Jesse went from a character that was gonna get killed off in the first season, to making it through all five and getting his own spinoff movie after. Well done aaron paul well done
@@earnem4175 You can learn much from someone who hates you if you're around them enough. A pat on the back isn't necessarily the only way to learn a lesson.
1:00 That was actually an insanely fast quickdraw. Jesse didn’t stand a chance if he wasn’t hiding another pistol. You can tell he has full confidence going into a shootout.
The first thing to come to mind was the last scene from Django, for some reason. Even though the context of the scene was totally different. "I count six shots, nigga." "I count _two guns,_ nigga."
I love how after killing the first guy Jesse is calm, because he knew he would win. But after surviving the second gunfight he was a bit more shaken up, since he simply just got lucky, yet he was able to keep his cool. Jesse has really grown into a badass.
Idk if it’s luck that won him the second gun fight. He shot the same way as he did when escaping the cartel with Gus and Mike. Instead of running and shooting like his opponent does, Jesse stands still and takes more time to aim his shots. That’s how he killed Don Hector’s grandson, that’s how he killed this white dude with the mustache.
Story and easter eggs were great But movie was too slow in some scenes In fact If it was any movie outside breaking bad universe I think i would have never watched it
I just watched this movie and it makes you feel for Jesse on a different level, he lost everything and the only good thing that happend is he survived.
Yeah except for all those close range shots he missed to an opponent that was standing still after defeating an opponent with perfect aim while he was standing still but i guess we can let that slide since he atleast won😂
@@Nickyblicky-n5x Imagine being this fucking naive lmao. He isn’t a professional killer or soldier, neither are you. You are firing a tiny piece of metal out of a pipe, each explosion moving the trajectory farther away from where you’re trying to aim. It’s not that easy to hit someone in a gun fight.
@@almightyfonics having your girlfriend die right next to you in your sleep killing a person for the first time see a kid get shot being captured by neo nazis seeing your girlfriend murdered right in front of you being tortured and a meth slave for a year will change a person.
I love the full scene so much. It shows everything Jesse learned from his mentors. He embodies so many different qualities ranging from Gus to Saul to Mike to Walt. It’s so well done and gives Mr. Driscoll a proper end to his character arc.
@@kvaka009 You know two can things can true at the same time? Yes a lot of time they were the root cause of Jesse's fucked up life, but they also taught him so much and for the most part tried to guide him, even if it at times it was for their own benefit. So they were, in more ways than one, his mentors.
@@kvaka009Well you’re not wrong but again it was those abuses which led to Jesse learning how to do what he does in the movie effectively. Which is kill, threaten and steal from people.
Jesse is just a survivor. He got turned into what he is here from all the terrible shit that happened to him. But he didnt break down. He just turned ruthless to survive.
Jesse basically channeled all his mentors, and an enemy, in this scene: His calm, business demeanor when he first entered and tried to negotiate: Gus Displaying his lesser gun front and center while keeping his main gun in his pocket to fire when his enemy least expects it: Mike Grabbing the henchmen's ID's so he can learn their names and addresses to better intimidate them: Tuco Rigging the entire place to explode through science: Walt
Much more closer to mike. Walt had his badass moments but he's never been in a full on shootout. I'm willing to bet Jesse got a ton of tips and lessons from Mike.
Having fired a hand gun at a range I can say hitting a target at medium range is harder than imagined. Add adrenaline, alcohol, rapid fire and Coke this will result in horrid aim. This is 100% believable
In addition, the fact that the second mook was firing from a really unstable and inaccurate position (one-handed & panicked), which made his shots land all over the place.
M3M3 M4CH1N3 well if it’s hard to be accurate under the most ideal circumstances, I can’t imagine it would be any easier to do it faster with a bunch of drugs screwing with you.
@@miguelvidal2335 well it was more supposed to be a symbalistic antagonist and he faced more of an internal conflict by becoming more intimidating and apathetic
This modern-western scene is a masterpiece. Vince Gilligan embraced all the classic codes of Western (characters watching each other, eyes and guns zooming...), this is really brilliant and turns out to be amazing in a contemporary gunfight.
Josué Aguilar 2001 He just kinda can’t stop himself. Being forced into this situation is enough for him. I am surprised he hasn’t had a heart attack from stress
Neil definitely deserved it for what he did to Jesse. I doubt he cared too much about that like with killing Todd. No tears shed over that one. But Casey didn't have to die, he just forced Jesse into that situation.
This would make 5 people that jesse has killed, right? 1st gail, then joaquin salamanca, then todd, then neil and finally casey. at least 2 out of the 5, he didnt regret killing.
skinny will end up hearing - "in other news tonight an explosion in the industrial district took place tonight, the owner of the welding warehouse, Kandys welding, is presumed to be the sole victim." skinny will know whats up.
I like how this scene shows how difficult it really is to shoot laterally. Even at close range you’d be surprised how much someone can miss even at close distance.
Especially when they're strafing like that and it's not like you can take the time to line up the sight. All you're really able to do is unload at them and pray.
The shootouts in these shows are some of the most accurate I’ve ever seen. Even the Salamanca twins walking in sync wiping out an entire division of a rival gang was pretty plausible.
My friends and I were doing some target practice (I don’t shoot very often) and they gave me a handgun and said to try hitting the target in the head while walking toward it. I missed all 8 shots except one to the ear lobe lol. This was from like 10-15 feet away.
I read in a interview that Vince Gilligan would originally make Jesse goes to prison in the end of the movie to save a random character and his girlfriend and staff team said: "are you crazy? he have to be free in the end!" Thank God he listened, imagine what a letdown it would be. Jesse needed a break.
As brilliant as Vince is, the writing staff has been extremely important in keeping some of his ideas down. From having Jesse killed in the first season, to having Walt Jr. to being brutally killed by Walter's trap early on, Vince tends to have extremely disturbing ideas at the start.
@@johnny_my_penls_is_small_but It was actually one of the first ideas for Season 1. If I recall, it had Walter kidnapping Tuco for killing Jesse, and he sets up a trap in case Tuco tries to escape. Walt Jr. visits Tuco, and Tuco set off the trap to kill them both. It was super dark and way too fast of a character development for Walter, which is why it was changed.
The movie on its own even functions as western movie. Jesse on the run from the law, looting Todd's money, running into bandits who are also trying to loot Todd's money, then getting a Wild West style duel at the end. Such a brilliant way to cap off Jesse's story and show his compete transformation in the way that we got to see Walt's full transformation in the finale.
1:26 this moment right here really gets me. Jesse's instinctual reaction to killing someone, and watching the life slowly leave them in the form of their leg shaking. You can almost see him being like "God fucking damn it, why do I have to keep doing this?" Killing so clearly gets to him every time, its nice to see he hasn't lost his humanity.
The gun he uses is a 38 snub. This is a callback to when Walt buys a 38 snub and is testing it out and keeps it in his jacket pocket... just like Jesse did
It looks to me like an old Iver Johnson Revolver in .32 S&W. Those things are very, very old and usually really cheap. Like under $100. Sometimes under $50 even. I think the point here is that it's a cheapo gun and his other is a Ruger .22. Two underpowered obsolete guns you wouldn't want to bring to a gunfight in 2019, but he did anyway out of desperation and still managed to come out on top.
ThePatriotsGun damn it I hate when people are right and I’m wrong. Lmao I think my mind and BrBa filled heart wanted it to be a callback/reference so I just convinced myself even though I don’t know dick about guns lol.
@@joshrankert811 I hope you don't misunderstand, that's not to say that I think your analysis is false. I think it's really insightful and interesting. I wouldn't be surprised if that parallelism was Vince Gilligan's intent. Perhaps he felt Jesse carrying a .38 snub nose in this scene, identical to Walter's, may have been a bit too on the nose. No pun intended.
It's refreshing to see REALISTIC handgun shooting scenes, where even accurate shooters in the heat of adrenaline, someone standing across the room and firing at you as you're trying to not only hit them but also not get hit and missing a good number of shots is WAY more accurate than the John Wick/Action Movie thing of basically a 11 round magazine translating into 11 dead bodies.
Well, the difference between someone like John Wick and Jesse Pinkman is John is trained to keep a cool head in the heat of a gunfight, as opposed to Jesse, who is just a guy who's been caught up in a lot of horrible things and never trained to use a gun. If you recall the scenes in Breaking Bad when Mike used a gun, he was a lot more accurate than Jesse because he was trained to use a firearm in the military before becoming a criminal.
@@dielaughing73 Sounds about right. I will give the creators of John Wick the benefit of the doubt, though. They made sure the guns in the films had the accurate number of bullets. At least, as far as I'm aware.
