@@Lookhaz I'm not but it's not Walt's fault he was enslaved. It was his own fault. Had he let bygones be bygones his gf wouldn't have been killed, her kid wouldn't have become an orphan, he wouldn't have been enslaved, hank wouldn't have dies ect ect
@@RandomPerson-ui3xv He saved him a lot of suffering living with lung cancer Despite Jack robbed almost every money Walter had... Walt decided to help him like a true bro. Walter did nothing wrong
weird enough... todd reminds me of me. he doesn and says exactly what i would given the situations hes thrust into. the only hangup being how cold he is about killing people.
I love the last thing Jesse says. It didn't hit me the first time but when I rewatched it. That "then do it yourself" has a lot of sting. If jesse let walt do all of it alone he would've been free and he knew he was once he said that to walt at the end. If he killed walt Jesse would have been following orders and he wasn't giving that loyalty to walt in the end.
Walt was manipulative and controlling from the beginning to the end. Only Jessie ever broke his spell. The day before this Heisenberg called up his son, and was sending him all the money in the world he had, in the mail. A few hundred thousand, the "last" of his "Empire". Walt Jr played right along and the Feds seized every penny that lunatic maniac had left. Luckily Walt's former Fiance and best friend, who he abandoned 20 years prior, stepped in and donated to the family of their mentally ill psychopath friend. They had to pretend they felt guilty because they "stole" Walt's business away and they were the real monsters or something. A complete lie, Walt really did absolutely nothing for them. He abandoned them because he was the weakest link, would never be the one "In Charge" and seethed in anger at his abandoned fiancé's and BFF success without him.
Walt is by far the most evil person in the show. Vince doesn't come out and explain it though. He makes it appear from Scene 1 that he is the "Desperate Good Guy". And along the way he reveals little hints of how he was always the baddie. That is the beauty of Breaking Bad.
@@alexvdb1267 That's the exact point, both spent their last moments staring at a man with a gun who shot them in the head. But whereas Hank faced it bravely, Jack begged for his life. Mirroring doesn't mean it completely copied it, it means it was similar.
I just rewatched the whole series with my wife. With whom, I've struggled to get her to watch but she ended up loving it. Anyway, yeah I feel Aaron Paul had the best performance. Just fantastic acting. The whole show is full of talented actors
How beautiful is that Jesse's first kill was shooting which was Walt's last kill too Similarly Jesse's Last kill was Strangling/Suffocating which was Walt's kind of proper first kill.
This scene is a mix of emotions and everything that the series built up to that point. Jesse is in plain confusion whether he's in control or just being manipulated by Walt again. And also the respect he still have for him.
Knowing Walt came there with the intent to kill everyone including himself and Jesse until he saw how they were keeping Jesse as a slave makes it much better . He changed his mind &tackles jesse to the ground covering him with his own body from the bullets amazing writing
I think he didnt even know Jesse was still alive... by then all the hate Walt had for Jesse snitching to the feds and breaking loyalty had withered away, so he saved him
@@udopiarecords he did know Jesse was alive because badger and skinny Pete bring up the blue meth still being around thinking it was Walt cooking it but it was jesse which is why when he visits jack he says you promised you would kill jesse pink man and you didn’t he’s alive isn’t he and then we know what happens next
No, Walter knew Jesse wasn't doing it willingly because he knows Jesse and Jesse dropped out of the meth cooking game mid S5. He wouldn't start cooking again and Walt knew that.
I think something people miss in this scene is the importance of Walt finally valuing something over his money when he shoots Jack mid-sentence when he is trying to plea with him that he won't know where the money is if he does indeed kill him. It shows how Walt has come full circle in his motives throughout the series. From starting good, to breaking bad, and back to a glimmer of good here at the end. Ironically, he is back to where he started, facing impending death and flat broke. Except now, he has also lost his family, and also his soul, and frankly himself completely. Thinking of it this way, it to some extent sums up criminal aspirations in general; No matter how smart you think your plan is, no matter how strong your ambition for wealth and glory are, it will inevitably end badly for you and you are better off never having pursued it in the first place. The people you care about and who you are at your core are more valuable. As smart as Walt was, he was not smart enough to have the foresight to understand this.
Did you forget about his deal with the Schwarzes? In the end, he did what he set out to do; he provided a large sum of cash which would provide for his family before he died. He destroyed a lot of lives in the process, including those in his family with the death of Hank.... but he got what he wanted in the end. So he didn't wind up exactly where he started.
I almost feel like this already happened when Skyler talks to him in that storage unit with that pallet of money. When she told him she didn't know how much it was cause she gave up counting, but then also asked when would it be enough for him. I think that's when Walt finally, and painfully, realized it was more about ego and power than it was about the money after all.
Probably the best completion of a character/relationship arc in any show ever. Jesse finally gets Walt to admit he manipulates and uses people for his own interest, and decides he actually is NOT like that and DOESNT want to break bad. Beautiful in every way
Can't emphasis enough the subtle undertones of sound within the scene, like the minigun still eerily going back and forth. It happens so much through Breaking Bad with many different sounds and it is just brilliant.
Also fun fact, that was a M-60 machine gun, most notable during Vietnam. If it was a mini gun, which is a rotating 3-6 barrel electric gun, I guarantee you y’all them would have been turned to Swiss cheese as a mini gun shoots thousands of rounds per min while the M-60 have a much slower fire rate of a couple hundred per min
Nice catch, one of my favorite examples of this is in Better Call Saul, Chuck explains Jimmy will come to his house at night, silently and discreetly, and from the streets you hear car breaks screeching. Its Jimmy.
The dude who played Jack was a damn good actor he played that white supremacist/felon role great.. damn near had me thinking he was a real life felon the way he put that cigarette in his mouth as he was bleeding out
Walt: "do it. You want this." Jesse: "say the words! Say YOU want this!" Walt: "thats what I just said. YOU want this." Jesse: "what? No, like "you" as in you!" Walt: "yeah, you! You want this!" Jesse: "look, we're not doing this. I want you to acknowledge that you, Walter, want me, Jesse, to shoot you." Walt: "oh. My bad."
@@contreras7880 The order follower bears more responsibility than the order giver. Without someone to personally perform the order with their own two hands, orders are just harmless suggestions.
he poisoned and almost killed an child. He dissolved another child he helped to kill in a drum of acid. He personally killed more people than Jeffery Dahmer in between the first and the last. The dude blew up a freakin nursing home and was proud of it.
what makes breaking bad is the character development, walter literally went from spending 2 episodes grieving over whether he should kill krazy 8 to just deadass just killing jack right then and there ☠️
Walt was originally going there to kill the crew for what they did to hank but then learned (in the scene with badger and skinny Pete in the car) that blue meth was still circulating and concluded that Jesse was cooking for them. Also Walt learned that Jack and his crew threatened his wife and daughter. So Walt was super determined to kill Jack and his crew but in true Walt fashion he again saves Jesse's life. I think before Jesse takes off in the el camino he realizes that Walt came back to rescue him. The absolute best part of this show was Walt and Jessie's relationship. Walt was extremely loyal.
@@nav5738 It was in the script he was going to kill Jesse and the crew, but he felt sorry for Jesse after he found out Jesse was a slave so he saved him and wanted Jesse to be the one to kill him instead.
Walt literally asks them to bring him Pinkman so that Jesse can be in the same room as them when the machine gun goes off. If he came to save Jesse, he would’ve just looked for him afterwards
It is so sad. You can clearly see how really they cared for each other, despite many misunderstandings, bad things they did to each other, they still care for each other. For me it is amazing writing, it could have gone so Good, if only one or two things would go diffrently...
The way i see it... jesse saw that wound and thought about every bullet they took for each other, real and metaphorical. Even at the very end, they still cared for each other. Its not a good thing, mind you. Its the kind of love (dont twist it, you know the kind of love i mean here) that condemns, not saves. And i see a certain kind of defeat in jesse when he sees that bullet wound - everything that happened between them. Their relationship is nothign but pain and horror, and yet. Love is still in there. In el camino, you see jesse thinking about the rare good, kind moment he shared with walt. And honestly it broke me. Their relationship is so majorly messed up. Toxic, and not in a twitter way. And it even could be good... but it wasnt.
Did you know, Bryan Cranston actually built a working machine gun turret and killed all the actors on set. Vince loved it so much he kept it in. Bravo Vince.
There's so many great irony in this scene. Todd dies by the very chain they used to locked Jesse up. Uncle Jack begging for his dear life and even offering the same money he took from Walter. This was a great way to wrap up the show.
