Breaking Bad: We rank every episode

In honor of 10 years of the AMC drama, we size up all 62 installments

The Breaking Baddest

Frank Ockenfels 3/AMC

Breaking Bad turned 10 years old at the beginning of 2018, and in honor of its decade in existence, the cast reunited on the cover of EW. We're celebrating Breaking Bad's big anniversary and EW's reunion by looking back at the series — all 62 episodes of it. Check out more from our Breaking Bad cast reunion right here, and see which hour snags our no. 1 spot ahead.

62. ''Rabid Dog''

Ursula Coyote/AMC

Season 5, episode 12

Let's get one thing clear: The worst episode of Breaking Bad is still pretty, pretty good. But this bifurcated hour suffers from an excess of moving chess pieces: By setting the table for a climactic feast, it can't help but leave you hungry for more. Part of the problem is the opening anticlimax: What happened after Jesse doused the White home in gasoline? Well?nothing. And part of the problem is the closing contrivance: This episode was, quite simply, one Bald Man too far. Throw in the single least essential scene in the show's run — at long last, a peek at Marie's therapist! — and an uncharacteristically homicidal Skyler, and you've got the least impressive episode of Bad's very impressive run. —Darren Franich

61. ''A No Rough-Stuff Type Deal''

AMC

Season 1, episode 7

This is the way Bad's first season ended: Not with a bang, but an uneasy anticlimax. It's not really the show's fault; the 2007-08 Writers Guild Strike forced Vince Gilligan & Co. to cut off production two episodes before they had originally planned. But even discounting its accidental status as a finale, there's some rough stuff here — namely, Marie's dumb kleptomania subplot and a lot of on-the-nose dialogue. (Skyler to Walt, after some surprise sex: ''Where did that come from? And why was it so damn good?'' Walt to Skyler: ''Because it was illegal.'') —Hillary Busis

60. ''Cancer Man''

AMC

Season 1, episode 4

Nearly anything would have felt like a letdown after the exquisite tension of season 1's third episode, ''...And the Bag's in the River.'' But an hour that brings the whole ''making meth'' plot to a screeching halt, focusing instead on Walt's cancer treatment and Jesse's less-than-scintillating family life? That's just adding insult to injury. (There's a reason Jake Pinkman has appeared in a grand total of one episode in all the series' seasons.) —Hillary Busis

59. ''Down''

AMC

Season 2, episode 4

Watching Breaking Bad's early installments occasionally felt like an exercise in pure masochism. For no episode was that more true than ''Down,'' a fugue of misery that follows Jesse through a series of increasingly unfortunate events — culminating with a humiliating tumble through the roof of a porta-potty. Also, Skyler's mad that Walt's keeping secrets! Lather, rinse, repeat...for 47 minutes. —Hillary Busis

58. ''Abiqui''

AMC

Season 3, episode 11

Some suspension of disbelief is necessary when watching any TV series, even one as carefully crafted as Bad. Yet the idea that Jesse's new girlfriend just happens to be the sister of the kid who killed Jesse's pal Combo back in season 2? The coincidence was tough to swallow; it felt more like an artificial way to ratchet up pre-finale tension than an organic story development. Also underwhelming: Jesse's new girlfriend herself, a character who just never felt as fully formed as Jane. —Hillary Busis

57. ''I See You''

AMC

Season 3, episode 8

There's some great comedy here (Jesse's big day alone in the superlab), as well as a few important plot developments (Gus begins taking down the cartel). Still, the hour feels like another letdown after a series high point (Hank's battle against the Cousins in ''One Minute''); there's too much moping and not enough forward momentum. Plus, you've got to admit that Leonel Salamanca going after Walt in the hospital — despite his two newly amputated legs — was more goofy than menacing. —Hillary Busis

56. ''Kafkaesque''

AMC

Season 3, episode 9

''Kafkaesque'' isn't bad, per se — but it's not particularly good either. Instead, it's just sort of...there, a 47-minute intermission before season 3's endgame truly kicks off. Chances are you don't even remember what happened in this episode, so here's a brief refresher: Jesse is balking under Walt and Gus's rules, Hank is slipping deeper and deeper into depression, and Walt Jr. is off eating breakfast somewhere, probably. —Hillary Busis