Marksman Definitely was not improv, it was deliberate. This isn’t a one shot scene. The time between filming Jessie firing the gun and the fire on his jacket is most likely hours or even days. In film there are multiple takes of every part of a scene. The Jessie firing gun part of this scene was probably filmed over 20 times before moving onto filming the next part of the scene. That’s also assuming they filmed all the parts of this scene in chronological order which is very rare. Either way, after every part of this scene was filmed, they would call cut and take a break from filming to prepare the set and the actors for filming the next section of this scene. In short, when Jessie fired the gun there was probably hours or even days between when they filmed the fire on his coat part of this scene. Now if his jacket caught fire in the same cut that he fired the gun, or if the entire scene was done in one take, then it would possibly be unintentional.
Re watching this show and seeing how Jesse starts off as a kid and ends with this is amazing transformation. He feels like a hardened outlaw by how he dresses and acts. Absolutely brilliant.
He actually came there peacefully and only asked for a very small amount of cash to pay the vacuum guy. He knew that likely wouldn't work but he at least tried to be civil. Walt never would've done that.
@@m1xxified Adrenaline doesn't put tears in your eyes. Besides, that close up has a clear purpose to show his reaction right after he finish killing. Jesse in the show always looked shocked or devastated right after he murdered someone. What I'm saying doesn't make him "less cooler" or contradicts his character development, it makes him human and shows how Jesse's gentle nature is still there, deep inside him.
Jesse went from the junkie comedic relief who was supposed to die in season 1 to one of the most feared characters in this universe and being one of the few who actually survived
Now THATS an interrogation mode voice lol, those guys were shitting themselves (but also cause Jesse killed two guys, albiet in self defense) cause now they think they might die right now. Perfect moment for Jesse to control the room and tie off loose ends aka threaten em' haha
"I have kids!" "Like I give a shit." Pretty funny given that the entire run of Breaking Bad seemed to imply that Jesse was the only character that actually did in fact give a shit about kids 😂
In my opinion this was Jessie's "I have 2 hitman that will be watching your every move, your whole life." moment. Like he is actually going to keep tabs on those 3 guys using their drivers licenses.
One guy was on coke and alcohol and firing from one hand while the other guy is shaken up as he's never been shot at before and doesn't use guns. He got the first guy cause he had like a full 2 minutes to aim the gun in his pocket.
yeah it really did feel like you say, especially with the inclusion of badger, skinny, and the disappearer vacuum guy. basically, this is in my head what i ASSUMED happened to jesse after he was driving away at the end of breaking bad.
Jesse kills the second guy the same way he kills that cartel member when saving Mike and Gus. What’s also amazing about Jesse is that he’s actually incredibly smart when he applies himself, something Walt told him when marking a chemistry paper, which is shown through using methods in this scene which he learned from all his mentors and enemies, and also shown from how pure he could make meth. Amazing work from Gilligan.
agreed. Even walt has never been in a full on shootout like this. I'm willing to bet jesse took a lot of tips and advice from mike when they were working together.
His misdirection was Heisenberg, Walt would always out think everyone when he was outmanned, outgunned or didn't have the money to compete. The shootout with the second guy and the exchange with the three guys is Mike. The mentality that it's got to be you or me and I'd rather it'd be you.
@@gasmime It wasn't an unnecessary movie. It told us what happened with Jesse after the events of Breaking Bad which gave clarification on how he made it out of Albuquerque.
@@gasmime it isn't unnecessary. It shows what happened to Jesse and gives him more character development. In BB, it just ends without an answer but El Camino properly says what happened.
Eight And Bourbon In the duel, they both stood still; static target’s significantly easier than a moving one, and incomparable to when you’re moving too. As soon as they both stopped moving again, that was all she wrote.
This scene is straight out of The Good the Bad and The Ugly where Blonde shoots 3 guys with his hand in his jacket pocket that's really on his gun. Love the modern twist that Gilligan put on it.
"I have kids man" "Like I give a shit" But we know Jesse and his love for kids. He does give a shit, he just can't show it in the moment. Brilliant scene from an amazing movie.
He says that because that guy used his kids as a defence. Jesse hates bad parents, and this guy "with kids" just finished getting a lapdance while snorting coke.
He means he doesn't give a shit about their dad. Why would he? The dude was just drinking and snorting coke with hookers a few minutes ago, his kids are probably better off without him.
I kind of figured this was just a natural progression from earlier in the movie He told the fake cop "I'm no cop killer" and the fake cop used that mercy against him This time he didn't show any signs of mercy to exploit, and it worked
This is one of the best shootouts I've ever seen. Someone listened to their technical advisers. One of the final lessons I learned at infantry school was hitting a target under stress is extremely difficult, even in close quarters. It was a lesson that was reinforced all throughout my career. A few of those times were with live rounds coming back. If anyone cares to get a feel for what it's like but without live rounds then look into simunitions. They aren't enough to kill, but they hurt bad enough to make training almost as stressful as the real thing.
Every one of the respondents prior to this reply knew instantly from context that OP simply mistakenly parsed out the word "best". I wonder what sort of mind would then be motivated to make such replies. I'd say it's likely the sort of bullying protected by anonymity that they wish they could engage in in real life, but are too cowardly to do so. Because in real life, you might actually face consequences.🤣🤣
One thing not mentioned about this scene is the choice of weapon in his pocket, he uses the perfect weapon to fire from within a pocket, a hammerless revolver. Because if he chose a regular pistol, the slide would most likely get stuck against the pocket lining and a normal revolver's hammer would also get stuck on it.
Honestly, wonderful attention to detail. Small moments like these that I really enjoy to look back on is probably the reason breaking bad and it’s universe is one of my favorites with a major reason being it’s cinematography. So much creativity and love put into every moment
Fun fact: In the "director's cut" version of the movie, Jesse was actually hit during this shootout in the same area Walter gets hit at the end of Breaking Bad. However, Ed the Disappearer saves Jesse's life. You can find the scenes on TH-cam.
@@Xzsh-ol9jg The scene with Jane and Jesse was nice, as was the opening scenes with Jesse just getting back to Skinny Pete and Badger. The ending was great too and there's the scene with Jesse at the vaccum cleaner store. Also the scene with the fake cops. A lot of great scenes in this movie.
I love this scene. Jesse has been through just about every traumatic event in his life. He's watch drug dealers get murdered, he's seen his girlfriend die, and the other get assassinated, he's been locked in a cage like an animal. He's got nothing to lose. House money.
@@SilencerXLR8 You may be right. We may both be right in a sense. It's almost like he channeled his inner Walt during this movie. Kind of like how Walt got to the point that he would do anything, crazy as it may sound if the outcome would benefit him.
Lucky7777 LMAO i was about to mention this. It was not realistic. You want a crazy good shoot out watch the end shoot out from the movie Heat. That was dope.
Jesse’s jacket caught on fire from the bullet friction just like Walter’s car trunk in Felina. Both were the final shootouts to close their stories. Gilligan you genus.
I love how Aaron so beautifully portrayed the toll it took on Jesse to take a life. You could always see that he hated doing it and it was the last resort. Hell of a movie and I'm so glad the ending was the way it was.
you guys are very easily impressed in the youtube comment section. This movie didn't need to be made but there was fools who kept saying, what happened? Id ask who cares but if you look up how many people on earth are mentally retarded, most of them are the type who asked what happened. He got away thats it, this whole video was just a waste of time and didn't change a bloody thing about the ending of Jesse Pinkman We know the same thing as we knew in the TV show, he wanted money, he uses drugs and he will kill for it, kinda pathetic ending that ruined the show, at least if you're smart it did
Honestly Todd and Neal seemed to be the only ones he didn’t mind killing likely because he knew they had it coming. But his uncontrollable sobbing when he has to whack Gail is always such a gut punch for me.
he only killed in self defense. Jesse would have let this guy go with the other 3 if he didn't shoot. Jesse was skipping town, that dude literally meant nothing to him, dead or alive, and Jesse isn't one to kill for no reason.
Honestly them missing each other that many times seems pretty accurate to me, its a tense fast paced situation with like 10 feet of room between them with 2 firearms discharging in a small space which would be very loud and disorienting and they're kinda just shooting frantically rather than aiming because this is a stressful situation
makes sense. still jesse picked some stuff up from his time with mike and gus . kept relatively still while tracking the guy and used both hands. meanwhile the other guy was firing with one hand extended all the way and moving to the side errattically
@@Clogmonger When I was new to shooting, I couldn’t consistently put shots on target at 10-15 feet even when I was standing still, keeping calm, utilizing sights, etc. Jesse has some practice, but they’re both strafing erratically and firing wildly in each others general direction, not utilizing sights at all. There’s bodycam footage of this exact sort of thing happening. In fact, more often than not, when a suspect actually returns fire at a lone police officer who wasn’t fully prepared, it ends up looking a lot like this
One of the greatest character developments in history of TV. Imagine being a sidecharacter, destined to die in season 1 - but play him so great that you become a lead role and get your own movie afterwards. Legend
Gale is probably the character who least deserved to die, if Jesse was so affected by it, it was because he had to kill a nice guy in cold blood, which was not even a direct threat.