1:11 The car keys, the chains, Todd... I like to see this take as a representation of the things that Jesse has to consider in this moment before shooting Walter or not. Keys: represents that Walter saved him. Chains and Todd: represent that Walter sent him to hell and let these people disgrace him. Maybe it's just stupid, but I like seeing it like that lol
@@Ajthelizard1100 Funny enough, the first time I watched it was in it's entirety on AMC when they marathoned all 4 seasons leading up to the S5 premier. At the time I was locked up in upstate NY for drug charges lol.
Walter's true final words: "I want this." It's fitting. After Jesse drops the gun, his ultimate fate is completely sealed. When he's calling Lydia, he's just a dead man walking. They aren't true final words. His last words don't deserve to be "Goodbye Lydia.".
The first time in the entire show Walt showed actual humanity. Everything, even if he began sincerely, always had the undertone of him doing for his pride or for his empire. I mean he admitted "It was for me" but this scene he finally does something not about $ and finally sets Jesse free from Walt himself. By telling Jesse he wanted to be killed by him and Jesse refusing, for the first time ever Walt gave him actual freedom. The first non selfish action he's done for Jesse
0:40 Walter's look. He is so angry at Jack. Kind of reminds me of the "You are done, Fired." scene when Gus kidnapped and brought Walter to the dessert.
Jesse finally liberated himself from Walt. Walt, time and time again, used Jesse as his goon, his henchman; he was essentially a projection of Walt’s will. When Jesse dropped that gun, he finally took control of his own life again
I only just realised that perhaps Jesse didn't want to kill because Walt proposed that "He (Jesse) wanted it", like an act of revenge, putting him on a path as a killer - of which he bears heavy burden after killing Gale. However, Jesse knows Walt is on a suicidal path and wants Walt instead to say he wants to die; which justifies Jesse shooting him if he had. Thankfully, Walt was already dying from the wound; so it saved Jesse from not only killing someone (no matter justified or not) but also from killing his old friend/partner/mentor/father figure.
oml so when i watched it was really tired so i didnt get the hype, now rewatching it i wish i could just watch this scene for the firs time. best show ever made
The writing is just untouchable in this show. Jesse tells Walt to say he wants this to give himself the out on shooting him. Jesse isn’t doing what Walt wants anymore. Which in this case was sparing his life.
Fun fact: this scene was entirely improvised. Aaron Paul really killed Jessie Plemons via strangulation because he was so in character so Vince decided they would add it to the story. Then Bryan Cranston followed suit by shooting Jack's actor in the head. Vince had to have him defib'ed so they could set up a camera for the right angle so they could get it again.
Simply the best! For the first time I hate the protagonist and end up loving the one who annoyed me the most at the beginning. Superb acting by everyone!
Love how Jack tried to pull out 'You can't kill me I'm important' but he was too stupid to see that Walt made up his mind 6 months ago
Excellent comment 👍
wait thats like hank death
Walt didn't let him finish his sentence just like how jack did with hank
@@Ripperoo95 indeed
Goated comment right here
Jack died begging for his life
Hank died fantasizing about what kind of minerals he was about to become
Jesus Christ Marie it's rocks not minerals!
@@Furlock627 LOL
@@Furlock627 Alternate universe😂
They are clearly not the same.
I'd say he died trying to negotiate rather than beg, but yeah, Ik it's a joke anyway
Walt freed Jesse from Jack and his crew. And by not killing him, Jesse freed himself from Walt.
Well again thanks to walt lol
Yea but Walt also told them Jesse was under the car. So he's the reason Jesse got captured in the first place.
@@ShadowNova300 Jesse was the reason Jesse got caught by being a snitch.
@@Elektrikman143 Why do you people act as if being a snitch is worse than being a drug kingpin and a child poisoner lmao
@@Lookhaz I'm not but it's not Walt's fault he was enslaved. It was his own fault. Had he let bygones be bygones his gf wouldn't have been killed, her kid wouldn't have become an orphan, he wouldn't have been enslaved, hank wouldn't have dies ect ect
This is the moment when Walt saved jacks life preventing lung cancer.
lmao
jack would never understand XDDD
He was the toughest guy Walt ever met, but he was too stupid to see...
Sorry to ruin the joke but he didn't save Jack's life because he killed him🤡
@@RandomPerson-ui3xv He saved him a lot of suffering living with lung cancer
Despite Jack robbed almost every money Walter had... Walt decided to help him like a true bro.
