Breaking Bad Season 5: Episode 11: Jesse Pinkman discovers the truth HD CLIP
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- Опубліковано 10 бер 2021
- What’s happening in this Breaking Bad clip?
Jesse (Aaron Paul) breaks into Saul's (Bob Odenkirk from Nebraska) office, preventing the security from entering. He physically attacks him, holding him at gunpoint and demanding to know about his role in Brock's poisoning. Saul admits to his involvement in the plot, but insists he had no idea what Walt's (Bryan Cranston from Godzilla and Total Recall) intentions were. As Jesse leaves, Saul calls Walt.
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What’s the TV show Breaking Bad about?
Walter White (Bryan Cranston from Godzilla and Total Recall), a chemistry teacher, is diagnosed with lung cancer. He decides to make and sell methamphetamine to repay his medical debts and secure his family’s future.
Season 5 of Breaking Bad:
With Gustavo (Giancarlo Esposito) dead, Walter (Bryan Cranston from Godzilla and Total Recall) and Jesse (Aaron Paul) decide to start their own drug empire. They team up with Mike (Jonathan Banks), Gus' former henchman. They also team up with Lydia (Laura Fraiser) and Todd (Jesse Plemons).
Hank (Dean Norris), now head of the DEA, gets involved in the Gus Fring case and tightens his grip on Mike, who will be forced to leave the operation. Jesse quickly does the same. Walter helps Mike to organize his escape but mortally wounds him in a fit of rage. Later, he makes Todd his new assistant.
Thereafter, Walter knows an uninterrupted success and accumulates enormous amounts of money. One day, Skyler (Anna Gunn) shows him the impressive pile of money, explaining that she can no longer launder it and begging him to stop. Soon after, Walter decides to leave the business for good.
Everything seems to be back to normal when Hank discovers that Walter is Heisenberg. Heisenberg buries his money in the desert and convinces Jesse to leave town, but Jesse agrees to surrender to Hank and his partner Steve (Steven Michael Quezada). Hank, Steve and Jesse manage to capture Walter in the desert. Walter, thinking that Jesse would be alone, hired Todd's uncle Jack (Michael Bowen) and his men to come and execute him, but tries to back out when he sees Hank with him, however Jack ignores this and a shootout ensues. Jesse is captured, Steve is shot, Hank is wounded, then coldly killed by Jack despite Walter's pleas. The mobsters find the hidden money and seize the quasi-totality, Todd insisting to leave him a small part of it. Walter then decides to flee with his family, but Skyler and Walter Jr. (RJ Mitte), terrorized, refuse to follow him.
Walter leaves to live in reclusion in New Hampshire, but his cancer relapses. Jesse is reduced to a slave by Todd, and after an escape attempt, Todd coldly shoots Andrea, Jesse's girlfriend. Later, Walter takes the risk to contact his son in order to give him money, but this one refuses and declares that he would prefer him dead. Desperate, Walter is about to turn himself in before he stumbles upon a television interview with his former partners, who downplay his contribution to the creation of their company. Overcome with resentment, he decides to act. He entrusts, under threat, the 10 million dollars which remain to him to his former associates, by making them promise that they will give them to Walter Jr. at his majority. He then says goodbye to Skyler and confesses to her that he did all that to feel alive and not for his family as he had always affirmed it. He manages to free Jesse and to kill Jack, Todd and their men, but is mortally wounded. He dies in a meth lab on his 52nd birthday, two years to the day after the events of the first episode.
Credits: © 2019 Sony Pictures Television Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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#crime #breakingbad #tvshow #aaronpaul #bobodenkirk #walterwhite #bryancranston #season5 #lastseason #gun #office #threat #truth - Розваги
"I didn't want any of this" feels a lot more genuine after better call saul.
to be completely fair he did try to break relations with Walt after he poisoned Brock
Ngl, this added a LOT to his arc in Better Call Saul
Makes sense that he'd try to kill an old lady to save his ass if he already did the same and poisoned a kid lmao
LIES if saul would’ve listened to mike in that one better call saul scene about not starting any business ties with walter, everything would’ve been fine. he reaped what he sowed.
@@mikec6935he didn’t want it to go that far though. From Saul’s perspective, he thought he’d be able to set Walter and maybe Jesse up with Gus, have him cook for a million per month and have an easy source of revenue that way until the cancer got him. That’s what everyone thought until they realised that Walt was a time bomb
He tried and tried to go legit but nothing seemed to work out, he had to break bad
I like how he still called Walt Mr. White while calling him an asshole 😂
I just always viewed that as a force of habit. People in general typically still refer to their old teachers as Mr. and Ms.
