The way Todd says "I mean, I can do it" in reference to torturing a man, like he was talking about taking out the garbage. Todd's a special kind of monster.
@@archiejefferson4615 sociopathic? That’s literally the opposite of Todd. Todd is CLEARLY a psychopath by medical definition. He lacks empathy for others. Is indifferent(doesn’t feel good or feel bad for it) to the suffering of others. He will kill you if it serves a logical purpose. Like killing the kid he didn’t do it because he enjoyed it (not like he felt bad either) but he did it because he saw the kid as a witness so killing the kid served a purpose. Sociopaths are usually hotheaded todd isn’t hotheaded. He’s cold and calculating. But most psychopaths don’t commit crimes because you don’t “see a psychopath when you see one” you see one when the mask falls off. Psychopaths usually try to be likable to everyone to manipulate people. There may be 2 psychopaths in your life you don’t know about because most psychopaths aren’t even behind bars.
@@jonahmoran3751 the definition of sociopath is someone with "antisocial behaviour who has little regard for others feelings and emotions" this sums up Todd pretty well. I agree Todd is a psychopath while also expressing sociopathic tendencies
Season 3, Episode 10: Walt nearly tells Jesse the truth about Jane, out of guilt Season 5, Episode 14: Walt tells Jesse the truth about Jane, but only to hurt him
I think it’s more complicated than that. He looked at Jesse’s as a second son and he did care about him. This betrayal does indeed hurt him. If he didn’t care about him he would of let Jesse die along time ago. But now Walt blames Hank’s death on Jesse because he knows if he just left all of this wouldn’t of happened. Also he now looks at Jesse as a threat to his family because of the whole trying to burn his house down.
In the beginning when he first says he watched Jane die, he looks guilty, but then he changes his facial expression. Also it’s something he has been holding off telling him for a long time. I think he wanted to hurt him & get it off his chest
i might be the only one who sided with walt in this scene, jesse was indirectly responsible for hanks death Edit: nah i take back what i said please stop replying
@@tylers6611 You’re right in my opinion. You can blame certain things on others but too many factors are attributed to Walt’s greed and desire for power because of that unshakable inferiority complex. 80 million dollars from this business when just 1 or 2 was more than enough for everything that even lead to him becoming Heisenberg
@El Tsuru Mamalon Walter absolutely didn't need Jesse for the business, he just meet Gustavo, who was doing Jesse's work(distribution) much-much better; he could give Jesse all those money and forgot about him forever(Jesse and Jane eventually would have OD sooner or later with that cash). But after that talk with Jane's father Walter decided to "never give up on family" and came back to Jesse's house, so I believe that letting Jane die was(in Walter's mind) in the first place for Jesse's best interests. Also, from my point of view, letting Jane die was much-much more of an antyhero decision, than turning down Eliot's charity (I believe that move was the move of pure villian, and it shown me a lot who Walter is as a person) Kristen Ritter, actress who played Jane, said that she was rooting for Walter after this, and that her character needed to go... Jane didn't have any good intentions when she was blackmailing Walter, she blackmailed him to get all the money and without control of her father shoot heroin. If the only thing she wanted was "freedom", she with Jesse would have went to the rehab as her dad asked her, and Walter himself would have given Jesse's money.
@El Tsuru Mamalon Walter is responsible for planes crush for like 10%, Jane's father for like 20% and that messed up air-company MINIMUM for 70% One person (Jane's father) can't be responsible for so much people's lifes 6:41 The answer is simple - Walter thought he was doing the best for Jesse in a long run. He thought he chose one dead body, one overdose over two overdoses, two dead bodies. Obviously he is in the wrong, but it understandable why in this episode he cared about Jesse.
@El Tsuru Mamalon Walter had to kill Mike and he planned to do it. He needed to make sure that Mike will not come back after Walter to revenge his 10 guys. Anyway, Mike wasn't right, everything between Walter and Gus was spoiled, when Walter chose to save Jesse from Gus's dealers, and as Saul said, Mike was the one who used "clown of the lawyer", so Mike was shifting all blame on Walter in that scene. Walter took his gun out of Mike's bag, before their talk, and just because he tried to be apologizing after killing Mike doesn't mean that he didn't need to do it or that it was an impulsive move.(Walter also apologized to Crazy-8, Jane, Gale) And it's so funny when people say that Mike "morally" more right than Walter. Mike was an amazing character, but as person he was as bad as Walter, he was ready to kill Walter and Jesse multiple times, he would have killed anybody simply following Gus's orders.
The facial acting on this show is something else. Walt's face initially looks concerned almost like he's going to apologize. But then you can just feel the petty spite.
I feel like he was feeling guilty at first, it’s something he has always felt guilty about.. but he needed to get it off his chest & he was blaming Jesse for Hank’s death so did it out of spite.
@@callistaks6948 I think he was expressing a condescending kind of pity because of how angry he was at Jesse. He was trying to insult him, and on top of that, he also admitted to killing Jane to hurt him even more
And just when you think jesse couldn’t be more defeated while fighting as hard as he can to not go with jack walt looks jesses straight in the eye and absolutely destroys him when he tells him about jane…jesse instantly stops fighting and accepts his fate
The detail in this show is insane. Earlier on in a previous episode when Jesse was talking to Hank, he was telling him how smart and lucky Walter is and how whatever you think is supposed to happen, the exact opposite of that is going to happen. Hank finally catches Walter and has him handcuffed at gunpoint and Jesse spits in his face, and then within minutes it’s like he magically swaps places with Jesse like a magician or something, and now Jesse is the one handcuffed at gunpoint with Walter standing there free, then he tells him that he watched Jane die, almost the same kind of gesture as a spit in the face, only much worse and more devastating. Everything that happened, the opposite ended up happening, just like Jesse said. The parallel imagery in this show is crazy
"Insane Detail." You literally wrote a paragraph and a half to explain some very basic if not obvious shit. The show was brilliant but this was no doubt one of the more obvious moments. I mean Walt's MO is turning the tables on all his most cornered moments. It's one of the reasons he survived this long.
The funny thing is that Hank was also right, because if he'd gone to the meeting in the square and let Walt explain himself they would have had him on the wire. So the opposite of what Jesse was expecting to happen in that scenario would have happened!
@@Jessebella1 "No they aint" isnt that the exact projection of somebody elses actions that you're complaining about in the first place? You dont speak for this guy anymore than he speaks for the character on the show, man.
@@Jessebella1 Im not sure what you're trying to get at, im not touching on the scene. I was pointing out your hypocrisy with complaining about this guy projecting what he thought was going through the characters mind, then immediately projecting onto this guy saying "No he aint" when the guy pointed out he was joking, projecting your own view on this guys comment. I don't understand where iv lost you, here.
@@nickarceneaux5573 Chill out bro. I know CDPR did a lot of wrong and there WERE lots of bugs and glitches(Most of which have been fixed by now and the game is very much playable). When you look beyond all that Cyberpunk is an amazing game. If you haven't played the game yet, I recommend you give it a chance.
I love how Walt didn't have some sappy change of heart and say "No don't kill him" he actually gave the go lol. Then told him about Jane. That's cold 🥶
About damn time. Jesse was good and useful till the first half of season 2 before Combo died. After that he's nothing more than a liability to Walter once he started working for Gus. Gus's operation was professional and composed, Jesse was simply not cutout for big time drug operations since he is too hot headed, emotional and lacks the foresight to consider the consequences of his actions. Walter should have had Mike take care of him the moment he threatened to snitch him to the DEA after Hank beat him.
@@gestaltsea3616 How bold of you to assume that I "idolize" Walt. I was merely pointing out how Jesse is a liability for big time drug operations due to him always letting his emotions get the best of him and lack of ability to think what his actions would cause.
@@gestaltsea3616 exactly. most of the weird misogynistic fans hated skyler and jesse while praising the man who literally made all of this happen and began destroying everyone’s lives since episode 1. This is how society works in real life too sadly. Which is how lots of straight white men get away with so much evil.
@noone there’s always one racist in the comments. are you a homophobe too? cause I’m not straight. you’ve just negated everything you typed because I don’t value the perspective or opinion of ignorant racist trash.
How ironic that in the episode following this one Jesse his forced to watch Andrea, another girl he loved, die right in front of him, helplessly tormented by the consequences of ever teaming up with Walt. By the end of this show Jesse has a shattered soul.
These last episodes are really cruel. I've only seen them once and I don't want to see them again. I was furious with Walter. If you think how many lives were destroyed and how many people died because of him.. it's truly sad.
@@patrickbateman7802 El Camino was a perfect way to provide closure to Jesse's character. I especially enjoyed his interactions with Pete and badger. When he asked Pete why he was helping him and Pete said "you're like my hero."
@@mr.thunder1219 yeah that was amazing. Never thought skinny would be the one to drop the tear jerker line of all of breaking bad lol so I see Walt and Jesse as both corrupt people that have paid their penance. Walt lived a miserable life where he should have had some reward,but then lived two years as selfishly and reprehensible as he wanted so he spent months living an awful solitary life in new Hampshire,then got to have his revenge, finish his goals...then die. I feel like karmic justice was served there. I think Jesses worst action was selling meth to people in recovery. Just for that I feel karmic justice for him was very cruel because it was on a short enough timeline. He spent a few months as a slave,then he got revenge,escaped and then was able to start over in another state. Unlike Walt he's still young and gets to live happily ever after with I would presume at least a little PTSD lol. Anyway. I felt horrible for Jesse and can barely watch those last few episodes of breaking bad but I think in the end it was the perfect way to end a series for two imperfect people.
@@patrickbateman7802 Agreed. A lot of people think El Camino was unnecessary but that satisfaction it gave me to see him finally smile again after that year or so of Hell was so worth the watch.
Jesse was shouting NO NO NO and trying to escape before Walt told about jane. But after that he just let go the desire to survive, the soul of Jesse died from the poisonous Heisenberg.
To be honest, that was Walt's intention, because thanks to Jesse snitching on him, Hank (Walt's brother in law) was killed and Walt was emotionally dead because of that. So he wanted Jesse to experience the same despair.
@@tommymician121 you mean walt deflected his blame on hank's death on jesse right? because i'm pretty sure jesse didn't call the nazis to the desert. what i do remember jesse doing is snitching on a child poisoning murderous piece of shit after years of being in an one-sided friendship with him, being used, manipulated and told off
@@craque_victor Well if it wasn't for walt Jesse would have been in jail in season 1 Jesse would have already been dead by season 3 on the hands of gustavo Walt Intentionally killed people who were either criminals or related to criminal activities That's what criminal world is about Hanks death was more of situation driven than anyones fault Cause anyone in Walt's place would have called Jack when they have fear of being killed by Jesse and Walt didn't even knew Jesse was with Hank
Something about the ways he says that to Jesse really reminds me of Gus. That aggressive, yet soft tone in his voice that's almost like a whisper is very characteristic of Gus. Very chilling
Everyone knows Walt picks up traits from people he has killed, but it’s not just mannerisms, it’s their skills too. Walt inherits Gus’ intimidation factor and almost always being ahead of the curve, and the ability to seemingly be impossible to predict. After killing Mike, he inherits his stealth abilities, being able to go cross country while the police are on a manhunt for him.
@@Crackedcripple plus when walt killed 9 people at jail he went to hank's place and they shared a whiskey, walter wanted one with rocks/ice and hank didnt. He didnt kill hank himself but in the bar at new hempshire he inherited preferring the whiskey without ice like hank does ,
Jesse got so screwed by the end of this show. I'm surprised he didn't kill Walt in the end when he had the chance. Maybe he was just grateful for his torment to be over, maybe he realized Walt was already a dead man walking and it wasn't even worth killing him. The hell he lived through after this is heartbreaking though. The scene where he's dreaming of being a carpenter and wakes up in chains is tragic.
Walt was hoping for Jessie to kill him for everything Walt has done to him. Jessie didn't want to kill him on his terms so he just left him to die by himself.
Honestly I feel like 2:18 is the most sinister Walter gets in this whole show, despite the things he’s done. He got so angry with Jesse and that hank died that he took his anger out on Jesse. He didn’t have to tell him that.
Fun fact about your opinion: Vince Gilligan, creator and producer of the show, famously agrees with this. He states that this is, in his opinion, the most heinous and despicable action of Walter’s
Ummm no jesses deserved everything he got , I’m sorry but if I had 5 million and I had to kill people risk my life for it I’d just restart my life , dude threw it out of the window like a dumb ass which led to suspicions, and Brock is still alive but nah he’s meth brain is still not functioning and can’t think that Walt did it to save Jesse bc it was part of the plan , then he turned rat and well being a rat these days is terrible so I don’t feel bad for him but Aaron Paul is still a goat
It's a small detail but that shot of the birds with Jesse looking up at the sky... after what happened to Hank, that shot seems to suggest he's about to die - you're seeing his last moments through his eyes. Amazing way of building up that tension without killing him off.
@@H.K.5 nah it’s definitely more a call back to jane wondering what it would be like to just be a bird and fly away, which gets paid off with Walter saying the thing right after.
I think alot of kids see themselves in Jesse. He was troubled and society beat him down even more. The worst crime is his parents though. They abandoned him, when in reality they should have helped him on a better path. No man or woman leaves their child. Thats the ultimate crime
No, Jesse was a drug dealer in a world of drug dealers without the spine to follow through with it when things got real. There was no innocence in him, not at all.
Walter only wanted to hurt Jesse so bad for the fact thag Hank died. But at thw end of the day it was his fault. Instead of responding for his acts he blamed Jesse. What a great show
Also I think there’s a factor here most fans tend to miss. Walter felt slighted given that Gus so badly wanted to off Jesse, and Walter kept Gus from killing him several times, only for Jesse to more or less turn on Walter. Then later Jesse broke all trust and snitched on him to Hank, I think that’s the thing that really turns Walter at this juncture. Walter from now on becomes absolutely pitiless.
@@Marcoz588 I think the snitching part is great. Not many people is brave enough to testify/report against a guy like Walter. After all, Walter has been very wrong. He kills people and continues to deal drugs. Jesse was wrong too doing the same thing, but at least he has changed.
@@Marcoz588 I think Jesse was unknowingly the only person who was helping Walt keep his humanity. Walt loved how much Jesse was impressed by him and so he always tried to do right by him. That’s why he hated it when Mike and Gus were slowly showing Jesse who the real Walter was. The second that Jesse betrayed him by snitching he went full on psycho. Jesse should’ve gotten in the van while he still had the chance
Ya know what's crazy? If Saul would've never had Huell steal Jesse's weed out of his pocket he would've never found out what really happened to Brock. He would've went with the "disappearer" and been gone, Hank wouldn't have had anything on Walter at that point. Crazy how such small moments prove to be some of the most pivotal points in a show. Edit: Thank you guys for the likes, never had this many before, my wife says I’ll never catch her 30,000 like comment, let’s prove her wrong and run it up guys.
But he would’ve been smoking the pot when he got there and would not have been able to go according to Saul, so he still wouldn’t of disappeared but he might of not helped hank -evidence the only reason he noticed it was swapped is because he was going to smoke it
@@moemoe-jb2fw he still put two and two together. Jesse still lost the cigarette and Walt replaced it with a salt filled one that they found in jesse’s house. After getting his dope lifted by huell he figures out huell lifted the ricin too. Walt even owns up to Jesse about poisoning Brock and tells him he did it to get Jesse to help him kill gus and ensure their survival
@@korpse69 yes but I don’t think it’s well written even Walt admitting we know Walt lifted the ricin and Brock was poisoned using lily of the valley so how does this lead to Jesse knowing Walt poisoned Brock all Jesse knows is Walt lifted the ricin Walt’s confession to poisoning Brock doesn’t make sense either
How else would Jesse have found out? It’s not like Walt left any evidence that he was Jesse’s house, and even if he did, that doesn’t mean it’d be evidence that he watched her die.
Todd saved Jesse's life and died for it which caused Walt to saved his life and die for it after. Two characters that took everything from him and paid the ultimate price. A true masterpiece.
jesse got hank killed jesse caused walt to not be there for his childs birth jesse ratted on walt because he dealt with mike because he would not let him killed the 9 snitches in prison that would have gotten walt and jesse put in prison for life, jesse got jane back on drugs, jesse got brocks mother killed for trying to escape when he knew they would kill her, jesse brought emilo and crazy 8 right to the rv where walt was cooking an forced walt to kill them both in defence, i just finished the show for the second time and even bad that happened to jesse was his fault oh yeah he also tried to go kill those try drug dealers forcing walt to do it which caused gus to eventually try to kill walt all jesse had to do was go back to gus and tell him the drug dealers killed that kid
@@imbest1214 Jesse snitched to hank, was prepared to ruin Walter sending him to prison for life, and then looked at Walt to save him from slavery Jesse is sorry Walt did everything for him without Walt Jesse would’ve been homeless
Everything after this was just so hard to watch because there was no repairing Jesse and Walter’s relationship. To watch Jesse’s respect and care for Walter fade on top of him being tortured emotionally and physically was depressing as hell
Jesse said previously "it's impossible to catch Heisenberg no matter what your plan is somehow he always escapes and turns it around on you" and sure enough that is exactly what happened.