Walter did nothing wrong
Jesse killing Todd was the most satisfying death in this whole series.
And El Camino add even more satisfaction
weird enough... todd reminds me of me. he doesn and says exactly what i would given the situations hes thrust into. the only hangup being how cold he is about killing people.
@@seemeno1 he's probably mentally ill look how he speaks how he acts
@@lovacc_1967 he’s definitely a sociopath by all definitions
But i love him 🥺🥺
This is the moment when Jack have his last cigarette and finally quit smoking
When he killed Crazy-8 (in selfdefense), he cryed. 5 Seasons later he killed a man without blink
@@serbanstefan5263 He killed a man who killed his brother-in-law and stole 80 million from him
Apparently he also quit breathing...
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
🤣🤣🤣
I like how walt didnt let him finish his sentence exactly how he did hank
fr???
Yeah, that was what killed them both. They just couldn't live without having finished that sentence...
Noor accept the money as an offering like with Hank.
Just shows how hank's death scene kept playing over and over in mind.
I love the last thing Jesse says. It didn't hit me the first time but when I rewatched it. That "then do it yourself" has a lot of sting. If jesse let walt do all of it alone he would've been free and he knew he was once he said that to walt at the end. If he killed walt Jesse would have been following orders and he wasn't giving that loyalty to walt in the end.
Kinda like that one seen from bioshock but Jesse is now free from walt’s control
Walt was manipulative and controlling from the beginning to the end. Only Jessie ever broke his spell. The day before this Heisenberg called up his son, and was sending him all the money in the world he had, in the mail. A few hundred thousand, the "last" of his "Empire". Walt Jr played right along and the Feds seized every penny that lunatic maniac had left.
Luckily Walt's former Fiance and best friend, who he abandoned 20 years prior, stepped in and donated to the family of their mentally ill psychopath friend. They had to pretend they felt guilty because they "stole" Walt's business away and they were the real monsters or something. A complete lie, Walt really did absolutely nothing for them. He abandoned them because he was the weakest link, would never be the one "In Charge" and seethed in anger at his abandoned fiancé's and BFF success without him.
Walt is by far the most evil person in the show. Vince doesn't come out and explain it though. He makes it appear from Scene 1 that he is the "Desperate Good Guy". And along the way he reveals little hints of how he was always the baddie. That is the beauty of Breaking Bad.
I think you thought about this a bit too much.
@@MichaelGrubbEvolvedMinistry Oh shut up.
Jack’s death mirrors Hank’s. How fitting
No it doesn’t. Hank didn’t beg for his life
Hank faced his death, Jack begged for his life like a coward.
@@alexvdb1267 That's the exact point, both spent their last moments staring at a man with a gun who shot them in the head. But whereas Hank faced it bravely, Jack begged for his life. Mirroring doesn't mean it completely copied it, it means it was similar.
He made up his mind one year ago
@@warhawk9566 do...do you not know how a mirror works?
Still cannot fathom how great Aaron Paul's acting skills are. You can feel his emotions via screen
I just rewatched the whole series with my wife. With whom, I've struggled to get her to watch but she ended up loving it. Anyway, yeah I feel Aaron Paul had the best performance. Just fantastic acting. The whole show is full of talented actors
Yep, he's good.
I wish he acted in more things. He's amazing at it but he's in so few movies or shows
@@crooked9210 I wanna see Aaron Paul in more lighthearted comedic roles
@@crooked9210 Baack in the 90s I was in a really famous TVVV show
"I want this."
"Then do it yourself."
Sounds like me and my girlfriend.
Damn bro I feel you
Wait u guys have GF?
What's a girlfriend?
There are three types of people in here.
@@kwl189 Friend girl what’s a?
Love the detail when before dropping the gun after saying "Then do it yourself" Jessie puts it in a safety mode
"I hate you but not rlly, stay safe mwah" type beat
well imagine if he didnt and it fired when it hit the ground, coulda shot him in the leg by accident
@@notanaveragedoktah8390 are you sure it isn't because if you throw a gun it could activate itself?
@@MatiasPlayerOne no, that's why trigger guards exist.
@@iexist.imnotjoking5700 tell this to SIG lmao
How beautiful is that Jesse's first kill was shooting which was Walt's last kill too
Similarly Jesse's Last kill was Strangling/Suffocating which was Walt's kind of proper first kill.
