Breaking Bad is a great television show. Produced and directed by Vince Gilligan, Breaking Bad explores ideas of loyalty, complexity and social nature. Breaking Bad is a series about Walter White, (played by Bryan Cranston) a high school chemistry teacher with a cancer diagnosis that is looking to find a way to support his family after his death. He chooses to support his family through the making and distribution of crystal meth. Walter decides this life is for him when he runs into an old student of his who makes terribly graded meth, Jesse Pinkman, and decides to support him.
Pinkman and White go through the whole show with different ring leaders, distribution attempts and exporters. There is never a point in the show where the suspense is dull. The utter cinematography of Breaking Bad is telling. Breaking Bad producers shell out millions of dollars per episode to bring engaging camera work and action scenes, leaving the audience with insane rising actions.
Breaking Bad has overarching themes that appeal to older and younger audiences, and offers versatility that anyone can get hooked on. For example, Walter White is portrayed as a reasonable gentleman who is soft spoken and down to earth. White’s character development completely changes course over the seasons, and his soft personality no longer remains. At the start of the show, White had good intentions, wanting to save money for his family after his death, but the drug industry consumed White, turning him into a money hungry individual who wouldn’t even blink before taking a life. It’s beneficial for all audiences to understand that a person can have good intentions, until something changes them. All in all, Breaking Bad is an amazing show to watch for anyone considering a seat gripping saga. Breaking Bad offers much more than a good watch, but life lessons, good production and good acting.




