@@benjaminvalenzuela8167 Yeah, Jesse did not deserve to have that on his conscience. Pure kill or be killed mentality at that point. Which brutally fucked him up in the long run, obviously. Even in Alaska. Finding a new woman, having kids; he'll always carry that weight. And that's because Jesse isn't a psychopath like everyone else in his environment. He actually feels for others, clearly.
@@zakkziegler111 Sometimes I think about what will happen when/if Jesse finds someone he loves in Alaska. They'll begin opening up to each other, that person will ask Jesse whether he's always been in Alaska or what he used to do, and Jesse will have to brush it off, saying it's a story for another time. Months will pass and they'll get closer, and eventually Jesse will realize to let this person close enough to be with means telling them everything. I can't imagine the pain of having to relive every dark and awful thing that he did or that was done to him--it's lifetimes' worth of suffering, most of which was crammed into the space of about two years, all being presented to someone who can at any point say "that's too much, I can't justify being with you." It would be all the anxiety and despair of his tell-all tape for Hank and Gomez times a hundred. Of course, I couldn't blame him for deciding he doesn't deserve someone or can't inflict himself on another innocent person. His last two girlfriends both met horrific ends that they would have avoided if he hadn't met them, which is a lot of guilt to ask a person to recover from, maybe too much. We have to hope Jesse's basic core of decency has enough left to heal so he can realize he isn't an inherently awful presence in people's lives, he's just been in consistently rough situations.
It's crazy how Jesse has only 5 body counts in the series (Gale, Joaquin, Todd, Neil, and Casey) yet you can tell at 1:30 that he still doesn't like to be put in a position where he has to kill someone
Jesse’s “yeah” at 0:27 is amazing acting with just one word. Either he wins the duel, gets his money, and is off to Alaska, or he loses and doesn’t have to worry about the money anymore. Either way, he knows his problems are over.
Mike taught Jesse how to shoot! There's a scene in Breaking Bad where Mike tells Jesse something like "Things might get a little hairy. I think it's time I taught you how to shoot." This is right before they fly to Mexico.
@@xboxmoonpartingty104 it's a quote from the book "The art of war", it basically says "when you're weak, act like you're strong, and when you're strong, act like you're weak"
1:19 is hands down the best scene from this part, you can see how Jesse is pulling that trigger as fast as he can but also being able to aim accurately. Huge character development from season 1
It's because how tense the scene was. The camera was focusing at jesses' hand close to the gun in his belt and the other guy's gun, it made you focus only to those two, making you wondering who can draw faster. Even if we saw jesse taking both guns froms his parents, this scene made us forget it completly.
The main reason that I love this movie so much is because it gave us a good ending for one of the few characters in the show that actually deserved a good ending. Considering what Jesse went through, he had better morals than many other people in the show. Jesse did kill people, but he was no murderer like Walt was. Jesse killed people to survive while Walter killed people just for simply standing in his way. Also, Jesse Pinkman was originally supposed to be killed off by Tuco at the end of season one. However, Aaron Paul’s portrayal of the character made him a fan-favorite character.
@@auser6789 Yup, and it was all thanks to Aaron Paul’s acting and portrayal of Jesse Pinkman. Another interesting fact to consider is that Aaron Paul has never taken an acting class in his entire life.
@@continentalextinction Bro I want to believe that Walt killed to genuinely save Jesse’s life but on the other hand I feel like he needed a way to keep exploiting Jesse’s loyalty to save his own ass too. Walt killing two of Gus’ soldiers for Jesse played a pivotal role in his life being sparred. On the verge of death, he orders Jesse to kill Gale, Jesse catches his first body and everything changes after that. He saves his life at the end of the show only after realizing he was a slave cook for Todd’s meth lab and not doing it by choice.
Classic western shootout. From the finger twiddles to the close up on both of their eyes. Normally it's kinda cheesy but the tension and atmosphere made it perfect.
Even when Jesse was put through hell and back, he STILL didn't kill those three guys cause he's a good person. Walt would've killed them without giving it a second thought
A perfect echo of Walt's intelligence in the murder of Jack and his gang. Gilligan manages to convey an entire series worth of lessons and teachings from Mike, Walt, and many others who have affected Jesse's life in some way, into a single shoot out. Genius 👏
Jack and his gang weren't murdered, Walt opened fire on the gang in defense of his and Jesse's life. Jack being executed was not murder either, it was extrajudicial
I was thinking the same thing: Jesse, the protégé, becomes the master. It is a great scene, with strong western-genre overtones. I even liked the 'final boss'. Neil reminds me of a grittier version of all the cowboy movie- and show-villains my grandparents watch on Encore Western every time I'm at their house.
John Nada he was just making a joking comment that he wasn’t fast enough... that’s it nothing more to it. Seriously how clueless can you be? is this your first day on the internet?
I forgot how much I loved Breaking Bad's writing and characterisation until I watched this movie. A perfect epilogue to the best TV show I've ever watched.
@@elock1277 Depends on what you think is an happy ending. When Jesse got beaten up by Hank, he has an argument with Walter in the hospital. There he mentions he's never been so alone since he worked with Walter (Combo got shot, Badger and Skinny didn't want to continue dealing etc.). Also Jane died and his parents abandoned him. It's pretty clear that Jesse just wants a life with his own family in some kind of way. But because he is wanted by the police, and then goes to Alaska, he can't fullfill his dream. He's alone for probably the rest of his life.
@@llama6394 Yeah hopefully he did. But when i think about a happy life for Jesse, i think about starting a family, live like a normal citizen. Don't forget, in Alaska he's alone till his death. He can't even walk 5m out of his property. He practically lives in some kind of prison. He spent a lot of time with the nazis, imprisoned in a concrete hole, just to cook meth. And after that he kinda went into a new prison, just without the nazis and the meth.
Jesse went from a character that was gonna get killed off in the first season, to making it through all five and getting his own spinoff movie after. Well done aaron paul well done
Well done Vince Gilligan*
@@davidvillamonte2007 both
@@davidvillamonte2007 I mean vince wanted to kill him off so luckily it changed
@@davidvillamonte2007 Vince was going to kill him off Aaron Pauls acting talent is the only reason why he was kept on
He was the only one that had a decent ending too everyone else died or went into hiding
Jesse has learned Gus's ruthlessness, Mike's calmness, Saul's con tactics, and Walt's intelligence.
🤭🤭🤭
in the end the one who successfully break the bad is jesse
I feel like he learnt from Mike, and Walter.
I don't think he ever got anything from Gus, Gus hated Jesse.
@@earnem4175 You can learn much from someone who hates you if you're around them enough. A pat on the back isn't necessarily the only way to learn a lesson.
Walt: "the perfect student doesn't exis..."
remember guys, this is the guy that went: "aahhh wire."
...copper
Nice pfp
And “cow house”
And 'Yeah, bitch! Magnets!'
YEAH MR.WHITE! YEAH SCIENCE!
1:00 That was actually an insanely fast quickdraw. Jesse didn’t stand a chance if he wasn’t hiding another pistol. You can tell he has full confidence going into a shootout.
Mr. Pinkman…Always outnumbered, Never Outgunned.
th-cam.com/video/jjlXSchka50/w-d-xo.html
@@Sandy3625 I did
@@Sandy3625 cared enough to reply
@@Sandy3625 you must not have many friends
@@Sandy3625 me dumfuci
Putting the gun on display while keeping another gun in the other pocket
That's some Clint Eastwood shit right there
The first thing to come to mind was the last scene from Django, for some reason. Even though the context of the scene was totally different.
"I count six shots, nigga."
"I count _two guns,_ nigga."
@@PhantomJavelin how Stephen stop acting like a dumb butler at that point and actually walks and talks as he really was is just freakin amazing
Heisenberg move.
that what lee van clef did in a few dollars more.
That's some pussy shit right there
Don't forget that this man knows 2 of the most dangerous hitmans in the west of the Mississippi, skinny Pete and badger! :^)
Appex.
Hitmen*
LOL
I made your 999 likes turn 1K
laserman
I love how after killing the first guy Jesse is calm, because he knew he would win. But after surviving the second gunfight he was a bit more shaken up, since he simply just got lucky, yet he was able to keep his cool. Jesse has really grown into a badass.
OMG ur totally obsessed
@@nikkingman stop speaking like a teenage girl
He’s not The Guy
@@nikkingman 😐
you got the whole squad laughing
Idk if it’s luck that won him the second gun fight. He shot the same way as he did when escaping the cartel with Gus and Mike. Instead of running and shooting like his opponent does, Jesse stands still and takes more time to aim his shots. That’s how he killed Don Hector’s grandson, that’s how he killed this white dude with the mustache.