Makes it much more potent when he calls him Walt 2 episodes later
Till the very end he called him Mr White.. closest thing to calling him Dad
😂🤣😂😂😂😅😅😂😂😂😅😅
I’m friends with my old drama teacher and I still call her Mrs. LastName after almost 15 years lol.
It's funny to imagine that Saul at first thought that Jesse went berserk because he stole his dope
hi
@@tupapaenpelotas and just WHO THE HELL DO YOU THINK YOU ARE!?
I had that thought too.
For a moment Saul thought he was going to die over a bag of weed.
Nah, he probably knew exactly why he was so pissed but wanted to feign ignorance and was hoping Jesse would buy it. Classic Saul move.
dabozk. SHUT UP
Anna Gunn and Bryan Cranston’s ability to make any scene awkward is incredible.
the portrayal of a failed relationship with zero chemistry left is so realistic
Wow
@@KrikZ32 Zero chemistry 😂 ironic.
dog
@@KrikZ32 dude it was all because of chemistry.
Walter White zooms in with his car, throws himself out of it, pauses at the door, takes a deep breath and finally starts his presentation of fictional stuff. I love this showing of the whole process.
Like Sky couldn’t hear the car peel in right outside too. She knows at this point everything Walt says he’s lying through his teeth
You can literally see him exhale, so good!
And the way Walter fakingly waits for Skyler's acknowledgement, but deep down doesn't even bother...
@@corndogrequiem1728 you get so caught up watching the show. These small little segments really help you appreciate the cinematography and the acting. That blast of air from Walt as he composes himself at the door, brilliant. I wonder if it was a happy coincidence or if that was actually by design.
It feels like being on wiet and you have to interact with someone sober. haha
Can we take a moment to appreciate Bob Odenkirk’s acting in this scene? I know Aaron steals the show but Bob is incredible too.
That's why he has his own show now
@@unowen7591 Federer is GOAT
Huell in this scene is v good as well
Damn straight homie
EY MAN YOU CANT GO IN DERE
0:52 Aaron’s delivery of “Mr White!” here is so bloody good. He’s pissed because he’s realised that it was Walt who poisoned Brock, but its when he says it out loud that it fully sinks in. It’s rage and grief all in one.
The dude is amazingly skilled
He got mad skills Yo
And even better at 1:15 when he finally got confirmation for 100% that this is not his paranoia but he was right all along.
Why is he even so whiny about it, the dude did not die
he still calls walt mr white even though hes about to go kill him 🤣🤣🤣
the way they juxtaposed this scene is genius. Skylar serving an honest customer to Walt walking in and lying to her when she blatantly can tell.
I didn't even catch that. That's actually a brilliant take. Other people thought she was trying to give away money out of guilt or to get rid of micro doses since she couldn't launder it all now or that she was distracted from worry. I think what you're saying is the most logical.
I dont think it takes s genius to set that up. Much less to figure it out.
"Thank you for your honesty"
"Honey the soda machine isnt.....latching"
Vrabo Bince
@@nood1le lol what’re you on about?
Jesse: HE POISONED BROCK!
Hank: Jesus Christ, Jesse, it’s a BMineral.
😂😂😂😂😂
Hahah good one!
Stolen...but I’ll let it go since I came down here to do the same
Lmao man good joke
@@someuselessfreshmen3516 it’s also stolen...
Walt's greatest weapon against Jesse was making him doubt his instincts.
I his greatest weapon was Jesse's loyalty. Had Jesse not been loyal Gus would've had him killed super early. But you could say our opinions go hand in hand
@@TheAmazingCrazyguy75 I'd argue, exactly as Mike did, that Jesse's weakness was loyalty to the wrong guy.
This is why I say Walt's greatest weapon is doubt.
Every time Jesse gets a good idea or begins to realize how he is being manipulated, Walt is there to convince him that these thoughts are wrong.
I agree, our opinions go hand in hand though.
@@We_Are_Borg_478 If Jesse had not been loyal to Walt, he would've died in season 3. Walt saved him. Gus had nothing but respect and admiration for Walt until he did. People's hate boner for Walt gets in the way of seeing that the only reason Walt ever needed Jesse is because he sacrificed his relationship with Gus to save him.
@@TheStraightestWhitest
The "Boner" for Walt you describe could not be further from the truth.
From episode 1 of season 1, Walt blackmailed Jesse with prison if he refused to comply with Walt.
From the first 5 minutes of the show, Jesse is under Walt's thumb.
Walt put Jesse in the danger that you seem to think Walt saved him from.
You can't force somebody into a meth ring and then claim to be a good guy because you murdered two shit for brains street dealers.
@@We_Are_Borg_478 Walt didn't force anybody. Jesse was already cooking and dealing meth, and he's a grown man who makes his own choices. Such a juvenile mindset you've got, blaming one for the actions of another.
