Breaking Bad -- "Mas" -- 04/18/10
#2
DVD Talk Legend
Re: Breaking Bad -- "Mas" -- 04/18/10
best show on TV right now
#7
DVD Talk Legend
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 18,946
Likes: 0
Received 3 Likes
on
3 Posts
From: 75 clicks above the Do Lung bridge...
Re: Breaking Bad -- "Mas" -- 04/18/10
Looking forward to tonight's episode.
Found this article interesting:
Found this article interesting:
From prison to 'Breaking Bad's' set
Luis Moncada did time, then got a job as a security guard on a movie shoot. And before he knew it, he was on ‘Breaking Bad.’
'Bad' brothers

Luis, left, and Daniel Moncada are real life brothers and former gang members who now play villainous brothers on "Breaking Bad." (Katie Falkenberg / Los Angeles Times)
By Josh Gajewski, Special to the Los Angeles Times
April 24, 2010
Every time Luis Moncada blinks, he curses, thanks to the unprintable expletive tattooed onto his eyelids at age 18.
A gang member at the time, he was convinced he wouldn't make it to 21 and wanted to deliver this angry message to the world when he was gone.
Fourteen years later, Moncada is telling a different kind of story with his eyes. He and his brother Daniel have recurring roles on AMC's "Breaking Bad," where they've spent much of this third season playing silent-assassin types — cartel members from Mexico who've come to kill Walter White ( Bryan Cranston).
For Luis, now 32, it's one of a long string of acting gigs that began in 2002, when a director spotted his tattoos and asked if he wanted to be in a film. For Daniel, 30, it's his first acting role.
"I tell my wife all the time, ‘Wow, look at how far we've come,' " Luis Moncada says, with Daniel sitting nearby. "
The journey included a few key stops, such as Luis' prison sentence for driving a stolen vehicle. "I'm not thankful I went to prison," he says, "but after going to prison, that's when you really, really, really think, ‘Wow, what a waste of time.' I had to change."
Also crucial was a beautiful girl who happened to be a parole officer ("No, not my parole officer," Luis notes with a smile), along with a move away from the Hollywood and Echo Park neighborhoods where Luis and Daniel sometimes associated with the wrong crowd. Leaving his gang on good terms, he moved with his brother to Studio City. Luis married the parole officer and they have a 2-year-old son; Daniel lives in their spare bedroom.
The acting career was an accident. Luis was a security guard on the set of a small film, "El Padrino," when director Damian Chapa spotted the gang tattoo around his neck and asked if he wanted to play Jennifer Tilly's bodyguard. "I was getting off in 10 minutes so I said, ‘You know what, sir? No thank you. I don't know if I can do eight or 12 more hours."
But Manuel Jimenez stood nearby. Jimenez is an ex-con who created Suspect Entertainment, a talent agency that turns reformed gang members into actors; Hollywood often utilizes Suspect when it needs to fill the role of a bad guy.
Jimenez convinced Luis to take the role and then signed him to the agency. A slew of other parts followed — "Gangbanger," "Carjacker," "Thug," his IMDB credits read. "Would you be cool with me if you saw me in an alley?" he asks. "No, you'd probably be scared of me. So I'm the bad guy. For now."
And then came "Breaking Bad." "We knew we were going to have these very scary, very silent Mexican cartel assassins in our third season, so we put the word out and needed to find these guys," says Vince Gilligan, the show's creator. "We needed a couple of guys who were very charismatic, whose expressions and eyes told us a lot."
The Moncadas stood out; Luis had initially caught the eyes of the show's casting directors, but since the script called for brothers, they asked that his brother audition too. "They exuded a certain authenticity," Gilligan says. "They don't have to glare at you to scare you."
Cranston directed them in last month's season premiere, which included a sequence in which the brothers coolly walked away from an exploding truck. Daniel even remembered Cranston's note that, "If you feel like it, it would be cool if you casually lifted your cigarette to your lips and take a puff like you're walking in the park."
Afterward, "I just threw my arms around them," Cranston said. "It was perfect."
After several more weeks of shooting, their work was done. "Whenever it's the last scene for an actor in a season, the [assistant director] will make an announcement and people will applaud — especially if we like them," Cranston says. Here, the applause from the cast and crew grew especially loud and long. "These two guys, their lives could have gone a very different way and our industry somehow showed them an avenue of alternatives, and they took them."
And those eyes? The emotion of the moment, Cranston says, actually made Luis Moncada cry.
