Fun fact: Bryan Cranston, he improvised the whole scene, he went at full speed with his car, ran over and shot the actors. Vince Gilligan liked it so much that he decided to leave him.
@@adman4566 but the first time is the best, you don't what's coming and you are just suprise by everything, i wish i could forget about this show and watch it all over again
@@spackle9999 I love how you start to feel different about some characters once you watch it a couple of times. Take Skyler and Walt for example. I was very much team Walt the first time I watched It, but at the second time, giving their situation more thoughts and knowing more about things to come... I actually feel for Skyler.
What shocked me most about this scene was how unafraid Walter was. He doesn’t grab the gun and point it at the guy for a while debating whether or not to kill him. He immediately shoots the guy with so little remorse and restraint that even Jesse is lost for words.
They were child murders so i think 90% of people wouldn't have any remorse for them, plus they wanted to kill jesse too so its not a good comparasion. I wouldn't have any remorse for people like this too
@@culixulstill tho. It shows u how much Walter has changed, when he killed crazy 8, he knew crazy 8 was trying to also kill him. Yet he still cried after he killed him. He was new to it, this scene, Walter kills the thugs with no hesitation. He’s completely Heisenberg here
@@culixul It's still a challenge to pull the trigger on a human head... your hate must be so incredibly overpowering to the point it clouds your sense of reality. Getting you in a state of mind where you kind of enjoy the thought of exploding that a**holes brain. Otherwise it's a very haunting experience to go through with, the rush of adrenaline making it even more psychotic
@@culixul It is still hard to go through. If most normal people were put in that scenario, they would probably hate them but they would also hesitate to pull the trigger on them because most people are not desensitized to violence/killing another human being, even if they did terrible things. Unless it personally affected them.
Mine was when he discovered the broken plate and strangled Krazy 8 while crying and apologizing. Then they tied it to the opening scene of "what makes a person" and saying the soul is what completed it. Just amazing. And only the 3rd episode.
I fell in love after that episode with hank and taking out those 2 assassin's he was about to go out like a savage and after that moment every second of each episode went from gold to Platinum nothing less but perfection if you ask me.
this was one of the most shocking scenes, I didn't think Walt had it in him at this point to shoot that guy like that, but he definitely took these guys out like a bad ass
@@Charsi_Escobar Yes, very much like that. When Bruce refers to himself in his head, he calls himself Batman. It's really more like Batman is wearing Bruce, and it was that way with Walt at the end as well. We see this begins happening around season 2, when he has the hat on even at home.
This episode was the turning point for me, after this episode it was very clear that this show was going into ground breaking territory no pun intended.
+Daniel Grimes he didn't say the scene was fake, he was referring to Walter using "fake meth" (some stuff that looked like meth but was highly explosive) to cause an explosion in the first season.
Fun fact, Bryan Cranston's actual line was "Well, this is it. I guess I finally Broke Bad." But Vince Gilligan hated it so much he decided not to keep it in.
breaking bad definitely had some of the best cinematography, so many memorable images throughout the series, some of the stuff is unforgettable in the face of television, what you show the audience and what you want them to see is very important for its success
Something I never hear anyone talk about that I absolutely love in this series is the weird undying loyalty between both Jesse and Walter I mean sure, alone, they argue, hate each other, frequently trade blows and insult and belittle one another, but when a third party comes along to one of them and posits a something that will negatively affect the other? They will NOT fucking have that shit, and will go along to totally fuck themselves over solely to assure the other's safety. Up until Hank's murder their loyalty to one another is fucking insane, and is still blatantly obvious if lessened even after the fact. Even though Walt knew Jesse was arguably responsible for Hank's death he STILL made sure that Jesse wouldn't be murdered with his trunk gun thing
im not saying this to be rude but how was Hank’s death Jesse’s fault? Walt was literally the one who called Jack and his guys out there lol. and i get that was intended for Jesse, before he knew Hank was even there… but at the same time Jesse wasn’t even the one in the wrong. the only reason he turned against Walter was because he poisoned his kid. to be fair i am pretty biased because im of the humble opinion that like 90% of the bad things that happen in the show are Walter’s fault in one way or another.
Breaking Bad is good because the first episode tries to make you like Walt as much as you can. Then the rest of the show is to see how far you'll keep with him.
One of the few scenes which demonstrates the good side in Walt , he had nothing to gain by killing those scumbags on the contrary it would prove to be very heavy on him later on
This is why Walter is one of the most complex characters in TV. We think Heisenberg is some evil pragmatic monster, but deep down Walter still had a sense of ethic. When he saw the dealers had killed the kid on TV, he knew Jesse would be outraged, but moreover, Walter himself was outraged. That's why he killed the dealers in cold blood, and that's why he was irreverent to Gus in the following episode. At this point Walter lost all respect for Gus: up until that point, Walter considered Gus to be a reasonable business man whom he respected very much, but after this, Gus was Walter's mortal enemy.
