
Aaron Paul
Now they're cooking! The cast of AMC's Breaking Bad gathered at the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences on February 23 for a panel celebrating the show's legacy and previewing the upcoming fifth and final season.
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Michelle Dockery and Dan Stevens
1. HOMELAND
The best new series of the year is Showtime's twisty nail-biter of a psychological thriller, an emotionally intense cat-and-mouse game between two damaged souls: Damian Lewis as Nicholas Brody, a Marine POW who may have been turned by terrorists during eight years in Iraqi captivity, and Claire Danes as Carrie Mathison, the unstable CIA analyst who breaks all the rules to get under his skin — and at times under the sheets. (Bringing new meaning to undercover agent). The actors are as electrifying as the storytelling in this taut tale of homeland insecurity, which also features a marvelously restrained Mandy Patinkin as Carrie's melancholy mentor and a revelatory Morena Baccarin as Brody's understandably conflicted wife. Homeland comes from the veteran producers of 24, who have lost none of their knack for sustained suspense, but within this more realistic framework have been able to concoct a thoughtful and gripping meditation on the human toll of the war on terror.
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Bryan Cranston
Could this be the end for Walt?
After Gus (Giancarlo Esposito) threatened Walt (Bryan Cranston) and his family on last week's Breaking Bad, Walt decides
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Anna Gunn
Like Saul said, it was a bad idea.
On last week's Breaking Bad, Skyler (Anna Gunn) was forced to reveal to her former boss/lover Ted (Christopher Cousins) that she was ...
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Bryan Cranston
Where did Walt walk off to?
Walt (Bryan Cranston) made it out of Jesse's house after their comically brutal fight last week, but he's MIA on Sunday's Breaking Bad (10/9c, AMC) on a rather important day — Jr.'s 16th birthday.
Fall TV: Get the lowdown on this season's must-see new shows
"Walt, if you're there, please pick up," Skyler (Anna Gunn) says, leaving a message ...
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Anna Gunn and Bryan Cranston
Can you ever have too much money?
Breaking Bad's Walt and Skyler do — and it ain't a good thing.
On Sunday's episode (10/9c, AMC), Skyler (Anna Gunn) nearly has a small stroke after she crunches the numbers and learns that Walt ...
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Bryan Cranston and Marius Stan
Is Breaking Bad's Walter White ready to be the boss?
AMC orders 16-episode final season of Breaking Bad
We're not talking about the drug cartel — we mean Walt's newly purchased car wash, of course. In Sunday's episode (10/9c, AMC), Walt (Bryan Cranston) visits his former employer to pick up the keys to his new business, a front through which to launder his drug money. But Bogdan (Marius Stan) — who is happier dealing with Walt than his pushy wife Skyler (Anna Gunn) —can't resist pushing Walt's buttons.
"So, you are the boss now," he says in the sneak peek video after the jump...
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Bryant Cranston and Aaron Paul, Breaking Bad
In Breaking Bad's fourth season, Walter White may finally accept what viewers have known for a while now: Walt is not a good man.
When viewers first met Walt (Bryan Cranston), running around the desert in tighty-whiteys after his first kill, his plight as a terminally-ill-chemistry-teacher-turned-crystal-meth-maker was still somewhat relatable. But after telling a mountain of lies, collecting boatloads of cash and committing a few more murders, Walt now seems about as black as his alter ego Heisenberg's porkpie hat.
Summer TV: Get scoop on your favorite returning shows
"He has accepted who he is and embraced who he is," Cranston tells TVGuide.com...
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Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul
As AMC's Emmy-award winning drama Breaking Bad prepares to fire up its fourth season on July 17, the show's stars came out for the premiere to reflect on a very realistic scenario: that Season 5 could be its very last. Even though creator Vince Gilligan only hinted at this possibility in an interview earlier this week without directly confirming it, it appears the actors have accepted the fact that the series will end next year.
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Tim Roth, Lie to Me
When Lie to Me returns for its third season, Cal Lightman and his team of lie-detecting scientists will be freed from their ties to Ben Reynolds and the FBI.
But while the show's producers made that decision to allow Lightman (Tim Roth) to take on different kinds of cases, will the lack of checks and balances prove dangerous for the Lightman Group?
Lie to Me: End of the line for Lightman and Reynolds
"We are leaning into Lightman's general conflict with power and authority," executive producer Alexander Cary tells TVGuide.com. "In the first episode of Season 3, he goes too far. He sails extremely close to the wind...
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