“I got kids”
“like a give a sh!t”
Gets me everytime 😂
Love how we’ve seen that Jesse has a big soft spot for kids and would never hurt them, but these guys dint know that.
The irony that Jesse is almost certainly lying, not that there's anyone left who'd know that.
That line is totally something Mike would say
@@oreji3987
Nor should said kids give a shit about drug addicted parents getting what they deserve.
Jesse saw that these monsters don't care if their victims have kids or not...
This was an extremely satisfying conclusion to Jesse’s story. He was such a good character, he makes you feel his pain.
Story and easter eggs were great
But movie was too slow in some scenes
In fact If it was any movie outside breaking bad universe
I think i would have never watched it
I just watched this movie and it makes you feel for Jesse on a different level, he lost everything and the only good thing that happend is he survived.
Yeah except for all those close range shots he missed to an opponent that was standing still after defeating an opponent with perfect aim while he was standing still but i guess we can let that slide since he atleast won😂
@@Nickyblicky-n5x more realistic than just one bullet instant headshot. Jesse wasn't expecting to fight another person and adrenaline goes hard so
@@Nickyblicky-n5x Imagine being this fucking naive lmao. He isn’t a professional killer or soldier, neither are you. You are firing a tiny piece of metal out of a pipe, each explosion moving the trajectory farther away from where you’re trying to aim.
It’s not that easy to hit someone in a gun fight.
Hard to imagine Jesse from the very first episode would ever end up like this. Crazy.
jumping out of a window half naked trying to avoid getting caught......
Just rewatched the first episode and it really is crazy how much Jesse changed.
@@almightyfonics having your girlfriend die right next to you in your sleep killing a person for the first time see a kid get shot being captured by neo nazis seeing your girlfriend murdered right in front of you being tortured and a meth slave for a year will change a person.
legion 66 😂😂
I mean if all that doesn’t change a man, I don’t know what the fuck will.
All that happening still doesn't make him that skilled with a firearm.
Skinny Pete hearing about this a few days later- *Man that’s church yo, for real*
Badger: "Church, for real man, that's yo."
"that's my hero and shit"
nice profile pic brother
“You’re like my hero man”
*Am I the only one who read this in Skinny Pete's voice?*
I love the full scene so much. It shows everything Jesse learned from his mentors. He embodies so many different qualities ranging from Gus to Saul to Mike to Walt. It’s so well done and gives Mr. Driscoll a proper end to his character arc.
Mentors? Did you mean exploiters and abusers. The closest is Mike, but he was hardly a mentor.
@@kvaka009 You know two can things can true at the same time? Yes a lot of time they were the root cause of Jesse's fucked up life, but they also taught him so much and for the most part tried to guide him, even if it at times it was for their own benefit. So they were, in more ways than one, his mentors.
@@frigusgwalker8123 ok, we disagree about what a "mentor"
@@kvaka009Well you’re not wrong but again it was those abuses which led to Jesse learning how to do what he does in the movie effectively. Which is kill, threaten and steal from people.
Jesse is just a survivor. He got turned into what he is here from all the terrible shit that happened to him. But he didnt break down. He just turned ruthless to survive.
Forget Gale. The cruelest thing Jesse ever did was subject those guys to endless hours of waiting in the Albuquerque DMV.
Michael VanHoose lol which episode was this
John Fortnite this clip is from the Breaking Bad movie El Camino
John Fortnite he took their id’s meaning they going to need to go to dmv
Actually, in the State of New Mexico, it is called the M.V.D., or the Motor Vehicles Division, NOT the D.M.V., like in other states, like California.
Aries Radke#6 ohhhh lmao I thought he gave them back
"A man who can hit his target with a .22 is more deadly than the man who can't hit jack shit with his .45 ACP."
-Sun Tzu
At this distance, a 22 does the job perfectly well.
@@Yora21 not if you don't hit what matters.
@@jessegpresley well then you wouldn't be hitting the target then would you?
He actually missed with the .22. He had to pick up the other guy's .45.
Whites ain’t shiet-MLK
Jesse basically channeled all his mentors, and an enemy, in this scene:
His calm, business demeanor when he first entered and tried to negotiate: Gus
Displaying his lesser gun front and center while keeping his main gun in his pocket to fire when his enemy least expects it: Mike
Grabbing the henchmen's ID's so he can learn their names and addresses to better intimidate them: Tuco
Rigging the entire place to explode through science: Walt
Yeah SCIENCE
Spot on analysis 👌🏿
well said man
And yet still keeping a bit of Jesse in himself in the final by letting them go
"DURRRRRRRR"
I love how he's breathing heavy and holding back tears at 1:30
He's not heartless, killing 2 men still effects him emotionally
I don't interpret it that way at all lol
he knew he was winning the first fight and was unphased but the 2nd guy caught him off guard
@bryankennel730 it’s probably a mixture of the two
Dumb observation. Dude just escaped death, ofc he's pumped with adrenaline.
I thought it was tension.
He was Heisenberg and Mike in that moment
I KNOW RIGHT
Hike?
I saw the mike in his eyes wtf
Walter Ehrmantraut? Mike White?
Much more closer to mike. Walt had his badass moments but he's never been in a full on shootout. I'm willing to bet Jesse got a ton of tips and lessons from Mike.
Having fired a hand gun at a range I can say hitting a target at medium range is harder than imagined. Add adrenaline, alcohol, rapid fire and Coke this will result in horrid aim. This is 100% believable
Mooky Blaylock Definitely go to the range once every few months.
In addition, the fact that the second mook was firing from a really unstable and inaccurate position (one-handed & panicked), which made his shots land all over the place.
M3M3 M4CH1N3 well if it’s hard to be accurate under the most ideal circumstances, I can’t imagine it would be any easier to do it faster with a bunch of drugs screwing with you.
@M3M3 M4CH1N3 Because that's incredibly obvious. There's a reason you don't drive drunk.
pendleton123 lol Coke sobers you up when you’re drunk
I love how the "Final Boss", was the guy who engineered his imprisonment and subsequent captivity.
itsVegas
He tied up loose ends
RENATUS RECORDS and got enough money to start over. 🤲🏼
This antagonist was a puppy compared to those of the show.
@@miguelvidal2335 aww man now im thinking about John wick's puppy :c
@@miguelvidal2335 well it was more supposed to be a symbalistic antagonist and he faced more of an internal conflict by becoming more intimidating and apathetic
This modern-western scene is a masterpiece. Vince Gilligan embraced all the classic codes of Western (characters watching each other, eyes and guns zooming...), this is really brilliant and turns out to be amazing in a contemporary gunfight.
It was a peak love letter to spaghetti westerns
I just love old Western movies, and Vince did a great job on scratching that itch on this scene.
The whole show is a neo western, if we're gonna pin it down to a genre
The fact that he still hesitates and tears up shows Jesse is still a good person. He doesn’t want to kill anyone, but they want to kill him.
Josué Aguilar 2001 He just kinda can’t stop himself. Being forced into this situation is enough for him. I am surprised he hasn’t had a heart attack from stress
Neil definitely deserved it for what he did to Jesse. I doubt he cared too much about that like with killing Todd. No tears shed over that one. But Casey didn't have to die, he just forced Jesse into that situation.
WarGrowlmon18 Jesse doesn’t like killing anyone, every time he kills someone he feels some kind of remorse or trauma after.
This would make 5 people that jesse has killed, right? 1st gail, then joaquin salamanca, then todd, then neil and finally casey. at least 2 out of the 5, he didnt regret killing.
Who the fook is jaquin salamanca
If only Skinny Pete could have seen this.
daweller he would’ve worshipped him
Cracked me up bro
skinny will end up hearing - "in other news tonight an explosion in the industrial district took place tonight, the owner of the welding warehouse, Kandys welding, is presumed to be the sole victim." skinny will know whats up.
Would love to hear a piano song dedicated to Jesse written by Skinny Pete, I mean he was his hero and shit...
🔥🔥🔥🔥
I like how this scene shows how difficult it really is to shoot laterally. Even at close range you’d be surprised how much someone can miss even at close distance.
”Even at close range…even at close distance”
Especially when they're strafing like that and it's not like you can take the time to line up the sight. All you're really able to do is unload at them and pray.
The shootouts in these shows are some of the most accurate I’ve ever seen. Even the Salamanca twins walking in sync wiping out an entire division of a rival gang was pretty plausible.