55. ''Thirty-Eight Snub''

AMC

Season 4, episode 2

A.k.a. the one with Jesse's mind-numbing, nightmarish perma-party, an event as unpleasant to watch as it must have been to attend. (Also, we get it: Jesse is self-medicating. Now what?) Other than Pinkman's downward spiral, there's not much to this episode, save Mike beating up Walt and Hank's first flirtation with rocks. Sorry, make that minerals. —Hillary Busis

54. ''Buried''

AMC

Season 5, episode 10

What happens after Walt and Hank's electrifying garage confrontation? As it turns out, not much: Though Walt soon hides his illicit earnings in a remote location, everyone else spends the hour basically treading water. (Both Skyler and Marie find out about Hank's big discovery, but their newfound knowledge doesn't really change the show's status quo...at least, not yet.) There's also a Todd/Lydia interlude — but who can spare energy for newer characters at a time like this? —Hillary Busis

53. ''Bug''

AMC

Season 4, episode 9

GPS tracking tomfoolery abounds as Hank tracks Gus's car and Walt tracks Jesse's car, impatient that his partner hasn't yet used the ricin cigarette on Gus. Skyler plays bimbo to get Ted out of a bind but Ted proves he's the real bimbo, for not having a strategy to get out of debt — like cooking meth. —Maricela Gonzalez

52. ''Live Free or Die''

AMC

Season 5, episode 1

After impatiently waiting for the first episode of Breaking Bad's last season, viewers are treated with answers! Just kidding. The episode starts off with a mysterious flash-forward to no-longer-bald Walt's 52nd birthday?at a Denny's?by himself?with a very lethal-looking weapon in his trunk. But hey, at least there are magnets? —Maricela Gonzalez

51. ''Box Cutter''

AMC

Season 4, episode 1

''Box Cutter'' resolves the third season finale's cliffhanger, confirming Gale's death at Jesse's hand. Other than that, though, the episode mostly just reiterates things we already know — Walt's a weasel! Mike is stoic! Gus is dangerous! —Maricela Gonzalez

50. ''Madrigal''

AMC

Season 5, episode 2

''Madrigal'' marks the introduction of one of the series' most beloved characters: Lydia. (Just kidding!) Almost a caricature of upper-class pretension, she is Gus's Madrigal corporate contact and a giant pain in Mike's neck. Meanwhile, Walt plants the ricin in (not a DJ) Roomba, completing his gaslighting scheme on Jesse. —Maricela Gonzalez

49. ''Mandala''

AMC

Season 2, episode 11

RIP Combo. On behalf of rival drug dealers, a local kid shoots down Jesse's friend and henchman, sending Jesse and Jane into heroin heaven/ hell. Plus, Walt chooses his baby Blue Sky and a potential business deal with meth kingpin Gus over witnessing the birth of his second child. —Maricela Gonzalez

48. ''Seven Thirty-Seven''

AMC

Season 2, episode 1

The season 2 premiere introducess that iconic — and creepy — burnt pink bear. Also, Hank tip offs Walt that Tuco killed his henchman Gonzo — right before Tuco kidnaps Walt and Jesse. More of a setup episode than anything else, the real adventure starts in the next episode, ''Grilled.'' —Maricela Gonzalez

47. ''Caballo sin Nombre''

AMC

Season 3, episode 2

Walt unnecessarily gets nasty with a police officer. Flynn decides he's Walter Jr. again. Oh, and scary hit men twins are out to kill Walt. The episode may suffer from juggling domestic drama with criminal business, but Walt throwing the pizza on the roof in a fit of rage is an inspired moment. —Maricela Gonzalez

46. ''Hazard Pay''

AMC

Season 5, episode 3

Despite introducing Vamonos Pest and good ol' Todd, not much else happens in this season 5 episode. Sure, Walt moves home, and Skyler screams at Marie to ''shut up,'' but other than the moment where Walt is left alone sitting next to Brock on Jesse's couch, the episode lacks Bad's usual tension. Well...other than the moment where Skyler sees Walt Jr. watching Scarface with his not-so-innocent father. —Samantha Highfill

45. ''Green Light''

AMC

Season 3, episode 4

The mighty Heisenberg is at his weakest in ''Green Light'' — he loses his teaching career after hitting on the principal, sees Jesse cook his own version of blue meth, and finds out that Skyler is cheating on him. Ouch. — Shirley Li

