I understand what you mean. It's a testament to the quality of the writing and Bryan Cranston's acting that such a pathetic, despicable person such as Walt still gets a hold of the audience's sympathy even till the very end.Baffle said:I still liked Walt at the end. I mean, yeah, he's a bad guy and everything, but, well, he did his best. And that's all anyone can ask you to do. Your best.
Edit: for clarity, I'm not joking. I found it really difficult to dislike Walt, probably because you follow his journey from the beginning and can see his descent and the reasons he ends up where he does. Jesse was okay too. Don't care for Nazis though.
Breaking Bad is a tragedy. A smart, kind man with some bitterness bubbling away underneath the surface (none of us are perfect) gets completely destroyed by his cancer diagnosis and the subsequent "end-of-life crisis" that makes him do the awful things he does. The worst part is that most of it was entirely his fault. Even if he stopped at $700k like he initially planned to, so many people would have survived.
A lot of people feel that Heisenberg is the "real" Walt while Walter White is a decoy. I disagree. I see it as a Jekyll and Hyde scenario. Two completely conflicting personalities (one that wants dominance and another that just loves his family) that struggle constantly through the series (maybe even before the diagnosis). It's actually very similar to Star Wars. Replace Anakin with Walter White, Darth Vader with Heisenberg, the dark side with the meth business...
Though I think the most tragic aspect of Breaking Bad is Walt Jr. It is not until a couple of episodes before the finale that he realises that the father he loved so much, thought the world of, always wanted to be with was actually a serial killer and drug manufacturer, one that absolutely destroyed their family. It actually makes me feel extremely uncomfortable thinking about it.