My friends and I were doing some target practice (I don’t shoot very often) and they gave me a handgun and said to try hitting the target in the head while walking toward it. I missed all 8 shots except one to the ear lobe lol. This was from like 10-15 feet away.
still weird he was able to kill the guy with the gun in his pocket without properly aiming at the same distance
‘Dude, you’re on fire.’ Kills me every time
Okay but why was he actually on fire? 😅
He just shot a really old and unreliable revolver through his pocket. Bullets are hot...
@@whateverwhatever4026 ok? I never said anything was wrong with it?
@@βασιλιάς0 I'm not talking to you. I'm answering Jesus's question...
@@whateverwhatever4026 do that somewhere else?
I read in a interview that Vince Gilligan would originally make Jesse goes to prison in the end of the movie to save a random character and his girlfriend and staff team said: "are you crazy? he have to be free in the end!" Thank God he listened, imagine what a letdown it would be. Jesse needed a break.
As brilliant as Vince is, the writing staff has been extremely important in keeping some of his ideas down. From having Jesse killed in the first season, to having Walt Jr. to being brutally killed by Walter's trap early on, Vince tends to have extremely disturbing ideas at the start.
@@davidci Even great writers have bad ideas and off days. That's why editors and beta readers are so important.
@@davidci
Wait, Walt. Jr was gonna be killed by one of Walt's traps? How come I never heard of this?
@@johnny_my_penls_is_small_but It was actually one of the first ideas for Season 1. If I recall, it had Walter kidnapping Tuco for killing Jesse, and he sets up a trap in case Tuco tries to escape. Walt Jr. visits Tuco, and Tuco set off the trap to kill them both. It was super dark and way too fast of a character development for Walter, which is why it was changed.
@@davidci thats fucked
He shouldn't have drained all his deadeye on the first guy!
Your goddam right
It's a .22, it's not enough 2 or 3 bullets to actually be sure that u kill the guy, unless u shoot in a really sensible place
@@javiero7211 it was a joke to red dead redemption
@@javiero7211 .22s are actually perfectly capable of killing someone with one shot contrary to popular belief
@@javiero7211 who told you that bullshit
Breaking Bad has always been a western - so this was the perfect icing on the cake for the show imo.
The movie on its own even functions as western movie. Jesse on the run from the law, looting Todd's money, running into bandits who are also trying to loot Todd's money, then getting a Wild West style duel at the end. Such a brilliant way to cap off Jesse's story and show his compete transformation in the way that we got to see Walt's full transformation in the finale.
Lost User A Neo Western
your observation made the movie twice as good for me, It really is a modern western.
What happened to Jesse's $5 million?
@@boss_niko he threw away but, in the end the police apprehended.
1:26 this moment right here really gets me. Jesse's instinctual reaction to killing someone, and watching the life slowly leave them in the form of their leg shaking. You can almost see him being like "God fucking damn it, why do I have to keep doing this?" Killing so clearly gets to him every time, its nice to see he hasn't lost his humanity.
"They say it gets easier. I'm not sure if I should be glad or not that it doesn't for me..."
He lost his humanity when he killed Dale
@@JohnS-il1dr Who's Dale? Is that the dog he said he killed in that support group?
@@JohnS-il1drit was either gale or walt and he decided to save walt. dont make it seem as if he went out of his way to kill gale for no reason.
This was Jeese’s “you’re god damn right scene”
TripleUp Dude I have kids.... *LIKE I GIVE A SHIT*
You’re goddamn right
Instead of them saying his names, he said their name
Nah the scene that was equivalent to that, was the one in the cartel lab where he owned the chemist in front of everyone..😂
feels like every jesse moment is his "you're god damn right" scene
The gun he uses is a 38 snub. This is a callback to when Walt buys a 38 snub and is testing it out and keeps it in his jacket pocket... just like Jesse did
It looks to me like an old Iver Johnson Revolver in .32 S&W. Those things are very, very old and usually really cheap. Like under $100. Sometimes under $50 even. I think the point here is that it's a cheapo gun and his other is a Ruger .22. Two underpowered obsolete guns you wouldn't want to bring to a gunfight in 2019, but he did anyway out of desperation and still managed to come out on top.
ThePatriotsGun damn it I hate when people are right and I’m wrong. Lmao I think my mind and BrBa filled heart wanted it to be a callback/reference so I just convinced myself even though I don’t know dick about guns lol.
@@joshrankert811 I hope you don't misunderstand, that's not to say that I think your analysis is false. I think it's really insightful and interesting. I wouldn't be surprised if that parallelism was Vince Gilligan's intent. Perhaps he felt Jesse carrying a .38 snub nose in this scene, identical to Walter's, may have been a bit too on the nose. No pun intended.
@Skitzo He fires the 45 like 10 times and it only carries 8 max so It was a little disappointing there.
Where would you keep a 38 snub if you where about to shoot some fellas
Jesse's aim was deadly with a big iron on his hip
*You have become addicted to Crystal Meth*
You take a sip from your trusty vault 13 canteen
HES AN OUTLAW LOOSE AND RUNNIN
The song San Angelo has the line "I beat his draw and I shot him, shot him six times just as fast as the bullets would flyyyyy!"
Hardly. He fired more rounds than the gun can hold... VG’s only failure...
It's refreshing to see REALISTIC handgun shooting scenes, where even accurate shooters in the heat of adrenaline, someone standing across the room and firing at you as you're trying to not only hit them but also not get hit and missing a good number of shots is WAY more accurate than the John Wick/Action Movie thing of basically a 11 round magazine translating into 11 dead bodies.
Well, the difference between someone like John Wick and Jesse Pinkman is John is trained to keep a cool head in the heat of a gunfight, as opposed to Jesse, who is just a guy who's been caught up in a lot of horrible things and never trained to use a gun. If you recall the scenes in Breaking Bad when Mike used a gun, he was a lot more accurate than Jesse because he was trained to use a firearm in the military before becoming a criminal.
More like an 11-round magazine turning into 30 dead bodies in a lot of films
@@theminingassassin16good analysis. You are perfectly on point imo.
@@dielaughing73 Sounds about right. I will give the creators of John Wick the benefit of the doubt, though. They made sure the guns in the films had the accurate number of bullets. At least, as far as I'm aware.
@@dielaughing73he always reloads.
The ending was such a sad yet heartwarming suprise tbh, no twist, no bs, just jesse finally getting what he deserved
Facts
Agreed
Yeah he got to live out mikes dream of moving to Alaska
yea
Did he deserve it though?
"Dude you're on fire" was literally a metaphor written into the show and its fuckin great
using "litterally" before the word "metaphor" makes you the most unpredictable person alive
Love how you used both the words “literally” and “metaphor” in the same sentence lol
@@BigMelvinHarrisSmoke I fuckin did, didn't I hahaha
That was so cool... Guy was just chilling in the corner and hit him with that line lol
vrabo nivce
"Dude you're on fire"
When I first heard that I thought he was complimenting him...but then I realized he was literally on fire.
Victor Valerio literally same
İt was not on purpose i think. He got fired accidentally
@@mlg_kaju2321 Yeah that was total accidental improv I'd imagine. The blanks in the revolver probably started the fire. I loved that little bit.
Vito Corleone reference?
Marksman
Definitely was not improv, it was deliberate. This isn’t a one shot scene. The time between filming Jessie firing the gun and the fire on his jacket is most likely hours or even days.
In film there are multiple takes of every part of a scene. The Jessie firing gun part of this scene was probably filmed over 20 times before moving onto filming the next part of the scene. That’s also assuming they filmed all the parts of this scene in chronological order which is very rare. Either way, after every part of this scene was filmed, they would call cut and take a break from filming to prepare the set and the actors for filming the next section of this scene.
In short, when Jessie fired the gun there was probably hours or even days between when they filmed the fire on his coat part of this scene.
Now if his jacket caught fire in the same cut that he fired the gun, or if the entire scene was done in one take, then it would possibly be unintentional.
Re watching this show and seeing how Jesse starts off as a kid and ends with this is amazing transformation. He feels like a hardened outlaw by how he dresses and acts. Absolutely brilliant.
He actually came there peacefully and only asked for a very small amount of cash to pay the vacuum guy. He knew that likely wouldn't work but he at least tried to be civil. Walt never would've done that.
@@flightofthebumblebee9529this was the moment he became el Camino
mike looking down like "atta boy"
james84 - I like Mike and all but let’s face it he’s looking up definitely not down 😂
I'd say Walter White did the same think
I think he's looking up
More like: "Not bad, kid"
Yeah great
This is the moment where Walter white turned into huel
Too funny! 🤣
@@phazedtoo Reasonably.
this is truly where I turned into Huell
This is the moment where Walt's sperm turned into Walt Jr.
You’re goddamn right
“Dude, you're on fire."
“..."
“..."
“You're goddamn right."
1:30 the acting suggest that he still hates to kill
@@oscarchavezavellan2738
Its just the adrenaline
@@m1xxified Adrenaline doesn't put tears in your eyes. Besides, that close up has a clear purpose to show his reaction right after he finish killing. Jesse in the show always looked shocked or devastated right after he murdered someone. What I'm saying doesn't make him "less cooler" or contradicts his character development, it makes him human and shows how Jesse's gentle nature is still there, deep inside him.
Like he gives a shit!
I actually kinda cringed at the line then I realized that he LITERALLY was on fire. It wasn’t a cliché line.
Jesse went from the junkie comedic relief who was supposed to die in season 1 to one of the most feared characters in this universe and being one of the few who actually survived
1:35 holy shit his voice in that part sounded just like Walt’s
Good catch! Heisenberg's sole apprentice indeed
WOW you’re right. Eerie.
It was like if Heisenberg's spirit possessed Jesse 😳
Now THATS an interrogation mode voice lol, those guys were shitting themselves (but also cause Jesse killed two guys, albiet in self defense) cause now they think they might die right now. Perfect moment for Jesse to control the room and tie off loose ends aka threaten em' haha
This is a show where characters tend to exhibit the traits of those who've been killed
"I have kids!"
"Like I give a shit."
Pretty funny given that the entire run of Breaking Bad seemed to imply that Jesse was the only character that actually did in fact give a shit about kids 😂
He did care, he just couldn't let them know that.
His adrenaline is through the roof from a near death experience. What did you expect him to say? 🤣
He didn't give a shit about the fact that that junkie is a father
@@plasmasnake3691 yea lmao
"I have kids"
"Oh, I am sorry to disturb you mister, you are free to go"
@@KrepX3 Either he didn’t care because the father would be a junkie or he did and put on this frightful persona learning from Walt
This is Jesse's "This is not Meth" moment, just a pure display of badassery and how far he's come as a character
Nah more like his, "Tread lightly" moment killing Tod or standing up to the Narcos was his "This is not Meth" moment
This was Jesses naked in a supermarket moment
Nah this is the equivalent of Walt killing nazis w machine gun
th-cam.com/video/iDOMq58zkbU/w-d-xo.html
In my opinion this was Jessie's "I have 2 hitman that will be watching your every move, your whole life." moment. Like he is actually going to keep tabs on those 3 guys using their drivers licenses.
There’s something so beautifully perfect about how Jesse is following Walt’s footsteps with empty but haunting threats to get what he wants
I love how they miss each other at point blank range. Most realistic shootout ever.
It’s hard to shoot someone when they’re also shooting at you. It actually makes it more realistic
One guy was on coke and alcohol and firing from one hand while the other guy is shaken up as he's never been shot at before and doesn't use guns. He got the first guy cause he had like a full 2 minutes to aim the gun in his pocket.
Am I the only one who interpreted this comment as sincerely meant?
I hate how they missed . aiming for the belly or chest would've surely hit something. and then a perfect head shot... come on. no way
@@filmprojecter8124 Jesse has been shot at THE MOST out of all the main cast.
I watched El Camino right after I finished Breaking Bad and it felt like I was watching Season 5 Episode 17 & 18 of Breaking Bad
Same, highly recommend including this movie as part of the finale run
same bro
yeah it really did feel like you say, especially with the inclusion of badger, skinny, and the disappearer vacuum guy. basically, this is in my head what i ASSUMED happened to jesse after he was driving away at the end of breaking bad.
@@HoldenTompkins27 and S1E1 of better call Saul after that
@@pIayingwithmahwii And the guy from the junkyard, he was a G
Jesse kills the second guy the same way he kills that cartel member when saving Mike and Gus. What’s also amazing about Jesse is that he’s actually incredibly smart when he applies himself, something Walt told him when marking a chemistry paper, which is shown through using methods in this scene which he learned from all his mentors and enemies, and also shown from how pure he could make meth. Amazing work from Gilligan.
Amazing analysis by yourself.
You summed up my thoughts. Thank you.
Further to this I think there's the lesson of letting people underestimate you, and hide your capacity or talents.
"Dude youre on fire" at the end of the scene
absolutely sold it . he didnt even notice, thats how intense the moment was
I don't get why people think he went full Heisenberg here, Heisenberg was ruthless but he was wreckless , this was full on Mike here.
agreed. Even walt has never been in a full on shootout like this. I'm willing to bet jesse took a lot of tips and advice from mike when they were working together.
@The Unborne I feel like that's just Jesse flexing his ego. Doesn't really mean a lot when you're already a high profile fugitive lol
He even dresses like Mike.
nah this was full on Jesse
His misdirection was Heisenberg, Walt would always out think everyone when he was outmanned, outgunned or didn't have the money to compete. The shootout with the second guy and the exchange with the three guys is Mike. The mentality that it's got to be you or me and I'd rather it'd be you.
I don't know why so many people hated this movie. It was a damn good movie and really gave us clarity of what happened with Jesse.
People hated this movie!?! Wow!
Never heard of people hating this. It's a really good movie.
@@gasmime It wasn't an unnecessary movie. It told us what happened with Jesse after the events of Breaking Bad which gave clarification on how he made it out of Albuquerque.
@@gasmime it isn't unnecessary. It shows what happened to Jesse and gives him more character development. In BB, it just ends without an answer but El Camino properly says what happened.
Everyone’s expectations were probably too high. It’s pretty good, but not as good as the show. Also Todd got fat.
The camera shot as Jesse takes out the redhead is almost identical to when he takes out the cartel guy in front of Don Eladio's. 1:19
joaquin you mean
Was just watching that scene and I was immediately reminded of this. Came here to confirm. 😂
@@stuntdouble1459 yes
@@arthousecouch I overstated it a bit. It's not identical. But it is certainly reminiscent... the muzzle aimed towards the camera, the rapid-fire.
His deadeye ran out after the duel. Hence why he missed a lotta shots.
Just my theory.
Eight And Bourbon In the duel, they both stood still; static target’s significantly easier than a moving one, and incomparable to when you’re moving too. As soon as they both stopped moving again, that was all she wrote.
He was playing on free aim
@@zebo8000 lmao 😂😂
@Fighter 57 hell m8
Yeah Jesse needs some deadeye tonic
El Camino is lowkey a modern day western, not just because of this scene
The whole breaking bad is, really
This scene is straight out of The Good the Bad and The Ugly where Blonde shoots 3 guys with his hand in his jacket pocket that's really on his gun. Love the modern twist that Gilligan put on it.
Agreed. I wish it was a little more action in it though. But it was still good.
yeah it is. good observation
Spooked Ghost i agree fully, gilligan even said he viewed breaking bad as a modern day western
If Jesse learned something from Walter was: never play other's game, play with your rules.
I think the greatest lesson he learned is he didn't deserve to be in the world of dirty men and their games.
@@user-pi1lb4tf2f I mean yea Jesse has a heart and emotions
i can tell, this is the exact moment jesse earned his freedom, the true and only freedom for him, that he now acted on himself
"Dude you're on fire"
You're god damn right
No dude. I'm the fire
I totally wanted to write the same thing, man.
"I have kids man"
"Like I give a shit"
But we know Jesse and his love for kids. He does give a shit, he just can't show it in the moment. Brilliant scene from an amazing movie.
@uh jeff he's not. his last letter to Brock shows this.
Yes this ground is made of ground
Thats why we don't see his face at this moment I guess 🤔
He says that because that guy used his kids as a defence. Jesse hates bad parents, and this guy "with kids" just finished getting a lapdance while snorting coke.
Enda O'Rourke Even if it didn’t have to be made, what makes it not a good movie?
“I have kids”
“Like I give a shit”
Yes, yes you do
But they don't know that, do they? That's what Jesse learned from Mike. The other guys can't see your soft side, ever.
He’s bluffing, it’s just intimidation
He means he doesn't give a shit about their dad. Why would he? The dude was just drinking and snorting coke with hookers a few minutes ago, his kids are probably better off without him.
I kind of figured this was just a natural progression from earlier in the movie
He told the fake cop "I'm no cop killer" and the fake cop used that mercy against him
This time he didn't show any signs of mercy to exploit, and it worked
Probably more than him tbh
“When the gun is drawn, you have the rest of your life to make the right shot.”
This is one of the best shootouts I've ever seen. Someone listened to their technical advisers. One of the final lessons I learned at infantry school was hitting a target under stress is extremely difficult, even in close quarters. It was a lesson that was reinforced all throughout my career. A few of those times were with live rounds coming back.
If anyone cares to get a feel for what it's like but without live rounds then look into simunitions. They aren't enough to kill, but they hurt bad enough to make training almost as stressful as the real thing.
just like how morbius is one of the movies ever?
@@soap3831 yeah I was confused by the first sentence too
@@soap3831 this is truly one of the scenes of all time
El Camino is in my opinion, one of the movies I've ever watched.
Every one of the respondents prior to this reply knew instantly from context that OP simply mistakenly parsed out the word "best". I wonder what sort of mind would then be motivated to make such replies. I'd say it's likely the sort of bullying protected by anonymity that they wish they could engage in in real life, but are too cowardly to do so. Because in real life, you might actually face consequences.🤣🤣
One thing not mentioned about this scene is the choice of weapon in his pocket, he uses the perfect weapon to fire from within a pocket, a hammerless revolver.
Because if he chose a regular pistol, the slide would most likely get stuck against the pocket lining and a normal revolver's hammer would also get stuck on it.
The shot at 1:23 is simply amazing! The placement of Jesse in the small window that was broken and the guy cowering in the left window is perfection
Honestly, wonderful attention to detail. Small moments like these that I really enjoy to look back on is probably the reason breaking bad and it’s universe is one of my favorites with a major reason being it’s cinematography. So much creativity and love put into every moment
That was probably planned
@@sumuqh No shit?
Not to mention the shot immediately after! Masterful cinematography. The grainy quality really goes well with it.
The shot of Jesse through the broken glass at 1:24 is just beautiful.
Didn't even notice that, nice catch!
VRAVO BINCE !!!
@@Liquidfard I see what u did there
the amount of times i’ve watched this movie and scene and i never spotted that. good catch
Fun fact: In the "director's cut" version of the movie, Jesse was actually hit during this shootout in the same area Walter gets hit at the end of Breaking Bad. However, Ed the Disappearer saves Jesse's life. You can find the scenes on TH-cam.
Oh thats cool ! Thanks
Wow thanks!
I can’t find the clip
th-cam.com/video/_Bjy4e2gI_8/w-d-xo.html heres the clip
@@tylerholmes7246 let me guess its a rickroll
young jesse wouldve left the gun there by accident lol 2:49
Jessie, DONT LEAVE THE GUN AT THE CRIME SCENE!!! 😡
Gilligan wasn't lying when he said Breaking Bad was a modern western
One of the best scenes in the movie and I love it
It is the best scene in the movie
What IS the best scene other than this? Maybe the Walter and Jesse convo comes close
This was awesome Jesse here was calculated like Walter and badass like Mike. This was his moment, I loved it
@@Xzsh-ol9jg The scene with Jane and Jesse was nice, as was the opening scenes with Jesse just getting back to Skinny Pete and Badger. The ending was great too and there's the scene with Jesse at the vaccum cleaner store. Also the scene with the fake cops. A lot of great scenes in this movie.
@King He wasn't waiting for him to get ready, he was stalling while aiming his gun in the pocket.
That driver license thing was smart!
Not really because they are basically crooks and could've easily faked their address on ids
Ash S he knew it wouldn’t work forever. Just had to buy him some time to reset his identity without getting caught.
It would have been better if he "fight clubed" it .. "if you are not on your way to becoming a veterinarian in 3 weeks"
well, Jesse wasn't the one who thought of it. It was actually Tuco if you remember.
@@ugy8392 Never thought of that, holy fuck what a callback
I would like to see this version of Jesse Pinkman encountering Tuco.
I love this scene. Jesse has been through just about every traumatic event in his life. He's watch drug dealers get murdered, he's seen his girlfriend die, and the other get assassinated, he's been locked in a cage like an animal. He's got nothing to lose. House money.
It also shows that he has learned a lot since meeting Walk in episode 1. He isn't just some dumb kid.
Oh I think he's truly realized how much there is to lose
@@SilencerXLR8 You may be right. We may both be right in a sense. It's almost like he channeled his inner Walt during this movie. Kind of like how Walt got to the point that he would do anything, crazy as it may sound if the outcome would benefit him.
That's gotta be one of the most realistic shootouts I've ever seen.
What about resvoir dogs?
@@markelkhatib2524 wasnt
This may be 2nd, only to the scene in season 2 of the wire when bodies crew had a full on street battle
@Degree7 true but how would they be able to show that since it's not from Jesse's first person view
Lucky7777 LMAO i was about to mention this. It was not realistic. You want a crazy good shoot out watch the end shoot out from the movie Heat. That was dope.
Jesse’s jacket caught on fire from the bullet friction just like Walter’s car trunk in Felina. Both were the final shootouts to close their stories. Gilligan you genus.
bullet friction? more like exploding gunpowder
More like exploding powder and a hot ass barrel sitting in the same spot.
I feel like both things were just what would happen in reality.
Lol bullet friction
Snub revolver and burning powder+pocket lint
This entire movie really is an accumulation of what Jesse has learned from breaking bad
I love how Aaron so beautifully portrayed the toll it took on Jesse to take a life. You could always see that he hated doing it and it was the last resort. Hell of a movie and I'm so glad the ending was the way it was.
you guys are very easily impressed in the youtube comment section. This movie didn't need to be made but there was fools who kept saying, what happened? Id ask who cares but if you look up how many people on earth are mentally retarded, most of them are the type who asked what happened. He got away thats it, this whole video was just a waste of time and didn't change a bloody thing about the ending of Jesse Pinkman
We know the same thing as we knew in the TV show, he wanted money, he uses drugs and he will kill for it, kinda pathetic ending that ruined the show, at least if you're smart it did
Honestly Todd and Neal seemed to be the only ones he didn’t mind killing likely because he knew they had it coming. But his uncontrollable sobbing when he has to whack Gail is always such a gut punch for me.
*todd and Neil also wronged him personally so that certainly helped put his mind at ease
he only killed in self defense. Jesse would have let this guy go with the other 3 if he didn't shoot. Jesse was skipping town, that dude literally meant nothing to him, dead or alive, and Jesse isn't one to kill for no reason.
Jesse went from being an incompetent guy that was gonna get killed in the first season to being one of the only survivors
the only survivor directly involved in the game if i’m not mistaken
@@Amaarc77 I mean, Saul is still alive and he was involved
@@ramoskee DIRECTLY involved
@@Amaarc77 Saul was directly involved, dumb@$$.
@@Amaarc77how was saul not directly involved
Honestly them missing each other that many times seems pretty accurate to me, its a tense fast paced situation with like 10 feet of room between them with 2 firearms discharging in a small space which would be very loud and disorienting and they're kinda just shooting frantically rather than aiming because this is a stressful situation
makes sense. still jesse picked some stuff up from his time with mike and gus . kept relatively still while tracking the guy and used both hands. meanwhile the other guy was firing with one hand extended all the way and moving to the side errattically
Divine intervention.
Gotta walk the earth now, like Kane.
That “10 feet of room” is exactly why they wouldn’t have missed that many times.
Also, did you watch the same clip? They’re clearly aiming at one another lol
@@Clogmonger When I was new to shooting, I couldn’t consistently put shots on target at 10-15 feet even when I was standing still, keeping calm, utilizing sights, etc. Jesse has some practice, but they’re both strafing erratically and firing wildly in each others general direction, not utilizing sights at all. There’s bodycam footage of this exact sort of thing happening. In fact, more often than not, when a suspect actually returns fire at a lone police officer who wasn’t fully prepared, it ends up looking a lot like this
One of the greatest character developments in history of TV. Imagine being a sidecharacter, destined to die in season 1 - but play him so great that you become a lead role and get your own movie afterwards. Legend
I still remember how traumatized Jesse was after killing Gale. Now he's dropping bodies like it's nobody's business.
He was torn up about killing gale, because he didn't deserve it. Todd and Neil had it coming and killing Joaquin and Casey was selfdefense.
Gale is probably the character who least deserved to die, if Jesse was so affected by it, it was because he had to kill a nice guy in cold blood, which was not even a direct threat.
@@benjaminvalenzuela8167 Yeah, Jesse did not deserve to have that on his conscience.
Pure kill or be killed mentality at that point. Which brutally fucked him up in the long run, obviously.
Even in Alaska. Finding a new woman, having kids; he'll always carry that weight.
And that's because Jesse isn't a psychopath like everyone else in his environment. He actually feels for others, clearly.
gale was harmless and kind of innocent (at least, a bit more innocent than jesse was at the time). he didnt deserve it. these guys did
@@zakkziegler111 Sometimes I think about what will happen when/if Jesse finds someone he loves in Alaska. They'll begin opening up to each other, that person will ask Jesse whether he's always been in Alaska or what he used to do, and Jesse will have to brush it off, saying it's a story for another time. Months will pass and they'll get closer, and eventually Jesse will realize to let this person close enough to be with means telling them everything. I can't imagine the pain of having to relive every dark and awful thing that he did or that was done to him--it's lifetimes' worth of suffering, most of which was crammed into the space of about two years, all being presented to someone who can at any point say "that's too much, I can't justify being with you." It would be all the anxiety and despair of his tell-all tape for Hank and Gomez times a hundred.
Of course, I couldn't blame him for deciding he doesn't deserve someone or can't inflict himself on another innocent person. His last two girlfriends both met horrific ends that they would have avoided if he hadn't met them, which is a lot of guilt to ask a person to recover from, maybe too much. We have to hope Jesse's basic core of decency has enough left to heal so he can realize he isn't an inherently awful presence in people's lives, he's just been in consistently rough situations.
- "Are you ready?"
- "Yeah"
Damn that "Yeah" made me see the entire story Jesse went trough
Props to the actor who plays Neil. The guy has scene presence.
Dude stared down Casey for like 30 seconds after he spoke up again.
Does he not sound like Christian Slater to you?!
@@zenith8417 he seemed gay in that part
He looks like the guy from "Music is Win"
Anybody see a little ray liotta in him?
It's crazy how Jesse has only 5 body counts in the series (Gale, Joaquin, Todd, Neil, and Casey) yet you can tell at 1:30 that he still doesn't like to be put in a position where he has to kill someone
That was Walt tf lol
@@deshaunreid7728what
Didnt he kill multiple men at the place where gus killed the salamancas with poison?
@@sonicartzldesignerclan5763He killed only one, Joaquin.
2:31 "Dude, you're on fire..."
In more ways than one.
You do not wanna fire
Almost like it's intentional
Plot twist, he meant it as a compliment. He did not see the fire
Jesse’s “yeah” at 0:27 is amazing acting with just one word. Either he wins the duel, gets his money, and is off to Alaska, or he loses and doesn’t have to worry about the money anymore. Either way, he knows his problems are over.
Plus, he already aimed with left hand.
Wrong time stamp - 0:25
pretty sure that's not fatalistic acceptance of his possible death
these comments are so funny
@@wh24it8e DID YOU KNOW: There is a subtle reference that jesse shot people as demonstrated by when jesse lit up a fucker or two in this scene
Jesse: “I Won”.
Neo 2k when they tied him up at Todd’s apartment, I legit thought they were Jacks family/friends and he was gonna get fucked up again
I won BiyatCH
Just busted out dyin 💀😂😂
0:05 When your girl tells you youre done drinking for the night
Mike taught Jesse how to shoot! There's a scene in Breaking Bad where Mike tells Jesse something like "Things might get a little hairy. I think it's time I taught you how to shoot." This is right before they fly to Mexico.
“Yeah”
-Jesse Pinkman
Jesse Pimpman
BI AT CH
*lowkey*
« You got no idea how ready I am, bitch . »
Jesse Wick
That’s Clint Eastwood’s spirit
When weak appear strong,
When strong appear weak.
-Sun Tzu
what
what
When strong spear weak
The weakened feel strong
-my dad
@@xboxmoonpartingty104 it's a quote from the book "The art of war", it basically says "when you're weak, act like you're strong, and when you're strong, act like you're weak"
*Sun Tuzla said that! And I’d say he knows A LITTLE more about fighting than you do pal cause he invented it!*
1:19 is hands down the best scene from this part, you can see how Jesse is pulling that trigger as fast as he can but also being able to aim accurately. Huge character development from season 1
Accurately?
@@EruseanPug Y...yes?
I didn't see the jacket move coming. Not sure how I missed it but that was amazing
It's because how tense the scene was. The camera was focusing at jesses' hand close to the gun in his belt and the other guy's gun, it made you focus only to those two, making you wondering who can draw faster. Even if we saw jesse taking both guns froms his parents, this scene made us forget it completly.
I was thinking he'd pull out the revolver as the pistol was only a 22. but I wasn't expecting the pocket trick.
Fucking brilliant.
He walked in with his hand in his pocket. I mean I feel like I'm the only one who caught that
Jesse pulled out two guns from the safe. I thought it was weird that we only saw him with the .22 peashooter.
The main reason that I love this movie so much is because it gave us a good ending for one of the few characters in the show that actually deserved a good ending. Considering what Jesse went through, he had better morals than many other people in the show. Jesse did kill people, but he was no murderer like Walt was. Jesse killed people to survive while Walter killed people just for simply standing in his way. Also, Jesse Pinkman was originally supposed to be killed off by Tuco at the end of season one. However, Aaron Paul’s portrayal of the character made him a fan-favorite character.
Wait really? Oh wow I’m really glad they didn’t kill him off
@@auser6789 Yup, and it was all thanks to Aaron Paul’s acting and portrayal of Jesse Pinkman. Another interesting fact to consider is that Aaron Paul has never taken an acting class in his entire life.
@@craigmeyer6957 what are you talking about? all the people Walt killed is to save his or Jesse's life, he didn't kill people for shits and giggles
@@continentalextinction Bro I want to believe that Walt killed to genuinely save Jesse’s life but on the other hand I feel like he needed a way to keep exploiting Jesse’s loyalty to save his own ass too. Walt killing two of Gus’ soldiers for Jesse played a pivotal role in his life being sparred. On the verge of death, he orders Jesse to kill Gale, Jesse catches his first body and everything changes after that. He saves his life at the end of the show only after realizing he was a slave cook for Todd’s meth lab and not doing it by choice.
Gale.
Remember when everyone thought it was the vacuum guy saying, you ready? 😂
Comments I saw were people saying it was Walter lol
i didnt think that was plausible, but then he showed up and I was ready to stand corrected. Glad I was right on that though
@@YungSeiji walter showed up after this scene... how were you ready to stand corrected?
I didn't see the trailer at all, so I was in total shock with this scene, as well as the rest of the movie.
I was hoping it was walter jr 🤣🤣😍
Classic western shootout. From the finger twiddles to the close up on both of their eyes. Normally it's kinda cheesy but the tension and atmosphere made it perfect.
Even when Jesse was put through hell and back, he STILL didn't kill those three guys cause he's a good person. Walt would've killed them without giving it a second thought
2
@@gamerweegee2160 No, it was 3.
I disagree
No If Walt is leaving
LENNNNNNNYYYYYYY
I love how Jesse threatens them and yet the one dude still has the curtesy to be like “dude yer on fire” 😂
He was on drugs.
@@thewiseowl8804 Like I give a sh!t!
Jesse went full Arthur Morgan.
He got that dead eye
Lost User more like Clint Eastwood
Nemo XO *Meth-eye
The music leading up to the shooting sounds like Dead Eye mode.
Man if you think about it Walt is Jesse’s Dutch.
"Jesse, what happened to your jacket after you shot that guy?"
"Ahhh... Fire."
A perfect echo of Walt's intelligence in the murder of Jack and his gang. Gilligan manages to convey an entire series worth of lessons and teachings from Mike, Walt, and many others who have affected Jesse's life in some way, into a single shoot out. Genius 👏
Jack and his gang weren't murdered, Walt opened fire on the gang in defense of his and Jesse's life. Jack being executed was not murder either, it was extrajudicial
I’m so mad that I didn’t see it this way. To me it felt like the same ol’ badass, John Wick, Equalizer kind of shootout, that’s all it felt like to me
I was thinking the same thing: Jesse, the protégé, becomes the master. It is a great scene, with strong western-genre overtones. I even liked the 'final boss'. Neil reminds me of a grittier version of all the cowboy movie- and show-villains my grandparents watch on Encore Western every time I'm at their house.
That first dude actually had a pretty quick draw...
why he agreed to the standoff likely
Not quick enough.
John Nada congrats you saw the same video? dumbest comment i’ve seen
John Nada he was just making a joking comment that he wasn’t fast enough... that’s it nothing more to it. Seriously how clueless can you be? is this your first day on the internet?
John Nada not really his comment was dead ended, all you did was explain what we all saw. Have a nice day boomer
I forgot how much I loved Breaking Bad's writing and characterisation until I watched this movie. A perfect epilogue to the best TV show I've ever watched.
@@elock1277 Depends on what you think is an happy ending. When Jesse got beaten up by Hank, he has an argument with Walter in the hospital. There he mentions he's never been so alone since he worked with Walter (Combo got shot, Badger and Skinny didn't want to continue dealing etc.). Also Jane died and his parents abandoned him. It's pretty clear that Jesse just wants a life with his own family in some kind of way. But because he is wanted by the police, and then goes to Alaska, he can't fullfill his dream. He's alone for probably the rest of his life.
@@raindropsdown7338 I'd like to think he found peace with that. Like the therapist guy that killed his wife and children
@@llama6394 Yeah hopefully he did. But when i think about a happy life for Jesse, i think about starting a family, live like a normal citizen. Don't forget, in Alaska he's alone till his death. He can't even walk 5m out of his property. He practically lives in some kind of prison. He spent a lot of time with the nazis, imprisoned in a concrete hole, just to cook meth. And after that he kinda went into a new prison, just without the nazis and the meth.
@@elock1277 You forgo Better Call Saul