It is, but those anime cunts from Attack on Titan believed their 20 minute episodes were better, so they proceeded to review bomb it, making it drop in ranking for sometime.
Honestly dumbest chain of joke memes out there. Basically for those who don't get it, There's a whole lot of jokes out there in regards to Walter junior sometimes referred to as Flynn. Basically they put the joke in and the joke is about Flynn but he doesn't appear in the video itself. Also 'minerals' is just a long running gag with Hank as he collects stones and calls then minerals. Honestly people who likes these types of comments are 'simps' . I get it but it's just really dumb, overused and unoriginal.
"...And then we'd take care of the job...after that." I remember the first(of like 50) times I watched this episode. I was in a trance. They had generated so much hype going into it and it actually ended up being the best hour of television ever made. But something about the friendly, completely dispassionate, harmless, slightly awkward way Todd says "We're going to take Jesse back to our hideout, torture him and kill him." Will always stick with me. It's just such a weirdly casual sentence spoken in the midst of such an intense and climactic scene, and it's communicating the darkest idea that Walter ever agreed to. The way I see it, it kind if represented the new normal, like every illusion of decency and morality was now gone. Like somehow Todd, the shows closest thing to an actual demon was implicitly saying "Whatever idea you had that some redemption was still possible, lose it. Your decisions have brought you to hell. This is the kind of thing that happens here. Me torturing and killing Jesse is not a big deal."
I have said it myself. that was a long week waiting for this espisode, not to mention they made is wait probably 20 mins into this episode with teh flashback. It probably was the best hour of all drama
dude when i rewatched that episode where jane died, and they did such a good job at the details in the show. He inadvertantly caused her death. If he wasnt there she probably wouldn't of died. He touched Jesse to wake him up, causing her to roll over on her back. Than she choked on her on puke.
Still though how could he possibly know that touching jesse was gonna cause her to puke,he didn't help her after that probably because she knew the truth about Walt and he just couldn't afford to be caught that early in his "career".
@@Mewantsgothgf maybe he could have saved her but decided to don't do it because Jesse had her other than Walter himself, she rolling was lucky sure but Walt gladly accepted the luck
Aaron Paul's facial acting in this scene is phenomenal. At 2:08 you can see all his anger and distress replaced by loss and hopelessness. This is the moment where Jesse realises that has entirely lost all his morality and humanity. Brilliant.
I really struggle with the fact that I might like Better Call Saul more than Breaking Bad. Clips like these remind me why I love Breaking Bad so much, and how I got so hooked on the show every week waiting for new episodes. Gilligan is a genius, man.
Idk, story wise BCS can't top BB for me. BCS lives off of the BB universe and tbh the story of the teacher becoming a drug lord while still trying to be a family man is just better to me than the lawyer story we have in BCS which is still an awesome storyline especially with all the new Gus and Mike content. Still, it lives off of BB. However, what BCS is better at is the cinematography and probably also the symbolism, maybe even the diaologues. charakter development is a hard case, but to me the arch of Walter, Jesse and even Skyler is more interesting to me than the arch of Jimmy and Kim, only by a hair tho. Arguing about this is nearly obsolete as the quality differences are small all in all. I see BB and BCS as one thing and honestly it is way above anything else, I have seen television wise.
2:15 this shot of Walt walking away is one of my favourites in the entire show, it really shows Walt for the monster he’s become, it’s pure heisenberg and he’s at the point of no return. It really demonstrates how much he’s declined and stooped to the level of being a complete sociopath, he’s not even human anymore. The embodiment of pain and suffering
No, it's just spite, very plain human spite. The dude was breaking down crying and begging for his brother in law's life 2 minutes prior to that and now has an enormous amount of hatred for the man he holds responsible for that. You can hardly get more human than that.
This should not have left without a revenge. I thought at first that there was a reason that Jesse learned the truth about Jane and that he would take revenge for her. But he did nothing unfortunately.
@@iwann108 Well Jesse loved Jane and she died right beside him, so he probably thought it was his own fault, than to learn after all this time that Walt could have saved and just watched her die it just broke his heart and it makes sense why he stopped fighting
Jane death half killed Jesse, hearing the closest person to him talk about how he’s basically happy he watched her die and did nothing. That finished of Jesse for good.
This whole episode is just filled with dread and despair. Its not "OH SHIT" moments or massive explosions, just an entire world we had been watching for 59 episodes disintegrating in front of us. A whole series of storytelling crumbling to pieces. I just felt empty watching it for the first time, so I didnt love it initially. But thats exactly whats happening: the show is leaving you with nothing
I think this is a very important scene. Walt’s fatherly (albeit still explorative) relationship with Jesse was always one of his redeeming qualities. Eradicating by the end of the story illustrates how fundamentally he has become a different human
It's because hes a Sociopath. Sociopath's can be seen as way nicer and innocent because they are able to hide it way better than psychopaths. Psychopaths are more like Tuco and Gus later on.
@@AlumniDaniel Tuco could have been a sociopath because he was raised in a rough criminal environment but Todd is nearly Dahmer level, he is a psychopath who finds murder interesting.
The way Jesse was hiding under Walters car... it really shows how his final attempt on being safe is by hiding from the person who ultimately has the most power over him.
Because he's actually incompetent. There's nothing special about Jesse Pinkman and he had no right to make it as far as he did with Walter. Instead of leaving peacefully he ended up messing things up for everyone. What a moron.
I'm on the side of Walt on this one. Jesse could have just let bygones be bygones and move on with a new identity with the help of the disappearer, with his money intact, but he just had to snitch.
I'd give anything to watch this show for the first time again. This scene was an absolute gut punch, Walter shattered Jesse's soul in just a few sentences.
Aaron paul is such a great actor. Word is that at 2:19 he relaxed his muscles so well that his rectum lost tension and he made big poop and it took the set staff 3 days to clean it all up.
Walt was furious that Jesse stabbed him in the back even though he had saved his life multiple times and had his back. When also Hank died, his anger peaked...
Después de la muerte de Gus recuerdo que me preguntaba quién sería el nuevo villano en la última temporada, por un momento llegué a creer que eran los neo-nazis pero cuando ví esta escena me di cuenta de que el verdadero villano todo el tiempo fue Walter...
Damn. The way Jesse thinks Walter is about to save him just for him to drop the bombshell on him. Brutal. Walter is truly an evil mastermind by the end of S5
He didn't watch her die, he killed her. She wouldn't have choked if he didn't break into Jesse's house and shake their bodies while they slept on the side
Watching breaking bad is unique because in the beginning Walt is the protagonist but slowly turns into the antagonist and every episode it slowly leads you to see what a monster Walter white has real become
Villain =/= Antagonist tho The Antagonist is the character who is against the motives and actions of the protagonist, you can have a Villain Protagonist and a Heroic Antagonist In the case of Breaking Bad, Walt is the Villain Protagonist and Hank was the Heroic Antagonist.
All the world's ills will be resolved once people understand that protagonist does not mean hero/morally good character and antagonist does not mean villain/morally bad character. So never, basically
I like that little editing bit where the bad guy closes the car door before dragging Jesse out. Presumably, he either did that to trick Jesse into thinking they were looking inside the car and not under it, or he genuinely checked the car first before someone indicated he was actually under.
I mean Jesse was giving Walt a reasonable loss. Get arrested, his family lives peacefully, Hank lives, nobody dies. Walt wanted to see Jesse suffer and die.
I love how Jesse, after he looks back from the sky, is just looking at Walt in disbelief. It's as incredible to him as it is to us that he's looking at the same man who blackmailed him back then.
I also love the fact that there's a shot where he looks at the sky and sees two birds flying together. If it hadn't been for Walt allowing Jane to die, those two birds, free and flying high, could be Jesse and Jane.
