yeah given the fact that he threw under the bus for the second time, jane being dead, and that his family screwed him over, its hard not to feel bad for jesse.
This actually pinnacles in Season 4 when Jesse asks Walt to go Go-Karting with him, but Walt refuses so Jesse has to go Go-Karting alone: ua-cam.com/video/LHpeFfBRF8U/v-deo.html
Because he’s a junkeys who keeps using drugs? He had a hot girlfriend a lot of money and every opportunity in the world he left all of it for drugs he’s a junkey and a hypocrite in a lot of scenes. I didn’t feel sorry for one second for him. Also every mistake he made he blamed others Walter helped him so many times he would be dead a million times without Walter and he turned on Walter many times a snake junked hypocrite
Marvin Morawski it was enjoyable to watch and I liked the quieter more intimate moments they had. But underlying the whole relationship was a an abusive and manipulative context where it came to a point I couldn’t take many things Walt said to Jesse sincerely
I mean, he feels bad for that reason. He values the people around him for the purpose they serve for him, and as long as they serve that purpose he doesn't care about what they might went through until it may become a danger to his own status quo, what he expects of them to be, in the end he doesn't questions what's on their minds since he doesn't do the same with his until the very end once he lost everything and was at his final moments.
Jesse brought it on himself. I love how people just make excuses for Jesse. Yes Walt was a terrible person. But Jesse wasn’t any better. He got badger and skinny right back on drugs to make himself feel better. He was told he was out and you all can only rant about Jesse feeling bad cause Walt insulted his Meth. You don’t even begin to question why Jesse needed to keep cooking meth. Because Jesse is accountable for nothing like how most of you hold yourselves accountable for nothing. True millennials, it’s always some one else’s fault. Guys younger than Jesse led men into battle and got the Medal of Honor but you cry like Jesse was a two year old.
@@rjdujon3320 Walt told Jesse he was out before this. Jesse is the one who wouldn’t quit cooking meth, traded meth for cigarettes and led Hank right to the RV. You people are dipsticks. What was Walt supposed to do other than monitor the moron? Then Jesse skates off to Alaska….probably to cook meth again. Walt was happy with Gale until this happened.
The cycle of abuse and manipulation walt puts jesse through is so tragic and heartbreaking. He's having a moment of clarity here, but because he cares so much for his abusers validation he compromises himself again soon after. It's incredibly well written and unfortunately, very true to life.
Walter's ego couldn't handle it when Jesse was making meth as good as his, so he belittled it and Jesse, causing Jesse to turn against him. Here Jesse has nothing and no one and receives validation from the one guy who showed up to his hospital bed, making him forever loyal to Walter for being the only person who considered Jesse worth anything. A classic scenario of abusive relationships.
StarWarFan your ego will handle it when a guy who doesn't even know basic chemistry will start making ur great product just cuz he worked with u? Nice.
@Hyperborean Arms right that's why Walter called Jesse a worthless junkie incapable of following even basic instructions. Father of the year, that guy is.
Marvin Morawski yeah because it takes next level acting to pull off a convincing performance like Aaron’s in this scene, as well as make an audience cry
The end of this scene is so absurd, yet brilliant. Walter and Jesse have become so inured to their deviant lifestyle that the quality of one’s cook is a metric for complimenting one another. I love that the phrase, “your cook is just as good as mine,” is tantamount to both an apology and praise at the same time.
@@masonhorsley1505 except at the same time he did mean it, he was jealous to begin with that Jesse proved he could cook as well as he did on his own during the conversation when Walt got fired. However the biggest thing is that he only admitted it then to manipulate Jesse into joining back up with him.
It reminds me of the Lighthouse lobster scene. “Fine, I like your cooking” To have such an emotional scene end in a begrudging compliment over something trivial or unusual just makes it seem so absurd
@@thesun5275 That’s not true at all. Even in the script, it said that Walt said that, b cause he felt he needed to tell the truth. When he was walking home, it also said he felt like Jesse wouldn’t change his mind.
Exactly. That’s one of biggest problems with this episode. Jesse has his fantastic monologue about how Walt ruined his life, just to join him a few minutes later.
@@supermom543 i wouldn’t say it’s a problem with the writing, but jesse himself. and i bet it’s 100% intentional. remember, in between this moment and that moment was walt admitting to jesse his meth was as good as his. he knew jesse craved appreciation.
"I'm not turning down the money. I'm turning down YOU!" This line hits me so hard each time I hear it. It reminds me of my own time cutting contact with my mother after she manipulated me and emotionally abused me for decades. I wanted to scream something similar at her once. Because she acted as though I was giving her silent treatment for one misdeed or misunderstanding. She couldn't seem to get it that it was her entire being I was rejecting.
Yeah. We both have similar experiences. I had one big argument with my mother once, and I revealed everything I ever felt through sheer rage. I had had enough of her games and her dirty tactics of using my anger to condone her actions that I went on bringing about the truth.
@@captainhowlerwilson508 I did something similar, though a bit more calculated. I sat down, wrote out a letter with everything I could remember her doing to me. I then called her and told her to listen to the end and I read all of it. At the end I said that she had two choices, either acknowledge that she had hurt me in the ways I specified, and apologise and work to be better, or I would cut all contact from here on out. I haven't spoken to her (By choice) in over a year now
@@captainhowlerwilson508 Over the last Christmas I even had a similar money situation to Jesse. My maternal grandparents sent money for me overseas but deliberately sent it to my mother to pass along, my grandma telling me to talk to her if I wanted my money.
Kitty Kat When was this? Did you ask for the money, or was it a game to make you talk to your mother? I get that talking to her is important. My mom also thought that going to those social groups that I liked going to would help rid of my anger, an assumption that came out of nowhere. It was just ridiculous that she had that idea, because anger is not simply something that is easily cured by positive energy. I even threw out the truth that she never helped make anyone feel better. I don’t feel bad about that day, and I never will. Anger like all the emotions is like water, finding its way around.
@@captainhowlerwilson508 over this last Christmas, when I had been no contact for about 9 months already. I didn't ask for money, it was an annual gift for Christmas from my grandma who lives overseas - it's easier to transfer money than mail a package overseas. But my grandma wanted to forced me to start talking to my mother again so she deliberately sent the money to my mother's account and told me to just contact my mother to confirm my account number.