There was a guy playing GTA in real life. He didn't shoot anyone, but he stole like 4 cars, drove around in full speed and rammed other cars. The RUclips video is still around. He got 160 years in prison for it.
This scene alone shows why Walt isn't as evil as a lot of people say he is. Unlike a lot of the other criminals on the show, he still had a sense of love and care towards his family, and eventually even Jesse. In fact, it wasn't even Walt's fault that everything fell apart with Gus like Mike says. If Jesse hadn't tried to kill these mofos, Walt wouldn't have had to kill them and anger Gus
I mean, he DID poison Brock a few episodes later Season 3 Walt was the perfect balance between a piece of shit and someone that looks out for other people's best interests, not as often as one might expect, but it still happens
@@fansee1368 Yeah, because he destroyed his relationship with Gus by saving Jesse from this two child murderers. I believe this has been one of the most irrational things Walt did. He could've let Jesse die and cook with Gale, but he felt something for him so he saved his life.
sorry to comment on an old post but what? your saying walt isnt evil as he executes a man point blank with no hesitation. he was doing it for himself not jesse or his family. he didnt care about his family he even says so in the last season. he did it all for himself.
These two dealers don't have any given dialogue or even names, yet they still play a big role in one of the most iconic and important scenes in this show, not to mention the chain reaction they cause.
Mayochiki heisenberg was born when walt was, heisenberg is walters ego. heisenberg starts to break through the moment walt realizes his life is over (cancer)
I agree with both comments. Heisenberg isnt born here. If u had to choose a moment where Heisenberg comes out of walter, it will be the "my house, my son my bottle" scene, right after in the same episode we got "stay out of my territory". Actually Heisenberg isnt born here but in those scene he comes out of the world raw for the first time
So much to unpack here when talking about this episode. First, there's Jesse and Walt's discussion in the restaurant about ricin and poisoning Gus's crew. The emotions they're able to convey to us while whispering is freakin awesome. Later, there's Mike's speech about being a beat cop and never, ever taking a half measure again. I was literally entranced with every word he said in that story. Fast forward to the big meeting where Jesse shows us that, despite all his wrongdoing, he still has a moral compass that tells him what is right from wrong. That crazy motherfucker stands up to Gus. Gus!!! The death of Tomas, along with Walt's realization that he's been played come next. All this, followed by Jesse's descent back into drug Hell, his piss poor attempt at revenge, and ultimately Walt's....check that....Heisenberg's answer to resolve a huge problem by showing he still has Jesse's back no matter what, possibly make this the best episode in the series.
This is the scene I think about the most in the series. The suddenness, the unexpectedness, and especially when Walter delivered the coup de gras to the head. Up to that point I thought it was pretty good show that I enjoyed watching but from that point on I was emotionally hooked. The hair on the back of my neck stood up. Walter had become a goal driven demon and I had to keep watching. This show was something very different now.
Vince Gilligan was only lucky friends. General Motors initially developed and filmed this entire scene for the launch of the Pontiac Aztek in effort to capture the SUV urban security craze, but when test audiences suffered post-traumatic stress executives caved, removed the ceremonial jaguar teeth from the grill, and packaged the Aztek and family sci-fi get away.
To think...Gus's death everything that went bad, came from this moment. Think about it if this didn't happen, Walt would have still been working for Gus
Fun fact: to get a real reaction from the actors, Vince Gilligan only told Bryan Cranston how this scene would play out. The other 3 were all just as surprised as we were!
Season 1: Walter kills in self defense twice, during the second one, he's crying. Season 2: Walter lets Jane die, but he was also crying and initially felt bad about it. *Season 3:*
@@RandomPerson-ui3xv s5 walt is really bad but worse then gus ? nah. don't forget how many people gus killed, in s5 walt killed like 12 people only , gus has way higher count and gus kills a lot to send messages, while yes walt also does this, not as much tho as gus
I might be reading too much into things, but I like to think this scene is a very subtle callback to Krazy 8 and Emilio. One of them dies immediately and the other doesn't die right away and Walter has to finish him off. However the difference is Walter was very remorseful with Emilio and Krazy 8. Here he puts them down like they're nothing.
I didn't start watching BB until the whole series was on Netflix so I was fortunate enough to not to have to wait for another episode to come out. But when I saw this, my jaw hit the floor and I just paused the tv and had to take a moment to compose myself. I can't imagine what your poor souls had to go through waiting a whole week to get to the next episode.
