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.
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.
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? At one point he did, begging for Jack's gang to kill him rather than make any more.
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.
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.
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.
By examining the social and internal interactions of the character Walter White, it is clear that he could be clinically diagnosed with a narcissistic personality disorder.
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.
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.
At the time the series starts, he has long been estranged from his parents due to his drug addiction and lifestyle as a drug dealer. After being forced to leave his parents' residence, Jesse moved in with his Aunt Ginny, for whom he cared until her death from cancer.
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.
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.
Hysteria. He was beaten and tortured, forced into slave labor stinking like a rotten pig. He thought he would never get out and resigned himself to his fate. So when he realizes he is free, it is an insane euphoric feeling, full blown mania.
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.
El Camino is a counterpoint to the end of Walter White
Breaking Bad kicks off with Walt finally deciding to take charge of his life — to act, instead of being acted upon, after being diagnosed with cancer. At every turn, he makes choices that will help him amass more power but that will also corrupt his soul.
The thing is, Walt already gave him an explanation for what happened to the ricin cigarette. At Jesse's house, Walt planted the fake one in the Roomba, then pretended to discover it and showed it to Jesse before disposing of it.
Many thoughts of grief may have flooded Walt's mind after Hank was killed in Breaking Bad, but the reason why Walt tells Jesse the truth about Jane's death is indicative of his true nature. Walt's evolution to becoming Heisenberg was created out of a series of events of desperation and tragedy.
After realizing that it was Walt who poisoned Brock, Jesse went ballistic. He wanted to bring Walt to justice, even if it meant he has to confess to everything he had done up until that point as well. As a response to this betrayal, Walt put a hit out on Jesse's head.
It's ironic that Jesse and Walter Jr., Walt's biological son, never cross paths in the show. This actually invokes a sense of sadness in realizing that Walt seems to outwardly show more love and affection for Jesse than he does his own son. He demonstrates this after being blackmailed by Jesse's girlfriend, Jane.
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.
Numerous characters in television shows are informally described as psychopaths. Examples include Natalie Buxton in Bad Girls, Sean Slater and Michael Moon in EastEnders, Dexter Morgan in Dexter, Tuco Salamanca in Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul, and Frank Underwood in House of Cards.
At this point, Tuco's behavior suggests he could be either a psychopath or a sociopath. While Tuco does show emotional detachment towards others' well-being, what differentiates him from a psychopath is his impulsive behavior.
The sides of his personality — sociopath and family man, scientist and killer, rational being and creature of impulse, entrepreneur and loser — are not necessarily as contradictory as we might have supposed. Or rather, if we insist on supposing that they are, it may be for our own sentimental reasons.