“I have never been more alone. I have NOTHING! NOONE! It’s all gone!” I’ve never been so emotionally invested with any character in any show as much as I have Jesse. This line genuinely made me tear up
1:04 Surprised after all these years nobody has mentioned how fucking raw this line is. Still some of the best acting I've seen in a long time, all in the delivery of one sentence
I feel it kinda helped that he was mostly shouting through clenched teeth, you could understand it if you were in the room but it would be all weird and muffled elsewhere.
Walt and jesse's relationship in Breaking Bad is an age old story of abuse and the abused seeking validation from their abuser. It is very tragic at its core.
Fun fact: The first time Jesse met Walter was in high school, and Walter flunked Jesse. This was one of the biggest factors in Jesse’s parents practically abandoning him. So, when Jesse says “Ever since I met you”, he’s actually right. Walter literally ruined Jesse’s life, even in high school.
Let's be brutally honest here; it's purely just the actors chemistry is what makes the relationship have a touch of wholesomeness when it has no right to. If you were to just read the scripts or if the series was just a book series instead there is no way so many fans would be so lenient with Walt if it weren't for Cranston embodying the character.
If you've ever been where Jesse is, isolated & depressed, it doesn't matter if you know they're abusing you, it matters they were there when nobody else was. And that's how they ensnare you in their trap, isolating you then saving you.
2:00 - White finds an opportunity. The moment Jesse showed how much he was seeking Walter's approval was the last chance Walter had to get Jesse to reconsider. He even went as far as to lie about Jesse's meth skills being as good as his. Brilliant character development. A supposedly brilliant man who was willing to turn into a bad guy because he thought that's what it took to provide for his family.
@Michael P jesses meth wasnt as good as walts. later episode made that clear. it was EXTREMELY good but it wasnt as pure. shown in multiple episodes later, for example when jesse has to cook meth for the cartel as proof
@@thahoule7924 In Granite State or Felina (I can't remember which one) Todd mentions Jesse's meth at least by the end of the show was as good as Walt's.
@Marvin Morawski he did need Jesse. He came into the drug business with Jesse. He knew he couldn't trust anyone except Jesse because he was loyal to a fault. But more importanty than anything else he wanted Jesse back because he knew he could control and manipulate him.
Man their relationship has got to be one of the most abusive, manipulative, dysfunctional and toxic relationships in the history of cinema. If someone doesn't understand what an abusive relationship looks like, they should watch this show. At one point you realise that you're being manipulated and used but you still can't get out of that relationship, just like jesse couldn't even after saying all of this. It took just two lines of validation from his abuser to make him get back with him again. This show is freaking brilliant.
Aaron Paul did such an awesome job in this show. You can feel the pain in his his words/actions, as if he really did go through all of that. Amazing talent!
The saddest part of this scene is him accepting in the end. As horrible as Walter was to Jesse, and despite how good it would be for Jesse to stay away from him completely, one sentence of validation (which I'm not even sure was real on Walt's part, and not just more manipulation) he almost immediately jumps at the chance to partner up again. Walt broke Jesse, and then abused that fact to reel him in.
@@tuanas458 sure it was a apology and prising Jesse’s cook but he was still comparing it to Walter’s 99.1% pure _as good as mine_ he is praising Jesse but he already implied that his is better then Jesse’s but is is *as* good as his
@@mathiaswilhelm1902 not sure what your point was. Your over complicating his line. I think alot of people are. Its a sophisticated line but people are over thinking it.
@@tuanas458 why does every single thing that happens in media need to be interpreted in the 100% “correct way” have you heard of a thing called infuring, picking up on subtext or reading between the lines Whatever it probably wasn’t but it’s what I got out of it end of story
I love how Jesse says, "Ever since I met you everything I ever cared about is gone." But He's referring to meeting Heisenberg, because we know Jesse met Mr. White like ten years ago.
'I have never felt more alone I have nothing ' the delivery on that line is phemonimal u can feel all the anger and resentment he has for walt yo to then Aaron Paul's performance is breathtaking my god ome of my favourite breaking bad scenes just 10/10 acting and its amazing
Fun fact I learned in my TV analysis class: back in season 1 they were planning to kill of Jesse because we had a unlikeable/unreliable character. Boy would that have been a grade A fuck up.
Jesse advertises the fact that he has nothing left in his life and he's completely and utterly vulnerable and alone, and Walt's reaction is to manipulate him again.
@@PaddyRoon7 The death of Jane, Andrea, and Combo were Pinkman’s fault. Other than the fact Jane was turning Pinkman into an addict, she should not have been involved in their dealings, blackmailing Walter.
I like how no matter what Jesse says, Walt doesn't empathize with him. He's just there to get what he wants and when he sees that's not happening, he plays his last ace by complimenting Jesse's meth. He knows that in that vulnerable situation if he validates Jesse, he'll get what he wants. AND THAT IS WHAT HAPPENS. Talks a lot about their characters and the bond they share in the show.
From Paul, some of the best acting in the history of humanity. Absolutely outstanding. His emotion. His tone. His intonation. It’s genius. It’s absolutely beyond
Shocking to see just how early on he wanted to turn away Walt. Whoever thinks Jesse deserve what he's been through should give this series a looooooong meditation
Man idk what these guys were on during the filmings of this episode but the acting was insane, especially from Aaron Paul (Jesse) and Dean Norris (Hank) I really felt sorry for both the characters, the way they speak with such emotion.
The acting on this show is stellar from everyone in every episode, but there's something about Jesse's speech here that makes me feel it's the best acted scene in all of Breaking Bad. He even spits a couple of times (like when he asks 'why would you get it?'). He was able to tap into the right mindset needed for this scene and that's the hallmark of a talented actor. Aaron Paul was unknown before this, but man, does he ever hold his own in a brilliant cast.