Asked about it now, Luis says with a laugh, "Come on, Bryan — why put me on the spot like that? You can't call it crying if a tear doesn't come down. But," he adds, "OK, my eyes got a little watery. It was a beautiful experience."
[email protected]
Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times
Luis Moncada did time, then got a job as a security guard on a movie shoot. And before he knew it, he was on ‘Breaking Bad.’
'Bad' brothers

Luis, left, and Daniel Moncada are real life brothers and former gang members who now play villainous brothers on "Breaking Bad." (Katie Falkenberg / Los Angeles Times)
By Josh Gajewski, Special to the Los Angeles Times
April 24, 2010
Every time Luis Moncada blinks, he curses, thanks to the unprintable expletive tattooed onto his eyelids at age 18.
A gang member at the time, he was convinced he wouldn't make it to 21 and wanted to deliver this angry message to the world when he was gone.
Fourteen years later, Moncada is telling a different kind of story with his eyes. He and his brother Daniel have recurring roles on AMC's "Breaking Bad," where they've spent much of this third season playing silent-assassin types — cartel members from Mexico who've come to kill Walter White ( Bryan Cranston).
For Luis, now 32, it's one of a long string of acting gigs that began in 2002, when a director spotted his tattoos and asked if he wanted to be in a film. For Daniel, 30, it's his first acting role.
"I tell my wife all the time, ‘Wow, look at how far we've come,' " Luis Moncada says, with Daniel sitting nearby. "
The journey included a few key stops, such as Luis' prison sentence for driving a stolen vehicle. "I'm not thankful I went to prison," he says, "but after going to prison, that's when you really, really, really think, ‘Wow, what a waste of time.' I had to change."
Also crucial was a beautiful girl who happened to be a parole officer ("No, not my parole officer," Luis notes with a smile), along with a move away from the Hollywood and Echo Park neighborhoods where Luis and Daniel sometimes associated with the wrong crowd. Leaving his gang on good terms, he moved with his brother to Studio City. Luis married the parole officer and they have a 2-year-old son; Daniel lives in their spare bedroom.
The acting career was an accident. Luis was a security guard on the set of a small film, "El Padrino," when director Damian Chapa spotted the gang tattoo around his neck and asked if he wanted to play Jennifer Tilly's bodyguard. "I was getting off in 10 minutes so I said, ‘You know what, sir? No thank you. I don't know if I can do eight or 12 more hours."
But Manuel Jimenez stood nearby. Jimenez is an ex-con who created Suspect Entertainment, a talent agency that turns reformed gang members into actors; Hollywood often utilizes Suspect when it needs to fill the role of a bad guy.
Jimenez convinced Luis to take the role and then signed him to the agency. A slew of other parts followed — "Gangbanger," "Carjacker," "Thug," his IMDB credits read. "Would you be cool with me if you saw me in an alley?" he asks. "No, you'd probably be scared of me. So I'm the bad guy. For now."
And then came "Breaking Bad." "We knew we were going to have these very scary, very silent Mexican cartel assassins in our third season, so we put the word out and needed to find these guys," says Vince Gilligan, the show's creator. "We needed a couple of guys who were very charismatic, whose expressions and eyes told us a lot."
The Moncadas stood out; Luis had initially caught the eyes of the show's casting directors, but since the script called for brothers, they asked that his brother audition too. "They exuded a certain authenticity," Gilligan says. "They don't have to glare at you to scare you."
Cranston directed them in last month's season premiere, which included a sequence in which the brothers coolly walked away from an exploding truck. Daniel even remembered Cranston's note that, "If you feel like it, it would be cool if you casually lifted your cigarette to your lips and take a puff like you're walking in the park."
Afterward, "I just threw my arms around them," Cranston said. "It was perfect."
After several more weeks of shooting, their work was done. "Whenever it's the last scene for an actor in a season, the [assistant director] will make an announcement and people will applaud — especially if we like them," Cranston says. Here, the applause from the cast and crew grew especially loud and long. "These two guys, their lives could have gone a very different way and our industry somehow showed them an avenue of alternatives, and they took them."
And those eyes? The emotion of the moment, Cranston says, actually made Luis Moncada cry.
Asked about it now, Luis says with a laugh, "Come on, Bryan — why put me on the spot like that? You can't call it crying if a tear doesn't come down. But," he adds, "OK, my eyes got a little watery. It was a beautiful experience."