"Jesse you gotta believe me! I DIDN'T WANT ANY OF THIS!"
That's not Saul Goodman talking, it's Jimmy McGill.
Well yeah, sometimes you just gotta cut the crap and be yourself.
Well cause Saul Not Good anymore Man.
This was his first time dropping the Saul act since the end of BCS. It took an entire beating to knock him back down into reality. In a way this is Saul’s punishment. All the scheming and people he’s hurt both in BB and BCS is finally coming down on him
"It wasn't me it was Ignacio!"
Like he gives a fuck about anyone than himself
can we appreciate that Aaron Pauls was pretty much an unknown actor before Breaking bad... his acting through the WHOLE Breaking bad series was so insane...
Breaking bad is his first time acting
@@awesomeme9093 The first time I saw Aaron Paul, was in a Korn Music video named "Thoughtless". Before I even knew what breaking bad was. Quite a few years before breaking bad, I believe the music video came out in 2002.
He did that bubblegum commercial in the 90s that was played every commercial break.
His acting in the “I take responsibility“ video was superb!
@@awesomeme9093 No I know he appeared on an episode of criminal minds before Breaking Bad
Aaron won an Emmy for this scene. Absolutely deserved.
@@DusterBuglas
Scenes are sent to awards committees for nomination consideration. Do you actually think they have the time to watch every show and just decide on their own who deserves what?
ExpertPenguin for the award for best show they kind of have to watch the whole show.
was up against Peter Dinklage's Tyrion trial scene as well.
stiff competition, phenomenal performances both of them.
@@DusterBuglas wym you dont win emmys for scenes? the whole show is made from scenes like this, thats how you can rate an actor, thats why the acting is award winning, because of scenes like this.
@@orbangyozo7283 it is slightly misleading to say he won the emmy for this scene, as it isn't specifically this scene he won it for, he won it for his overall performance that season
love skylar’s reaction in this scene. she’s so done with walt’s bullshit, she knows he’s lying before he even opens his mouth.
@@kalls2k907 Lol what an oddly singular thing to ride on for an entire character arc...I mean you could just as easily say that if Walt had the sense to see that as simply as a wife taking an opportunity to ensure the father of her children gets treatment when they had no other foreseeable options, he wouldn't have let his pride and ego get stepped on in the first place.
@@kalls2k907 i’m not skylar’s biggest fan or anything; she had her fair share of flaws. still, of all the the things you could have attacked her for, that’s what you came up with? how is accepting money from literal billionaires in order to pay for medical treatment that they clearly could not afford not an entirely reasonable decision? at the very least. the safety of Walt’s family is 1000x more important than his “pride”. his ego was the very thing that killed him at the end of the day, not the cancer. i think you may have missed the point of the show...
@@kalls2k907 Pretty ironic to refer to me as a layman when you don't even seem to be able to understand the issue I took with your comment. I never said I couldn't understand why Walt felt that way, I understand that perfectly fine. Only difference is you don't seem to see that as a character flaw of Walt's. More pointedly, you were suggesting Skyler setting up the offer from Elliott played a key role in his transformation, purely in the sense that she wronged his ego and therefore should never be sided with.
A) she wasn't doing anything malicious, she was doing it because she wanted any chance to keep Walt in their life, and B) it's just one piece of many in the set of circumstances that sent Walt on his path, and you could just as easily blame any of other pieces.
For example, you could just as easily take the close-minded opinion that Hank is too arrogant, and because of his arrogance he just had to gather everyone to watch the news report of his recent meth bust at Walt's birthday party, giving Walt the idea to start cooking meth. It's asinine. Why blame the people involved in any of these circumstances over Walt? The only thing that remains constant throughout them is how Walt decides to respond. And claiming that Walt's ego is anyone's problem but his own is a little ridiculous. As is the idea that his pride should have been minded more carefully by Skyler if she aimed to avoid the "obvious" consequences, Walt becoming a meth kingpin with a double-digit murder count.
What I love is that Walts lies became so painfully transparent by the end, like the gasoline one.
@@alexpollock6932 “Dad! Just tell the truth!”
The “AND ALL FOR THAT ASSHOLE MR. WHITEEEE” line always kills me. Jesse’s tone is so funny man i can’t help it
Best part is he's enraged that Walt murdered Brock but his respect for Walt is so strong that Jesse still calls him "Mr. White" even as he appears ready to kill everyone over it
@@kevinyin2663 he didn't murder Brock
This was Saul and Jesse's last scene together.
Saul and Jesse were def a duo I wanted to see more of.
