Breaking Bad Season 5: Episode 7: Walt kills Mike HD CLIP
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- čas přidán 16. 03. 2021
- What’s happening in this Breaking Bad clip?
Angered by Walt's (Bryan Cranston from Godzilla) insistence that he owes him gratitude, Mike (Jonathan Banks) proceeds to attack Walt's ego, insisting the entire situation could have been avoided if he had continued to work for Gus and had not killed him. Walt storms off momentarily, but then approaches Mike's car. Mike realizes his gun is missing from the go bag, just as Walt uses it to shoot him through his car window. Mike tries to get away, but - mortally wounded - ultimately resigns himself to sitting on a log by the river. After Walt catches up to him, Walt realizes he could have just asked Lydia for the names and that shooting Mike was unnecessary. As Walt stammers an apology, Mike tells him, "Shut the f*ck up and let me die in peace". After a moment of silence, he falls off the log, dead.
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What’s the TV show Breaking Bad about?
Walter White (Bryan Cranston from Godzilla and Total Recall), a chemistry teacher, is diagnosed with lung cancer. He decides to make and sell methamphetamine to repay his medical debts and secure his family’s future.
Season 5 of Breaking Bad:
With Gustavo (Giancarlo Esposito) dead, Walter (Bryan Cranston from Godzilla and Total Recall) and Jesse (Aaron Paul) decide to start their own drug empire. They team up with Mike (Jonathan Banks), Gus' former henchman. They also team up with Lydia (Laura Fraiser) and Todd (Jesse Plemons).
Hank (Dean Norris), now head of the DEA, gets involved in the Gus Fring case and tightens his grip on Mike, who will be forced to leave the operation. Jesse quickly does the same. Walter helps Mike to organize his escape but mortally wounds him in a fit of rage. Later, he makes Todd his new assistant.
Thereafter, Walter knows an uninterrupted success and accumulates enormous amounts of money. One day, Skyler (Anna Gunn) shows him the impressive pile of money, explaining that she can no longer launder it and begging him to stop. Soon after, Walter decides to leave the business for good.
Everything seems to be back to normal when Hank discovers that Walter is Heisenberg. Heisenberg buries his money in the desert and convinces Jesse to leave town, but Jesse agrees to surrender to Hank and his partner Steve (Steven Michael Quezada). Hank, Steve and Jesse manage to capture Walter in the desert. Walter, thinking that Jesse would be alone, hired Todd's uncle Jack (Michael Bowen) and his men to come and execute him, but tries to back out when he sees Hank with him, however Jack ignores this and a shootout ensues. Jesse is captured, Steve is shot, Hank is wounded, then coldly killed by Jack despite Walter's pleas. The mobsters find the hidden money and seize the quasi-totality, Todd insisting to leave him a small part of it. Walter then decides to flee with his family, but Skyler and Walter Jr. (RJ Mitte), terrorized, refuse to follow him.
Walter leaves to live in reclusion in New Hampshire, but his cancer relapses. Jesse is reduced to a slave by Todd, and after an escape attempt, Todd coldly shoots Andrea, Jesse's girlfriend. Later, Walter takes the risk to contact his son in order to give him money, but this one refuses and declares that he would prefer him dead. Desperate, Walter is about to turn himself in before he stumbles upon a television interview with his former partners, who downplay his contribution to the creation of their company. Overcome with resentment, he decides to act. He entrusts, under threat, the 10 million dollars which remain to him to his former associates, by making them promise that they will give them to Walter Jr. at his majority. He then says goodbye to Skyler and confesses to her that he did all that to feel alive and not for his family as he had always affirmed it. He manages to free Jesse and to kill Jack, Todd and their men, but is mortally wounded. He dies in a meth lab on his 52nd birthday, two years to the day after the events of the first episode.
Credits: © 2019 Sony Pictures Television Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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#crime #breakingbad #tvshow #annagunn #walterwhite #bryancranston #season5 #lastseason #jonathanbanks #shoot #argue #dead - Zábava
Bro literally killed him for winning the argument lmao
Wasn't really winning, then. If an argument comes to blows, it means that one person decided the other couldn't be reasoned with, not that one person lost.
I think this was an uncharacteristic screwup on Mike's part; he handled _so many_ situations by knowing how the other guy would react when he said things they didn't want to hear. This shouldn't have been an exception.
Walter let Mike win by reacting this way out of ego, proving Mike right. So even tho he died, Mike was still right that everything Walter was doing was out of pride and ego.
@@abbyymarie4073 And "pride and ego" aren't even bad things, so that point from Mike was a red herring.
@@Tzizenorec They aren’t bad things, but when they go to high and unchecked, it becomes bad. There were times Walter had a right to have pride and ego. But he let it get to the point it was all for power and he manipulated everyone around him. When Mike was around Walter more, even though it wasn’t much, even seeing Walter and Jesse’s dynamic, he started to realize Walter had a lot of unchecked pride and ego.
