiful and the characters development is amazing This is one of the best episode of the show full of great ones.
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10/10
Biblical
untaekn9 September 2023
The only episode of TV - the only piece of entertainment - that even comes close to a 10.0 out of 10 rating. Universally loved and an indescribable experience. I don't cry often to TV, but this was easily one of the most emotional experiences of my entire life. If I had the chance, I'd love nothing more than to watch it all again for the first time, because it's an absolute masterpiece. Do NOT spoil it for yourself. The entire show is building towards this episode and it's one of the best and most fulfilling pieces of media ever to be created - there's a reason it's been memed into oblivion in the years since.
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7/10
Expected to be better
jackdheil14 March 2021
Warning: Spoilers
This episode is considered "the best in television history", and honestly it disappointed me a bit...I don't understand what's special about it, it's because an important character died? In my opinion killing characters doesn't make a series better. Overall I don't think this episode deserves a 10.
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2/10
Some points just don't sit right with me
juantrivinoes19 August 2022
Warning: Spoilers
First off, I'm not a troll I watched the entire series and loved it but I don't get why this episode is rated perfectly when there are some clear errors.

First thing that bugged me is Hank's death. Why did couldn't Walter use his way with words like he always does to make a deal with jack and by offering that money? I'd figured Hank would see this gesture and realize Walter really cared for him but instead he accepts death? When seconds before we saw him crawl to the shotgun and could have pulled that stunt he did to the twins. Also, Hank had so much evidence yet he only went out to the desert with Gomez with no backup? All I'm saying is he did not have to die.

Second thing, Walter Jr. Calling the cops on his dad is the stupidest move there was in the whole series, frankly in any series. The whole series they made us believe his son was always on his dad's side but here he turns on him when it was Skyler that attacked Walt... idiotic!

I was so wrapped up in this series and honestly pictured a different "perfect" episode. These two breaking points I have just described could have ended in such a better way. Some part of me likes to believe that Walter could have kept Hank alive and would somehow convince him to run free and get the money to his kids, That could have made for a far more satisfying ending; instead he sent Walt into hiding and just made me feel bad for him.

On the second breaking point, if junior wouldn't have called the cops they could have run away from all the madness, have their dad-to-son heart to heart in Bali resort and enjoy the rest of the money.

In the end, I did not like how the writers handled those two points, as I have to admit were quite shocking, not the perfect episode I would have hope for.
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My name is Ozymandias, king of TV series episodes and films alike.
stillworkingfortheknife15 February 2014
With "Ozymandias", Breaking Bad reaches its absolute apex, a gathering of all the worst things that could possibly happen for the series's main characters and the perfect analysis of Walter White's character. To me, this isn't merely the best episode of the series – these 45 minutes of utterly tragic intensity, having my heart continuously palpitate, are what I consider to be the best thing to be ever put on screen in any medium.

In a non-stop fashion, Looper's writer/director Rian Johnson shocks the audience with gut-wrenching, jaw-dropping, and unforgettable scenes, not leaving you any time to breathe deeply and not stopping to bother you after the ending credits roll. The screenwriters of this series have proved to be one of the most talented in their business over the course of almost five seasons up to that point and in "Ozymandias", they have all the accumulated problems ingeniously falling to pieces. In one way, it's torturing to watch all the worst case scenarios arise, but it's also fascinating because of how greatly made it is. The acting is a new career-best for virtually everyone involved and the departments that don't receive their due respect too often, such as the cinematography, the editing, or the incidental music contribute a major share to the phenomenal final good as well.

I'm completely stunned at how fantastic "Ozymandias" is and I can't think of any other episode of a TV series or any other film that emotionally affected me to the extent Vince Gilligan and his crew managed to do with this episode. Breaking Bad has had its weaker moments in previous seasons and may not be everyone's cup of tea, but with "Ozymandias", it suddenly becomes a must-see for anyone who gives anything about great film- or TV-series-making.
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