@@kevinyin2663 i think the only reason jesse calls him mr. white is because thats what he would've called him when he was a student. i dont think jesse has any respect left for walt at this point lol
I was hearing Todd from bojack horseman lol
I love how Francesca looks mildly annoyed despite the fact an emotionally damaged man just beat up her boss and is waving a gun around
Yeah.
she's probably seen worse working for saul
Meanwhile Huell looks like he’s scared for his life and Saul’s.
Francesca hated Saul by this point so she probably didn't care lol
Occupational hazard
Saul/Jimmy’s character managed to still be funny in a time of crisis. He yells “code red!!!” as if he knew a situation like this was gonna happen. Idk I just find this funny.
Not intended to be comedic at all...look at who he deals with regularly. Of course he has a code red for his body guards
His wittiness and big mouth saved himself multiple times 😂 while also causing himself more trouble
Knew*
@@mattkeller5913 I actually think it was intended to be funny, it's the kinda humour we saw the entire show.
@@estebancastaneda8908 yeah maybe you are right. It's subtle but looking back on this comment months later I think it was comedic relief in a very serious dark situation.
Walt had lied so many times Skylar stopped caring to the point where he became a terrible liar and whatever he said she was just going to be like "okay".
Kind of like a certain Kim Wexler
@@TrueRetroflection oh shit nice catch!!!
+retroflection really not excited to see how jimmy will destroy that relationship :/ i love Kim
@@TrueRetroflection the difference with Kim is that she isn't taking his lies because of trauma, she's in with him head-on and doesn't mind him being a crook, she only let him go with the lalo stuff because she knows he was at a crossroads and couldn't refuse lalo or mike, given that she heard the phone call, and she certainly knew he had severe ptsd from the ambush so she let him deal with it his way
@@TrueRetroflection I was just thinking the same thing.
After watching his development in BCS, this scene honestly feels like the climax of Saul's entire character.
This was the moment Saul climaxed
@@TechnologicallyTechnical Bravo Vince
@@TechnologicallyTechnical
You made me spill my water hahaha
@@TechnologicallyTechnical"Kim, take your shoes of Kim, I'm sucking your toes right now Kim."
2:46 I'm amazed at how Walt is both the best liar in the world and the worst liar in the world at the same time.
And he basically, on a subconscious level, placed that book on the toilet 'cause he wanted to get caught, his lies were so good. (And he wanted his ego stroked)
@@CollaredDom it's not that deep he forgot the fucking book
He's the best liar just not in front of Skylar
@@CollaredDom i too used to have that theory but since it wasn't confirmed by anyone in any of their interviews i dropped it
@@CollaredDom Lol no.
I feel this is only one of two times where we see Jimmy McGill in the show. The other being when he leaves in the penultimate episode. Just Jimmy being real, no lies, no showmanship, no scamming
It must have happened more than these two times. For example when Walter and Jesse bring him to the desert and he thinks he's going to die.
Also when talking to Brock he’s genuinely kind
@@slimDaTa Having watched season 6 of Better Call Saul, yeah, that was definitely Jimmy.
I love how you can tell Skyler knows something is up. She's not *stupid*. She just says "Great." because she knows there is nothing she can do to try and get Walt to admit why he's there. He's a pathological liar by this point.
F her
@@rashedalmandoos3371 she's not my type tbh but you go on ahead
@@largenstonesea 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Yea skylar is actually really smart. She knows what she’s doing most of the time
@@etherious5957 she’s also extremely possessive
Wild to think that at the time, I thought this was the most intense scene Saul had.
watch BCS
@@rosarps1844 during the airing of breaking bad not during the airing of better call saul
@@rosarps1844 why do you think he mentioned “at the time?”
@@El.Nigga.readings hard for some people
1:39 Huel's genuine concern for Saul makes more sense now that we know about Saul going to absolutely insane lengths to keep him out of prison.
How could you hold a straight face typing this?
@@bryanp5843 I don't get it.
You’re so right tho
And then Saul’s “what do I pay you for?” shows how Saul became almost a different person altogether
Saul probably sure wished he had stayed with Davis & Main during this scene
Fr or just working with the elderly
Or the mailroom at hhm
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
He probably wished he still had that cocobolo desk at that moment, too.
After he finished his call to Walt Howard called him to ask him about the job offer
I felt bad for Saul. I knew he did nothing wrong by his expressions
@Astra lmao
You feel bad for yourself wooow
😂😂
Homie did not have what you would call...an A1 day.
He helped Walt poison a child….
Bob Odenkirk seriously sells the genuine distress of Jimmy getting the shit kicked out of him, especially with that "Stop!". All it takes is one hit for him to pop out of the Saul character. He's absolutely miserable here, legit has no idea what he did wrong, to the point he was probably fucking crying. He's not a bigshot criminal, he's just another dude involved with Heisenberg at the mercy of a confused, angry, and heavily manipulated young man.
