[s3e17] Two Body Bags Guide

Body Bags was originally intended to be a series on Showtime but was instead released as an anthology film featuring three segments (or "episodes"). The "two body bags" could refer to the framing story in the morgue, where the "Coroner" (John Carpenter) eventually crawls back into a body bag himself.

Are you Team "The Gas Station" or Team "Hair"? ⛽💇‍♂️ #BodyBags #JohnCarpenter #HorrorAnthology #90sHorror [S3E17] Two Body Bags

Some fans argue it was a massive red herring, while others see it as the ultimate metaphor for how Walt’s "personal" choices have devastating, far-reaching consequences for people he’s never even met. Body Bags was originally intended to be a

While Breaking Bad Season 3, Episode 17 does not exist (Season 3 only has 13 episodes), the phrase "two body bags" is most famously associated with the and the subsequent Season 3 premiere. The "two body bags" shown in the Whites' driveway were a season-long mystery that was finally revealed to be victims of the Wayfarer 515 mid-air collision. Draft Post (Fan Theory/Discussion): Draft Post (Fan Theory/Discussion): Was the plane crash

Was the plane crash payoff satisfying, or did you want the bodies in those bags to be someone we actually knew? 🧪💎 #BreakingBad #Heisenberg #TVTheories Option 2: Body Bags (1993 Anthology)

From Mark Hamill’s unhinged performance in "Eye" to the creepy morgue framing story, it’s a masterclass in 90s practical effects and "Tales from the Crypt" energy. The ending reveal—where the morgue workers find the "Coroner" in his own body bag—still hits.