That admission had to be the most brutal heart wrenching thing to hear in the entire series. You know that Jessie didn't have a single fiber in his being that cared about Walt after that. It just cut him to the bone in the worst way imaginable
This was more than a television show, it was an experience, and an incredible one at that. I couldn’t stop rewatching this show if I wanted to. There is more raw emotion, truly brilliant acting, and deep, enriching backstory in this scene alone than most shows have in their entire series. We love you Vince Gilligan and thank you for this amazing experience. ❤️
This is, in my humble opinion, the most cruel and evil moment I have ever seen in any tv series ever. All of Theon Greyjoys torture pales in comparison to what Walter White did to Jesse. And the way Cranston and Paul play it just makes it that much more painful. A true masterclass in acting/ writing.
Interesting thing to note here 2:33 is the first two letters of the cars license plate are NZ, a common acronym for New Zealand, Where Jane and Jesse were planning to start a new life. Above the "NZ" in the corner is a design that looks very similar to the Southern Cross, which is a symbol of New Zealand. The colors are warm and inviting as well so Its a fleeting reminder of a happy future that Jesse was robbed of by Walt.
...oh and by the way, Jesse, I gave you a D for your exam but it was actually a B.
The answers were correct. I marked it wrong on purpose. I could have passed you, but I didn't.
@@rawkguy4896 lol
@@rawkguy4896 cries
*gave you the D
Holy shit, this comment just made me remember that this was his chemistry teacher holy shit.
yeah big deal i watched jane die too when i saw the episode
How about the guy that filmed the whole thing
@@Delta_Aves "I filmed Jane dying. I could've saved her but I didn't" Damn, son.
lmfao
Walt's just trying to 1up everyone
But you couldn't have saved her.
The way Todd says "I mean, I can do it" in reference to torturing a man, like he was talking about taking out the garbage. Todd's a special kind of monster.
Sociopathic
@@archiejefferson4615 sociopathic? That’s literally the opposite of Todd. Todd is CLEARLY a psychopath by medical definition. He lacks empathy for others. Is indifferent(doesn’t feel good or feel bad for it) to the suffering of others. He will kill you if it serves a logical purpose. Like killing the kid he didn’t do it because he enjoyed it (not like he felt bad either) but he did it because he saw the kid as a witness so killing the kid served a purpose. Sociopaths are usually hotheaded todd isn’t hotheaded. He’s cold and calculating. But most psychopaths don’t commit crimes because you don’t “see a psychopath when you see one” you see one when the mask falls off. Psychopaths usually try to be likable to everyone to manipulate people. There may be 2 psychopaths in your life you don’t know about because most psychopaths aren’t even behind bars.
@@jonahmoran3751 the definition of sociopath is someone with "antisocial behaviour who has little regard for others feelings and emotions" this sums up Todd pretty well. I agree Todd is a psychopath while also expressing sociopathic tendencies
*Literally kills a child*
Moments later: "Shit happens. Huh?"
@@archiejefferson4615 psychopath
I've just realized that we all saw Walter as the "too soft for the criminal life" guy, but Jesse was that guy all along :(
You just realized i5 😑
@@bait5257 I mean yeah I guess I knew already, but never thought about it directly
@@Bilen74 Know don't worry about if. Person above shouldn't be shaming you for that. It's a very valid statement given how they're both portrayed.
Nah jessie was soft and stupid from the episode where he coildnt handle 8 ball and snitched on walt.
@@grantlong6586 walts a narcissist no true emotion much like a psychopath except the emotion he does feel is fake and only to fit his narrative.
I like how he goes limp rather than trying to fight. Ultimate depression
Coalburner
@@spikey1389 is this a minecraft joke?
@@Rafa-fv9fv I honestly couldn’t begin to guess
@@Rafa-fv9fv dont know
@@TEEANVEE it’s a slur for white women who date black guys
Season 3, Episode 10: Walt nearly tells Jesse the truth about Jane, out of guilt
Season 5, Episode 14: Walt tells Jesse the truth about Jane, but only to hurt him
I think it’s more complicated than that. He looked at Jesse’s as a second son and he did care about him. This betrayal does indeed hurt him. If he didn’t care about him he would of let Jesse die along time ago. But now Walt blames Hank’s death on Jesse because he knows if he just left all of this wouldn’t of happened. Also he now looks at Jesse as a threat to his family because of the whole trying to burn his house down.
x CT
Yep
But wasnt Walt was his alterego Heisenberg
In the beginning when he first says he watched Jane die, he looks guilty, but then he changes his facial expression. Also it’s something he has been holding off telling him for a long time. I think he wanted to hurt him & get it off his chest
He tells that to Jesse at the last moment because Walter blamed Hank's death on Jesse for being a snitch. He just wanted to hurt him so bad.
i might be the only one who sided with walt in this scene, jesse was indirectly responsible for hanks death
Edit: nah i take back what i said please stop replying
@@lcdream4213 Ikr, all Jesse had to do was get inside the goddamn van.
@@Danthegamer68 correction
*kidney bean*
Walt is such a piece of crap. If it wasn't for his greed none of them would be in this situation in the first place smh
@@tylers6611 You’re right in my opinion. You can blame certain things on others but too many factors are attributed to Walt’s greed and desire for power because of that unshakable inferiority complex. 80 million dollars from this business when just 1 or 2 was more than enough for everything that even lead to him becoming Heisenberg
This is the moment Vince Gilligan himself said was the single worst thing Walter ever did, from his perspective.
@El Tsuru Mamalon Walter absolutely didn't need Jesse for the business, he just meet Gustavo, who was doing Jesse's work(distribution) much-much better; he could give Jesse all those money and forgot about him forever(Jesse and Jane eventually would have OD sooner or later with that cash).
But after that talk with Jane's father Walter decided to "never give up on family" and came back to Jesse's house, so I believe that letting Jane die was(in Walter's mind) in the first place for Jesse's best interests.
Also, from my point of view, letting Jane die was much-much more of an antyhero decision, than turning down Eliot's charity (I believe that move was the move of pure villian, and it shown me a lot who Walter is as a person)
Kristen Ritter, actress who played Jane, said that she was rooting for Walter after this, and that her character needed to go...
Jane didn't have any good intentions when she was blackmailing Walter, she blackmailed him to get all the money and without control of her father shoot heroin. If the only thing she wanted was "freedom", she with Jesse would have went to the rehab as her dad asked her, and Walter himself would have given Jesse's money.
@El Tsuru Mamalon Walter is responsible for planes crush for like 10%, Jane's father for like 20% and that messed up air-company MINIMUM for 70%
One person (Jane's father) can't be responsible for so much people's lifes
6:41 The answer is simple - Walter thought he was doing the best for Jesse in a long run. He thought he chose one dead body, one overdose over two overdoses, two dead bodies. Obviously he is in the wrong, but it understandable why in this episode he cared about Jesse.
@El Tsuru Mamalon "destroy a rational and functional meth-business", no idiot, Gus wanted to kill his whole family
@El Tsuru Mamalon Walter had to kill Mike and he planned to do it. He needed to make sure that Mike will not come back after Walter to revenge his 10 guys. Anyway, Mike wasn't right, everything between Walter and Gus was spoiled, when Walter chose to save Jesse from Gus's dealers, and as Saul said, Mike was the one who used "clown of the lawyer", so Mike was shifting all blame on Walter in that scene.
Walter took his gun out of Mike's bag, before their talk, and just because he tried to be apologizing after killing Mike doesn't mean that he didn't need to do it or that it was an impulsive move.(Walter also apologized to Crazy-8, Jane, Gale)
And it's so funny when people say that Mike "morally" more right than Walter. Mike was an amazing character, but as person he was as bad as Walter, he was ready to kill Walter and Jesse multiple times, he would have killed anybody simply following Gus's orders.
@@dextermorgan6292 really cause walt got mike's man killed the one gus killed and Mike didn't kill him.
The facial acting on this show is something else. Walt's face initially looks concerned almost like he's going to apologize. But then you can just feel the petty spite.
I feel like he was feeling guilty at first, it’s something he has always felt guilty about.. but he needed to get it off his chest & he was blaming Jesse for Hank’s death so did it out of spite.
@@callistaks6948 I think he was expressing a condescending kind of pity because of how angry he was at Jesse. He was trying to insult him, and on top of that, he also admitted to killing Jane to hurt him even more
And just when you think jesse couldn’t be more defeated while fighting as hard as he can to not go with jack walt looks jesses straight in the eye and absolutely destroys him when he tells him about jane…jesse instantly stops fighting and accepts his fate
@@ianmaylehe didn't kill Jane. Walt didn't know that would happen right when he showed up nor was he involved in them getting high.