That’s what a narcissist do to the people around. Period.
Jimmy’s biggest weakness is that he underestimates those close to him. He never thought his life would go down even further (because he’s always down) by meeting with a cancer patient and a methhead.
@@fatimaWr2 what
Watch BCS.
He was crying
Nobody:
Huel: Hey, man, you can’t go in there /-_-\
I'm watching this show in clips so I've only heard Huell speak in a soft voice, to just suddenly hear him yell caught me off guard and made my day.
Hahaha it's like Pattrick
🤣
@@JohnPerry27 why not watch the show normally ?
@@ceoofbased6850 The current generation has the attention span of a goldfish.
The look on Heul's face watching all this speaks depths.
He had no idea that a child would be poisoned when he lifted the cigarette.
I always just figured Huell thought he was legit saving Jesse. Like, that cigarette was poisoned against HIM, and Huell was sparing Jesse, and he thought he did a heroic thing.
@@ZenMonkeyGod Huell is a bonified hero after all
@@altafkalam2716 - Saul even admitted that whe he agreed with Walt to have that cigarette lifted off Jesse, that he never knew that boy would end up in the hospital, and with complete outrage and disgust pouring our of him, he tried to end his partnership with Walt, who then intimidated him into staying.
That right there to me said a lot about Saul's character, his outrage and disgust over what happened to that child, that even though he was a slimy weasel, he wasn't completely heartless, either.
A key difference between Saul and Walter is that Saul says “you have to believe me” when he’s actually telling the truth, Walter only says it when he just told a lie
Saul never lies. Misleads, yes. Leaves out important details, yes. Makes up entire stories, yes. But he never lies.
1:21 this line hits so much harder after you're caught up on Better Call Saul :(
Don't want any of this 😢
bro i swear..and the fact that the series is coming to an end man, my life is going to be so empty
Walt destroyed everything.
@@chillbest14 good, everything kinda deserved to be destroyed.
@@ididntmeantoshootthatvietn5012 mike and saul didn't deserve the end they got tho
I always felt kind of bad for Saul here. He really did have no idea that he was just as much of a pawn as Jesse.
He actually, had the idea, but was to late when he realizado
lol, 1:54 Skylar is trying to get rid of the excess money.
👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾 Brilliant catch!! A minute detail that is pretty important to their (Skylar and Walt) arc - successfully washing Walt's drug money.
Catches like these really make me appreciate the show moreso!
What? No. It’s because she’s obviously not paying attention because she’s worried about walt
wait who is SkylAr?
@@jo-jr2dv maybe, it could be either or, when Walt came in it didn’t seem like he was the only thing on her mind. It could also be she just has so much money she doesn’t really pay attention to counting change because the job isn’t for money at all
I think, like many moments similar to this, the writers are leaving it vague enough for it be left up to the viewer to decide. She could be trying to get rid of excess money but she could genuinely be distracted by everything thats happened to her and the family. Fecking brilliant writing and acting, this show man🤯
If only Jesse took that ride and never looked back at this Hank, Gomey, Walter and Andrea would still be alive
Well not walter he has a cancer
It’s so sad... I just think about how when he was locked up in the whole at Todd’s place, Jesse would have for sure thought this and regretted his choice to not get in the car immensely... he probably stirred a lot with self hatred
I mean yeah, but ultimately it's all Walt's fault
@@paulbeen459 not everything is Walter´s fault, for example Walter got in trouble with Gus because Jesse was going to try and kill the people who killed Andrea´s little brother but saved his life, and Jesse got involved with Andrea in the first place because he was interested in selling drugs to ex-addicts with Badger and Skinny Pete. Nothing can be traced back to anyone really, and that´s what makes this series so good: you understand the actions (both good and bad) each character takes
@@sengiko literally every moment in the show is walts fault because he could’ve taken the job at gray matter and avoided all of it
Just think of this scene from the perspective of Saul. Jesse bursts in and pulls a gun on him, and starts talking about how you stole something from him. You assume he's in a junkie rage and angry about you taking his drugs, but then he's like "no, the cigarettes." For a second there Saul would've thought that Jesse was completely out of his mind and was gonna kill him because of some cigies.
And he never gets over it and wants Jesse dead over a misunderstanding. So he's not much better.
@@Black.Sabbath Now, to be fair, Saul *kinda* got his ass whooped on by Jesse for a hot second there, so...
Not to mention, pulling a gun on a person and going on weird rants while they're smacking you around isn't the way to win long-term friends.