Honestly maybe I’m wrong, but I think Aaron’s use of emotion is almost comparable to a level of James gandolfini. All the way down to his breathing pattern thin this scene is just raw anger and sadness. Incredible performance throughout the scene
YES! I often think of exactly him too, during many intense Jesse scenes. It’s not *because* of the heavy breathing, but the heavy breathing is the biggest 🚨 out there for me
This scene got to me at the time. But now. Jesse's breakdown and him saying that meeting Walt just caused Jesse to lose more than what he had... Man I could not relate more than I thought with that statement.
Jesse is most tragic person in whole breaking bad series. Jesse lost literally everything and suffer the most. He is the true hero of the whole BB franchise
Y'know, in retrospect, if Walt had just given Jesse $1.5 million to not press charges against Hank, and just kept working with Gale, literally everything would have gone better.
I think a lot of people may have misinterpreted this scene and the decisions Walt made surrounding it. Most people see Walt insisting he work with Jesse as Walt destroying his business relationship with Gus for no other reason than his desire to keep Jesse around in order to continue manipulating him. But this is actually Walt doing his best to save both Jesse and Hank. Jesse was absolutely set on ruining Hank's life for beating him up. And he was set on continuing to cook alone. He said he knew he'd get caught eventually, and when that happened he'd give the police Heisenberg's identity as a get out of jail free card. If Jesse were to continue on that path, it'd be out of Walt's hands. Hank would suffer some sort of great misfortune, and Gus would have put a hit on Jesse for being a liability. So Walt had to convince Jesse to continue working with him. There was no other option besides going to the police, which let's be honest would not end well for anyone involved.
I think it's a lot of things. It's in the best interests of everyone that he bring Jesse back into the fold, but he also genuinely misses him and even feels some guilt and responsibility for how much Jesse is hurting (physically and emotionally.) I don't think Walt consciously thinks about the fact that he manipulates Jesse, either-it's a necessary evil in his mind because Jesse will "get into trouble" if he doesn't steer the ship (that's how he justifies it to himself, anyway.)
And all it took was one affirming comment from Walt after Jesse going on and on about how Walt has supposedly ruined his life, to put Jesse back in Walt's corner. That's how desperate Jesse is for validation and even love. And Walt knows it..
for me is also sooo sad after he called walter back he saw the pain meter to the "worst pain posible" sad face then goes back to sleep with a sad face....
That would be correct. In fact, Jesse was supposed to be killed off in Season 1 due to the fact that he was just supposed an expendable side character. However, when they saw just how talented of an actor he was, they changed the script so that he lived on throughout the rest of the show.
I mean you don’t have to go to acting school to be a good actor. Some people just fit the roles perfectly with their mannerisms and personality as well as the mindset of pretending you are actually that character and if you already fit the idea for it if you can sell it easier
@@SergeantExtreme Which I've never understood. If the entire premise of the show is that Walt and Jesse cook together, why would they kill off Jesse so early? Just makes you wonder what the original script was...
@@Rockineagle84 The entire premise of the show was NOT that Walt and Jesse cook together. The entire premise of the show was turning a lovable, ordinary family man into a hated, horrible villain.
Dam jesse knew exactly the kind of person Walt was, and Walt was still able to reel him back in because he also knew just how badly jesse wanted his approval. Hell, anybody's approval would've been enough for him.
I said that to my mom once. I was an alcholic for a while yes i made bad desisions and i blame myself. My mom would help but take everything from me. All she wanted was to control me. But since i was the alcoholic its always my fault. She was abusive mentally but i had to bear it because i had no one else. She burned all my bridges by liying about me to my other family. It was the alcohilics word against the loving mothers word. I left and was homeless for a while. I lived in a shelter and got a job. It was really hard but i dug Myself out, my way. One day she finds me at a buss stop and says "wow you rather be here than in a house. She said come home get in the car. Not asking " telling me" . i said no. She asked are you turning down an opportunity. And i said the same thing " no im turning you down" just like you always want to keep me down. IM INDEPENDENT NOW AND THAT IS THE PAST. I AM MY OWN PERSON AGAIN. AND MY RELATIONSHIP WITH MY MOTHER COMPLETELY CHANGED. SHE HAS TO RESPECT ME NOW. WE GET ALONG NOW. AND I DONT HOLD GRUDGES
Well let’s see. First scene Jesse is in, what’s he doing? Running from the DEA. Krazy 8 was a snitch, Jesse didn’t know, and Krazy 8 intended to blame him to his cousin. No idea how that would have worked out. Let’s move on, he met Jane because the lab in his basement got him kicked out. She was in some kind of rehab program. What did Jesse do? Enabled her drug use, we can guess about that outcome all day. What does Jesse do when he’s told he’s out in season 3? He keeps cooking meth even though he had 400k to start fresh give Saul 80k to launder it and get a real job or pay for college and living expenses if he didn’t want to accrue interest and just have some simple ticket booth job like Mike used to have with his laundered 320k in the bank. Then what happens? He gets the RV caught on camera trading meth for cigarettes, boy were reaching genius levels now. What does he do after that? He threatens to snitch on the guy he stole the meth formula from forcing the guy to basically HAVE to baby monitor him. What’s Jesse’s next master plan? Oh that’s right he attacks two gang bangers right after he was told not to. But suuuuuuure poor poor Jesse. I can tell you’re just a professional victim. Funny how I’d have made my 400k an been happy some one even let me in on 400k at 23 years old. But what ever dopey. That’s more than some people make in over 10 years. But I can’t expect a professional victim to comprehend because Walter insulted Jesse’s illegal meth boo hoo hoo waaaaaaah waaaaaah me big baby me go get the RV caught now like a baby, then blame everyone else like a baby.
ash ash it’s implied that he is. Walt had stage four lung cancer, was off chemo, was shot near his right lung, and was bleeding out. There is no way he could survive that and Vince Gilligan is too smart to please the fans and bring Walt back. El Camino is about Jesse Pinkman after Breaking Bad (Walt’s Story). He’s not alive. He’s dead. A part of me wants to tell you to get over it but it took me a while to. But seriously learn how to interpret scenes.
I’m watching this show rn and I was doing other things when it came on and the acting was so compelling I literally just stopped and got so invested. Best acting in the series imo
@@isaacthegoat1432 Listen to his words. “Why would you get it?” Walt doesn’t understand and Jesse is trying to get through to him. Jesse’s outburst didn’t just come from nowhere. I’d say Aaron’s rage in this scene is warranted here. Did you just come here to hate on the scene?
At first I thought Waltuh was genuinely complementing Jesse until he said that its not just good but as good as his own, which is obviously a lie because Waltuh would never mean that.
Nurse at the hall: " Did I just hear you say meth?!"
Walt: "Meth? No no no I said Math, don't be ridicilous"
Lmao I was actually thinking "never thought about how loud he's actually speaking. Stop yelling,Jesse! What if someone hears?"
"Your math is good Jesse, as good as mine"
😂😂😂😂👌🏻
_Yeah what about it bitch? You have a problem bitch?_
Was just thinking that lmao. What if the nurse heard jesse’s whole rant. He was screaming. If I were Walt I would have told him to shut his trap 🤣
“I have never been more alone!! I have...NOTHING!!! NO ONE!!!” That line just hits me man...
yeah given the fact that he threw under the bus for the second time, jane being dead, and that his family screwed him over, its hard not to feel bad for jesse.
This actually pinnacles in Season 4 when Jesse asks Walt to go Go-Karting with him, but Walt refuses so Jesse has to go Go-Karting alone: ua-cam.com/video/LHpeFfBRF8U/v-deo.html
@@SergeantExtreme oh god this makes it even worse
Because he’s a junkeys who keeps using drugs? He had a hot girlfriend a lot of money and every opportunity in the world he left all of it for drugs he’s a junkey and a hypocrite in a lot of scenes. I didn’t feel sorry for one second for him. Also every mistake he made he blamed others Walter helped him so many times he would be dead a million times without Walter and he turned on Walter many times a snake junked hypocrite
🤓
Jesse seeing Walt’s approval as a thing of value shows how abusive this relationship became
Marvin Morawski it shouldn’t make you happy at all
Marvin Morawski it was enjoyable to watch and I liked the quieter more intimate moments they had. But underlying the whole relationship was a an abusive and manipulative context where it came to a point I couldn’t take many things Walt said to Jesse sincerely
Don't forget that Walt is actually a teacher to jesse and Jesse still have impression that Walt is decent teacher
Kar but it is and normal people would feel happy
Toxic AF.
Aaron’s acting in this scene (well, the whole series to be exact) absolutely blows me away. Unbelievable talent.
I love the "problem dog" speech.
celikblack also amazing
Dude is naturally talented
@ Yikes bro, I guess we are allowed to be wrong.
Also in the episode where he’s in that crackheads house with the kid he rly shines
I just love how Walt doesn't even feel bad for Jesse he's just upset he might've lost his partner.
I mean, he feels bad for that reason.
He values the people around him for the purpose they serve for him, and as long as they serve that purpose he doesn't care about what they might went through until it may become a danger to his own status quo, what he expects of them to be, in the end he doesn't questions what's on their minds since he doesn't do the same with his until the very end once he lost everything and was at his final moments.
Walt’s just saying whatever he needs to say to keep Jesse around and it’s just slimy
Why do u love that, the fuck is wrong with u 😂😂
Jesse brought it on himself. I love how people just make excuses for Jesse. Yes Walt was a terrible person. But Jesse wasn’t any better. He got badger and skinny right back on drugs to make himself feel better. He was told he was out and you all can only rant about Jesse feeling bad cause Walt insulted his Meth. You don’t even begin to question why Jesse needed to keep cooking meth. Because Jesse is accountable for nothing like how most of you hold yourselves accountable for nothing.
True millennials, it’s always some one else’s fault. Guys younger than Jesse led men into battle and got the Medal of Honor but you cry like Jesse was a two year old.
@@rjdujon3320 Walt told Jesse he was out before this. Jesse is the one who wouldn’t quit cooking meth, traded meth for cigarettes and led Hank right to the RV. You people are dipsticks. What was Walt supposed to do other than monitor the moron? Then Jesse skates off to Alaska….probably to cook meth again. Walt was happy with Gale until this happened.
Your acting is good Jesse, as good as mine
Why did he agree to work with walter again??
Z M because all he wanted was approval, and Walt gave it to him
Z M because walter threatened to turn him in.
"El Camino" confirmed that
😂😂😂😂
The cycle of abuse and manipulation walt puts jesse through is so tragic and heartbreaking. He's having a moment of clarity here, but because he cares so much for his abusers validation he compromises himself again soon after. It's incredibly well written and unfortunately, very true to life.
jesse was a rat. walt should have been done with him a long time ago
What Gus asked Walt at the restaurant, "Why him (Jesse)?"
Walt: "because he does what I say."
Jesse benefited more than he lost since meeting Walt imo
I woudent say Walter is abusive
@@fixyourteeth4409 it ended in him being tortured and enslaved by nazis lmfao what
Walter's ego couldn't handle it when Jesse was making meth as good as his, so he belittled it and Jesse, causing Jesse to turn against him.
Here Jesse has nothing and no one and receives validation from the one guy who showed up to his hospital bed, making him forever loyal to Walter for being the only person who considered Jesse worth anything.
A classic scenario of abusive relationships.
StarWarFan your ego will handle it when a guy who doesn't even know basic chemistry will start making ur great product just cuz he worked with u? Nice.
@Hyperborean Arms right that's why Walter called Jesse a worthless junkie incapable of following even basic instructions. Father of the year, that guy is.
@Hyperborean Arms Lol someone's triggered.
Jesse tempted Walt as much as Walt tempted Jesse.
@@starwarfan8342 He,s not wrong.
This scene should be titled: “how you win yourself an Emmy”
He should have won an oscar
Marvin Morawski yeah because it takes next level acting to pull off a convincing performance like Aaron’s in this scene, as well as make an audience cry
@@theminingbat Amazing that he didn't go to acting school or anything either
By playing emotionally insecure kid
@@TheMrExemplar Yeah... Exactly. Play that role to perfection.
The end of this scene is so absurd, yet brilliant. Walter and Jesse have become so inured to their deviant lifestyle that the quality of one’s cook is a metric for complimenting one another. I love that the phrase, “your cook is just as good as mine,” is tantamount to both an apology and praise at the same time.
It wasn't an apology, it was just another way for Walt to manipulate Jesse
@@masonhorsley1505 except at the same time he did mean it, he was jealous to begin with that Jesse proved he could cook as well as he did on his own during the conversation when Walt got fired. However the biggest thing is that he only admitted it then to manipulate Jesse into joining back up with him.
And that single complement was enough to win Jesse back to him
It reminds me of the Lighthouse lobster scene.
“Fine, I like your cooking”
To have such an emotional scene end in a begrudging compliment over something trivial or unusual just makes it seem so absurd
@@thesun5275 That’s not true at all. Even in the script, it said that Walt said that, b cause he felt he needed to tell the truth. When he was walking home, it also said he felt like Jesse wouldn’t change his mind.
The “I have never been more alone” always hits
i’m right here jesse 🙄
I think the most heartbreaking thing about this scene is that this isn't even Jesse's lowest point in the series. It only gets worse for him from here
It doesn't only get worse, it gets better too. But yes it ends up worse.
this acting is 99.1 percent pure
92%? That’s Heisenberg level
It is…acceptable.
@@notor1ousgamingph385no, it is impeccable
It's up to Pollos standards.
No, it’s 99.6% percent pure.
One scene later:
Jesse: “50/50? Ok, partners.” 😂
🤣🤣🤣
Exactly. That’s one of biggest problems with this episode. Jesse has his fantastic monologue about how Walt ruined his life, just to join him a few minutes later.
@@supermom543 i wouldn’t say it’s a problem with the writing, but jesse himself. and i bet it’s 100% intentional.
remember, in between this moment and that moment was walt admitting to jesse his meth was as good as his. he knew jesse craved appreciation.
I see your point, but I doubt that one compliment from Walt would make up for everything else he’s done to him.
@@supermom543 that’s the thing, it doesn’t. but it just blinds jesse because he’s so desperate for any type of validation
"I'm not turning down the money. I'm turning down YOU!"
This line hits me so hard each time I hear it. It reminds me of my own time cutting contact with my mother after she manipulated me and emotionally abused me for decades. I wanted to scream something similar at her once. Because she acted as though I was giving her silent treatment for one misdeed or misunderstanding. She couldn't seem to get it that it was her entire being I was rejecting.
Yeah. We both have similar experiences. I had one big argument with my mother once,
and I revealed everything I ever felt through sheer rage. I had had enough of her games and her dirty tactics of using my anger to condone her actions that I went on bringing about the truth.
@@captainhowlerwilson508 I did something similar, though a bit more calculated. I sat down, wrote out a letter with everything I could remember her doing to me. I then called her and told her to listen to the end and I read all of it. At the end I said that she had two choices, either acknowledge that she had hurt me in the ways I specified, and apologise and work to be better, or I would cut all contact from here on out. I haven't spoken to her (By choice) in over a year now
@@captainhowlerwilson508 Over the last Christmas I even had a similar money situation to Jesse. My maternal grandparents sent money for me overseas but deliberately sent it to my mother to pass along, my grandma telling me to talk to her if I wanted my money.
Kitty Kat When was this? Did you ask for the money, or was it a game to make you talk to your mother? I get that talking to her is important. My mom also thought that going to those social groups that I liked going to would help rid of my anger, an assumption that came out of nowhere. It was just ridiculous that she had that idea, because anger is not simply something that is easily cured by positive energy. I even threw out the truth that she never helped make anyone feel better. I don’t feel bad about that day, and I never will. Anger like all the emotions is like water, finding its way around.
@@captainhowlerwilson508 over this last Christmas, when I had been no contact for about 9 months already.
I didn't ask for money, it was an annual gift for Christmas from my grandma who lives overseas - it's easier to transfer money than mail a package overseas. But my grandma wanted to forced me to start talking to my mother again so she deliberately sent the money to my mother's account and told me to just contact my mother to confirm my account number.
“I have never been more alone. I have NOTHING! NOONE! It’s all gone!”
I’ve never been so emotionally invested with any character in any show as much as I have Jesse. This line genuinely made me tear up
1:11 “ALRIGHT IT’S SAUL GONE!”
Damn Jesse predicted the Better Call Saul finale
Don't you mean post-dicted as BCS was in the past of BB?
@@spaciousflame The finale takes place long after Breaking Bad 's finale
@@scottvelez3154yeah it takes place after El Camino it’s literally the end of the entire breaking bad/ BCS universe timeline.
1:04 Surprised after all these years nobody has mentioned how fucking raw this line is. Still some of the best acting I've seen in a long time, all in the delivery of one sentence
What really got me was the way Aaron says “Screw you…” at the end and he just on the verge of tears
I know man. Makes you feel like he's actually in the same room as you.
”No no no, why…why would you….GET IT!?”
That ACTING!
“I have never been more alone!”
Me after season 5 : Jesse, you don’t know how much you’re gonna lose than just being alone.
that's the kind of thing a spoiled brat who don't know how apreciatte the good things he had would say, and he had to find it the hard way
Great scene but was anyone else bothered by the fact that Jesse was yelling about him and Walt cooking meth in public.
It’s a closed room isnt it?
@kaine bolts And fortunatly no one was going pass that moment. Far-fetched? Maybe. But still is a reasonable and possible answer
I feel it kinda helped that he was mostly shouting through clenched teeth, you could understand it if you were in the room but it would be all weird and muffled elsewhere.
yeah i was kinda worried too
This is also the same show that has a man walk away from a bomb blast with half a skull and adjust his tie. This show takes its artistic liberties
Walt and jesse's relationship in Breaking Bad is an age old story of abuse and the abused seeking validation from their abuser. It is very tragic at its core.
They were both awful people who deserved each other.
@@isaacthegoat1432 nah, Walt doesn't deserve anyone
@@xomi9722 They were too on and off. You could say the same about Jesse who caused the death of Jane and Andrea.