44. ''Cat's in the Bag''

AMC

Season 1, episode 2

Walt and Jesse slowly, clumsily, and painfully attempt to tie up their first cook's two loose ends: the dead Emilio and the still-alive Krazy 8. We don't blame you if you couldn't watch this one — after all, guts fall through the ceiling at the end. — Shirley Li

43. ''Confessions''

AMC

Season 5, episode 11

Walt and Skyler have the world's most uncomfortable double date with Hank and Marie, who know of Walt's alter ego. The Whites leave them with a ''confession'' video, but are headed for more trouble when Jesse has a (convenient?) epiphany about the ricin cigarette. —Shirley Li

42. ''End Times''

AMC

Season 4, episode 12

Walt tries to carry out two missions in the penultimate season 4 episode: kill Gus with a car bomb and convince Jesse that Gus poisoned Brock. He fails in the former but succeeds in the latter, winning back a distraught Jesse's loyalty. —Shirley Li

41. ''Breakage''

AMC

Season 2, episode 5

Walt and Jesse return to cooking, while Skyler, having had enough of Walt's lies, tries instead to patch things up with Marie. Hank, meanwhile, begins to experience anxiety after his promotion and questions his abilities. —Shirley Li

40. ''Bit by a Dead Bee''

AMC

Season 2, episode 3

After Tuco is abruptly ''sent to Belize,'' Walt and Jesse concoct one of their most preposterous alibis: Walt pretends he's been in a ''fugue state,'' while Jesse holes up with a hooker. And even though Skyler has suspicions about his second cell phone, Walt refuses to stop cooking. —Shirley Li

39. ''Sunset''

AMC

Season 3, episode 6

Hank corners Walt and Jesse in the RV, prompting Aaron Paul to utter the classic Jesse-ism, ''This is my own private domicile, and I will not be harassed...bitch!'' The duo survives again, and, thanks to Gus, Hank becomes the new target for the Cousins. —Shirley Li

38. ''Hermanos''

AMC

Season 4, episode 8

It's hard to imagine the cold, robotic Gustavo Fring's past, but ''Hermanos'' manages to reveal how Gus knew Don Eladio and Hector, and why he's motivated to take out the cartel. It turns out Los Pollos Hermanos means more than just a front company for Gus. —Shirley Li

37. ''Mas''

AMC

Season 3, episode 5

''Mas'' presents us with an equal balance of good and bad: We get the great strip club flashback that marks the beginning of the RV, not to mention the introduction of the super lab, and a very upset Jesse smashing Walt's windshield when he learns that Gus had chosen only Walt. But we also have to sit through Hank's desperate RV search (and overall uninteresting emotional breakdown), Gomez's farewell party, and Skyler and Ted's rendezvous. —Samantha Highfill

36. ''No Mas''

AMC

Season 3, episode 1

The season 3 opener deals with the aftermath of the plane crash, including Walt's great ''people move on'' speech at the school assembly. Elsewhere, Jesse copes with accepting himself as the ''bad guy'' in rehab, and Walt comes clean to Skyler about what it is he's been doing with his time. However, we can't forget the inexplicable crawling-to-a-shrine opening that introduces the annoyingly mute Cousins. —Samantha Highfill

35. ''Bullet Points''

AMC

Season 4, episode 4

After a great opening with Mike losing a piece of his ear (but somehow not his life) in the back of a refrigerated truck, the episode trails off a little with Skyler and Walt's gambling story, complete with a Gamblers Anonymous meeting. But when Walt gets Hank to show him Gale's notebook, things get interesting again. Meanwhile, Walt's partying partner becomes a ''liability'' for Gus, and Jesse gets to take a little ride with Mike. —Samantha Highfill

34. ''Gray Matter''

AMC

Season 1, episode 5

This episode introduces the lovable Badger and also explains Walt's money troubles, as well as his sense of pride. At a birthday party for his friend Elliott Schwartz, we realize the life Walt could (and perhaps should) have had. That realization is what pushes Walt to fight his cancer and start cooking with Jesse again. We could do without the family intervention, though. —Samantha Highfill

33. ''To'hajiilee''