@@GoodAvatar I mean, neither is helping a dude poison kids, and before you give me the whole "He didn't know", he continued to dickride and help Walt after this and was like the only character not to turn on Walt.
1:00 what makes this scene genuinely heartbreaking is that, at the end of jesse saying “YOU HELPED HIM” you see suddenly his rage fueled face goes straight into the despair, confusion and deepest strain of sadness due to being manipulated too much by everyone, he just can’t trust anyone anymore, he’s mentally traumatized and tired from all of the manipulations, this scene is genuinely sad and aaron deserved that emmy well for this.
Crazy acting. Like insanely good.
And Aaron Paul never even took acting classes. That's what is called a natural talent.
@@cybercriminal3110 He was talking about Walt's performance for Skylar clearly.
@@cybercriminal3110 I was just making a joke, since clearly he wasn't talking about that
Another scene where he follows up with amazing acting is with attempting to burn down the house. It was so intense, and when he screams “he can’t keep getting away with it!!”
walt is so bad at lying ... makes me cringe every time .. lol
That's why he is a great actor
That’s the thing tho. He’s not a bad liar at all, only when it comes to skyler. He straight lied through his teeth to Jesse about Brock and we all believed everything he said
@@ianromero6363 well.. he is really bad at lying when it comes to skyler
@Orellia Chris ok TV show detective, great job. Nothing gets past you.
He's a very good liar for most of the show. But by this point Skylar knew that he was lying and Walt knew that she knew. So he didn't bother to come up with a good lie and Skylar didn't bother to call him out.
This is the moment when Saul became The Nobody.
This is the moment Saul Goodman became Gene Takovic
I think it’s more of him turning back into Jimmy McGill
@johan 11 lol Huell is sooo FIRED 😂😭
I'm gonna f you up
The funniest thing about this is Saul actually thought Jesse was that pissed about Huell taking his weed.
"Jesse, you gotta believe me! I didn't want any of this!!!"
I don't think Saul is just talking about Brock being poisoned. He's not even just talking about the events of Breaking Bad. He's talking about everything that happened that brought him to this point. The skater scam gone wrong. The chicago sunroof. All of it.
He didn't want any of this.
I love how much more depth Better Call Saul gives the Saul Goodman character. I'm hoping they revisit how he feels immediately after this scene in BCS given everything that's happened to him.
Poor jimmy. He got pushed to this position
Your interpretation is wrong.
Those events didn't exist yet
@@liamcannon9617 how not? chicago sunroof happened long before he was a lawyer
Aaron's acting makes me think that it's impossible to do things that he does, without actually feeling what Jessie feels. Just look at the thumbnail and realize he's not actually mad. That's amazing.
He is actually mad, though--that's the essence of acting. It's not putting on a set of facial expressions and tone of voice and movement that indicate an emotion; it's finding a way to channel and experience that emotion for a scene, in the moment...and the rest follows.
"I didn't want any of this!" hits WAY differently now.
Yeah
1:21 Having finished the latest episode of Better Call Saul! I can say that this line really summarized the state that Jimmy/Saul was stuck in!
What do you mean?
@@MegaSpideymanhe didn't want any of this!
0:02 “HEUYMANYUOCAINTGOENNDTHERRE”
Why am I even watching BrBa clips, I watched the whole series just yesterday. Damn that blue meth, it's addictive.
I automatically read BrBa with elements' full names
@@saulgoodmanKAZAKH you're goddamn right
have u seen better call saul
@@forgetful9845 nope. It is supposed to be a prequel, but the actors are much older in it, and it ruins the immersion for me.
@@darkprinceofdorne that's a really stupid reason. they don't look THAT much older, and once you've watched a few episodes you stop noticing anyway.
I love how the receptionist lady just kind of puts her hands up casually when he tells them to back up. Like she's used to crap like this and it isn't the first time someone's broken into sauls office and held them all at gunpoint. She's thiiiiis close to rolling her eyes.
Also when Walt broke into sauls office and he goes heisenberg on her but she doesn't move an inch when he threatens her
Her name is Fransecsa
@@sinanengin5756 ohhhh WHO CAREEEEEEES
@@saintjames5816 I care
@@jakecastro3485 I don't care you care
Fun fact, this scene was 100% improv and Aaron Paul really did beat the piss out of Saul and pointed a real gun at his head. Now that's dedication!
Bravo Vince
I know this is just fans joking about breaking bad's BTS with real life, but still, Bravo Vince.
Vravo Bince
ovarb ecniv
"i didn't want any of this" hits really different after watch BCS
0:48 that yelling is epic
uOT?
Imagine: If Walt hadn't bothered telling Skyler such a lame and obvious lie, he would have reached the house at the same time as Hank.