People always say that every dangerous or compromising thing Walt ever did for Jesse was in Walt's best interest and that Walt is a seflish asshole... not this. Walt had nothing to gain from this. It would have been in his best interest to let Jesse die here. Walt cared for Jesse. Not as a son, but as a student.
I agree. However, Walt in the lead up to running over the thugs in this scene, is completely alive. Like he says in the finale, he did it for himself ( mostly true, but not entirely imop)I think he had fun in scenes like this where they are such a huge departure from the Walter White before turning 50.
kalibos people actually say this...morons...if WW was selfish asshole then he wouldn't have been agreed about giving his whole life earning just to save his DEA Bro law who was after him and haven't showed any mercy on mr.white!!!
Rashedul Haque lol you also realize that WW didnt show any mercy by putting hank into danger several times and almost got him killed. his meth empire was also created by lying to hank and his family, killing innocents and putting his loved ones into danger, gotta see both sides
@@INSANEWitG18S I would not have changed a single thing. But if I had to, it would be Walt shouting *GO NOW* A reference from the silence of the labs in this video (@7:56): ruclips.net/video/SoZ1e5kjjcs/видео.html
First time I watched this, I was so shook. Everything about this scene was amazing. The build up, the close ups to the guns, everything. Then Walt runs them over, looks so shocked and runs to get the gun. Shoots him in the head and that "run"... Oh man. Still getting chills to this day!
compare this scene with when he committed his first murder - krazy 8 back in season 1. he was pulling on the pipe around his neck while he had his eyes closed and after he had choked him to death, he sat down and cried, saying "I"m so sorry!" the journey from that to this is what makes this show so great
And by this point you can tell that he has no remorse for what he's about to do, he sees it as necessary. There is just a brief moment of hesitation while he wraps his head around it and then he headshots the guy without a second thought.
Yeah I think shooting a cold-blooded child murderer in the head hits a little different than strangling a guy to death who you just had a beer with and befriended but that’s just me.
The only bad thing about this scene is that you can only watch it for the first time once.
I thought this, but I re-watched Breaking Bad few months ago and I completely forgot about this scene. I was more shocked than the first time lol
I tried not to re-watch it because it is such a good show but I can’t resist after a few years.
About this show*
@Heisenberg 2015/2016, I don't know exactly.
People with amnesia: "It's free real estate."
Fun fact: Bryan Cranston, he improvised the whole scene, he went at full speed with his car, ran over and shot the actors.
Vince Gilligan liked it so much that he decided to leave him.
Vince Gilligan liked it so much, plus the fact that he couldn't resurrect the actors.
@@ziconghuang7139 Yea, for more realism
Secry_2 lmao
B
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Secry_2 shiii
I love how the beginning of this episode is Walt trying to teach Flynn how to properly drive a car.
Thats actually so ironic
Nice catch!
B R A V O V I N C E
I think that’s the one where he bought him a car not help him drive one
@@DenJClan
It's not, Flynn was just talking about borrowing Walt's car for a test drive
The one you're thinking of happens way later lmao
I wish I could forget everything about this series so I could watch it like it was the very first time all over again
I guess I'm kind of lucky. I watched this show for the very first time a couple months ago.
Second time is better and third time you see how genius this show is
@@adman4566 but the first time is the best, you don't what's coming and you are just suprise by everything, i wish i could forget about this show and watch it all over again
@@adman4566 After the tenth time it starts to get old...naw, still good. I'm still picking up new things I missed.
@@spackle9999 I love how you start to feel different about some characters once you watch it a couple of times. Take Skyler and Walt for example. I was very much team Walt the first time I watched It, but at the second time, giving their situation more thoughts and knowing more about things to come... I actually feel for Skyler.
What shocked me most about this scene was how unafraid Walter was. He doesn’t grab the gun and point it at the guy for a while debating whether or not to kill him. He immediately shoots the guy with so little remorse and restraint that even Jesse is lost for words.
They were child murders so i think 90% of people wouldn't have any remorse for them, plus they wanted to kill jesse too so its not a good comparasion. I wouldn't have any remorse for people like this too
@@culixulstill tho. It shows u how much Walter has changed, when he killed crazy 8, he knew crazy 8 was trying to also kill him. Yet he still cried after he killed him. He was new to it, this scene, Walter kills the thugs with no hesitation. He’s completely Heisenberg here
@@culixul It's still a challenge to pull the trigger on a human head... your hate must be so incredibly overpowering to the point it clouds your sense of reality. Getting you in a state of mind where you kind of enjoy the thought of exploding that a**holes brain. Otherwise it's a very haunting experience to go through with, the rush of adrenaline making it even more psychotic
"no half measures" is a very true thing plus they were child killers, i wouldn't lose any sleep
@@culixul It is still hard to go through. If most normal people were put in that scenario, they would probably hate them but they would also hesitate to pull the trigger on them because most people are not desensitized to violence/killing another human being, even if they did terrible things. Unless it personally affected them.
This is the very moment I fell in love with the show forever.
that's late in the series, i pretty much liked the pre-intro scene from the first episode already
Im rewatching this show after 3 years and damn this scene turns me on lol. Walt is a boss.
u are a shame. U loved it after 32 episodes? Seriously?
Mine was when he discovered the broken plate and strangled Krazy 8 while crying and apologizing. Then they tied it to the opening scene of "what makes a person" and saying the soul is what completed it. Just amazing. And only the 3rd episode.
I fell in love after that episode with hank and taking out those 2 assassin's he was about to go out like a savage and after that moment every second of each episode went from gold to Platinum nothing less but perfection if you ask me.
this was one of the most shocking scenes, I didn't think Walt had it in him at this point to shoot that guy like that, but he definitely took these guys out like a bad ass
Agreed. I think this is when "Heisenberg" became dominate over Walt.
@@brucelston Heisenberg is Walt. It's a name and a mask he wears consciously.
Straight White Male kinda like Bruce Wayne/Batman.
@@Charsi_Escobar Yes, very much like that. When Bruce refers to himself in his head, he calls himself Batman. It's really more like Batman is wearing Bruce, and it was that way with Walt at the end as well. We see this begins happening around season 2, when he has the hat on even at home.
@Mayochiki Yeah. His whole body language really sells the Walter/Heisenberg duality in this scene. Cranston is just perfect for this role.
This episode was the turning point for me, after this episode it was very clear that this show was going into ground breaking territory no pun intended.
osaro runner i got that after the fake meth scene at tucos in the first season....i mean, WOW!
+MisterDevos i don't think that scene is fake, is Awsome
+Daniel Grimes he didn't say the scene was fake, he was referring to Walter using "fake meth" (some stuff that looked like meth but was highly explosive) to cause an explosion in the first season.
mine was when walter quit his job at the car was in the first episode. "WIPE DOWN THIS!!"
nothing about breaking bad was ground breaking. it was a good series but thats about it.
the unpredictability of this show is the reason it is number one of all the tv series out there.
You clearly havent seen GOT
Adam Douglas Spaulding Breaking Bad surpasses Game of Thrones in ratings. The last season really plummeted the show. It was horrid.
Esta Subtitulado Yes! I completely agree with you. Couldn’t have said it better myself!
juneaug Lok Most Breaking Bad fans like you are so damn obnoxious, you guys watch the show just to boost your ego.
It's definitely up there
Fun fact, Bryan Cranston's actual line was "Well, this is it. I guess I finally Broke Bad." But Vince Gilligan hated it so much he decided not to keep it in.
Best comment
unbravo vince!
Boo Vince 😡
"Oopsies! I broke bad!"
Thank god. Sounds like a line gpt would write
remember when Krazy 8 said Walter could never have the guts to kill someone?
I guess he'd be all choked up after seeing this moment
@@gingeroverseer9302 my boy with the s tier content. Just for that ima warn you about a guy named corvo...
@@gingeroverseer9302 Walter really stepped up to the plate again.
Joke was on Krazy 8
@@gingeroverseer9302 he'd be gasping for air!
The lighting in this scene...
hhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh Absolute perfection, like everything about this show really.
breaking bad definitely had some of the best cinematography, so many memorable images throughout the series, some of the stuff is unforgettable in the face of television, what you show the audience and what you want them to see is very important for its success
Good ol albuquerque street lights
The everything in this scene...
breaking bad always has perfect lighting, the shadow symbols aren't new but they are perfectly used in this tv show
This was the moment that took the show from amazing to the best series of all time
you know vince gilligan was listening to some fucking DMX when he was making this shit
Something I never hear anyone talk about that I absolutely love in this series is the weird undying loyalty between both Jesse and Walter
I mean sure, alone, they argue, hate each other, frequently trade blows and insult and belittle one another, but when a third party comes along to one of them and posits a something that will negatively affect the other? They will NOT fucking have that shit, and will go along to totally fuck themselves over solely to assure the other's safety.