@@Snoozytube If you let someone die you are also responsible for that person's death
It's crazy to think that if not for Todd's intervention here, Jesse would've died from Walt greenlighting Jack to execute him. Damn.
And then Todd gets killed by Jesse lol
Yeah anger is the enemey.
@@SenseiDenax I mean he did kill that woman on the porch in front of Jessie.
I think he respected Jesse in some way, but also wanted to appease Lydia, so he kept him around
@@hilde198881 That was basically to discourage Jesse from trying to escape, yet Brock was still a target.
I feel bad for the people who got bored after the first episode.... This is a masterpiece.
I normally hate to watch tv series because they're usually long but this one... I could've watch 5 episode at once and it's my personal record.
I've watched it's entirety more than 6 times and I still find stuff I didn't notice
I honestly didn’t get hooked on this show until maybe episode 3 or 4. It’s a slow burn but oh so fucking good
@@Kaiser8361N sopranos is better
@@alexspader
Aye, similar with Game of Thrones, & recently Peaky Blinders too.
The detail in this show is insane. Earlier on in a previous episode when Jesse was talking to Hank, he was telling him how smart and lucky Walter is and how whatever you think is supposed to happen, the exact opposite of that is going to happen. Hank finally catches Walter and has him handcuffed at gunpoint and Jesse spits in his face, and then within minutes it’s like he magically swaps places with Jesse like a magician or something, and now Jesse is the one handcuffed at gunpoint with Walter standing there free, then he tells him that he watched Jane die, almost the same kind of gesture as a spit in the face, only much worse and more devastating. Everything that happened, the opposite ended up happening, just like Jesse said. The parallel imagery in this show is crazy
Yep, Hank really should’ve listened to him.
And at the very end of the show where Jesse thinks Walt is going to shoot him (after Walt kills Jack and the others) Walt slides the gun to Jesse
"Insane Detail." You literally wrote a paragraph and a half to explain some very basic if not obvious shit. The show was brilliant but this was no doubt one of the more obvious moments. I mean Walt's MO is turning the tables on all his most cornered moments. It's one of the reasons he survived this long.
The funny thing is that Hank was also right, because if he'd gone to the meeting in the square and let Walt explain himself they would have had him on the wire. So the opposite of what Jesse was expecting to happen in that scenario would have happened!
"It's like poetry, it rhymes"
the neo nazi holding jesse was like okay that’s dark
He even dragged him away gently like "Damn bro i got you"
@@Jessebella1 Go outside and touch grass, Milky A is obviously joking.
@@Jessebella1 "No they aint" isnt that the exact projection of somebody elses actions that you're complaining about in the first place? You dont speak for this guy anymore than he speaks for the character on the show, man.
@@Jessebella1 Im not sure what you're trying to get at, im not touching on the scene. I was pointing out your hypocrisy with complaining about this guy projecting what he thought was going through the characters mind, then immediately projecting onto this guy saying "No he aint" when the guy pointed out he was joking, projecting your own view on this guys comment. I don't understand where iv lost you, here.
lol he should have put Jesse over his shoulder and carried him. pat his back a bit to make him feel better
Jesse was no angel, but goddamn did I feel for him. Some of the best character development
This and Red Dead Redemption 2 have the best character development.
Cyberpunk 2077 has some pretty amazing characters too!
@@SantoshKumar-ws2qz Did you eat lead paint chips when you were a kid? Never compare Cyberpunk to Breaking Bad.
@@nickarceneaux5573 Chill out bro. I know CDPR did a lot of wrong and there WERE lots of bugs and glitches(Most of which have been fixed by now and the game is very much playable). When you look beyond all that Cyberpunk is an amazing game. If you haven't played the game yet, I recommend you give it a chance.
@@SantoshKumar-ws2qz I tried it and refunded it. It was a terrible game
I love how Walt didn't have some sappy change of heart and say "No don't kill him" he actually gave the go lol. Then told him about Jane. That's cold 🥶
About damn time. Jesse was good and useful till the first half of season 2 before Combo died. After that he's nothing more than a liability to Walter once he started working for Gus. Gus's operation was professional and composed, Jesse was simply not cutout for big time drug operations since he is too hot headed, emotional and lacks the foresight to consider the consequences of his actions. Walter should have had Mike take care of him the moment he threatened to snitch him to the DEA after Hank beat him.
@@emperorrat3036 when you miss the point and idolize Walt
@@gestaltsea3616 How bold of you to assume that I "idolize" Walt. I was merely pointing out how Jesse is a liability for big time drug operations due to him always letting his emotions get the best of him and lack of ability to think what his actions would cause.
@@gestaltsea3616 exactly. most of the weird misogynistic fans hated skyler and jesse while praising the man who literally made all of this happen and began destroying everyone’s lives since episode 1. This is how society works in real life too sadly. Which is how lots of straight white men get away with so much evil.
@noone there’s always one racist in the comments. are you a homophobe too? cause I’m not straight. you’ve just negated everything you typed because I don’t value the perspective or opinion of ignorant racist trash.
How ironic that in the episode following this one Jesse his forced to watch Andrea, another girl he loved, die right in front of him, helplessly tormented by the consequences of ever teaming up with Walt. By the end of this show Jesse has a shattered soul.
These last episodes are really cruel. I've only seen them once and I don't want to see them again. I was furious with Walter. If you think how many lives were destroyed and how many people died because of him.. it's truly sad.
Thank God for el Camino. Whether you were or we're not a fan,at least you'll u really got to see Jesse find peace.
@@patrickbateman7802 El Camino was a perfect way to provide closure to Jesse's character. I especially enjoyed his interactions with Pete and badger. When he asked Pete why he was helping him and Pete said "you're like my hero."
@@mr.thunder1219 yeah that was amazing. Never thought skinny would be the one to drop the tear jerker line of all of breaking bad lol so I see Walt and Jesse as both corrupt people that have paid their penance. Walt lived a miserable life where he should have had some reward,but then lived two years as selfishly and reprehensible as he wanted so he spent months living an awful solitary life in new Hampshire,then got to have his revenge, finish his goals...then die. I feel like karmic justice was served there. I think Jesses worst action was selling meth to people in recovery. Just for that I feel karmic justice for him was very cruel because it was on a short enough timeline. He spent a few months as a slave,then he got revenge,escaped and then was able to start over in another state. Unlike Walt he's still young and gets to live happily ever after with I would presume at least a little PTSD lol. Anyway. I felt horrible for Jesse and can barely watch those last few episodes of breaking bad but I think in the end it was the perfect way to end a series for two imperfect people.
@@patrickbateman7802 Agreed. A lot of people think El Camino was unnecessary but that satisfaction it gave me to see him finally smile again after that year or so of Hell was so worth the watch.
Jesse was shouting NO NO NO and trying to escape before Walt told about jane. But after that he just let go the desire to survive, the soul of Jesse died from the poisonous Heisenberg.
To be honest, that was Walt's intention, because thanks to Jesse snitching on him, Hank (Walt's brother in law) was killed and Walt was emotionally dead because of that. So he wanted Jesse to experience the same despair.
The only poisonous thing was Jesse himself.
@@tommymician121 you mean walt deflected his blame on hank's death on jesse right? because i'm pretty sure jesse didn't call the nazis to the desert. what i do remember jesse doing is snitching on a child poisoning murderous piece of shit after years of being in an one-sided friendship with him, being used, manipulated and told off
@@craque_victor
Well if it wasn't for walt
Jesse would have been in jail in season 1
Jesse would have already been dead by season 3 on the hands of gustavo
Walt Intentionally killed people who were either criminals or related to criminal activities
That's what criminal world is about
Hanks death was more of situation driven than anyones fault
Cause anyone in Walt's place would have called Jack when they have fear of being killed by Jesse and Walt didn't even knew Jesse was with Hank
@@youtubeisabitch5758 he tried to poison a kid and every time he helped jesse was for his own self-satisfaction
Something about the ways he says that to Jesse really reminds me of Gus. That aggressive, yet soft tone in his voice that's almost like a whisper is very characteristic of Gus. Very chilling
And his crying on the floor face down watching Hank die is very reminiscent of Gus watching his friend die in front him.
Everyone knows Walt picks up traits from people he has killed, but it’s not just mannerisms, it’s their skills too. Walt inherits Gus’ intimidation factor and almost always being ahead of the curve, and the ability to seemingly be impossible to predict. After killing Mike, he inherits his stealth abilities, being able to go cross country while the police are on a manhunt for him.
@@Crackedcripple plus when walt killed 9 people at jail he went to hank's place and they shared a whiskey, walter wanted one with rocks/ice and hank didnt. He didnt kill hank himself but in the bar at new hempshire he inherited preferring the whiskey without ice like hank does ,
@@Crackedcripple he be collecting skills like pokemon lmao
Yeah, as much as I hate to admit it cuz I love Gus and I hate Walt, they're pretty comparable
Jesse got so screwed by the end of this show. I'm surprised he didn't kill Walt in the end when he had the chance. Maybe he was just grateful for his torment to be over, maybe he realized Walt was already a dead man walking and it wasn't even worth killing him. The hell he lived through after this is heartbreaking though. The scene where he's dreaming of being a carpenter and wakes up in chains is tragic.
By the end, Jessie was sick of being manipulated by everyone and just wanted to leave his miserable life.
Walt was hoping for Jessie to kill him for everything Walt has done to him. Jessie didn't want to kill him on his terms so he just left him to die by himself.
Walt wanted Jessi to shot him. But he didn’t do it because he was tired of following Walt’s orders
wasnt that a flashback to his highschool woodoworking class? he talks about making a box and selling it for weed
the daydreaming scene was actually disturbing as hell, just the aspect of chaining up a human and treating them like an animal is horror movie shit.
Honestly I feel like 2:18 is the most sinister Walter gets in this whole show, despite the things he’s done. He got so angry with Jesse and that hank died that he took his anger out on Jesse. He didn’t have to tell him that.
Exactly. His eyes in this scene are pure evil
@@bendover650 I know
Fun fact about your opinion:
Vince Gilligan, creator and producer of the show, famously agrees with this. He states that this is, in his opinion, the most heinous and despicable action of Walter’s
Ummm no jesses deserved everything he got , I’m sorry but if I had 5 million and I had to kill people risk my life for it I’d just restart my life , dude threw it out of the window like a dumb ass which led to suspicions, and Brock is still alive but nah he’s meth brain is still not functioning and can’t think that Walt did it to save Jesse bc it was part of the plan , then he turned rat and well being a rat these days is terrible so I don’t feel bad for him but Aaron Paul is still a goat
Well he sold out to the DEA he watched her die because she was trying to snitch and could of been Jessie's demise anyways
The way that Jesse loses all of his fight and will to live after Walter tells him that is absolutely heartbreaking
He should have listened to Walt earlier and just gotten in the van.
Not for me
I watched Jane die!
I liked it!
And I was good at it!
And I was really...I was Alive!!
That's really effed up what you did there.
I'm the one who watches!
:'(((
She wasn't tho. Haha
Lol BUT SHE WASNT
Hard to imagine all this would have not happened if jesse had no wanted to have a smoke
Which scene?
@@MOF43 at the moment he was waiting for the guy who would change his identity.
Jesse fucked up bad. He should have just let go off his anger and take the ride. He was the reason why Andrea also died.
If Walt didn’t sell his shares in Grey Matter, none of this would have happened
@@DaHatBat nothing is one sided everyone has a part. And if you start doing the blaming thing you can go far as the beginning
It's a small detail but that shot of the birds with Jesse looking up at the sky... after what happened to Hank, that shot seems to suggest he's about to die - you're seeing his last moments through his eyes. Amazing way of building up that tension without killing him off.
It also briefly appears as if the birds seem to “crash” into each other due to line of sight. Just like Wayfarer 515.
I always thought the birds were symbolic of Hank and gomez
@@BiggerBossN313 It was supposed to symbolise Walt and Jesse and all those times they spent working together.
@@H.K.5 nah it’s definitely more a call back to jane wondering what it would be like to just be a bird and fly away, which gets paid off with Walter saying the thing right after.
Jesse’s a nice guy in a world of drug dealers. Morals and emotions put him in some fucked up spots. He was too human for the drug game
I think alot of kids see themselves in Jesse. He was troubled and society beat him down even more. The worst crime is his parents though. They abandoned him, when in reality they should have helped him on a better path. No man or woman leaves their child. Thats the ultimate crime
No, Jesse was a drug dealer in a world of drug dealers without the spine to follow through with it when things got real. There was no innocence in him, not at all.
@@Ryley280 naw he got himself arrested thru guilt alone he was too pure hearted
@@Ryley280 You a very, VERY narrow view of the world.
@@DaHatBat LMAO they you really don't know anything about family
Things like this happen everyday
Walter only wanted to hurt Jesse so bad for the fact thag Hank died. But at thw end of the day it was his fault. Instead of responding for his acts he blamed Jesse. What a great show
Also I think there’s a factor here most fans tend to miss. Walter felt slighted given that Gus so badly wanted to off Jesse, and Walter kept Gus from killing him several times, only for Jesse to more or less turn on Walter. Then later Jesse broke all trust and snitched on him to Hank, I think that’s the thing that really turns Walter at this juncture. Walter from now on becomes absolutely pitiless.
@@Marcoz588 I think the snitching part is great. Not many people is brave enough to testify/report against a guy like Walter. After all, Walter has been very wrong. He kills people and continues to deal drugs. Jesse was wrong too doing the same thing, but at least he has changed.
@@Marcoz588 I think Jesse was unknowingly the only person who was helping Walt keep his humanity. Walt loved how much Jesse was impressed by him and so he always tried to do right by him. That’s why he hated it when Mike and Gus were slowly showing Jesse who the real Walter was. The second that Jesse betrayed him by snitching he went full on psycho. Jesse should’ve gotten in the van while he still had the chance
@@Marcoz588 people seem to forget that it’s completely justifiable to turn on someone for intentionally poisoning a child.
@@Zaynersyy always amazes me how people can hate on Walter but justify their support for Jesse and Mike
Ya know what's crazy? If Saul would've never had Huell steal Jesse's weed out of his pocket he would've never found out what really happened to Brock. He would've went with the "disappearer" and been gone, Hank wouldn't have had anything on Walter at that point. Crazy how such small moments prove to be some of the most pivotal points in a show.
Edit: Thank you guys for the likes, never had this many before, my wife says I’ll never catch her 30,000 like comment, let’s prove her wrong and run it up guys.
Great comment
But he would’ve been smoking the pot when he got there and would not have been able to go according to Saul, so he still wouldn’t of disappeared but he might of not helped hank
-evidence the only reason he noticed it was swapped is because he was going to smoke it
How did Jesse even figure out Walt poisoned him ? Walt used lily of the valley
@@moemoe-jb2fw he still put two and two together. Jesse still lost the cigarette and Walt replaced it with a salt filled one that they found in jesse’s house. After getting his dope lifted by huell he figures out huell lifted the ricin too. Walt even owns up to Jesse about poisoning Brock and tells him he did it to get Jesse to help him kill gus and ensure their survival
@@korpse69 yes but I don’t think it’s well written even Walt admitting we know Walt lifted the ricin and Brock was poisoned using lily of the valley so how does this lead to Jesse knowing Walt poisoned Brock all Jesse knows is Walt lifted the ricin Walt’s confession to poisoning Brock doesn’t make sense either
Todd had a secret crush on Jesse. That's why he kept sparing him
Actually Jesse is the key to win Lydia's heart for Todd
@@peternehemiah1606 I don't think you know what joke means
This is the exact moment where Jesse becomes Lydia
@@FueledFromFiction underrated reply
@@peternehemiah1606 He was pretending to like Lydia so he could keep Jesse.
"You are not how I remembered you...like, at all" - Jesse to Walt, Season 1
ever since Jane died I was expecting Jesse to find out Walt’s involvement, yet did not expect it this way… brutal
How else would Jesse have found out? It’s not like Walt left any evidence that he was Jesse’s house, and even if he did, that doesn’t mean it’d be evidence that he watched her die.
@@SomeGuyWhoPlaysGames333 I meant I expected the show to reveal Jesse would find out but didn’t expect it to play out the way it did.
@@LafriteRip
" I watched janes search history she likes furries"
Todd saved Jesse's life and died for it which caused Walt to saved his life and die for it after. Two characters that took everything from him and paid the ultimate price. A true masterpiece.
Shut up.
