When we were introduced to Jesse, he was a crystal meth junkie and a small time drug dealer. But as we came to know him, more facets of his personality emerged. Turns out, he was not a bad human as far as characters from the so-called 'Breaking Bad' universe went. He was good at heart.
He's the only one asides from Mike who shows any real sense of humanity or decency in the show. He's not as broken on the inside as people like Walt, Gus, and even Mike. He showcases many times that he has a big heart and a love for people and for life, and he generally doesn't want to hurt anyone.
Jesse Bruce Pinkman is the deuteragonist of Breaking Bad, the main protagonist of its 2019 sequel film El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie and a minor yet pivotal character in the sixth and final season of the prequel/sequel series Better Call Saul.
Perhaps the creepiest character on Breaking Bad is Todd who has done some unspeakably evil things while also maintaining a polite demeanor. His soft-spoken nature just makes everything he does even scarier, especially when he pays Skyler an unexpected visit.
Gus Fring
He is a major kingpin in the Breaking Bad series. He covers up his drug activity by owning legitimate businesses and doing charity work. His heart and conscience have become wicked, and he reflects who Walter White is becoming.
Gustavo "Gus" Fring (Late 1950s/Early 1960s - July 15, 2009), mockingly referred to as the Chicken Man, is the main antagonist of the AMC TV series Breaking Bad and a major character in its prequel series Better Call Saul.
Aside from seeing death around every corner, we have to remember that Jesse was abjured by his parents, and he still has PTSD from shooting Gale.
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.
Walt does care for Jesse in his unusual way
Walt may not respect Jesse as a peer, but he does come to genuinely care about him in a semi-familial sense.
Besides Walter White acting as his surrogate father, he is also Jesse's only true friend and Pinkman a.
Marco and Leonel Salamanca, commonly known as The Cousins, are twin brothers, deadly enforcers, and prolific hitmen for Don Eladio Vuente's drug cartel.
Walt Betrayed Flynn
After Flynn realized who his father was and what he had done, he hated him so much that he wouldn't even talk to him. His immense hurt could be seen in the final phone call between the two.
Walt, the trained scientist, calls himself “Heisenberg” after the Heisenberg Uncertainly Principle by the German physicist Werner Heisenberg, who posited that the location and momentum of a nuclear particle cannot be known at the same time.
Walter became dangerous once he developed his alter ego, Heisenberg. Certainly Gus underestimated him as a threat. But Walter spent most of his life as benign—he needed to develop cancer to feel his anger at lost opportunities. Walt was dangerous as Heisenberg when he felt thwarted and desperate.
Throughout Breaking Bad, Walter White murders over 200 people (although not all with his own two hands), and likely fits the definition of a serial killer by the time the series ended.
As the first part of the final season comes to a close, one truth is increasingly clear: Walter was never good to begin with.
Walter White, once an underpaid educator and loving family man, finishes the series with the deaths of 200 people on his hands.
Question: Is Gustavo Fring the good guy or bad guy in Breaking Bad? He's definitely the antagonist; however he wasn't supposed to be the primary antagonist that he was for the first three seasons (Minor spoiler) as Tuco Salamanca was supposed to fill that role.
Bryan Lee Cranston (born March 7, 1956) is an American actor and director who is best known for portraying Walter White in the AMC crime drama series Breaking Bad (2008–2013) and Hal in the Fox sitcom Malcolm in the Middle (2000–2006).
At heart, Breaking Bad is a tragedy in the most classical sense, and "Live Free or Die" sees Walter White in the throes of his fatal flaw: hubris.
That is why Walter White is the ultimate antihero: unlike Tony Soprano (who is in therapy), White is past the point of redemption. His story is so powerful because we see the transformation from the sweet Walter to the ruthless drug lord Heisenberg.
Bryan Cranston was not the first choice for the role of Walter White. In fact, casting him took some convincing by the show's creator and writer. At the show's inception, the role of Walter White was initially offered to actors Matthew Broderick and John Cusack.