AMC

Season 5, episode 13

Jesse has a plan to take down Walt: Go after his money. Walt has a plan to take down Jesse: Get Jack to kill him. Sidestepping a few questionable plot points — Huell in a hotel room, and Walt's willingness to lead Jesse right to the money — the episode ends with the desert showdown no viewer will ever forget. —Samantha Highfill

32. ''Pilot''

AMC

Season 1, episode 1

Although the pilot sets up a number of brilliant points for the series, the in-your-face nature of the first scene is a bit too jarring. As a whole, the episode runs smoothly, setting up Walt's cancer and his love of his family, and keeping us intrigued. But to have such a pulse-pounding beginning end up being an unnecessary panic at the end feels a little anti-climactic. —Samantha Highfill

31. ''I.F.T.''

AMC

Season 3, episode 3

Opening with the Tortuga flashback, this episode starts on a strong note, continuing with Walt barely evading death-by-ax from the Cousins. But when it delves too much into Skyler and Walt's unhappiness (and the beginning of her affair), it loses traction. Elsewhere, Gus meets with Tio about stopping the Cousins from killing Walt, and Hank copes with his feelings in an all-too-obvious way: By starting a bar fight. But Skyler brings the episode home when she tells Walt, ''I f---ed Ted.'' —Samantha Highfill

30. ''Crazy Handful of Nothin'''

AMC

Season 1, episode 6

This episode is packed full of important firsts: Jesse learns about Walt's cancer, we meet Tuco, and, of course, we meet Heisenberg. The middle drags a bit with a cancer support group meeting, but the tension quickly rebuilds when Hank shows up at Walt's school and Jesse has an unpleasant first meeting with Tuco. However, the ending — Heisenberg and his newly shaved head walking away from Tuco's bombed headquarters — marks the beginning of it all. —Samantha Highfill

29. ''Granite State''

Ursula Coyote/AMC

Season 5, episode 15

The penultimate episode of the series feels like a giant set-up for the finale. Everything happens, and yet nothing happens at all. Walt transitions into the Mr. Lambert we've seen from previous flashforwards, Jesse is still a chained dog, and the rest of the White family waits in limbo for what is surely coming next. In the final minutes of the hour, a defeated Walt coincidentally stumbles upon a Charlie Rose interview with his old friends Gretchen and Elliott, setting Heisenberg's return into motion. —Denise Warner

28. ''Problem Dog''

AMC

Season 4, episode 7

Gale's death weighs heavily on Jesse's mind, as he confesses to his Narcotics Anonymous group that he killed a ''problem dog'' that never did anything wrong. Jesse's loyalties to Walt also waver as Mike and Gus take Pinkman further under their wings. Thus, the seeds of discontent between the meth student and his teacher begin to grow. —Denise Warner

27. ''Fifty-One''

AMC

Season 5, episode 4

Anna Gunn shines in this Skyler-centric plot. The weary Mrs. White calmly walks into the family pool, which signals her distress to Marie and Hank, who suggest they take the kids for a while. Once her children are whisked away to safety, she tells her husband that all she can do is wait for his cancer to return. Point: Skyler. —Denise Warner

26. ''Open House''

AMC

Season 4, episode 3

Marie is rarely more than Hank's pretty-in-purple accessory or a shoulder for Skyler to complain on. But her own twisted psychosis is on display in ''Open House,'' revealing a different side of Mrs. Schrader, who creates a fake backstory as she waltzes from open house to open house. Marie's plot mirrors Skyler's as Skyler hatches a plan to buy the car wash from Bogden and create a new story for herself (not to mention for Walt's meth money). —Denise Warner

25. ''Half Measures''

AMC

Season 3, episode 12

Walt learns just how far Jesse will go when he knows the lives of children are at stake, and Jesse learns how far his partner will go to protect him — events that reverberate through the rest of the series, including one killer ending. —Denise Warner

24. ''Cornered''

AMC

Season 4, episode 6

If you only remember one thing about ''Cornered,'' it's Walt's ''I am the one who knocks'' speech. That iconic moment is enough to lift the entire hour to the top 25 on our list. —Denise Warner

23. ''Over''

