![]() It read the memo about great TV, such as the original cultural talking point ‘who shot JR’ from the days of Dallas in the ’80s, and for everyone who tuned into AMC to catch that breathtaking finale of Breaking Bad, their lives and perspectives were changed forevermore. ‘Felina’ makes a strong claim for being the best final episode ever, eclipsing even that of The Sopranos. BREAKING BAD ALTERNATE ENDINGS SERIESBut I love knowing what was in the letter.Over its five year run between 20, Breaking Bad achieved a lot. It remains genuinely shocking to think that the neo-western crime drama wrapped up nearly ten years ago and that it’s been almost a decade and a half since we first set foot into the surreal world of Walter White and Co.īreaking Bad was perhaps the pinnacle of ‘The Golden Age of TV’, where we got so many other great series such as Mad Men and Game of Thrones, but unlike the aforementioned, it remained consistent across its five seasons, leaving us with that life-changing finale, or ‘Felina’, as we should call it. But Vince just thought, ‘You know what? Maybe it’s best left unknown.’ And we don’t need it. “It’s heartbreaking, it’s beautiful, just honest. BREAKING BAD ALTERNATE ENDINGS MOVIE“Originally the voiceover of that letter was how the movie ended - just driving through Alaska and you could hear what was inside of that letter,” said Paul. (Walter poisoned him and his mother was killed by Todd Alquist.) The audience never finds out what’s in the letter, but according to Paul, it “was the very first thing that Vince wrote when writing this script.” At the end of El Camino, he hands it to Ed ( the late Robert Forster) to send to Brock following all of the hell that his and Walter’s business put him through. All right, honey.” I’m glad I listened to her and I listened to Peter Gould and the Better Call Saul writers.”Īs for the first of the two alternate endings, it concerned a letter Jesse had written to Brock, the young son of his ex-girlfriend Andrea. ![]() You cannot go that route.’ And I said, “Okay. The people that I love and trust, starting with my girlfriend Holly, said, ‘You cannot have Jesse Pinkman get busted at the end of this thing. “I even played with telling that story in a movie, and luckily smarter brains prevailed. In the latter ending, Pinkman’s attempted escape at the end of Breaking Bad and throughout El Camino ends with the character “in police custody.” As EW notes, this would have been a “logical-but-definitely-not-fan-friendly idea,” and though Gilligan did begin teasing it out in early drafts, Rice and others convinced him otherwise: The second, however, was an extremely depressing (though realistic) outcome for the character that never came to light, thanks to the intervention of the Better Call Saul team and Gilligan’s longtime girlfriend, Holly Rice. One was essentially what the film provided, minus a personal letter penned by Pinkman and its voice-over narration. In separate interviews, the pair revealed that El Camino had two alternate endings. ![]() That’s because it is - at least, according to Paul and creator Vince Gilligan’s comments to Entertainment Weekly. As great as this all was, though, many couldn’t shake the feeling that Jesse’s escape was just too good to be true. The fate of Walter White’s (Bryan Cranston) right-hand man in the meth-dealing business was brought to light in El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie, which also offered Netflix subscribers a who’s-who tour down memory lane via a sizeable cast of (returning) supporting characters. Last Friday, Breaking Bad fans finally discovered what happened to Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul) following the explosive events of the critically acclaimed series’ final episode six years prior. Warning: Spoilers for El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie below. ![]()
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