Did Jesse care about Walt?
Índice
- Did Jesse care about Walt?
- What happened between Jesse and Walter?
- Why did Jesse leave Walt?
- Why is Walter White so obsessed with Jesse?
- Does Walt Jr forgive Walt?
- What mental illness does Jesse Pinkman have?
- Did Walt know Jesse was a prisoner?
- Did Jesse know Walt killed Mike?
- Why does Jesse think Walt is worth it?
- Why did Jesse forgave Walt in the Outsiders?
- Why did Walt give the gun to Jesse in Breaking Bad?
- Why did Walt tell Jesse to kill Gale?
Did Jesse care about Walt?
Walt does care for Jesse in his unusual way Jesse also appears to care about Walt's health and celebrates in earnest when Walt's cancer is in remission. ... Even though Walt does have some emotional attachment to Jesse, though, he avoids spending time with him outside of work-related situations.
What happened between Jesse and Walter?
Then jesse backed him into a corner, and Walt decided to kill him painlessly using the nazis. Then Jesse ratted him out to Hank + inevitably caused Hank's death (in walt's perspective), so he wanted Jesse dead (this time not to protect his family, but for revenge).
Why did Jesse leave Walt?
Walter wanted to die Having realized that, Jesse avoids shooting Walter and says "do it yourself". He does so to spite Walter, and also because he's finally done with being bossed around by Walter. This is his small revenge for the harm Walter caused him.
Why is Walter White so obsessed with Jesse?
Walt is obsessed with Jesse largely for his social needs. It is becoming apparent after the fugue state. When Skyler did not talk with Walt, only Jesse was his companion. He shared no chemistry with his son or the Schraders.
Does Walt Jr forgive Walt?
That realization hit home during the phone call at the end of the previous episode, "Granite State." Walter Jr. will not try to understand his father; Walter Jr. will not knowingly accept his money; Walter Jr. will never forgive him. His father was his greatest hero, but became his ultimate villain.
What mental illness does Jesse Pinkman have?
PTSD The Bad News? With one episode left, it doesn't seem likely. Aside from seeing death around every corner, we have to remember that Jesse was abjured by his parents, and he still has PTSD from shooting Gale.
Did Walt know Jesse was a prisoner?
Walt was only acting in front of the Nazis just like he acted in front of the police when he called Skyler. When he heard about the blue meth still being produced he knew that Jesse was alive and that he would not partner with Jack but that he rather is his slave.
Did Jesse know Walt killed Mike?
Jesse knew how paranoid Walt felt about leaving those men alive, and how protective Mike was of them. So when Mike's sudden disappearance coincides with the synchronized executions of Mike's men, Jesse knew something was very fishy. Mike would never abandon his men that way.
Why does Jesse think Walt is worth it?
- This is probably the most obvious one. He realizes that Walt did care for Jesse after all, even though Jesse was may a time an unwilling part of Walt's plan. Jesse thinks that Walt isn't worth it. Jesse was never fond of killing, and seems to want as less of it as possible.
Why did Jesse forgave Walt in the Outsiders?
- Jesse forgave Walt. This is probably the most obvious one. He realizes that Walt did care for Jesse after all, even though Jesse was may a time an unwilling part of Walt's plan. Jesse thinks that Walt isn't worth it.
Why did Walt give the gun to Jesse in Breaking Bad?
- During the last few minutes of Felina, the last episode of Breaking Bad, after Walt has killed the Nazis, he gives gun to Jesse and asks him to shoot, but Jesse doesn't shoot him. What could be the reason/reasons behind this ? It was Walt who poisoned Brock. It was Walt who was responsible for Andrea's death as well.
Why did Walt tell Jesse to kill Gale?
- Jesse had to race to Gale. Walt specifically told him to kill Gale because he could get to Gale faster than Gus could protect Gale. So while he knew he was going to kill Gale while en route, he did not have ample time to consider his decision since he needed to do it before Gus' men arrived. – Flater Jul 19 '17 at 11:57