AMC

Season 2, episode 10

Walt finds out his cancer is in remission and promptly celebrates with his family. To exert his status as patriarch over Hank, Walt practically force feeds Walt Jr. shots of tequila, which the teenager can't handle. Walt's caring nature as a father figure deteriorates throughout Bad's run, but this is the first we see it affect his biological son. —Denise Warner

22. ''Gliding Over All''

AMC

Season 5, episode 8

As ''Crystal Blue Persuasion'' plays in the background, Walt builds up his empire with Todd?until Skyler forces him to realize he's made more than enough money for several lifetimes. Walt leaves the business, the kids return home, and the Whites and the Schraders have one of their famous backyard barbecues. During their family celebration, Hank takes that fateful trip to the master bathroom, where a copy of Leaves of Grass blows Heisenberg's secret wide open. —Denise Warner

21. ''Salud''

AMC

Season 4, episode 10

Gus Fring's drive to exact revenge for the murder of his partner Max at the hands of Don Eladio comes to a head. He poisons himself along with Don Eladio and the rest of the cartel, killing everyone and leaving himself in mortal danger. —Denise Warner

20. ''Buyout''

AMC

Season 5, episode 6

Walt sheds light on his motivations as he explains to Jesse how much money he sold his share of Gray Matter Technologies for — a measly $5k (compared to the billions the company is worth now). That's why his meth empire is so important to him. You see, Walt is not a meth businessman; he's a meth business, man. —Denise Warner

19. ''Dead Freight''

AMC

Season 5, episode 5

A speeding locomotive is a pretty fitting analogy for Breaking Bad, so it's no surprise that one of the best episodes of the first half of season 5 featured an against-all-odds train heist. But, like most happy Bad moments, the celebration is short-lived: Todd pulls the trigger on a young boy riding his bike through the desert, and Jesse will never be the same. —Katie Atkinson

18. ''Shotgun''

AMC

Season 4, episode 5

If Walt is the meth mastermind, then what is Jesse? Gus wisely pounces on this imbalance, teaming up with Mike to fabricate an attack that lets Jesse save the day, for once. A tipsy Walt, meanwhile, bristles at the idea of Gale being a ''genius,'' and his drunken ego trip drives Hank deeper into the Heisenberg investigation. (Probably should have just let the dead guy take the credit, Walt.) Katie Atkinson

17. ''Negro y Azul''

AMC

Season 2, episode 7

It's no secret now that Hank is much more than Walt's oaf of a brother-in-law, but this episode is where we learn just how complicated he really is. When a human head mounted on a tortoise comes wandering up to the DEA agents, Agent Schrader is left completely shell-shocked. His well-timed panic attack saves his life (and limbs), but he leaves El Paso missing some of his trademark bravado. —Katie Atkinson

16. ''ABQ''

AMC

Season 2, episode 13

The first two seasons all twisted and turned to this finale, where Walt's lies come to a head with Gus (he discovers Walt's DEA connection through a picture on a donation jar), Skyler (Walt's drugged admission of dual cell phones leads her to investigate all his unbelievable tales), and Jesse/the entire city of Albuquerque (Walt let Jane die in the previous episode, which leads to her air traffic controller dad causing a plane crash). No man is an island. —Katie Atkinson

15. ''Felina''

Ursula Coyote/AMC

Season 5, episode 16

It's difficult to judge series finales, which come with the weight of impossible expectation, but Bad's ending provided a satisfying tie-up for (almost) all the loose ends, portraying Walt's final days as a series of scores left decisively settled. We can quibble over minor points: Walt gets his money to his family via Schwartz Ex Machina; the guns-blazing conclusion with Uncle Jack and the Neo-Nazis could never compare to the final act of the Walt/Gus rivalry; Jesse's reduced role in the final act was a disappointing off-note, and so forth.... But Vince Gilligan wrote and directed an exquisitely tense series closer. And few images in television history are more resonant than the opening shots of Walter White, trapped inside a snow-covered car, illuminated by the lights of searching police cars, desperately begging someone — Some higher power? His own declining body? The car? — for a little more time to make things right. —Darren Franich

14. ''Peekaboo''

AMC

Season 2, episode 6

Don't you wish Jesse could just start over and be a preschool teacher? In this heartbreaking hour, Jesse goes to the house of a methhead couple that robbed Skinny Pete only to bond with their shy redheaded son through a game of peekaboo. When the dad's head is crushed with an ATM, Jesse calls the cops and leaves the little boy in the front yard to (hopefully) be taken to a better life. —Katie Atkinson