It’s like poetry 🥲
Jesse's last kill was in the duel during El Camino tho
Jesse cried when he killed Gale, Walt didn't when he killed Jack. Walt cried when he killed Krazy-8, Jesse didn't when he killed Todd
Walt's first kill was using poisonous gas to kill Krazy 8s partner
Walt last kill was with Ricin, Lydia is the last death on BB
1:47 now thats how you ask for consent.
Lmao
Jack was too stupid to see, walt made up his mind a year ago
This scene is a mix of emotions and everything that the series built up to that point. Jesse is in plain confusion whether he's in control or just being manipulated by Walt again. And also the respect he still have for him.
nah jesse knows walt was tryna manipulate him
Jesse: "SAY THE WORDS!"
Walt: "you're meth is good Jesse, as good as mine."
Jesse: "NO! I MEANT THAT HOW YOU WANT THIS TO HAPPEN!"
" Say the words "
"I am Breaking bad "
@@Utilizador-gs3lx vravo bince
@@Utilizador-gs3lx "you're goodamn right"
Jesse: But thank you.
Ohh, big boi
Knowing Walt came there with the intent to kill everyone including himself and Jesse until he saw how they were keeping Jesse as a slave makes it much better . He changed his mind &tackles jesse to the ground covering him with his own body from the bullets amazing writing
I think he didnt even know Jesse was still alive... by then all the hate Walt had for Jesse snitching to the feds and breaking loyalty had withered away, so he saved him
@@udopiarecords he did know Jesse was alive because badger and skinny Pete bring up the blue meth still being around thinking it was Walt cooking it but it was jesse which is why when he visits jack he says you promised you would kill jesse pink man and you didn’t he’s alive isn’t he and then we know what happens next
@@elchato6290 You're right, forgot about that!
No, Walter knew Jesse wasn't doing it willingly because he knows Jesse and Jesse dropped out of the meth cooking game mid S5.
He wouldn't start cooking again and Walt knew that.
I don’t get why people say this when there is virtually no proof
I think something people miss in this scene is the importance of Walt finally valuing something over his money when he shoots Jack mid-sentence when he is trying to plea with him that he won't know where the money is if he does indeed kill him.
It shows how Walt has come full circle in his motives throughout the series. From starting good, to breaking bad, and back to a glimmer of good here at the end. Ironically, he is back to where he started, facing impending death and flat broke. Except now, he has also lost his family, and also his soul, and frankly himself completely.
Thinking of it this way, it to some extent sums up criminal aspirations in general; No matter how smart you think your plan is, no matter how strong your ambition for wealth and glory are, it will inevitably end badly for you and you are better off never having pursued it in the first place. The people you care about and who you are at your core are more valuable.
As smart as Walt was, he was not smart enough to have the foresight to understand this.
Did you forget about his deal with the Schwarzes? In the end, he did what he set out to do; he provided a large sum of cash which would provide for his family before he died.
He destroyed a lot of lives in the process, including those in his family with the death of Hank.... but he got what he wanted in the end. So he didn't wind up exactly where he started.
@@DaveyKanabus didn’t he only have about $800,000 to give to his family, as opposed to the 80 million or so before y’know, Jack?
@@YoungsterJoey2 It is about 8 million, not as much as 80 million but plentiful for a normal family.
I almost feel like this already happened when Skyler talks to him in that storage unit with that pallet of money. When she told him she didn't know how much it was cause she gave up counting, but then also asked when would it be enough for him. I think that's when Walt finally, and painfully, realized it was more about ego and power than it was about the money after all.
A swing and a miss.
Probably the best completion of a character/relationship arc in any show ever. Jesse finally gets Walt to admit he manipulates and uses people for his own interest, and decides he actually is NOT like that and DOESNT want to break bad. Beautiful in every way
Can't emphasis enough the subtle undertones of sound within the scene, like the minigun still eerily going back and forth. It happens so much through Breaking Bad with many different sounds and it is just brilliant.
Also fun fact, that was a M-60 machine gun, most notable during Vietnam. If it was a mini gun, which is a rotating 3-6 barrel electric gun, I guarantee you y’all them would have been turned to Swiss cheese as a mini gun shoots thousands of rounds per min while the M-60 have a much slower fire rate of a couple hundred per min
@@OAB179 I think it would've been cooler if it was a mg42
Nice catch, one of my favorite examples of this is in Better Call Saul, Chuck explains Jimmy will come to his house at night, silently and discreetly, and from the streets you hear car breaks screeching. Its Jimmy.
