Article 4HM2W How Mike Ehrmantraut of ‘Breaking Bad’ Believed He Could Hang Onto Integrity by Adhering to a Code

How Mike Ehrmantraut of ‘Breaking Bad’ Believed He Could Hang Onto Integrity by Adhering to a Code

by
Lori Dorn
from Laughing Squid on (#4HM2W)
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As part of their ongoing series of deconstructing the complex character development within the sublime AMC series Breaking Bad, and Better Call Saul by association, Debra Minoff and Susannah McCullough take a look at the decomposition and decompensation of Mike Ehrmantraut between the two shows.

Mike starts off as a relatively good guy who, like Omar of 'The Wire', lived by a strict moral code, which allowed to hang on to his integrity. Despite his best efforts, however, Mike Ehrmantraut eventually stifled his emotional self to become Gus Fring's on-call automaton.

He takes responsibility and holds himself to high standards, and this allows him to retain some integrity, some decency, in a world of necessary evils. "He takes comfort in his self-discipline, his pragmatism, the idea that he can still be a relatively good version of a bad man. "This is a fallacy, though. A moral code isn't the same as morality if that code accepts immoral behavior.

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The post How Mike Ehrmantraut of 'Breaking Bad' Believed He Could Hang Onto Integrity by Adhering to a Code first appeared on Laughing Squid.

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