13. ''Phoenix''

AMC

Season 2, episode 12

There have been a lot of secrets between Walt and Jesse over the years, but the one kept the longest (and angrily spit out in the third-to-last episode ever) is the fact that Walt watched Jane die and did nothing about it. And in a season of coincidences, this all happens after Walt unknowingly sits down for a drink with Jane's dad — just a couple of father figures lamenting their mixed-up kids. —Katie Atkinson

12. ''Blood Money''

AMC

Season 5, episode 9

For five seasons, fans have wondered whether Hank would uncover who Walt really is and, then, what the eff he would do when he found out. Now we know! Walt and Hank's face-off in the midseason premiere was visceral and physical. And, as always, Heisenberg got the last word(s): ''Tread lightly.'' —Katie Atkinson

11. ''Grilled''

AMC

Season 2, episode 2

Sometimes Hank seemed like the worst DEA agent ever — what with a meth kingpin in his own family and all — but this episode proves that he (sometimes) gets it right. On the hunt for a missing Walt, Hank instead stumbles onto Tuco's hideout and promptly takes the kingpin out. Bonus: This is where Hector ''Tio'' Salamanca first puts his handy bell to good use, warning his nephew not to eat that burrito. —Katie Atkinson

10. ''Better Call Saul''

AMC

Season 2, episode 8

The episode that inspired a spin-off! It's tough to imagine Breaking Bad before Saul Goodman. Who solved all of Walt and Jesse's pesky problems? In his premiere episode, Saul quickly proves himself indispensable (for now), saving Badger from jail time and giving the DEA a Heisenberg lookalike. ''If you want to make more money and keep the money that you make...Better Call Saul!'' —Katie Atkinson

9. ''Crawl Space''

AMC

Season 4, episode 11

The gradual pace of Bad's fourth season resembles a chessboard. ''Crawl Space'' is the moment Gustavo Fring apparently puts Walt into checkmate. Fresh from his successful cartel coup, Gus officially releases Walt from his employ, in a desert scene shot like a David Lean movie. There's more good stuff (like when Kuby and Huell pay a visit to hapless Ted Beneke), but the showstopping moment comes when Walt descends to the titular crawl space and finds his money all gone. His scream turns to crying, then maniacal supervillain laughter?and finally dead silence. —Darren Franich

8. ''Say My Name''

AMC

Season 5, episode 7

It begins with Heisenberg Triumphant: Walt meets with the Phoenix boys, and his mere presence intimidates them. ''Say my name,'' he says, basking in his glory like an emperor with a kingdom stretching to the horizon. But the episode climaxes with a final showdown between Walt and Mike, the inadvertent nemesis of season 5's first half. Mike is an honorable criminal, and the only man to speak truth to Walt's terrifying power, so Walt kills him. The closing scene is at once hilarious and devastating. —Darren Franich

7. ''And the Bag's in the River''

AMC

Season 1, episode 3

The show's third episode and its first masterpiece. Krazy 8's in the basement, and Walt needs to dispose of him. One problem: Krazy 8's not dead. The show treats Walt's plight seriously (at one point, he writes a list of the pros and cons of murdering another human being). And, as Krazy 8, Maximino Arciniega makes a fine foil for Walt, arguing that our hero isn't cut out for the criminal life?before accidentally proving that Walt is. And the impressionistic flashbacks to Walt's college days provide an early tease at the barely explored memories (Gretchen!) that torment Walt throughout the run of the show. —Darren Franich

6. ''Full Measure''

AMC

Season 3, episode 13

Part of the rollicking thrill of Breaking Bad is seeing Walt and Jesse paint themselves into a corner — and then, somehow, find some way to barely save their skin. That's especially true in the third season finale, which sees Jesse on the run and Walt figuring out how not to get killed by angry employer Gus. In part, this episode belongs to returning guest star David Costabile, whose Gale emerges as a lovable sap caught up in a fight he can barely understand. But the final moments of this episode are all Aaron Paul, weeping uncontrollably as he damns himself with a gunshot. —Darren Franich

5. ''Fly''