The dude who played Jack was a damn good actor he played that white supremacist/felon role great.. damn near had me thinking he was a real life felon the way he put that cigarette in his mouth as he was bleeding out
That shot, combined with Walt's face is the ultimate "shut up."
and ultimate revenge for Hank
Walt: "do it. You want this."
Jesse: "say the words! Say YOU want this!"
Walt: "thats what I just said. YOU want this."
Jesse: "what? No, like "you" as in you!"
Walt: "yeah, you! You want this!"
Jesse: "look, we're not doing this. I want you to acknowledge that you, Walter, want me, Jesse, to shoot you."
Walt: "oh. My bad."
Good old Rush Hour 3 reference
oh, my breaking bad"
"My bad. My breaking bad."
@@Profile__1 "then you better call it right now"
"I'll call it, just like how I Better Call Saul
@@kakyoindonut3213 “El Camino - A Breaking Bad Movie.”
This is the moment that Walt says "I want this"
Great job reading the title of the video
Jesus Marie this is the moment of minerals
This was so good , Jack was the worst person on the show.
Agreed. Here come the Walt haters.
It was hector
Um…Todd?
@@contreras7880 The order follower bears more responsibility than the order giver. Without someone to personally perform the order with their own two hands, orders are just harmless suggestions.
@@jeffkaczmarek3577 u right lets just agree that the ultimate worst person on the show was walter jr
When he killed Crazy-8 (in selfdefense), he cryed. 5 Seasons later he killed a man without blink 😎😎😎
he poisoned and almost killed an child. He dissolved another child he helped to kill in a drum of acid. He personally killed more people than Jeffery Dahmer in between the first and the last. The dude blew up a freakin nursing home and was proud of it.
Why would he cry about killing Jack tho
that isnt a good thing
I wouldn’t have been crying over jack
why the sunglasses emojis?
Jesse having the dream of carving and polishing the wooden box still makes me little teary and thinking about it gives me goosebumps
I actually think Walt looks a lot cooler with hair and a beard over a bald head and a goatee.
@Some Person probably more the beard over anything, I think beards look a lot better than goatees to be honest.
yeah this is DEFINITLEY my favorite version of Walter White. It's a huge shame we only see this version of him for a couple episodes
Well, you're wrong
I humbly disagree
Reminds me of Gordan Freeman. Half life
1:45 sewers 😢💔
1:45 *SEWERS!*
Damn you, I’ll never be able to unhear that.
How fitting of bully maguire to do such villainy
SILVERS!
I felt so good when I knew Jesse was free and alive, I love his character.
Damn I love the part where he says “I want this”
what makes breaking bad is the character development, walter literally went from spending 2 episodes grieving over whether he should kill krazy 8 to just deadass just killing jack right then and there ☠️
Both him and Jesse were far used to killing people by now, Walt got used to killing people when he tried to kill Tuco
Walt was originally going there to kill the crew for what they did to hank but then learned (in the scene with badger and skinny Pete in the car) that blue meth was still circulating and concluded that Jesse was cooking for them. Also Walt learned that Jack and his crew threatened his wife and daughter. So Walt was super determined to kill Jack and his crew but in true Walt fashion he again saves Jesse's life. I think before Jesse takes off in the el camino he realizes that Walt came back to rescue him.
The absolute best part of this show was Walt and Jessie's relationship. Walt was extremely loyal.
Walt was gonna kill Jesse until he saw that he was kept as a slave
@@GhastlyG possibly. Either way, I thought the end was terrific. Better than the sopranos copout ending
@@GhastlyG how do you know, maybe he knew Jesse was likely a slave and came to rescue him too
@@nav5738 It was in the script he was going to kill Jesse and the crew, but he felt sorry for Jesse after he found out Jesse was a slave so he saved him and wanted Jesse to be the one to kill him instead.
Walt literally asks them to bring him Pinkman so that Jesse can be in the same room as them when the machine gun goes off. If he came to save Jesse, he would’ve just looked for him afterwards
It is so sad. You can clearly see how really they cared for each other, despite many misunderstandings, bad things they did to each other, they still care for each other. For me it is amazing writing, it could have gone so Good, if only one or two things would go diffrently...