@@isaacthegoat1432 Considering who sent Jesse to the Nazis in the first place, i don't think it's fair to say it's his fault
@@isaacthegoat1432 and Walter accidentally pushed Jane, so it's his fault again
Fun fact: The first time Jesse met Walter was in high school, and Walter flunked Jesse. This was one of the biggest factors in Jesse’s parents practically abandoning him. So, when Jesse says “Ever since I met you”, he’s actually right. Walter literally ruined Jesse’s life, even in high school.
He wouldn't flunk him for no reason. He must've not studied
That was jesse’s fault for failing and not studying
You guys love to blame Walter for everything lmao
Literally not on Walt at all.
Okay Walter ain't no saint but this is removing Jesse's accountability to an absurd level.
Let's be brutally honest here; it's purely just the actors chemistry is what makes the relationship have a touch of wholesomeness when it has no right to. If you were to just read the scripts or if the series was just a book series instead there is no way so many fans would be so lenient with Walt if it weren't for Cranston embodying the character.
If you've ever been where Jesse is, isolated & depressed, it doesn't matter if you know they're abusing you, it matters they were there when nobody else was. And that's how they ensnare you in their trap, isolating you then saving you.
This is probably the top 5 best acting I’ve seen in my whole lifetime, you can just see the emotion in his face and how broken Jesse really is
"I am not turning down the money, I am turning down YOU" powerful
2:00 - White finds an opportunity. The moment Jesse showed how much he was seeking Walter's approval was the last chance Walter had to get Jesse to reconsider. He even went as far as to lie about Jesse's meth skills being as good as his. Brilliant character development. A supposedly brilliant man who was willing to turn into a bad guy because he thought that's what it took to provide for his family.
He was lying, remember when Jesse made meth for the cartel 97%I think it was
@Michael P jesses meth wasnt as good as walts. later episode made that clear. it was EXTREMELY good but it wasnt as pure. shown in multiple episodes later, for example when jesse has to cook meth for the cartel as proof
@@thahoule7924 In Granite State or Felina (I can't remember which one) Todd mentions Jesse's meth at least by the end of the show was as good as Walt's.
@@drcheesenut896 yeah bc todd and his crew clearly knew so much abou meth...except sellin it
@Marvin Morawski he did need Jesse. He came into the drug business with Jesse. He knew he couldn't trust anyone except Jesse because he was loyal to a fault. But more importanty than anything else he wanted Jesse back because he knew he could control and manipulate him.
Man their relationship has got to be one of the most abusive, manipulative, dysfunctional and toxic relationships in the history of cinema. If someone doesn't understand what an abusive relationship looks like, they should watch this show. At one point you realise that you're being manipulated and used but you still can't get out of that relationship, just like jesse couldn't even after saying all of this. It took just two lines of validation from his abuser to make him get back with him again. This show is freaking brilliant.
Aaron Paul did such an awesome job in this show. You can feel the pain in his his words/actions, as if he really did go through all of that. Amazing talent!
The saddest part of this scene is him accepting in the end. As horrible as Walter was to Jesse, and despite how good it would be for Jesse to stay away from him completely, one sentence of validation (which I'm not even sure was real on Walt's part, and not just more manipulation) he almost immediately jumps at the chance to partner up again. Walt broke Jesse, and then abused that fact to reel him in.
0:46 that’s not true he still has skinny Pete and badger
[Spoiler] for El Camino :)
Darren Semotiuk I wrote this before el Camino a while back 🤪
I thought the same :(
@@DarrenSemotiuk no? How was it one?
are you talking about the two best hitmen west of mississippi?
Everything you touch dies Heisenberg .. Everything Even Walter White
But he's not dead so I don't know about that buddy lol
Justin Lee you’re one of those?
@@JackMcCrack10 El Camino confirmed he's dead.
سعد التميمي واو!
@@JackMcCrack10 You should watch the whole show before watching Breaking Bad videos on UA-cam.
"as good as mine" you can FEEL his pride and ego oozing out of his bald head
I'm slack-jawed at the performance even a month later of seeing the show
Dont insult Walt hairless forehead with no ending like that
I didn't get that at all from that line. Walter has never had an ego. The line was meant to be an apology and a praise at the same time.
@@tuanas458 sure it was a apology and prising Jesse’s cook but he was still comparing it to Walter’s 99.1% pure
_as good as mine_ he is praising Jesse but he already implied that his is better then Jesse’s but is is *as* good as his
@@mathiaswilhelm1902 not sure what your point was. Your over complicating his line. I think alot of people are. Its a sophisticated line but people are over thinking it.
@@tuanas458 why does every single thing that happens in media need to be interpreted in the 100% “correct way” have you heard of a thing called infuring, picking up on subtext or reading between the lines
Whatever it probably wasn’t but it’s what I got out of it end of story
I love how Jesse says, "Ever since I met you everything I ever cared about is gone."
But He's referring to meeting Heisenberg, because we know Jesse met Mr. White like ten years ago.
1:35
The slightest response of, "I do care about you son"
I don't know that we'll ever see this caliber of acting again
this is one of the best scenes in the whole show imo, entirely underrated
'I have never felt more alone I have nothing ' the delivery on that line is phemonimal u can feel all the anger and resentment he has for walt yo to then Aaron Paul's performance is breathtaking my god ome of my favourite breaking bad scenes just 10/10 acting and its amazing
Fun fact I learned in my TV analysis class: back in season 1 they were planning to kill of Jesse because we had a unlikeable/unreliable character. Boy would that have been a grade A fuck up.
Jesse advertises the fact that he has nothing left in his life and he's completely and utterly vulnerable and alone, and Walt's reaction is to manipulate him again.
His fault.
@@isaacthegoat1432 Pardon, are you saying you think it's Jesse's fault about where his life currently is?
@@PaddyRoon7 The death of Jane, Andrea, and Combo were Pinkman’s fault. Other than the fact Jane was turning Pinkman into an addict, she should not have been involved in their dealings, blackmailing Walter.
@@newhappythoughts1628 walt literally chose to let jane die
His acting is Oscar-worthy!
True that
He won 3 Emmy's lol
Church
you mean emmy? oscars are for films
@@Maya_k yes definitely, it was just a way of saying his acting is top notch
I just watched this episode, and I was blown away, especially by this scene. Aaron Paul’s acting is just so damn raw.
"I'm not turning down the money, I am turning down YOU!" Jesse became his own man with that one sentence!
I like how no matter what Jesse says, Walt doesn't empathize with him. He's just there to get what he wants and when he sees that's not happening, he plays his last ace by complimenting Jesse's meth. He knows that in that vulnerable situation if he validates Jesse, he'll get what he wants. AND THAT IS WHAT HAPPENS. Talks a lot about their characters and the bond they share in the show.
Damn
What are you talking about. Walt tried to save him so many times when he was using drugs. Jesse had no one to blame but himself when his gf died
From Paul, some of the best acting in the history of humanity. Absolutely outstanding. His emotion. His tone. His intonation. It’s genius. It’s absolutely beyond
Don't over analyse.
@@isaacthegoat1432 owned him. W.
Walter did care about Jesse. In his own sick way. But he did care.
I love this scene and the episode over all because of the emphasis of what effects of Walt's actions did to the people around him
Shocking to see just how early on he wanted to turn away Walt. Whoever thinks Jesse deserve what he's been through should give this series a looooooong meditation
this scene is arguably better acting than “I am the danger”. jesse’s character is incredible
Man idk what these guys were on during the filmings of this episode but the acting was insane, especially from Aaron Paul (Jesse) and Dean Norris (Hank)
I really felt sorry for both the characters, the way they speak with such emotion.
Even in his "compliments" he's so self-dismissive of wrong doing and derogatory to Jesse.
But it is subtle to the victim.
I get goosebumps every time Jesse says "the great Heisenberg".
The acting on this show is stellar from everyone in every episode, but there's something about Jesse's speech here that makes me feel it's the best acted scene in all of Breaking Bad. He even spits a couple of times (like when he asks 'why would you get it?'). He was able to tap into the right mindset needed for this scene and that's the hallmark of a talented actor. Aaron Paul was unknown before this, but man, does he ever hold his own in a brilliant cast.
Jesse: "I have never been more alone!"
Badger & Skinny Pete: "Are we a joke to you?"
Jesse: Yeah Bitch!!
One of the finest scenes for Aaron Paul. Love him.
Honestly maybe I’m wrong, but I think Aaron’s use of emotion is almost comparable to a level of James gandolfini. All the way down to his breathing pattern thin this scene is just raw anger and sadness. Incredible performance throughout the scene
Shut up!
YES! I often think of exactly him too, during many intense Jesse scenes. It’s not *because* of the heavy breathing, but the heavy breathing is the biggest 🚨 out there for me
This scene got to me at the time. But now. Jesse's breakdown and him saying that meeting Walt just caused Jesse to lose more than what he had... Man I could not relate more than I thought with that statement.
Jesse is most tragic person in whole breaking bad series. Jesse lost literally everything and suffer the most. He is the true hero of the whole BB franchise
"You said my K/D was garbage!"
"Your K/D is good Jessie, as good as mine."
Gaming bad
Felina was aired exactly 5 years ago
This episode was beautiful. One of the best episodes I've ever seen
Episode number?
@M7MD season 3 ep 7 I believe. It's called "one minute"
@@sfxjb Just to add supplementary info, it's also the same episode with Hank confronting the Salamanca Twins. Pretty great episode.
Loved the "as good as mine" line. Freaking goat.
This is the greatest show ever made... period.
Church
It was at this point, everyone cried for Jesse and he became everyone’s favorite character.
Y'know, in retrospect, if Walt had just given Jesse $1.5 million to not press charges against Hank, and just kept working with Gale, literally everything would have gone better.
I think a lot of people may have misinterpreted this scene and the decisions Walt made surrounding it. Most people see Walt insisting he work with Jesse as Walt destroying his business relationship with Gus for no other reason than his desire to keep Jesse around in order to continue manipulating him.
But this is actually Walt doing his best to save both Jesse and Hank. Jesse was absolutely set on ruining Hank's life for beating him up. And he was set on continuing to cook alone. He said he knew he'd get caught eventually, and when that happened he'd give the police Heisenberg's identity as a get out of jail free card.
If Jesse were to continue on that path, it'd be out of Walt's hands. Hank would suffer some sort of great misfortune, and Gus would have put a hit on Jesse for being a liability. So Walt had to convince Jesse to continue working with him. There was no other option besides going to the police, which let's be honest would not end well for anyone involved.
I think it's a lot of things. It's in the best interests of everyone that he bring Jesse back into the fold, but he also genuinely misses him and even feels some guilt and responsibility for how much Jesse is hurting (physically and emotionally.) I don't think Walt consciously thinks about the fact that he manipulates Jesse, either-it's a necessary evil in his mind because Jesse will "get into trouble" if he doesn't steer the ship (that's how he justifies it to himself, anyway.)
To everyone who wonders about Skinny Pete and Badger, they quit after what happened with Combo so he is alone
So... Aaron Paul mentioned this specific scene to get prepared for El Camino. Here I’m my lord
Everybody’s certainly applauded after “cut”. What a great actor...bravo aaron
Walt’s manipulation is so scary. He says nothing until Jesse reveals the one thing Walt has that could win his loyalty back, validation from Walt.
And all it took was one affirming comment from Walt after Jesse going on and on about how Walt has supposedly ruined his life, to put Jesse back in Walt's corner. That's how desperate Jesse is for validation and even love. And Walt knows it..
1:11 Jesse really just said the last Better Call Saul episode's name
One of the most well acted scenes of all time. Aaron Paul is incredible.
🤡
@@isaacthegoat1432 🤓
@@Foretelling Cringe.
@@isaacthegoat1432tf you are in all replies
@@skele-xg9ur Because I am.
Aaron perfected this scene, like you could feel the pure wrath coming from him towards Walt
for me is also sooo sad after he called walter back he saw the pain meter to the "worst pain posible" sad face then goes back to sleep with a sad face....
I read somewhere that Aaron never actually went to acting school, he's just a born natural.
That would be correct. In fact, Jesse was supposed to be killed off in Season 1 due to the fact that he was just supposed an expendable side character. However, when they saw just how talented of an actor he was, they changed the script so that he lived on throughout the rest of the show.
