Television
BB Ep 201: Seven Thirty-Seven
10 March 2009
A brief opening in B&W featuring a swimming pool … is this Sunset Boulevard? Nope. This is even more messed up than that. Season Two of Breaking Bad begins.
After this visual, “Seven Thirty-Seven” starts in earnest with a bloody scene in a junkyard that I know I’ve seen before. Why was that first part so familiar, where Tuco lays into the other guy and gets off on it? Did I see a sneak preview, or was that simply taken from the first season? Not sure, but wondering….
Now I gotta say something about the opening credits that take place during the part I’m writing about. Bryan Cranston plays a chemistry teacher, so the show’s titles are designed with element symbols. Breaking Bad Created by Vince Gilligan, for instance, uses bromine, barium and chromium. I used to love the periodic table, so it’s fun to see sodium, hydrogen and especially stuff like molybdenum and yttrium go by, squeezed into the names of actors and producers. Some elements get used more than once, with bromine showing up at least three times, but I think they should have used vanadium, too:
Q: We see a credit that says “Director of Photography MiChael Slovis.” What’s wrong with this?
A: There is no element with the symbol Ch. Vanadium — or sulfur, or iodine; any others? — would have worked for our DP, who surely deserves better! He’s not even an itinerant DP, but works on BB regularly. I’m keeping an eye on your future credits, Mr. Slovis.
I’m also keeping my eye out for Co-Producer Sam Catlin (calcium), Producer Melissa Bernstein (beryllium) and Consulting Producer John ShiBan (barium). These are three people in the biz that I hope to get to know.
The titles are not the thing, though. The thing is the story and its presentation. Thanks to Bialy / Thomas this is a well-cast show, and I liked this episode. Strong beginning to Season Two!
I thought i was going crazy, the Ch didnt look right to me, i spent 30 mins searching for a chemical element with symbol “Ch” or some kind of sign that someone else noticed it and this is the only one. I tried multiple keywords but nothing till i got here. i even searched again with other keywords and still nothing but here. at least i just learned that Ununnilium and unununium have become darmstadtium and Roentgenium respectively
Luigi
15 Apr 09 at 3:08 pm edit_comment_link(__('Edit', 'sandbox'), ' ', ''); ?>
Corrected in season 3!
Blog entry: http://www.kevinashworth.com/blog/archives/1090
Kevin
6 Apr 10 at 1:04 am edit_comment_link(__('Edit', 'sandbox'), ' ', ''); ?>
I noticed this too, very upsetting to people familiar with chemistry.
Daniel
29 Oct 11 at 6:35 pm edit_comment_link(__('Edit', 'sandbox'), ' ', ''); ?>