The way i see it... jesse saw that wound and thought about every bullet they took for each other, real and metaphorical. Even at the very end, they still cared for each other. Its not a good thing, mind you. Its the kind of love (dont twist it, you know the kind of love i mean here) that condemns, not saves. And i see a certain kind of defeat in jesse when he sees that bullet wound - everything that happened between them. Their relationship is nothign but pain and horror, and yet. Love is still in there.
In el camino, you see jesse thinking about the rare good, kind moment he shared with walt. And honestly it broke me. Their relationship is so majorly messed up. Toxic, and not in a twitter way. And it even could be good... but it wasnt.
This is the scene where a gun touches the floor twice.
Did you know, Bryan Cranston actually built a working machine gun turret and killed all the actors on set. Vince loved it so much he kept it in. Bravo Vince.
Moral of the story: don't kill somebody mid-sentence or you end up having the same fate
I want this scene too
Lmao xD
Lmao! That was good 😂
The virgin jack: Pwetty pwease don’t kill me!
The chad hank: kill me lol irdc
Walt is such a kind man, treating Jack's smoking problems
i cant get over this show
"Hey Jesse, where donthe ninja turtles live?" 1:43
God it is surreal to think back to them in chemistry class all those years ago
Can’t believe it’s been 10 years since this gem aired. One of the greatest ends to a TV series ever.
“You want it, you want it just as much as I do. And its NOT wrong to want it...”
Who are you quoting?
@@xCorvus7x waltuh white
"Sewers!"🔥🔥🔥
1:44 "SEWERS!"
If nothing else, Walt learned how a pistol safety works 😂
This is the best series ever created - start to finish. Brilliant.
Sopranos is the best tv show
@@cainandabel7059 boring af
I mean it's top 10 for sure, probably the most entertaining show but it's not the best.
@@crazyclemsonfan8305 Name it then.
@@nathanieldiaz5254 Best is Bojack Horseman for me. A lot more depth, complexity, and emotion than Breaking Bad
1:45 sewers 😭😭😭
Sewer 🗣️🗣️🔥❗️‼️
Sayuwandis🗣️🗣️🗣️🔥🔥🔥‼️‼️
@@Swrtft4nuthinhappens until Ihearyou say it🤫🤫🤫🤫🧏🏻🧏🏻🧏🏻
Watch the series a first time, then a second time, then watch the episodes out of order and finally watch the best moments on RUclips
Start again !!
There's so many great irony in this scene. Todd dies by the very chain they used to locked Jesse up. Uncle Jack begging for his dear life and even offering the same money he took from Walter. This was a great way to wrap up the show.
1:11 The car keys, the chains, Todd...
I like to see this take as a representation of the things that Jesse has to consider in this moment before shooting Walter or not.
Keys: represents that Walter saved him.
Chains and Todd: represent that Walter sent him to hell and let these people disgrace him.
Maybe it's just stupid, but I like seeing it like that lol
Classic love/hate for each other revealed in this scene!
I'm on my 7th time re-watching the entire series on binge. I'm up to S04E12 :)
Damn your 7th! Impressive. I’m assuming you watched the show when it came out back in 2008
@@Ajthelizard1100 Funny enough, the first time I watched it was in it's entirety on AMC when they marathoned all 4 seasons leading up to the S5 premier. At the time I was locked up in upstate NY for drug charges lol.
4x12 and 4x13 with everything is going on with Gus are one of the best ones!
Wow I only watched it 4 times, good job
When he killed Crazy-8 (in selfdefense), he cryed. 5 Seasons later he killed a man without blink
The kimber ultra raptor is the last gun held in both breaking bad and el camino
The moment Heisenberg became Walt again.
Walter's true final words: "I want this."
It's fitting.
After Jesse drops the gun, his ultimate fate is completely sealed. When he's calling Lydia, he's just a dead man walking. They aren't true final words. His last words don't deserve to be "Goodbye Lydia.".
Too bad. “Goodbye Lydia” are his final words.
@@Im.Smaher 🤓
@@roiroije6326 Read your original comment, spazz.
The finale had an entire series emotional roller coaster explode in the final episode. The mark of a great show
The first time in the entire show Walt showed actual humanity. Everything, even if he began sincerely, always had the undertone of him doing for his pride or for his empire. I mean he admitted "It was for me" but this scene he finally does something not about $ and finally sets Jesse free from Walt himself. By telling Jesse he wanted to be killed by him and Jesse refusing, for the first time ever Walt gave him actual freedom. The first non selfish action he's done for Jesse
SEWERS🔥🔥🔥
SAYOUWANDIS🗣️💯🔥🔥
@@Alexmercer1_1notinhapenuntilihearusayit
Jack attempted to refill his deadeye💀💀
0:40 Walter's look. He is so angry at Jack. Kind of reminds me of the "You are done, Fired." scene when Gus kidnapped and brought Walter to the dessert.
Jesse finally liberated himself from Walt. Walt, time and time again, used Jesse as his goon, his henchman; he was essentially a projection of Walt’s will. When Jesse dropped that gun, he finally took control of his own life again
I think part of it is Jesse not taking orders but also he just can't bring himself to kill him despite everything he did.
deep down i can tell he loved him to much to shoot🥲
One of the great scenes of the show. Awesome acting.
A cigarette bought him 8 seconds of life.
1:44
Walter: You want this
Jesse: SEWERS 🕳
I only just realised that perhaps Jesse didn't want to kill because Walt proposed that "He (Jesse) wanted it", like an act of revenge, putting him on a path as a killer - of which he bears heavy burden after killing Gale. However, Jesse knows Walt is on a suicidal path and wants Walt instead to say he wants to die; which justifies Jesse shooting him if he had.
Thankfully, Walt was already dying from the wound; so it saved Jesse from not only killing someone (no matter justified or not) but also from killing his old friend/partner/mentor/father figure.
SEWERS
This is truly the moment that jacks head became spaghetti sauce
Despite everything, Walt and Jesse are forever the best partners
"Say the words."
"The words."
Damnit Caboose!
oml so when i watched it was really tired so i didnt get the hype, now rewatching it i wish i could just watch this scene for the firs time. best show ever made
SEWERS🗣️🗣️🔥🔥🔥
Dewit
yuwantis
SEWERS
SEIUWANTIS
NOTINHAPESUNTILAIHEERJUSEYIT
Aywantis
Dendootioselv
- The famous last conversation.
This is the best exchange in the series. "Say YOU want this"
just like that episode on season 2 where jesse fights with Walt on the RV!
and like that moment where in the dessert, Walt gave jesse an idea to disappear and start a new life.....
SEWERS 🗣️🗣️🗣️🔥🔥🔥 SAYUWATDIS 🗣️🗣️🔥🔥🔥🔥
Imagine for a second that this is a final scene in a tv series.
0:22 ✋ 🤚 🚬 💰? 🔫 "wait you want your money right'?
The writing is just untouchable in this show. Jesse tells Walt to say he wants this to give himself the out on shooting him. Jesse isn’t doing what Walt wants anymore. Which in this case was sparing his life.
This is the moment where Walt became Stevia
The beautiful irony of Jack getting killed in the same manner as Hank, except Hank didn't beg.
The last words of Jesse for Walt be “yourself”, because walt just think in himself.
I would've liked to have seen Jack hurt a little bit longer.
I like that this is the scene in which Walter is finally no longer able to manipulate Jesse
2:27
My guy on the couch still alive.
Probably not for long, riddled with m60 rounds. But yeah I’d say he was at that point, hadn’t noticed that
that's the massage chair. your guy was shot in the head
No it was a massage chair still going
Sewers 🗣️🗣️🗣️
Fun fact: this scene was entirely improvised. Aaron Paul really killed Jessie Plemons via strangulation because he was so in character so Vince decided they would add it to the story. Then Bryan Cranston followed suit by shooting Jack's actor in the head. Vince had to have him defib'ed so they could set up a camera for the right angle so they could get it again.
Walter will never know where his money is
The best serie I ever watched, from start to finish
Jack was too stupid to see that Walt made up his mind 10 minutes ago…
That's why Aaron Paul has 3 Emmys
Simply the best! For the first time I hate the protagonist and end up loving the one who annoyed me the most at the beginning. Superb acting by everyone!
Jesse seemed more in control of that moment than the first time he held a gun at gale
Mike taught Jesse how to use a gun properly when he started working with them. Jesse's more confident now than he was when he killed Gale.
Love that Jesse was so done doing what Walt wanted that he wouldn’t even give him a bullet between the eyes