I mean you don’t have to go to acting school to be a good actor. Some people just fit the roles perfectly with their mannerisms and personality as well as the mindset of pretending you are actually that character and if you already fit the idea for it if you can sell it easier
@@SergeantExtreme Which I've never understood. If the entire premise of the show is that Walt and Jesse cook together, why would they kill off Jesse so early? Just makes you wonder what the original script was...
@@Rockineagle84 The entire premise of the show was NOT that Walt and Jesse cook together. The entire premise of the show was turning a lovable, ordinary family man into a hated, horrible villain.
1:02-1:16 what he said hits me the hardest in my current situation and I couldn’t stop thinking about it for the past couple weeks
Dam jesse knew exactly the kind of person Walt was, and Walt was still able to reel him back in because he also knew just how badly jesse wanted his approval. Hell, anybody's approval would've been enough for him.
2:10 as he walks out the door. "Oh! Hey, Hank! Gomie!"
Poor Jesse. Saying that I feel bad for him would be a miraculously massive understatement.
I think Aaron Paul needs to star in more movies by good directors. He's underrated.
Starring in one of the most popular tv shows and getting 3 emmy’s isn’t exactly underrated
@@jimmilton4543 I think they meant that he hasn't been seen in many other popular films/shows.
@@Marvelfanatic3658 bojack comes to mind
@@jimmilton4543John
“I have NO ONE!”
Badger and Skinny Pete: “Are we a joke to you?”
The nurse outside the door: wtf is goin on inside
This isn’t a statement it’s an emotion
Exactly two seasons later Jesse leaves the business for good.
This is the moment Jessie became Pinkmen
One of the greatest acting in history.
This manipulation is so well done i actually sympathize with both people
Good job walt
I said that to my mom once. I was an alcholic for a while yes i made bad desisions and i blame myself. My mom would help but take everything from me. All she wanted was to control me. But since i was the alcoholic its always my fault. She was abusive mentally but i had to bear it because i had no one else. She burned all my bridges by liying about me to my other family. It was the alcohilics word against the loving mothers word. I left and was homeless for a while. I lived in a shelter and got a job. It was really hard but i dug Myself out, my way. One day she finds me at a buss stop and says "wow you rather be here than in a house. She said come home get in the car. Not asking " telling me" . i said no. She asked are you turning down an opportunity. And i said the same thing " no im turning you down" just like you always want to keep me down. IM INDEPENDENT NOW AND THAT IS THE PAST. I AM MY OWN PERSON AGAIN. AND MY RELATIONSHIP WITH MY MOTHER COMPLETELY CHANGED. SHE HAS TO RESPECT ME NOW. WE GET ALONG NOW. AND I DONT HOLD GRUDGES
I love how he says all this, and then like a minute later he’s just like “actually, changed my mind, let’s partner up.”
1:11 Saul gone, last episode of BCS
Bravo Vince
This should have been Rudolph's response when Santa asked him to guide his sleigh.
Weird to see how Walt didn't reply to any of Jesse's accusations and just said that his cooks was as good as his. Really manipulative
Well let’s see. First scene Jesse is in, what’s he doing? Running from the DEA. Krazy 8 was a snitch, Jesse didn’t know, and Krazy 8 intended to blame him to his cousin. No idea how that would have worked out. Let’s move on, he met Jane because the lab in his basement got him kicked out. She was in some kind of rehab program. What did Jesse do? Enabled her drug use, we can guess about that outcome all day. What does Jesse do when he’s told he’s out in season 3? He keeps cooking meth even though he had 400k to start fresh give Saul 80k to launder it and get a real job or pay for college and living expenses if he didn’t want to accrue interest and just have some simple ticket booth job like Mike used to have with his laundered 320k in the bank. Then what happens? He gets the RV caught on camera trading meth for cigarettes, boy were reaching genius levels now. What does he do after that? He threatens to snitch on the guy he stole the meth formula from forcing the guy to basically HAVE to baby monitor him. What’s Jesse’s next master plan? Oh that’s right he attacks two gang bangers right after he was told not to.
But suuuuuuure poor poor Jesse. I can tell you’re just a professional victim. Funny how I’d have made my 400k an been happy some one even let me in on 400k at 23 years old. But what ever dopey. That’s more than some people make in over 10 years. But I can’t expect a professional victim to comprehend because Walter insulted Jesse’s illegal meth boo hoo hoo waaaaaaah waaaaaah me big baby me go get the RV caught now like a baby, then blame everyone else like a baby.
if you watch any scene before el Camino watch this I feel like this says more about the theme of the film than anything will
0:27 When a musician/band rejects a multi-million dollar record deal from a label.
Anyone here after Aaron Paul posted this scene on his Twitter today ?
i don't know why...but something tells me Walters not dead.
Yee
ash ash it’s implied that he is. Walt had stage four lung cancer, was off chemo, was shot near his right lung, and was bleeding out. There is no way he could survive that and Vince Gilligan is too smart to please the fans and bring Walt back. El Camino is about Jesse Pinkman after Breaking Bad (Walt’s Story). He’s not alive. He’s dead. A part of me wants to tell you to get over it but it took me a while to. But seriously learn how to interpret scenes.
@@ashash6866 WRONG.
Although before "El Camino" I agreed with you.
I’m watching this show rn and I was doing other things when it came on and the acting was so compelling I literally just stopped and got so invested. Best acting in the series imo
He was over acting.
@@isaacthegoat1432 be serious
@@aishah7730 Be an acting connoisseur.
@@isaacthegoat1432 Listen to his words. “Why would you get it?” Walt doesn’t understand and Jesse is trying to get through to him. Jesse’s outburst didn’t just come from nowhere. I’d say Aaron’s rage in this scene is warranted here. Did you just come here to hate on the scene?
@@justincruz5720 1) Jesse is a major hypocrite.
2) He was over acting.
At first I thought Waltuh was genuinely complementing Jesse until he said that its not just good but as good as his own, which is obviously a lie because Waltuh would never mean that.
(Mar 31, 2024)
“I spent my whole life scared”
“I have never been more alone”
1:00
If Jesse pressed charges against Hank, all would have been well.