Hank is orange, which sits between yellow and red. This means he is both associated with the meth business and the violence that comes with it. He is the opposite of Skyler's blue, because while Hank wants to bring down Walter's meth empire, Skyler eventually becomes a major part of it.
When considering the constant purple sported by Hank's wife, Breaking Bad viewers had theorized that Marie wasn't actually a fan of purple, but instead, Hank loved the color. Considering she loved her husband deeply, she consistently wore the color and purchased various home goods to present purple for Hank to enjoy.
Throughout the series, Marie is almost always shown wearing the color purple, which creator Vince Gilligan explained is symbolic of her being misled; for example, Walt and Skyler were deluding Marie about who was behind the drug business.
Then after fighting off the cousins (and the subsequent drab/pastel colors of recovery and depression), he slowly gains his color back after he re-involves himself with the Heisenberg case. Jesse's angry (and occasionally deadly) color is red, while his drug recovery tones are more drab and subdued.
Skyler White and Hank Schrader, and their colors, represent two end-member relationships to the drug trade and Walter White. Skyler's blue represents loyalty and peace, while Schrader's red represents violence and anger.
However, these yellow shirts do not only help illustrate Gus's perfectionist attitude. They also reflect his paranoia. In color theory, yellow is associated with deceit and betrayal, something that Gus constantly fears.
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.
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.
White Stripes
Walter White Junior has an interesting color situation if you keep an eye out for it. He is commonly seen wearing striped shirts so he can represent the colors of the people he is currently involved with or being pulled between.
“I use yellow as a relief color for her, so it's not purple, purple, purple all the time,” Bryan explained. “You'll notice sometimes she wears a yellow tank underneath something. There's no deep hidden meaning — not this time.” Marie's shirt, in other words, was an un-purple herring, meaning nothing.
The color purple became associated with wealth and royalty because, oftentimes, the rich were the only individuals who could afford clothing and other household items that were dyed purple.
Background information. Little is known about Marie's early life. The only member of her immediate family that is known is her older sister Skyler.
He was frustrated and felt helpless. Marie is a sycophant and the more she tries to please Hank the more it comes across as fake and manipulative. Hank is mean to her almost as if to try and prod her into an argument that would at least be a genuine reaction as opposed to her constantly plastered - on smile.
In Season 5 Episode 14, “Ozymandias,” Marie (Brandt) learns about Hank's (Dean Norris) death while Skylar (Anna Gunn) is on the phone with Walt (Bryan Cranston).
In Breaking Bad, Purple is primarily worn by Marie and it is used to symbolize protection, self-deception, and complete lack of involvement in the meth trade. Marie often wears the color purple to show her self-deception.
As Walt either wouldn't or couldn't do anything to save Jane, he decided not to wake Jesse up, knowing that her death would help him gain control over Jesse as a result, and possibly saving Jesse from the same fate and to protect his own criminal secrets. Walt watching Jane die.
After Jesse tried to escape from Jack Welker and his gang, Andrea was killed by Todd Alquist as punishment to Jesse for attempting to escape and refusing to cook for him ("Granite State").
In Season 2 we learned there are levels to Jesse's over-sized hoodie game. Jesse does a formidable amount of drugs in this season and if there is anything to learn here it's that the more drugs Jesse does, the baggier his clothes get.
In the pilot episode of Breaking Bad, Jesse Pinkman is sprinting away from the fearsome drug dealers Emilio and Krazy 8 when he trips and falls eye-socket-first onto a rock in the New Mexico desert. When he wakes up, he'll have a scone-shaped shiner the color of a Marie Schrader accent wall.
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.
Ed provides Jesse with a new identity with the surname "Driscoll" and smuggles him to Haines, Alaska. Jesse hands Ed a letter for Brock and says there is no one else he wants to say goodbye to. As Jesse drives off, he has a flashback to his time with Jane.
Gus is known to have ASD (Autism Spectrum Disorder), and he most noticeably has a form of OCD (Obsessive Compulsive Disorder).
In the clip, Hazel (Shailene Woodley) chastises Gus (Ansel Elgort) for smoking, but he explains why he really has the cigarette in his mouth. “It's a metaphor, you see. You put the thing that does the killing right between your teeth, but you never give it the power to kill you,” he says.
However, Hector looks up at Gus for the first time in years, and Gus is shocked. Hector repeatedly rings his bell, detonating the bomb underneath his wheelchair. The explosion kills him and Tyrus. Gus walks out of the room with his face half blown off, before dying.