Breaking Bad Season 5 [patched] Review

Jesse, drowning in guilt over Drew Sharp, tries to give his money to the boy’s family. He learns that Walt had actually witnessed Todd kill the boy and did nothing—and worse, Walt helped the Nazis dispose of the body using hydrofluoric acid. Jesse realizes Walt has been manipulating him from the start, including the poisoning of Brock (Season 4). In a rage, he goes to Walt’s house with a can of gasoline, intending to burn it down. Hank arrives, intercepts Jesse, and convinces him to become an informant. The DEA now has a witness.

He watches Jesse drive away, finally free. Walt touches the equipment, the beakers, the purity—the only thing he ever truly loved. As police sirens wail, he falls to the floor. In his final moments, he smiles. He has accomplished everything: he secured $9 million for his family (via the Schwartzes, whom he terrorized into setting up a trust), he freed Jesse, he killed the Nazis, and he died on his own terms. The last shot is of his body, the camera pulling back, as the police flood in. He is Heisenberg until the end.

Walt sees an interview with his former partners, Gretchen and Elliott Schwartz, on TV. They say Walter White was merely a footnote in the company’s history. Walt, enraged, decides to return to Albuquerque. He arranges to meet Skyler one last time. She tells him that Hank and Gomez’s bodies were found, and that the White family is ruined. He gives her the lottery ticket with the coordinates of Hank’s grave. breaking bad season 5

A brutal shootout erupts. Gomez is killed. Hank, wounded, stands his ground. Walt begs Jack: "Don’t do it! The money! I’ll give you all of it! Just let him go!" Jack coldly replies, "No." He executes Hank in front of Walt. Jack takes most of Walt’s $80 million, leaving him one barrel. Walt, hysterical, is forced to reveal where the rest is buried. Jesse, hidden in Hank’s car, is discovered. Walt watches as Jack’s men drag Jesse out. Walt, filled with hate for Jesse (whom he blames for Hank), tells Jack, "You're gonna need him. He's the cook." Then, quietly: "Do what you're gonna do." He gives Jesse up to be enslaved.

Walt’s ego explodes. He buys a fleet of luxury cars, including two flashy new Chrysler 300s. He bullies Saul into taking a huge cut. He demands that Jesse take on the role of his partner, not his equal. The partnership with Mike frays. Mike is the professional; Walt is the arrogant chemist. After a tense desert deal where Walt kills a rival dealer just to prove a point, Mike tells Jesse, "You’re a time bomb ticking. I’m telling you, sooner or later, you’re going to realize you’re standing next to the guy who killed Gus Frier… and you’re going to want to kill him." Jesse, drowning in guilt over Drew Sharp, tries

Jesse is shattered. He has a full-blown breakdown. Walt tries to rationalize it as "necessary," but Jesse sees the truth: they are now monsters. Walt tries to get Todd’s uncle, Jack Welker (a white supremacist prison gang leader), to handle the methylamine distribution, cutting Mike out.

Walt, Jesse, and a resentful Mike go into business together. They need a new distribution network. Walt approaches Lydia Rodarte-Quayle, a nervous, high-strung Madrigal Electromotive executive (Gus’s parent company). She connects them with Declan, a local Phoenix kingpin. Declan laughs at Walt’s proposal of $15 million for the methylamine. Walt coldly retorts, "Then I’ll just cook my own." He buys a Vamonos Pest control company as a front, cooking in the tents of fumigated houses while the owners are away. In a rage, he goes to Walt’s house

Walt devises a plan: a coordinated hit on all nine men within a two-minute window. Jesse, horrified by the prison violence he witnesses (a horrific montage of shivs and falls), is disgusted. Mike is furious, not at the act, but at Walt’s chaotic, untidy nature. Mike wants to pay the men "hazard pay" to keep them quiet and retire peacefully. Walt overrules him.