AMC

Season 3, episode 10

The most controversial episode in our top 10. Some people despise ''Fly'' for its artsy pretensions and its go-nowhere plot arc. Others (like yours truly) frankly think it belongs much higher on this list. But we can all agree that ''Fly'' is one of the great bottle episodes of the new golden age of TV. In a long, dark night of the soul, Jesse and Walt try to rid the superlab of the titular insectile intruder. It's a showcase for Cranston and Paul, by turns funny and scary and quietly philosophical: It's like watching the Marx Brothers perform Waiting for Godot with a ticking time bomb onstage. It's also a brilliant episode directed by Rian Johnson (you'll see his name again soon). —Darren Franich

4. ''One Minute''

AMC

Season 3, episode 7

Call it ''The Last Temptation of Hank Schrader.'' In a brilliant, bleak, and utterly humane hour of television, the guy who used to seem like a one-joke jock lays a brutal beating down on Jesse Pinkman — an action that puts his whole career on the line. Dean Norris makes Hank's descent utterly heartbreaking. When Hank says, ''I'm supposed to be better than that,'' it's like a sudden ray of light shining in the show's amoral world. And then the show ends with a bloody, brazen action set-piece. There's more good stuff in ''One Minute,'' including a bruised Jesse swearing vengeance and the ensuing rekindling of the Walt-Jesse partnership — all of it shot by director Michelle MacLaren in shadowy long takes and soul-baring close-ups. —Darren Franich

3. ''Ozymandias''

AMC

Season 5, episode 14

Where to begin? With the sorrowful flashback to Walt and Jesse's first cook? With Hank's badass almost-final words — ''My name is ASAC Schrader, and you can go f--- yourself'' — or the look on Hank's face the last time he stares at Walt, with terror and anger and just a bit of pity? How about Walt pushing his last barrel of cash through the desert while a sprightly tune plays by the Limeliters? Skyler finally kicking the monster out of her house? Walt Jr. revealing that at least one member of the White family has a moral code? That final ambiguous phone call, with Walt playing Heisenberg?or is Heisenberg playing Walt? Who can tell anymore? Breaking Bad was a show that ran on secrets, and this epic Rian Johnson-directed hour lets them all burst out at once. —Darren Franich

2. ''Face Off''

AMC

Season 4, episode 13

Gustavo Fring pushed Bad to new heights in its third and fourth seasons. He's one of the great television antagonists: A character who seemed to come out of myth (or somewhere in Chile anyhow) and who seemed to have a near-mystical invulnerability by the end of season 4. But he has one weakness, and in ''Face Off,'' Walt exploits that weakness for a Hail-Mary counterattack. The writers didn't know if there would be another season, and the climactic moments of ''Face Off'' feel, in hindsight, like they could be the end of a certain version of the show: A series about Gus Fring and Tio Salamanca, two old enemies tearing each other to pieces. Even more terrifying are Walt's closing words to Skyler: ''I won.'' All it took was a bomb, some murder?and sending one innocent kid to the hospital. —Darren Franich

1. ''4 Days Out''

AMC

Season 2, episode 9

Nobody dies in ''4 Days Out.'' There are no climactic shootouts, breathtaking action set-pieces, or awesomely quotable badass monologues. (Walt wouldn't even dub himself ''the one who knocks'' for two more seasons.) Where other classic episodes are big and flashy, it's quiet, contemplative, and utterly simple: just Walt, Jesse, and a marathon meth-making session gone horribly wrong. This is Breaking Bad at its most elemental — as well as its most gripping. (Appropriate for a show about chemistry.) And though the hour is a tightly constructed examination of Walt and Jesse's relationship — sort of like ''Fly,'' but without the artiness that grates on some viewers — that's not all it has to offer. Between Funyuns, Walt's withering appraisals of Jesse's judgment (''You brought a meth lab to the airport?''), and Jesse's incredulous guess at how Walt will get them out of this mess (''A robot?''), it doubles as Bad's funniest episode. ''4 Days'' also delivers one of the series' best endings: Walt learning that his cancer is in remission, then responding to the news by savagely beating a metal paper towel dispenser. It's a beautifully executed moment of ambiguous rage — as well as a vital turning point for Walt, Heisenberg, and the show at large. —Hillary Busis

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