There's no word on what happened to the White family after Walt's death, but
Jesse jumps into an El Camino and drives away to freedom, shedding tears of joy, anguish, and general catharsis. It's one of the most iconic scenes of the series. Speaking of El Caminos, that's what the Breaking Bad movie starring Aaron Paul is all about.
Jesse Pinkman
After "dueling" with a criminal named Neil over a share of Todd's money, Jesse was able to pay for the service and begins a new life in Alaska. He left a letter for his former girlfriend's son, Brock, but otherwise didn't say goodbye to anyone.
Alaska serves as Jesse's final destination following the events of "El Camino," and is nicknamed "The Last Frontier." It was chosen by Jesse due to a conversation with Mike Ehrmantraut in which Mike stated that Alaska would be a good place to make a new life as it is The Last Frontier and you can be anyone you want ...
26) The Nazis fail to produce drugs of Jesse and Walt quality, so their international distributor Lydia (Laura Fraser) has been freaking out. Which is very bad news for Jesse: After they let Walt go, they literally cage Jesse up for months and force him to make Heisenberg-level meth.
The series ended with White dying from a gunshot wound after using a remote-controlled machine gun to kill an Aryan Brotherhood gang and free Pinkman, who had been held captive for six months.
It's been six years since Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul) escaped from the cage he was kept in by Todd (Jesse Plemons) and Jack (Michael Bowen) on Breaking Bad, but Netflix's sequel film, El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie, picks up mere seconds after the show's iconic finale.
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.
The core tenets of Breaking Bad consist of the main show's five seasons, follow-up film El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie and series Better Call Saul. The latter spin-off explores both events leading up to Breaking Bad and the aftermath with Saul Goodman years later.
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.
After Breaking Bad
In an interview, show creator Vince Gilligan confirmed that Walter Jr. eventually received his father's drug money through Gretchen and Elliott Schwartz, which he had arranged beforehand.
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.
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.
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.
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.
El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie drew 6.5 million viewers in the US on its opening weekend, making it one of Netflix's most successful original films of the year.
The campaign saw the return of Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul character Huell Babineaux, with Lavell Crawford reprising the role.
Following Mike's death in the fifth season episode "Say My Name", Banks said this did not surprise him because he always believed the character would die at some point. Mike continued to appear in Better Call Saul and appears during a flashback scene in El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie.
Throughout the film, Jesse has gone wherever he is taken in order to reach his goal of freedom. The final decision he makes to gain it could be considered wildly out of character, but it's at this point that he follows Jane's advice, taking control of his own life and being an active participant in his own story.
He hands Ed a final letter to one individual and, as Jesse drives away, we see who it's addressed to: Brock Cantillo. Breaking Bad fans will remember that Brock, played in the series by Ian Posada, is the young child of Jesse's girlfriend Andrea (Emily Rios), who is murdered in cold blood by Todd (Jesse Plemons).
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.
Jesse did something Walt never dreamed he would do, which was spill to the DEA. So all this time, we believe that Walt truly wants Jesse dead. We even see him leave behind the watch Jesse gave him on top of a payphone. Then, he gets to Jack's place and saves Jesse.
Keeping and torturing Jesse Pinkman as a slave for 6 months by coercing him to cook meth for him and Jack Welker's gang. Remorselessly killing Andrea Cantillo in front of a tied up Jesse as the latter's punishment for escaping their prison.
Narrator: To dispose of Todd's El Camino, Jesse calls on Old Joe, the lovable scrapyard owner who once helped Walt and Jesse destroy their RV. Joe reminisces about the magnet scheme from the season five premiere, when he helped Jesse use a giant magnet to destroy Gus Fring's laptop.