When he took on the moniker, it was almost like he was a different person. That was until, the Heisenberg persona began overtaking all aspects of his life. Despite his illicit behavior, Walt prioritized keeping his family safe. Jesse made rash decisions, and he was also a talker, which gave Walt all the more reason to put up a barrier between his business partner and family.
Walt Jr. He would have asked a lot of questions if he met Jesse, and it would have been difficult for Walt to explain his relationship with a former burnout student. As much as Walt tried to keep those two areas of his life separate in Breaking Bad , Jesse still caused issues when it came to the White family. After learning that Walt poisoned Brock Castillo Ian Posada in season 5, Jesse tried to torch Walt's family home by pouring gasoline throughout the residence.
He also assisted Hank Schrader Dean Norris , Walt's own brother-in-law, in nearly taking down Heisenberg before the end of the series. Had Jesse met Walt Jr. It could have also sped up the revelation of Walt's identity since Walt Jr. For now, it looks like Jesse and Walt Jr. Kara Hedash is a features editor and writer for Screen Rant.
It's not just Walt, we also see memories of Mike and Jane. The scene very much highlights a part of Walt's character that defined Jesse's interaction with him, in a way that Jesse now retroactively think he should've seen the red flags. But the most important element here is found in the following quote :. You're really lucky, you know that? You didn't have to wait your whole life to do something special. It's not the resentment that's the big issue here though it does contribute , but rather that Walt is clearly in love with what they are doing.
Walt's love for his activities is what will eventually lead to his downfall and that of everyone around him, leading to Jesse's life in a cage and subsequent life on the run. You can even see it in Jesse's response to that quote.
He's initially dumbstruck, clearly trying to figure out if Walt meant what he said. Once Jesse realizes that Walt didn't misspeak, he bows his head in avoidance, which implies he disagrees but is not willing to get into it.
While it is only in later seasons that we find out that Walt is in love with building an empire as opposed to making meth or making money; the point of the scene is that Jesse is reminding himself that he should've seen the red flags way back at the diner. He somewhat did notice it then, but he dismissed it and continued working with Walt. As Charles already mentioned, it's not Skinny Pete's cap which is full black with a white logo.
It's Jesse's own cap. It just happens to somewhat resemble it. According to THR :. The Walter White scene takes place within the space of season two's "4 Days Out" , one of the most celebrated episodes in the Breaking Bad pantheon, in which Walt and Jesse's RV breaks down in the middle of the desert; it's one of their closest bonding points in the show , hence Walt's less-threatening-than-usual demeanor in the restaurant.
However, Aaron Paul looks at it differently :. Because of Walt Jesse became a murderer. In a interview with NPR , organic chemist and science advisor to the show, Donna Nelson, said key elements to the meth-making process were eliminated from "Breaking Bad" to keep people from attempting it at home.
On season one, Walt and Jesse use hydrofluoric acid to dissolve a body in a bathtub. In addition to the body, the acid eats through the tub and ceiling, leading to a massive, disgusting, gloopy mess crashing down onto the first floor. The "Mythbusters" team also proved that the acid couldn't even make a dent in the bathtub or drywall material. Both passed on the role, much to the dismay of executives at AMC and Sony Pictures Television who couldn't get past Cranston's history of comedic roles he'd previously been known for roles like the dopey father on the sitcom "Malcolm in the Middle" to see him as the show's antihero.
Gilligan had pushed for casting Cranston because he remembered the actor's performance on "The X-Files. So, Gilligan showed executives the tapes of Cranston's performance on the s series and the rest was history.
Before the multi-Emmy-award-winning series found a home on AMC, it was passed on by some of the biggest networks. Reportedly, FX was afraid the show was too similar to other series it currently had which featured male anti-heroes.
And, Showtime said the concept sounded a lot like their show "Weeds," about a woman who secretly grows and sells marijuana.
In , Gilligan also recalled his pitch meeting with HBO as one of "the worst" he ever experienced. During the character Gus Fring's final scene, the makeup department and special-effects team had a huge responsibility to create a realistic-looking, half-blown-off face for actor Giancarlo Esposito.
And it took months to do. Jackson said he had dreams of doing a cameo appearance as his Marvel character. His pitch was a casual walk-on role where Nick Fury enters Los Pollos Hermanos in costume, orders food, and leaves.
Walter Jr. During the show's first season Walter White's son, Walt Jr. Walter Sr. The website, which is run by AMC, is actually a real site and is still up and running.
Fans of the show on Reddit say that the site has been active since the night the episode aired. Although Pinkman ultimately remained on the entirety of the series, the reports that the show's writers' strike of to saved him are not entirely true.
There's a common story that Gilligan had planned to kill off Aaron Paul's character Jesse Pinkman on episode nine of the show's first season, but that the writers' strike caused the show to only run for seven episodes.
As a result, Gilligan is said to have had time to reconsider killing off Jess e and ultimately keep him on the show. But, Gilligan said that isn't the case. He said that by episode two, he, the producers, and the directors all knew Paul was a great actor to work with and that it "would be a huge, colossal mistake to kill off Jesse.
In a Reddit AMA , Paul shared that he was knocked unconscious with a concussion and sent to the hospital as a result of a fight scene gone wrong. Cranston told IndieWire that the season-two scene where Walt purposely watches Jesse's girlfriend, Jane, die even though he could save her was the hardest moment for him to film.
He said he pictured Krysten Ritter Jane as his own daughter and couldn't control his emotions after the scene was cut. Once the director cut he recalled, "I'm a weeping mess.
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