True or if he didn’t Store the gun in the carwash soda machine as well he would of been there same time as Hank too. i just find it off and don’t understand why he didn’t just put his gun in the trunk Of his car like Mike. It would of less been easier to get to Also. Like it doesn’t Make sense even to him to store a gun in the workplace where your wife and kid is at lol
It’s one of his “I’d rather pick up the barrel sideways than simply roll it” moments
Imagine if Jesse had said: You did it. You changed those numbers, one year after Carta magna. As if Chuck could make such a mistake
Man, just imagine is face, it would be a hell of a scene.
Best comment ever 😂😂
You got that idiot at the copy shop to lie for you
Magna Carta*
The scene that won Aaron Paul his final Emmy. Breathtaking performance. Bob Odenkirk is amazing, too.
Emmys are not given out based on a single scene, it's usually an entire season. Aaron Paul won for seasons 3, 4 and 5.
@@distantraveller9876 I thought they're given out based on an episode of a TV season (or half-season in this case)?
@@Glatier yes, Axel Is incorrect
I wish he got nominated for El Camino!
Jesse’s face when Saul admits it. Jesse knew Walt had been manipulative towards him the entire time, but here it is: actual, concrete proof, confirmation of his worst fear.
1:52 This whole scene is just amazing, first it's shown a man that gets his change wrong and is honest with Skylar and she is sorta trying to get rid of the excess money. Then Walter White comes into a rush and slows down in the door, entering there pretending to be calm and says something completely random to her and she clearly doesn't believe that this is the reason for him to come by, but she just ignores him.
That scene broke my heart. THE LATCH WASNT LATCHING! Its so awful.
It BROCK my heart too
But the good thing is its still Catching though. Its a good sign.
The exact moment that the vending machine became Heisenberg.
@@heckyeah8292 *Bminerald your heart.
You'd be upset if the latch on your METH vending machine was broke too.
He beat the Jimmy McGill out of him. He said "STOP!" in the exact same tone he said "You make me happy".
This is the exact scene Walter White becomes Latchenberg.
0:09 This shot would have been perfect if Jimmy bumped his head on a table like Chuck and Howard.
Satisfying after the Howard situation.
Haha. I had to go watch all scenes from BrBa where Saul gets beaten up to feel some justice for Howard
In the latest episode, Kim divorces Jimmy cause she's the one who was at fault because she hid the fact that lalo was alive.
When Saul is in danger, Jimmy comes back
2:12 The attention to detail here with Walt having to calm down
van der linde steals from u
Skylar at the carwash is having the normal life she should've been living, making the innocent mistakes she should've been making, then, there comes Walt in his expensive car he bought with drug money, bringing extraordinarily big mistakes with him.
I wish we could see more criminal skyler
There's a good chance she tried to get rid of the money on purpose.
Yeah, except they wouldn't even own a carwash if not for the drug money.
@@exu7325 That's not the point. The point is that she and the whole family would be living a normal life if Walt swallowed his pride and took Eliot's money to pay for his treatment. If he asked nicely he may have given a nice job to Skyler to care of the family.
Walters drug money bought the carwash and funded her lifestyle. She's not some innocent by stander up until season 4 she was complicit in his line of work
1:20 hits different if you've seen Better Call Saul
Why ? did he really didnt want this or was he a bad guy
@@saavanelias8059 just watch the show and find out
@@saavanelias8059 bruh he only wanted to become a lawyer, not just some replaceable henchmen for heisenberg
That's why I love BCS so much. Evey line from Breaking Bad gets a more nuanced depth to it.
@ Right? I'm positive the writers combed over scenes from BB time and time again, in order to write the next scenes for BCS.
As of now, watching jesse beat up saul make me happy.
After BCS 6x07, I feel satisfied that Jesse beats up Saul like a mad dog.
Its so sad when Saul says he didnt want any of this. After BCS last season we get why
Why?
He started working for the salamanca cartel against his will and ended up in the middle of a war between the cartel and Gus Fring
The music in this scene is so well done. The way it switches from the droning sounds to the ominous drum beat right when Jesse yells at 0:41 is so subtly brilliant.
2:15 This little bit makes me lmfao
We didn't see Saul in this scene, we saw Jimmy.
Slippin' Jimmy
0:42 0:49 1:04 There's not a way to say that more passionately. Aaron Paul is such an excellent actor. His screams and "serious" moments are invaluable
"Code Red!!!" 0:13
When Jesse pulled a gun on Walt, he lied & called his bluff.
When Jesse pulls a gun on Saul, he folds instantly.
Jimmy McGill was still down there. He kept up the lie against Lalo - so somewhere he knew what happened to Jesse is wrong.
"I didn't want any of this" That wasn't Saul Goodman speaking, that was Jimmy for possibly the only time in the series.
