There's no word on what happened to the White family after Walt's death, but El Camino confirmed that Jesse Pinkman survived the compound siege and that he made it to Alaska a free man, ready to start over. El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie is now streaming on Netflix.
Jesse and his 'Camino' to Better Call Saul
Seven years later, fans can finally rest in peace as the final answers are revealed to what happened to Jesse Pinkman after Walter's death. The only thing the fans knew was that he survived the compound stage and made it to Alaska as a free man.
The finale did give Jesse a happy ending of sorts when Walt, finally showing something like remorse for what he'd done to his former student, set him free.
Despite plans to kill off the character at the end of the first season, Paul's performance convinced the showrunner and head writer Vince Gilligan to keep Jesse in the show. The character and Paul's performance have received acclaim from critics and fans.
His partner was arrested, but he happened to be having sex with an unnamed woman in the house next door when agent Hank Schrader's (Dean Norris) team busted in, and he was able to escape.
So many familiar faces from Breaking Bad show up in El Camino, but there are key absences. Among the most important characters who sit out of the film: Skyler (Anna Gunn), Flynn (RJ Mitte) and baby Holly, not to mention Marie (Betsy Brandt), the family Walter left behind.
Neil Kandy is an unseen antagonist in the fifth and final season of Breaking Bad and the main antagonist of its 2019 sequel film El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie.
Walt pleads to Jack to spare Hank's life, offering his entire fortune to Jack. Hank refuses to beg for his life and asks Walt how such an intelligent man could be too naive to see that Jack had already made his decision. Hank then tells Jack to do what he has to do and Jack kills him with a shot to the head.
Jesse also has his head buzzed, which was actor Aaron Paul's idea because he felt it was appropriate for the inner turmoil his character was experiencing.
El Camino ended with Jesse making it to Alaska thanks to Ed (Robert Forster) who Jesse paid to smuggle him there. This was a reference to a conversation he had with Mike in a flashback to Breaking Bad that opened the movie, where Mike said that was where he would go if he had to start again.
Like Bryan Cranston's Walter White and Jonathan Banks' Mike Ehrmantraut, Todd is brought back from the dead via flashbacks by Breaking Bad creator and El Camino writer-director Vince Gilligan.
No. From the moment Walt had him dragged out from under that car in the desert, Jesse never forgave his former partner. From that moment on, Jesse felt nothing but hatred and resentment towards him.
When her life fell apart and Walt disappeared, Skyler lost her assets and moved in with her kids in a small apartment with a job as a taxi dispatcher. It was revealed that her sister, Marie, reached out for a truce, so it's likely that the two reconnected shortly after the series finale.
He is sentenced to 86 years in prison, where he is revered by fellow inmates who recognize him as Saul. Kim visits him and they share a cigarette. As she departs, he goes to the prison yard to see her off and "shoots" her finger guns. Kim acknowledges the gesture and leaves.
The movie is all about Jesse's journey.
El Camino picks up shortly after the events of Breaking Bad's finale, when Jesse Pinkman was shown speeding away in that eponymous car after Walt (Bryan Cranston) rescued him from the white supremacist compound.
track down Walt, foreshadowing the debut of Mike Ehrmantraut in "ABQ". In "Breaking Bad", Saul is shown asking Mike about Heisenberg and he identifies both Walt and Jesse for him.
But finally, Saul's luck runs out. Everywhere he turns, there are cops. After hiding in a dumpster, Saul tries to dig out a phone to call Ed the Disappearer, but he fumbles everything he's holding and the police find him.
In the end, Hank's body was returned to his family and Walter was killed after seeking vengeance on Uncle Jack.
Jesse cooked a meth purity of 96% for the Mexican Cartel. Also, Jesse's gunfight with Casey is photographed in the same manner as Jesse's gunfight with Hector Salamanca's grandson, Joaquin, whom Jesse shot and killed in "Salud".
Nope. Fortunately, Pinkman managed to bust out of his meth lab prison thanks to the efforts of Walter White. In the Breaking Bad finale, his former partner in crime returned to Jack's compound, mowing down all eight members of the group – and himself – with a crafty mounted machine gun hidden in his car.
Jesse Pinkman's Drug Organisation was a short lived meth distribution chain in Albuquerque, New Mexico led by Jesse Pinkman and Walter White, serving as a temporary replacement for their main drug empire. The other members of the group consisted of Skinny Pete, Brandon "Badger" Mayhew and Christian "Combo" Ortega.
Hank Schrader: Dead
Every moment of the episode "Ozymandias" is indelibly lodged in the brain of every Breaking Bad fan alive, so there's really no ambiguity here. RIP, Hank.
Walter appears in one scene in El Camino. It's a flashback that harkens back to season 2 of the show, when Walter and Jesse had managed to MacGyver a boost to their RV car battery after a huge-quantity cook. In El Camino, Walt and Jesse meet up the next morning in a dingy motel and grab something to eat.
Type of Villain
Mr. White- Todd's last words before he is strangled to death by Jesse Pinkman. Todd Alquist is a major antagonist in Breaking Bad, serving as the secondary antagonist of Season 5 and a posthumous antagonist in its 2019 sequel film El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie.