El Camino ending explained: Closure for Breaking Bad’s Jesse Pinkman?

As Walt turned from the kindly Mr Chips into a Scarface-like drug lord, it was Jesse who struggled with the decisions he was involved with.

The young meth cook became disillusioned and randomly threw his money onto the sidewalks of suburbia, while rightly struggling to deal with the murders of children as Walt and others seemed nowhere near as fazed.

But as El Camino began Walter White was gone. Dead.

No longer trying to influence and manipulate Jesse for his own plans.

Free from his old partner, Jesse charts his own course, but it isn’t easy.

Eventually, Jesse manages to get enough of Todd’s money to pay Ed, the Disappearer, to get him out of New Mexico to a new life in Alaska.

READ MORE: EL CAMINO REVIEW

The final flashback emphasises Jesse’s redemption or way (the meaning of the El Camino), as he finally takes life into his own hands.

Thinking back to his time with Jane, he tells her how he admires her view of letting the universe take you wherever it wants to go.

But Jane points out how making your own decisions is better, as sometimes life can take you to a bad place.

Certainly, that’s what Walt did. But now he’s gone, Jesse can make his own way as he starts a new life in Alaska.

But is that really the end of Breaking Bad? We hope so, although show-runner Vince Gilligan won’t rule it out.

In a recent interview, he said: “I think it’s the last one of these.

“But, then, probably five years ago I said…the last Breaking Bad episode was the last one of these too.

“So I’m just apparently a pathological liar, don’t take anything I say…”

Rich Eisen later pushed again for a clearer answer, asking: “It’s possible that you’re going to do another one of these?”

And while Gilligan currently has no plans, for all he knows he’ll be making more Breaking Bad in some form in the future.

source: express.co.uk