Up until Hank's murder their loyalty to one another is fucking insane, and is still blatantly obvious if lessened even after the fact. Even though Walt knew Jesse was arguably responsible for Hank's death he STILL made sure that Jesse wouldn't be murdered with his trunk gun thing
im not saying this to be rude but how was Hank’s death Jesse’s fault? Walt was literally the one who called Jack and his guys out there lol. and i get that was intended for Jesse, before he knew Hank was even there… but at the same time Jesse wasn’t even the one in the wrong. the only reason he turned against Walter was because he poisoned his kid.
to be fair i am pretty biased because im of the humble opinion that like 90% of the bad things that happen in the show are Walter’s fault in one way or another.
I think people mean to say this when they say the best thing about Breaking Bad is the chemistry between Walt and Jesse. :)
Walt gave the neo nazis the nod to kill Jesse in the desert
@@BocalokaTV Yeah, but Jesse gave the go ahead to Hank to arrest Walt. That makes us even.
@@Ahiru77 Makes what even, i'm just pointing out what a pos Walter is
1:08 : Walter White log out.
1:09 : Heisenberg joined the lobby
hasan tıngır hahaha 🤣🤣🤣
Walter White logged out well before this scene lmao
Breaking Bad is good because the first episode tries to make you like Walt as much as you can. Then the rest of the show is to see how far you'll keep with him.
i stuck with him all the way! hes a hero! only bad thing he did was allowing Jane to die. that was not his call to make.
@@Ch4rlz_ThA_Princ3 child poisoning what a hero!😇
@@Ch4rlz_ThA_Princ3 setting off a bomb in a nursing home... what a saint!
@@deepfriedchocobo What!? Was he supposed to leave it on his car!?
There are viewers who've seen the entire series who think Walt's the hero, and Skyler who's the problem in the White family.
One of the few scenes which demonstrates the good side in Walt , he had nothing to gain by killing those scumbags on the contrary it would prove to be very heavy on him later on
Fun fact - after this scene, actor Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul did run.
When I first watched this scene, it felt like my jaw took a 6 mile drop ! 😲
This scene and Gale's death were the biggest jaw dropping moments. Just 😮
Symmetry I saw gale coming from a mile away but this not one bit
Season 4 finale where they zoomed in on Lily of the Valley was crazy too.
Jane choking to death as WW watches was crazy too
Gus killing Vic...
I know I shouldn't say this since this has been out for over a decade but spoilers! ☹
And that’s when you realize, just how far Walt has gone.
This is the exact moment those two guys got ran over by a car
This is why Walter is one of the most complex characters in TV. We think Heisenberg is some evil pragmatic monster, but deep down Walter still had a sense of ethic. When he saw the dealers had killed the kid on TV, he knew Jesse would be outraged, but moreover, Walter himself was outraged. That's why he killed the dealers in cold blood, and that's why he was irreverent to Gus in the following episode. At this point Walter lost all respect for Gus: up until that point, Walter considered Gus to be a reasonable business man whom he respected very much, but after this, Gus was Walter's mortal enemy.
GTA 5 in real life.
except it is not real life...
You mean live action
There was a guy playing GTA in real life. He didn't shoot anyone, but he stole like 4 cars, drove around in full speed and rammed other cars. The RUclips video is still around. He got 160 years in prison for it.
Actually i tried to recreat this scene in gta 4 and its just perfect tho
This scene alone shows why Walt isn't as evil as a lot of people say he is. Unlike a lot of the other criminals on the show, he still had a sense of love and care towards his family, and eventually even Jesse. In fact, it wasn't even Walt's fault that everything fell apart with Gus like Mike says. If Jesse hadn't tried to kill these mofos, Walt wouldn't have had to kill them and anger Gus
I mean, he DID poison Brock a few episodes later
Season 3 Walt was the perfect balance between a piece of shit and someone that looks out for other people's best interests, not as often as one might expect, but it still happens
@@fansee1368 Still not as evil as the major villains
@@fansee1368 Yeah, because he destroyed his relationship with Gus by saving Jesse from this two child murderers. I believe this has been one of the most irrational things Walt did. He could've let Jesse die and cook with Gale, but he felt something for him so he saved his life.
sorry to comment on an old post but what? your saying walt isnt evil as he executes a man point blank with no hesitation. he was doing it for himself not jesse or his family. he didnt care about his family he even says so in the last season. he did it all for himself.
@@azzedine9415yes, but he'd still care about people, like his family and Jesse, despite the damage he provoke to them by his actions
These two dealers don't have any given dialogue or even names, yet they still play a big role in one of the most iconic and important scenes in this show, not to mention the chain reaction they cause.
My favourite scene in the show
Mike gave Walt lesson about "Half measures" implying he should let Jesse go. Walt then went "Full measures" to protect him
NOW THAT'S HEISNBERG!!!
1:28 When you're playing Battlefield and manage to sneak up on that pesky sniper that's been slaughtering your team
1:35 When you see a tank approaching your squad
He ran to that gun in the most dad way , love him lmaoo
@Fuck RUclips why tf are you putting capital letters on every word?
@Fuck RUclips oh
When you're about to do a hard mission and a max level player passes through.
Nobody messes with the REAL Walt jr
The scene is amazingly awesome. It’s unbelievable. I’ve seen the show quite a few times but now that I see this again holy shit.
...and hiesenburg is born
Mayochiki heisenberg was born when walt was, heisenberg is walters ego. heisenberg starts to break through the moment walt realizes his life is over (cancer)
I agree with both comments. Heisenberg isnt born here. If u had to choose a moment where Heisenberg comes out of walter, it will be the "my house, my son my bottle" scene, right after in the same episode we got "stay out of my territory". Actually Heisenberg isnt born here but in those scene he comes out of the world raw for the first time
So much to unpack here when talking about this episode. First, there's Jesse and Walt's discussion in the restaurant about ricin and poisoning Gus's crew. The emotions they're able to convey to us while whispering is freakin awesome. Later, there's Mike's speech about being a beat cop and never, ever taking a half measure again. I was literally entranced with every word he said in that story. Fast forward to the big meeting where Jesse shows us that, despite all his wrongdoing, he still has a moral compass that tells him what is right from wrong. That crazy motherfucker stands up to Gus. Gus!!! The death of Tomas, along with Walt's realization that he's been played come next. All this, followed by Jesse's descent back into drug Hell, his piss poor attempt at revenge, and ultimately Walt's....check that....Heisenberg's answer to resolve a huge problem by showing he still has Jesse's back no matter what, possibly make this the best episode in the series.
More than 13 years ago
Time flies
Chills.. Everytime.
Christian Segura
This is the scene I think about the most in the series. The suddenness, the unexpectedness, and especially when Walter delivered the coup de gras to the head. Up to that point I thought it was pretty good show that I enjoyed watching but from that point on I was emotionally hooked. The hair on the back of my neck stood up. Walter had become a goal driven demon and I had to keep watching. This show was something very different now.
this is the moment when the two gangsters got run over
Vince Gilligan was only lucky friends. General Motors initially developed and filmed this entire scene for the launch of the Pontiac Aztek in effort to capture the SUV urban security craze, but when test audiences suffered post-traumatic stress executives caved, removed the ceremonial jaguar teeth from the grill, and packaged the Aztek and family sci-fi get away.
One of the best escenes of all times!! So real and violent, just perfect. Better than a lot of big screen movies
This is the moment jesse becomes heisenberg
Jesse's reaction was literally us, what a scene
this show has so many amazing moments it's insane
To think...Gus's death everything that went bad, came from this moment.
Think about it if this didn't happen, Walt would have still been working for Gus
Walter White:No Woman No Kids ☠
Fun fact: rikishi was riding shot gun, he told Bryan Cranston to do it for the rock.
Bro I'm rewatching the show for a second time after years and years and I totally forgot about this! So badass!
The way jesse stumbles back when walt shoot's the guy, I feel everyone watching did the exact same thing
It was at this very exact moment that the Nickle plated Baretta became gunzinberg
One of my favorite scenes in the entire show.
0:39 Both parties know exactly what is about to go on, literally some Wild West shit
This was the moment walter became the best hitman west of the Mississippi
i love the fact that walt break the bad on this scene
Fun fact: to get a real reaction from the actors, Vince Gilligan only told Bryan Cranston how this scene would play out. The other 3 were all just as surprised as we were!
This is the moment when Flynn became Héctor Salamanca
Take a break from the interbutts. That don't even make sense
This is the exact moment when @@Onigirli became Karen.
Although Walt is evil. You cannot deny his loyalty
This scene contrasts really well how reluctant Walt was when he killed Krazy 8
This is the exact moment where Walter ran over and shot two guys
This scene alone proves Walt loved Jesse.
Dude the way the car mangled the guys getting ran over is so realistic. Curious how they did that so seamlessly.
Imagine having to wait a full week to see what happens next? Somewhat relieved I didn’t get into this show until 4 seasons were on Netflix
“That’s it. It’s time to break bad.” Walt said menacingly.
Jesse is the good man who plays the Bad, Walter is the Bad Man who plays the good
This was the moment, when Walt took the full measure
Walt always got Jesse's back
This is the moment Walter White ruined everything for himself
This scene was literal goosebumps.