@@catrinad2491 -Meth head
@@catrinad2491 you high
Yup
@@catrinad2491 shut up
I’d say that’s the end of that partnership
No, they'll be teaming up the next episode
1:13
You can see Jesse quietly pleading and mouthing "come on" at Walt, hoping for Mr. White to rescue him
That is heartbreaking
jesse got hank killed jesse caused walt to not be there for his childs birth jesse ratted on walt because he dealt with mike because he would not let him killed the 9 snitches in prison that would have gotten walt and jesse put in prison for life, jesse got jane back on drugs, jesse got brocks mother killed for trying to escape when he knew they would kill her, jesse brought emilo and crazy 8 right to the rv where walt was cooking an forced walt to kill them both in defence, i just finished the show for the second time and even bad that happened to jesse was his fault oh yeah he also tried to go kill those try drug dealers forcing walt to do it which caused gus to eventually try to kill walt all jesse had to do was go back to gus and tell him the drug dealers killed that kid
thats kinda pathetic when u think about it. Why ask someone you were willing to screw over to save u?
@@shadowboy2818 what would u do huh? Stop acting like some big guy
@@imbest1214 Jesse snitched to hank, was prepared to ruin Walter sending him to prison for life, and then looked at Walt to save him from slavery Jesse is sorry Walt did everything for him without Walt Jesse would’ve been homeless
@@moemoe-jb2fw yeah like Walt didn’t already ruined his life
Everything after this was just so hard to watch because there was no repairing Jesse and Walter’s relationship. To watch Jesse’s respect and care for Walter fade on top of him being tortured emotionally and physically was depressing as hell
Jesse struggling for freedom..
Walt: Let me calm him down
"I watched Jane die"
Jesse: Totally silent and speechless
Yeah Mr. White Science lol
Jesse said previously "it's impossible to catch Heisenberg no matter what your plan is somehow he always escapes and turns it around on you" and sure enough that is exactly what happened.
ozymandias was the best episode in tv history....so many damn emotions. what a fn brilliant show.
Ozymandias is basically crawl space for almost 50 mins long
It is, but those anime cunts from Attack on Titan believed their 20 minute episodes were better, so they proceeded to review bomb it, making it drop in ranking for sometime.
This is the moment where Walter Jr became minerals
B
R
A
V I N C E
O
I don't get it.
What does that mean??
The moment he got uncle frank killed was when Walter Jr became Finn
Honestly dumbest chain of joke memes out there. Basically for those who don't get it, There's a whole lot of jokes out there in regards to Walter junior sometimes referred to as Flynn. Basically they put the joke in and the joke is about Flynn but he doesn't appear in the video itself. Also 'minerals' is just a long running gag with Hank as he collects stones and calls then minerals. Honestly people who likes these types of comments are 'simps' . I get it but it's just really dumb, overused and unoriginal.
"...And then we'd take care of the job...after that." I remember the first(of like 50) times I watched this episode. I was in a trance. They had generated so much hype going into it and it actually ended up being the best hour of television ever made. But something about the friendly, completely dispassionate, harmless, slightly awkward way Todd says "We're going to take Jesse back to our hideout, torture him and kill him." Will always stick with me. It's just such a weirdly casual sentence spoken in the midst of such an intense and climactic scene, and it's communicating the darkest idea that Walter ever agreed to. The way I see it, it kind if represented the new normal, like every illusion of decency and morality was now gone. Like somehow Todd, the shows closest thing to an actual demon was implicitly saying "Whatever idea you had that some redemption was still possible, lose it. Your decisions have brought you to hell. This is the kind of thing that happens here. Me torturing and killing Jesse is not a big deal."
I have said it myself. that was a long week waiting for this espisode, not to mention they made is wait probably 20 mins into this episode with teh flashback. It probably was the best hour of all drama
@@jasonwilder4677 what? The flashback was like, 5 minutes, tops.
dude when i rewatched that episode where jane died, and they did such a good job at the details in the show. He inadvertantly caused her death. If he wasnt there she probably wouldn't of died. He touched Jesse to wake him up, causing her to roll over on her back. Than she choked on her on puke.
Damn really?? I never noticed that... maybe its time for me to watch the series again, for the third time lol
Literally every small detail is important in breaking bad
Damn wtf
Still though how could he possibly know that touching jesse was gonna cause her to puke,he didn't help her after that probably because she knew the truth about Walt and he just couldn't afford to be caught that early in his "career".
@@Mewantsgothgf maybe he could have saved her but decided to don't do it because Jesse had her other than Walter himself, she rolling was lucky sure but Walt gladly accepted the luck
“Wait”
Oh! Is he gonna change his mind?
“I watched Jane die.”
oh
Jesse ended up being the only one out of all of them in the desert that day that lived through it all.
But it cost him everything
@@CaptainKacknupgood that's what you deserve for being a snitch.
Aaron Paul's facial acting in this scene is phenomenal. At 2:08 you can see all his anger and distress replaced by loss and hopelessness. This is the moment where Jesse realises that has entirely lost all his morality and humanity. Brilliant.
0:36 That expression on Jesse’s face. You know he already accepted his death the moment he was pulled out of the car.
0:38
This is the moment when we would not see Walter Jr eating breakfast anymore
Best show ever created on Tv .🤙👍
Honestly better call Saul is even better
@@sirredofx587 totally disagree but that's yet to be decided until the finale
The Wire is better.
I really struggle with the fact that I might like Better Call Saul more than Breaking Bad.
Clips like these remind me why I love Breaking Bad so much, and how I got so hooked on the show every week waiting for new episodes.
Gilligan is a genius, man.
Idk, story wise BCS can't top BB for me. BCS lives off of the BB universe and tbh the story of the teacher becoming a drug lord while still trying to be a family man is just better to me than the lawyer story we have in BCS which is still an awesome storyline especially with all the new Gus and Mike content. Still, it lives off of BB.
However, what BCS is better at is the cinematography and probably also the symbolism, maybe even the diaologues. charakter development is a hard case, but to me the arch of Walter, Jesse and even Skyler is more interesting to me than the arch of Jimmy and Kim, only by a hair tho.
Arguing about this is nearly obsolete as the quality differences are small all in all. I see BB and BCS as one thing and honestly it is way above anything else, I have seen television wise.
0:26 It's like Hank and Steve's souls watching
Every time I see this scene my stomach drops when Walt says it. It's so cold and ruthless
He was in incredible emotional pain
@@boogaloobender3462 I know. It's still absolutely brutal and heartless
2:15 this shot of Walt walking away is one of my favourites in the entire show, it really shows Walt for the monster he’s become, it’s pure heisenberg and he’s at the point of no return. It really demonstrates how much he’s declined and stooped to the level of being a complete sociopath, he’s not even human anymore. The embodiment of pain and suffering
How can you not be human if you have pin and suffering?
@@Inbraneinthememsane this guy doesnt know what hes talking about
Think he’d past the point of no return a long time ago.
What I see is a man grieving over his brother in law and taking out on someone indirectly responsible.
No, it's just spite, very plain human spite. The dude was breaking down crying and begging for his brother in law's life 2 minutes prior to that and now has an enormous amount of hatred for the man he holds responsible for that. You can hardly get more human than that.
After he told him, Jesse just stopped fighting it and got dragged away
This should not have left without a revenge. I thought at first that there was a reason that Jesse learned the truth about Jane and that he would take revenge for her. But he did nothing unfortunately.
@@iwann108 Well Jesse loved Jane and she died right beside him, so he probably thought it was his own fault, than to learn after all this time that Walt could have saved and just watched her die it just broke his heart and it makes sense why he stopped fighting
Nevertheless she could have save herself by not being a drug addict in the first place
Highly agree.@@SenseiDenax
Jane death half killed Jesse, hearing the closest person to him talk about how he’s basically happy he watched her die and did nothing. That finished of Jesse for good.
No one: every comment section of any breaking bad scene: this is the moment Walter became heisenburg 😟😣😖😫😠
@George Allen yeah exactly! Why are you here? 😜
This is the Heisenberg where Walt fully became moment
It’s been long gone but I still circle back to some of these scenes and am still awe struck. This series is ICONIC.
This whole episode is just filled with dread and despair. Its not "OH SHIT" moments or massive explosions, just an entire world we had been watching for 59 episodes disintegrating in front of us. A whole series of storytelling crumbling to pieces. I just felt empty watching it for the first time, so I didnt love it initially. But thats exactly whats happening: the show is leaving you with nothing
Walt: Wait.
Jesse: I knew you wouldn't let them kill me Mr. White!
Walt: I watched Jane die.
Jesse: Duuuuude.
1:35 when Walt says “Wait” I thought he was going to turn over a new leaf or whatever, but then he drops a freakin bomb on Jesse, great show
1:28 Jesse's expression. It shows what a phenomenal actor Aaron Paul is.
I think this is a very important scene. Walt’s fatherly (albeit still explorative) relationship with Jesse was always one of his redeeming qualities. Eradicating by the end of the story illustrates how fundamentally he has become a different human
I love how at first walt wanted them to kill jessie the quick painless way and now he accepted they torture him!
how is todd nice and psychotic at the same time.
It's because hes a Sociopath. Sociopath's can be seen as way nicer and innocent because they are able to hide it way better than psychopaths. Psychopaths are more like Tuco and Gus later on.
Learn the difference between psychopath and sociopath.
@@GOTTA_RUN gus wasnt a physcopath but definitely tuco
@@AlumniDaniel Tuco could have been a sociopath because he was raised in a rough criminal environment but Todd is nearly Dahmer level, he is a psychopath who finds murder interesting.
Idt he was trying to be nice, he only spared Jesse so he’d help him make meth and get to see Lydia more by extension
The way Jesse was hiding under Walters car... it really shows how his final attempt on being safe is by hiding from the person who ultimately has the most power over him.
Because he's actually incompetent. There's nothing special about Jesse Pinkman and he had no right to make it as far as he did with Walter. Instead of leaving peacefully he ended up messing things up for everyone. What a moron.
Walt was absolutely despicable here
This was the most cruel thing Walt ever did, hands down, in my opinion.
Jesse was worse, a rat, and it's because of him Hank died. Jesse also threatened to kill him before. Walt was on his right to feel angry
I'm on the side of Walt on this one. Jesse could have just let bygones be bygones and move on with a new identity with the help of the disappearer, with his money intact, but he just had to snitch.
Hank died because of Walter. He called in the Nazis and he began the whole Heisenberg/meth thing. @@nainorotodox
I feel bad for the hell Jesse will go through, but he shouldn’t have betrayed Walt.
season one: GET OFF THE TOILET!
season five: I watched Jane die...
This scene was so powerful, shows walt's anger. He wanted to say something that will destroy jesse and it did
Masterful scene, and masterful show. Masterful acting, masterful writing, masterful cinematography...definitely the best TV show ever made.
I'd give anything to watch this show for the first time again. This scene was an absolute gut punch, Walter shattered Jesse's soul in just a few sentences.
Aaron paul is such a great actor. Word is that at 2:19 he relaxed his muscles so well that his rectum lost tension and he made big poop and it took the set staff 3 days to clean it all up.
What the hell
God tier comment
Lmao what
Out of all the meme comments on breaking bad videos this might be the best EXTREMELY UNDERATED
How Jesse managed to survive BB is still beyoooond me 🤣🤣🤣
walt protecting him constantly
@RUclips Sharts He wasn't in this scene. However, Jesse's ability to cook because of Walt was the only thing that kept him alive
@@SeinsmelledWalt wanted him dead here. It was Todd who saved him here tbf
Walt should've dropped Jesse ages ago. He really didn't need him.
Walt should've dropped Jesse ages ago. He really didn't need him.
I loved the part where Walt said “did I mention? I was the breaking bad” so sad bro
Walt was furious that Jesse stabbed him in the back even though he had saved his life multiple times and had his back. When also Hank died, his anger peaked...
Después de la muerte de Gus recuerdo que me preguntaba quién sería el nuevo villano en la última temporada, por un momento llegué a creer que eran los neo-nazis pero cuando ví esta escena me di cuenta de que el verdadero villano todo el tiempo fue Walter...
Damn. The way Jesse thinks Walter is about to save him just for him to drop the bombshell on him. Brutal. Walter is truly an evil mastermind by the end of S5
that faint moment at 0:24 where jesse takes in everything, the birds, the sky, thought he was really going to die.
He wanted Jesse to feel the pain he was going through after the murder of Hank.
“I put you in that wheelchair. You sick fuck!”
He didn't watch her die, he killed her. She wouldn't have choked if he didn't break into Jesse's house and shake their bodies while they slept on the side
Watching breaking bad is unique because in the beginning Walt is the protagonist but slowly turns into the antagonist and every episode it slowly leads you to see what a monster Walter white has real become
And finally becomes the Protagonist again in the final episode. Truly Brilliant writing.
He was always the protagonist, a protagonist doesn’t have to be a good person just the main character.
Walter White is the protagonist and Heisenberg is the antagonist
Villain =/= Antagonist tho
The Antagonist is the character who is against the motives and actions of the protagonist, you can have a Villain Protagonist and a Heroic Antagonist
In the case of Breaking Bad, Walt is the Villain Protagonist and Hank was the Heroic Antagonist.
All the world's ills will be resolved once people understand that protagonist does not mean hero/morally good character and antagonist does not mean villain/morally bad character. So never, basically
This is the exact moment the tarantula becomes the pizza.
lmao
overused
I like that little editing bit where the bad guy closes the car door before dragging Jesse out.
Presumably, he either did that to trick Jesse into thinking they were looking inside the car and not under it, or he genuinely checked the car first before someone indicated he was actually under.
breaking bad is the best tv show i've seen.
Yeah me too 👌
Check out True Detective S1 it’s close
Me too
It's a curse and a blessing.
A side effect of being a mixture of cleverness and arrogance.
This is one of the greatest performances to ever come out of an actor in the history of tv and film
1:14 Look at Jesse giving Walt a look like, "please.....help me"
Is he serious? After the shit he just pulled?
I mean Jesse was giving Walt a reasonable loss. Get arrested, his family lives peacefully, Hank lives, nobody dies.
Walt wanted to see Jesse suffer and die.
I think he said quietly, "Come on, man." Like, "Come on, man, please don't do this."
Bryan's acting here is phenominal, the many emotions he shows at once and the facial expressions are just incredible. Bravo Bryan! Bravo Vince!
"What kind of man speaks to the DEA Jesse? No man"
I love how Jesse, after he looks back from the sky, is just looking at Walt in disbelief. It's as incredible to him as it is to us that he's looking at the same man who blackmailed him back then.
It just shocked him that walt would hand him off to the buzzards like that
Found it laughable that Jesse believed Walt would save him despite ordering his death not 1 minute ago.
I also love the fact that there's a shot where he looks at the sky and sees two birds flying together. If it hadn't been for Walt allowing Jane to die, those two birds, free and flying high, could be Jesse and Jane.
This was peak Heisenberg.
0:25 it always breaks me how Jesse accepts his fate and looks to the sky. I don’t know just something about it just makes me feel bad
Compare that to when Tuco put a gun to the back of his head and screamed "OH GOD NO I DONT WANNA DIE!!!" its very poweful
@@johnrockyryan character development, for the worst
That admission had to be the most brutal heart wrenching thing to hear in the entire series. You know that Jessie didn't have a single fiber in his being that cared about Walt after that. It just cut him to the bone in the worst way imaginable
This was more than a television show, it was an experience, and an incredible one at that. I couldn’t stop rewatching this show if I wanted to. There is more raw emotion, truly brilliant acting, and deep, enriching backstory in this scene alone than most shows have in their entire series. We love you Vince Gilligan and thank you for this amazing experience. ❤️
This is, in my humble opinion, the most cruel and evil moment I have ever seen in any tv series ever. All of Theon Greyjoys torture pales in comparison to what Walter White did to Jesse. And the way Cranston and Paul play it just makes it that much more painful. A true masterclass in acting/ writing.
"I could have saved her but I didn't"
At that moment it was like something Gus would say
The amount of heartbreak jesse took was too intense
Interesting thing to note here 2:33 is the first two letters of the cars license plate are NZ, a common acronym for New Zealand, Where Jane and Jesse were planning to start a new life. Above the "NZ" in the corner is a design that looks very similar to the Southern Cross, which is a symbol of New Zealand. The colors are warm and inviting as well so Its a fleeting reminder of a happy future that Jesse was robbed of by Walt.
I can't believe people would watch this scene and still be on Walt's side. Dude's a fcking monster
Maybe if jesse kept listening to walt everything would end different
1:57 when you were there
at that episode when he saw jane in the bed, and he just didnt do anything, i think season 2-3 i forgot the exact ep
man the amount of people trying to justify walt is insane
@silver3981 they fr trying to say jesse is in the wrong and Walt’s in the right
Speak into the mic bish
Jesse looking up to the sky as he’s about to die is an underrated moment. Trying to find some semblance of piece before the darkness