I enjoy TWD, but must say whatever the latest season that’s on Netflix, I haven’t gotten through it yet. I normally binge new seasons of shows I like, within a couple weeks. I still like it, just haven’t found it more compelling than a couple other shows I’m watching right now.
Breaking Bad, OTOH, I consumed every episode asap whenever they were released to whatever viewing venue I was using at the time (disk or streaming). I have also watched the whole thing a second time. It’s a masterpiece.
On the subject of the poll it’s Breaking Bad. It’s simply brilliantly written and with a character who gets some power for the first time in his life and goes mad.
More to the point, he becomes one, and the transformation is so well-written and well-acted that the viewer faces a point along the way of having to recognize that they are identifying with someone who does loathsome things. It forces you to feel like turning against the protagonist. Even then there’s an ambivalence that is really very remarkable.
I gave it shot. I watched the first couple episodes, didn’t like it, and moved on. Then when all the talk about it being as good as The Wire and the best thing on TV, I gave it another shot. I watched 6 more episodes.
Still didn’t like Breaking Bad.
I dislike the characters, I dislike the plot, I found it mind-numbingly boring, and it covered the same ground over and over and over and over.
I like anti-heroes. I like deep stories. I love me some Brian Cranston.
I don’t like Breaking Bad. Just because a guy has a shitty life does not make his descent into assholishness any more interesting than watching paint dry. And every other character in the show is a one-dimensional prop for him to play off.
There could be a very compelling, very interesting maybe 110 minute movie in there. Flush out the characters, add some more compelling bad guys, and more intriguing situations, and I may like it. But dragging one movie’s worth of idea over 6 seasons seems incredibly annoying. And that’s after I only watched 6 episodes.
I’m a big BB fan and I kind of agree with this, however it’s a valid critique of almost every single episodic piece of work ever created. I think you’d be very hard pressed to find a good long running series (TV, books, movies, whatever) and not be able to say “cut 50% and you have a vastly better product”.
There’s no way this story would have been any where near this good in a single movie, there’s just too much depth and breadth dealt with in the entire run to condense it that much and still have the amazing story we were told.
But a whole lot could have been cut and it would have been better.
In part. But one great thing about The Wire was that, for the most part, the characters and situations changed each season. One season was (mostly) about the drug trade in the projects, next the unions and dock work, next politics and structures, fourth was schools, and fifth was the press. Each year, there was something new, something intriguing, to keep it from getting boring and rehashing the same crap every single season. You’re right, a vast majority of TV series go on much too long though. Breaking Bad was one of those. And maybe The Walking Dead will be one too.
I’ll take your word for it. I just didn’t give a crap enough about the characters or plot to sit through all the tedium for a few gems.
You forgot Deadwood, the second greatest drama of all time, after Breaking Bad (and fuck The Wire [he said, after slogging through two fucking seasons of that show, with very little to, um, show for it]).
I gave up on Breaking bad after the third episode and never went back.
I gave up on Walking Dead after the third season, and have checked in periodically to keep up. The latest season was pretty decent. Walking Dead has had its moments, but it is not particularly good overall.
I watched the first six or so episodes of The Walking Dead, and I got to thinking about what I would do in that situation. There are a lot of habitable islands off the coast of Georgia and up and down the Eastern seaboard. Find one big enough to have fresh water and arable land, and you’re in business. Clear it of zombies and then bring over everything you need from the mainland. Zombies aren’t going to swim out or pilot ships. Maybe there was a reason that couldn’t be done, but everything they did seemed kind of stupid. Also, they in the beginning they were having trouble finding guns. In rural Georgia.
To put it another way. If the poll ratio continues more dentists by percentage would not recommend sugarless gum than those who preferred TWD over Breaking Bad.
Breaking Bad. Every day of the week & twice on Sundays.
I have seen every episode of both BB & TWD. I’ve seen all of BB 3 times. (omitting much of Walter’s dealings with Skylar) You would need to pay me, a lot, to watch all of TWD more than just the once.
TWD can be clever & deliver every now & again, which is why I still watch it. But, it can also be staggeringly stupid. They have slash & hack scenes in every episode. Maybe they’re contractually mandated … I have no idea. The characters & plots just stumble along in little bursts in random directions.
When someone died in BB, there was a reason. There was drama. Everything unfolded in ways that seemed plausible & believable. There was a beauty in it, like watching ice skaters in the Olympics.