PONTIAC KICKASS
I'm rewatching this again and can't believe that years later those 2 guys still haven't figured to get out of the way of the car.
Walt knew Jesse was going to blow everything up and Gale was going to maintain the status quo. Which is why Walt wanted to work with Jesse.
his light yet immediate change to a sociopathic psychopathic is so fascinating
This was the perfect product placement for the Pontiac Aztec. Pontiac should be happy with this clip.
Fun fact, those guys weren’t actually hit by the car, they were acting, which is symbolic for acting.
"tHiS wAs ThE mOmEnT hEiSeNbErG wAs BoRn" - someone on literally every scene where Walt does something radical
This is the moment Hector became Skinny Pete
MasteroChieftan Well you see, this is actually where Ted Beneke became Huell Babineaux
Rob This is actually where Brock became Bmineral
This is the moment ‘Better Call’ became Sal’s slogan
Mfs probably watched the final episode of breaking bad and were like “this was the moment heisenberg was born...”
It was in that moment, the Pontiac Aztek became Carsenberg
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Carlsberg.
You fucking won
Oh my God yes
Cancerberg
Season 1: Walter kills in self defense twice, during the second one, he's crying.
Season 2: Walter lets Jane die, but he was also crying and initially felt bad about it.
*Season 3:*
@Thomas Shelby But I don't think it's a coincidence that after it Walt becomes indifferent to killing people.
Season 5 walt is worse than gus
@@RandomPerson-ui3xv s5 walt is really bad but worse then gus ? nah. don't forget how many people gus killed, in s5 walt killed like 12 people only , gus has way higher count and gus kills a lot to send messages, while yes walt also does this, not as much tho as gus
Season 4: *literally poisons a kid*
@@blackbeast9268 idk man i think walt could be worse than gus if he had an organization and crew like him
My Dad's favourite moment of the series. I vividly remember him jumping out of his chair, screaming "HOLY SHIT"!
I had that exact reaction myself when I watched this scene.
Magnets!
yeah!! MR.SCIENCE bitch!!
Billy Berry My dad had the same react and me too
I was watching alone and it made me go 'waahhhh' pretty loud - first and only time I've done that. Great scene ever for me.
man and this isnt even the season finale holy shit
This is better than the finale
BigGeekEmpire nope
@@BigGeekEmpire the finale is perfect
@@chriskayser5798 yep
This is the season finale, but not the final season
I might be reading too much into things, but I like to think this scene is a very subtle callback to Krazy 8 and Emilio. One of them dies immediately and the other doesn't die right away and Walter has to finish him off. However the difference is Walter was very remorseful with Emilio and Krazy 8. Here he puts them down like they're nothing.
Very good read, I think it's very much intentional
Well killing a child murderer is easier than a dude whom you'd just had a beer with and opened up with.
Vince Gilligan: That's a cool coincidence, thanks for pointing it out
@@wozerbozer4050 true.
I think you're reaching
Fun fact: actor Bryan Cranston played both Walter White and Heisenberg characters.
AR
Now that I think of it..... you NEVER see those two in same room......
@@SuperBennett69 LMAOOOOOOO! BOTH OF YOU ARE CRAZY! 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Thumbs up
Omg!!! Now everything is clear in my mind
It's so interesting that Heisenberg looks like Brian Cranston, but also have similarities with Walter White.
There is something symbolic in that...
what is going through his mind: "that was my teacher?"
dude this is one year old
@@TheGreatestDarn who cares the dealers were my favorite kills the other are Krazy-8,Emilio,Tuco,Todd,Jack and his crew.
@David Kuijl You tired and you failed horribly.
Kang Jae-Mo And?
@David Kuijl he tried to say I believe:"you tried and you failed horribly".
Even the sound of the car door opening up was epic.
lol!
one of the most surprising moments in cinematic history
These foley artists know their craft.
lmao ikr
Dude even the warm air cloud coming out of his mouth when he says "run" is epic.
OH DIOS MIO
leonthesleepy lmao
lmao
DON ELADIO ESTA MUERTO
POLLOS
Muro
“No more half measures, Waltuh” - Mike
I think Walt really took that to heart lol
Mike said that to him
"Yeah... funny how words can be so open to interpretation..."
Funny how some things are so open to interpretation 😂
I didn't start watching BB until the whole series was on Netflix so I was fortunate enough to not to have to wait for another episode to come out. But when I saw this, my jaw hit the floor and I just paused the tv and had to take a moment to compose myself. I can't imagine what your poor souls had to go through waiting a whole week to get to the next episode.
Same for me. Can't watch engaging shows like this anymore once a week.
Who gives a fuck u idiot
Chill out, dude.