[email protected]
Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times
#8
DVD Talk God
Re: Breaking Bad -- "Mas" -- 04/18/10
FWIW, there is a sentence in that article that could potentially be considered a spoiler. Maybe the direction the show is headed in in future episodes, so be warned.
#10
Suspended
Re: Breaking Bad -- "Mas" -- 04/18/10
TvByTheNumbers is reporting this has been renewed:
http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/04/17...-renewed/48921
Makes sense, especially since Sony's other cable show, Damages, is likely to get canned.
http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/04/17...-renewed/48921
As of right now TVMoJoe is calling this an unconfirmed rumor, but a “darn reliable source” claims the greatest show on TV (okay, I’m editorializing a little) has been picked up for a fourth season.
This comes after its fourth episode’s ratings stabilized in the A18-49 demo and rebounded a bit in total viewers.
This comes after its fourth episode’s ratings stabilized in the A18-49 demo and rebounded a bit in total viewers.
#11
Thread Starter
DVD Talk Limited Edition
#12
DVD Talk Hero
Re: Breaking Bad -- "Mas" -- 04/18/10
This show I must agree is fantastic! Started watching it last month after buying the second season on dvd (I'd owned the first for a long time but never got around to it). This along with Dexter are probably my two favorite drama series currently airing.
#13
DVD Talk Legend
Re: Breaking Bad -- "Mas" -- 04/18/10
another excellent episode
#14
Re: Breaking Bad -- "Mas" -- 04/18/10
Great episode. I was worried that the entire thing would involve unseen moments from season one. Hank is getting closer and closer, and the only thread that he hasn't revisited is the fact that materials were stolen out of Walt's High School lab. Hopefully that comes into play sometime after his eventual encounter with Jesse.
#17
DVD Talk Hero
Re: Breaking Bad -- "Mas" -- 04/18/10
Walt's life is getting even more complicated, making Jessie an adversary was a gamble. El Pollo was close to losing his cool with Walt's hesistancy after giving him the keys to the kingdom, quietly fun scene. Skylar. Skylar, Skylar, that's all I have to say about her predicament. Those "hangover-like" photos were hilarious, too bad they give the brother-in-law a lead, but his RV-Reconnaisance skills need work.
#19
DVD Talk Hero
#20
Re: Breaking Bad -- "Mas" -- 04/18/10
It's funny though, even though Mad Men moves at a slower pace from episode to episode, several years are covered during the three seasons. With Breaking Bad, which moves at a faster pace within episodes, we're still not too far from the series beginning...maybe 8 months or so?
#21
DVD Talk Limited Edition
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 5,820
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
From: Under a dead Ohio sky
Re: Breaking Bad -- "Mas" -- 04/18/10
Jesse is going to be everyones downfall. I also think Gus having a Meth lab in the basement of a laundry that he owns is out of character. This is a guy who seemingly goes out of his way to make sure none of his underworld dealings can be tied back to him or his legitimate businesses. Yet he is setting up a meth factory under his laundry?! There is no way he can deny having knowledge of that if it gets discovered.
Last edited by Thrush; 04-19-10 at 03:49 AM.
#22
DVD Talk Legend
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 18,946
Likes: 0
Received 3 Likes
on
3 Posts
From: 75 clicks above the Do Lung bridge...
Re: Breaking Bad -- "Mas" -- 04/18/10
Great episode.
Walt getting back into being a dick to Jesse kind of sucks. Pollo playing Walt like a fiddle was funny - "I'm sorry for being so obvious". He knew he had Walt right where he wanted him, reeled him in with the 'what do men do?' stuff.
Walt getting back into being a dick to Jesse kind of sucks. Pollo playing Walt like a fiddle was funny - "I'm sorry for being so obvious". He knew he had Walt right where he wanted him, reeled him in with the 'what do men do?' stuff.
#24
DVD Talk Legend
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 18,946
Likes: 0
Received 3 Likes
on
3 Posts
From: 75 clicks above the Do Lung bridge...
Re: Breaking Bad -- "Mas" -- 04/18/10
Yeah they were just kind of bonding after rehab like 2-3 episodes ago.
It does seem contrived. I get where they are going with it, but it kind of popped up out of nowhere that they are red hot enemies again.
It does seem contrived. I get where they are going with it, but it kind of popped up out of nowhere that they are red hot enemies again.
#25
DVD Talk Hero
Re: Breaking Bad -- "Mas" -- 04/18/10
Yeah who could believe that a violent amoral drug dealer and a vindictive addict with a screw loose could show erratic behavior?





