Jesse was enslaved by Charlottesville resident Peter Marks, who purchased property from
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.
During the final season of Breaking Bad, Jesse was enslaved by a group of neo-nazis. They wanted Jesse to cook the meth he had been working on with Walt and, as motivation, held him emotionally and physically hostage.
Jesse spent roughly six months as their slave, bound in ankle-and-hand-cuffs while meth-making in the warehouse and sleeping in a concrete cellar at night. Why didn't he just refuse to cook for the criminals?
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. “El Camino” picks up after a scar-faced, dusty Pinkman flees the bloody scene in a stolen El Camino vehicle.
Throughout Breaking Bad, Jesse finds himself constantly suffering as a result of his involvement in Walter's business. He's beaten, nearly killed multiple times, imprisoned, and suffers severe anxiety and depression as a result of his experiences.
El Camino begins where the Breaking Bad finale left off in 2013, with Aaron Paul's Jesse Pinkman seeking freedom after six months of torture at the hands of Nazi drug dealers.
Jesse was severely beaten on multiple occassions, sometimes maybe just for fun. His most prominebt scar on his face is probably the result of the first day when they interogatted him. His face was extremely damaged.
His Discovery That Walt Contributed To Jane's Death
Jesse is burdened by his trauma from Jane's death throughout the entire series, and it is magnified even further when Walter reveals his prominent part in the loss.
He knew Jesse was being held against his will. He used the vocabulary of “partner” to provoke Jack into proving Walter wrong by showing him Jesse's true situation.
I understand the second time Walt ordered Jack to kill Jesse (in the desert after Hank died): Walt felt betrayed by the seemingly only person he held a soft spot for (other than his family). Jesse did something Walt never dreamed he would do, which was spill to the DEA.
Because he was competing for Jesse with that upstart, Gus. Walt knew that if he didn't lock Jesse down as his, that he would lose him. Walt realized two things about his relationship with Gus. That Gus didn't like him, and that two people could possibly replace him.
“I've made a mistake. It's all my fault. I had it coming,” Walt confesses. Walt isn't just crying because he's ruined the only real relationship he had (both business and personal), but he's crying because he's realized the mess he's made of his life, and those around him.
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. But our final image of Jesse was behind the wheel, screaming, gunning it down backroads to make his escape. It's an ending, but it's hardly closure.
he was being choked to death by Jesse—the final killing in Walter White's assault on Uncle Jack's compound. In El Camino, Todd (played by Jesse Plemons, who appears to be very comfortable with new-day weight) is very much still alive, albeit in flashback form.
Why did Hector Salamanca not give testimony against Jessy Pinkman? Hector Salamanca was not a man to use the law or the courts to exact revenge, nor one to cooperate with the Police let alone on a case that could expose his own illegal behaviors.
But Jesse consistently suffers at Walt's hands throughout the series, with little respite or other people to turn to. After the characters go through some traumatic events together, Breaking Bad slowly reveals more about Jesse's personal life.
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.
Trivia. While Jesse Pinkman eventually relapses on drugs following the murder of Tomas Cantillo, he never does heroin again, having permanently gotten clean of it after being sent to rehab by Walter White.
It really does seem like Todd genuinely likes Jesse, and maybe even looks up to him a bit. I think it's kind of like a man's best friend situation. [Laughs] I really think he looks at Jesse with some admiration and feels close to him, because he's probably been more honest to him than most people.
Gilligan said that he wanted Jesse's teeth to be 'a little more realistic', in relation to his personal situation; he added that the character 'smoked a lot of meth, and that smoke eats the enamel right off the teeth.
Meeting God
He then had a flashback, revealing what really happened when he fell from the plane. He died, but God had a conversation with him. The coversation angered God, and in a fit of rage he bit Jesse's eye out. He ressurected Jesse, but left him missing an eye.
Coming to terms with his impending death, Walt tied up loose ends before ambushing Jack's compound. He was mortally wounded in the process, but the event allowed Jesse to break free. Seeing as El Camino picked up moments after Breaking Bad's final episode, Jesse was still 25.
At the end of El Camino, Jesse had more than $230k in cash and a 1988 Toyota Land Cruiser (the movie is set in 2010). When Skinny Pete asks Jesse if he has any cash, Jesse says no. He and Badger then give Jesse approximately $8,000 in cash.
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, one of Breaking Bad's most victimized characters, but otherwise didn't say goodbye to anyone.