Stevie, have a Snickers.
you totally rigth man
1:21 his little middle aged man run gets me everytime 😂😂
Lol yeah
Haha. Seriously 🤣
Bryan Cranston is a fantastic actor, those little mannerisms completed the character
Like Peter Griffin standing pose.
@Cali God Yes and that reason is the CIA keeps them out the news
Walt turns to the camera and says, "How's that for a full measure, Mike?"
Jesse: What? Why did you say that Mr. White?
Walt, "Thought I told you to fucking run, Jesse..."
Aaron David Kapner ROFL
Aaron David Kapner time to have gay sex now jessie
Redbad .....maybe in the gay porn version you're fantasizing about...
I miss moments like this on television. My heart was pumping a little faster when I first watched this scene.
I actually jumped out of my couch from this scene. The slow burn of Walt’s decent and how much it accelerated during this scene paid off well.
People always say that every dangerous or compromising thing Walt ever did for Jesse was in Walt's best interest and that Walt is a seflish asshole... not this. Walt had nothing to gain from this. It would have been in his best interest to let Jesse die here.
Walt cared for Jesse. Not as a son, but as a student.
I agree. However, Walt in the lead up to running over the thugs in this scene, is completely alive. Like he says in the finale, he did it for himself ( mostly true, but not entirely imop)I think he had fun in scenes like this where they are such a huge departure from the Walter White before turning 50.
kalibos people actually say this...morons...if WW was selfish asshole then he wouldn't have been agreed about giving his whole life earning just to save his DEA Bro law who was after him and haven't showed any mercy on mr.white!!!
Gettheledoutstyle he just said that just to let skyler and jasee win the argument because ww had nothing to lose!
Rashedul Haque lol you also realize that WW didnt show any mercy by putting hank into danger several times and almost got him killed. his meth empire was also created by lying to hank and his family, killing innocents and putting his loved ones into danger, gotta see both sides
As a partner*
this "RUN" was just amazing, it was so well played 😉
Mladen Bukvic what would you have written in the script m8
@@INSANEWitG18S I would not have changed a single thing. But if I had to, it would be Walt shouting *GO NOW*
A reference from the silence of the labs in this video (@7:56): ruclips.net/video/SoZ1e5kjjcs/видео.html
@@riiddisbuk2496 them labs been real quiet since this dropped
@@RandomEdits780 lol
Jokes aside this is one of the most badass moments in Breaking Bad. It really shows Walter’s ruthlessness when it comes to bad people
he is a bad people
Bro poisoned a kid and you talking about bad people lol
@@Ahmed-og2jm Nah he’s just based😎
@@Ahmed-og2jm the kid didn't die and he did it for greater good
@@23snacKs he's anti hero.
this scene wouldnt be the same without the black screen and "Executive Producer Vince Gilligan"
edseiya true.
without*
The Executive Producer credit after something badass, sad, dramatic or a cliffhanger holds a lot weight especially if it’s the creator or a big name.
Um, what? That's exactly what happened.
@@H.K.5 yeah. Key word “wouldn’t”
First time watching, my wife legitimately thought Jesse was having a drug induced hallucination because it was too shocking to have actually happened
First time I watched this, I was so shook. Everything about this scene was amazing. The build up, the close ups to the guns, everything. Then Walt runs them over, looks so shocked and runs to get the gun. Shoots him in the head and that "run"... Oh man. Still getting chills to this day!
"so shook".... fuck off. Just fuck off. Retards these days cant even use the english language properly.
osama binpoohead go eat ass ye old fogey
@@John.anti-carnist lmao
@DroboN3w DO you like hurting other people?
compare this scene with when he committed his first murder - krazy 8 back in season 1. he was pulling on the pipe around his neck while he had his eyes closed and after he had choked him to death, he sat down and cried, saying "I"m so sorry!"
the journey from that to this is what makes this show so great
? Crazy 8 was a scumbag you deserve everything you got
Like Snake in Metal Gear Solid says, "killing is one of those things that gets easier the more you do it."
@@naught_.
Snake? SNAKE? SNAKKKEEEEEE!!!!
And by this point you can tell that he has no remorse for what he's about to do, he sees it as necessary. There is just a brief moment of hesitation while he wraps his head around it and then he headshots the guy without a second thought.
Yeah I think shooting a cold-blooded child murderer in the head hits a little different than strangling a guy to death who you just had a beer with and befriended but that’s just me.
0:01 This is the moment Jesse became Hector Salamanca
Lol😂
Lmfao
I confess I laughed a little out loud
LMAOO
i died
That's how you close an episode!
Oh hello Gordon Freeman. It's good to see you.