I love that saul thought jesse was pointing a gun at him because he had huell take his weed lol
Considering people have been shot for less I don’t blame him lol
“Biznatch”
Season 5 of Breaking Bad is unforgettable, best tv show I have ever seen in my whole life
are you kidding me dude Frasier is better than this crap
@@chrisdawson1776 🤣🤣
@@chrisdawson1776 what the fuck
@@chrisdawson1776 Bad bait.
This is Howard beating up Jimmy through Jesse
Jesus how many times has Saul been close to death? With the final season ending, I think his luck is running out
2:35
right then and there. You can see it on her face, she knows Walt's lying the second he says things are fine. She's just far too exhausted from the years of this routine from him to care. Great acting.
jesse is lucky huell was happy enough to not release even 0.01% of his power.
One thing Saul Goodman is great at is talking himself out of a fucked up situation
Random fact: This is the 57th episode of Breaking Bad. The midseason finale of Better Call Saul is also its 57th episode. How far we've come.
Bro after watching BCS makes the line “I never wanted any of this!!” 1000x more tragic. Jimmy literally didn’t want any of this for his life and he has to suffer the consequences of other people who manipulated him. When I watched this before BCS was out, I felt a little bad for Saul but overall I thought it was deserved but now? This just makes me sad
I mean I don't think Jimmy is a complete victim. He was still scamming people and what not. And Chuck was right that he has a very the ends justify the means approach that screws him time and again. His brother didn't believe he could change. But Jimmy has always been his own worst enemy.
@@darksideofevil13 Jimmy always underestimate the situation he gets himself in. He thought he could get an easy money from Lalo. What he got is a lifetime PTSD, a threat on his life and a potential death of Kim. He thought Walt would be a piece of cake for him to scam. It turns out that he’s trapped with Walt and couldn’t get out.
It’s all badgers fault for selling the meth to the Fed if Badger went with his instinct and didn’t sell to that Fed Walt and Jesse would of never needed saul 😂
@@darksideofevil13 Saul was a crook and a talker, but not even close to a killer. He would not have agreed to any of walts plans had he known what they actually were
@@MO-zk8qs Bro saul suggests killing badger
spoilers for BCS S6 E9: Fun and Games
At the end of that episode, Jimmy died and Saul emerged. in this episode, Jimmy returns
It would've been hilarious if he fired a warning shot and it turned out to be a novelty lighter.
This was basically punishment coming down on Saul and him finally paying for all his sins he’s committed and people he’s hurt: both here and in BCS
This is the exact moment latching became catching
Walt doesn't even know what to say at this point
After Better Call Saul, this scene hits way harder now. Jimmy has allowed his Saul persona run ramp it, and even while working for a manipulating, egotistical drug kingpin, Jimmy has allowed himself to be nothing but Walt’s puppet. I believe this is the first time we have seen Jimmy get punched before in the series. He’s been tied up and placed at gunpoint multiple times, but it’s almost symbolic that Jesse, one of the few remaining innocent protagonists of the series, hit him with a reality cheek that his actions left consequences. Being the betting of other men, is something Jimmy has always known.
Im really glad that they censored all the curses. Now I can show this scene of a psicopath meth adicted murderer beating a dirty lawyer and almost killing him to my child without being a bad influence
I love The fact that he shouts out "code red" it suggests that someone beating up Saul is a thing that happens regular and that they are prepared for it. I have just starded waching Better call saul and i am exited to find out more about this individual.
Prepare for heartbreak.
be ready to feel the pain
Mike tried to tell him to leave that teacher alone.
This is for Howard
Chuck McGill and Howard Hamlin love this
Kim and Lalo as well
At 0:54 I know it is supposed to be an intense moment, but I can’t stop hearing Todd Chavez voice in that part
After watching "Plan and Execution" - Hit him again Jesse!
1:21 This hits different after BCS
0:16 I love that little moment of shock from Jesse. Even when propelled by blind rage, he still isn't comfortable hurting others.
After BCS I think this scene has another meaning. I like to think that Saul was going to come up with another lie to protect Walter, but when Jesse pointed the gun at Francesca he remembered Howard's death and came up with the truth. Like he didn't want anyone else to die for his fault. It makes sense to me, specially if Kim ends up having a similar fate.
Also, in 1:21 he quickly looks at Huell and Francesca when he is saying "i didn't want any of this".
I'm not sure if Jesse would've killed her, or anyone there. You could be right about Saul, though I thought it was more about self-preservation than anything else.
I swear Paul and Cranston best acting all time this show.
What's with the censor bleeps? This show isn't for children to begin with
idk binge society is shit
They trying to get that ad revenue