
El camino a breaking bad movie series#
Back for the Finale: Several characters from the series return for the final chapter in Jesse's story including Badger, Skinny Pete, Old Joe, Jesse's parents, and Ed Galbraith (the "Disappearer").
It's all a ruse to get them to leave the house so that he could steal their guns but it's clear that the emotion in their talk was genuine. In return, he tells them that his problems aren't their fault, and they did the best they could. They still want him to turn himself in, but speak with real concern and agree to pick him up themselves.
Aw, Look! They Really Do Love Each Other: Jesse's parents finally cut him some slack and treat him with some kindness when he calls. Sorry kid, that's the one thing you can never do. By the end, however, he is at least able to make peace with his parents and bid farewell to his friends and Brock. The Atoner: Jesse wants to be this as evidenced by his conversation with Mike at the beginning, but at this point things have spiraled so out of control it has become impossible for him to make any sort of amends. This also mirrors Jesse's situation of being kept in a cage as the Neo-Nazis' prisoner, with Todd passing a cigarette to him from above. Todd has a pet tarantula that he kept in a tank inside his apartment (possibly the same tarantula found by the boy he shot after the train heist he pulled with Walt and Jesse), which Jesse drops food into from the top. The association remains strong in this film, albeit with Jesse as a battered dog, particularly in his interactions with Todd while in the Neo-Nazis' slavery: he won't lash out in fear of reprisal, but his hatred of his tormentor is palpable and eventually, like a battered dog whose master turned his back on him for a split second, he killed Todd. Jesse has always been associated with dogs, due to his strong loyalty to Walt throughout most of the series and his desire for the approval of his betters. And Starring: At the end of the credits: With Robert Forster, with Jonathan Banks, and Bryan Cranston. But if he thinks it necessary, he'll murder anyone, without hesitation, and shows only the mildest remorse for it.
He's unfailingly polite and friendly, even considerate, and we never once see him take joy in any kind of cruelty (unlike the rest of his gang). Affably Evil: An inhumanly creepy example in Todd.