Walter White’s story doesn’t just end in the finale of — it curdles. By the time we reach “Felina,” the timid chemistry teacher with lung cancer has fully become Heisenberg, a man who finally stops lying to everyone except in the one way that matters most: he refuses to let go of control, even as he dies.
At the start, Walt is a humiliated man: an overqualified high school teacher washing cars for extra money, sidelined from a company he helped build and now worth billions without him. His cancer diagnosis is the slap in the face that tells him his life will end in debt and failure.
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