@@Tzizenorec Walter admitted it himself at the end of the show, still proving Mike’s point after Mike been dead for abt a year or almost a year. It wasn’t abt the money anymore, it was the power and how much he liked the feel of power. So regardless Mike was still right even in death.
It's crazy how far Walt has come here. He went from struggling to kill a man in self-defense, to shooting someone impulsively for upsetting him.
Breaking *bad*
@@Wade_Fucking_Wilson wow man, such sherlock
Felipe Benevides Thank you felipe, very cool !
He put the obstacle out of the way, it's simple.
Never protect rats
It’s kind of fitting that mike, someone who was always calculated and prepared for everything, died from one of Walt’s irrational tantrums
It was not irrational, I don’t understand why people aren’t getting this
@@guillermo9140 bro He killed him out of pettiness
Unless this is a joke
@@fegeleinherman8587 he took his gun before the argument, he was a loose end now that the police was looking for him and he was a danger because he was gonna kill his men
@@guillermo9140 that doesn't change the fact that the reason Walt killed him is out of pettiness
Sure you can come out with multiple reason why it's good for the long run but that doesn't change the fact that Walt killed Mike simply because he can't eccept what He said to him hell He even admit in the end that this whole thing could've Been avoided
@@fegeleinherman8587 but why did he take the gun before the argument? And why did he have it with him during the argument? You can see that he just walk to make Mike think that he was leaving
"Shut the f**k up and let me die in peace" even his last words are badass.
This part is when Walt became heisenberg
I never could see him as true badass, the Mickey Mouse ears just spoil it.
@@KESTRAL23 dude he was heisenburg for ages before this
Walt has always been Heisenberg he is Heisenberg he forever will be Heisenberg
@@KESTRAL23 The idea is that we all have a Heisenberg persona inside of us and all it takes is a series of events to bring it out
Mike: "You and your pride and your ego!"
Wait: **shoots him because of his pride and his ego**
To be fair, he had already stolen the gun so...yeah
So true
No he shot him because he tried to kill him many times before and potentially would’ve tried it again. This is typing up loose ends
Walt's whole character is ran through by ego and pride... From cooking in the van just to make himself feel good and somewhat big to literally killing a man because he made a point: a point that he could've seen but was too blinded by ego.
Whos Wait??
Im so glad after Walt left, Mike got up after faking his death and left to spend the rest of his life helping raise his grand daughter.
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Mike was right, everything in Breaking Bad escalated because of Walter’s ego. He could’ve returned to Grey Matter and probably have a clean life. He could’ve continued working as Gus’s cooker and he would’ve made millions without ever being found out. He could’ve just settled with the amount of money he needed in season 2 but he wanted more and didn’t want anyone to take his empirical spot.
It’s hard to not have a Big ego after you are a losser Your whole life , then suddently your’e making the best drug in bussiness & a lot of Money!
@@Leo-vi7tt I get that to be honest. Seeing Hank be the big shot in town and having his own son look up to him must be such a bad hit mentally. Seeing Grey Matter succeed after he sold was probably one of the worst mistakes he ever made and becoming an overqualified high school teacher who doesn't get any respect has to hit him. The drug business was honestly heaven and a break for him, with how good he was at it.
You're forgetting the part where Jesse would've been dead if Walt had stayed out of hot water with Gus
he can do all that but that mean
no more jesse
you can argue that everything escalated due to Jessie's incompetence and stupidity - every single one. Walt was just there keeping them both alive.
This actually broke my heart knowing Mike would never take his granddaughter to the park again.
And she will never know what happened to her grandpa :(
Seriously, all he wanted was to make sure her and her mother were financially ok and that she had a nest egg for when she was an adult and Walt ruined all of that. Cassie will never see her grandpa again, will never know what happened to him, and will never receive any money from him.
Worst part is it was all for nothing since Walt didn’t need him for the names
Glad it's not real
@@CZcamsAIbot kaylee*
He wasn’t going to anyway, he was getting the hell out of dodge before he got pinched by the DEA. He left all that money behind for his granddaughter as a final gesture of goodwill.
"Oh man. You're going to hate me for this, but I just now realized that I could have gotten the names from Lydia. My bad, bro."
😂
I was about to comment this. Unreal right. Guy just shot a guy to death basically and he’s still thinking about those names!
No conscience anymore, just cold hearted murderer.
imagining telling someone youre gonna kill all his friends/associates anyway
Serves him right for talking about how great Gus "I will kill your infant daughter" Fring was.
-High professionalism, never really made a mistake
-Always figured out how to keep his grandaughter away from his job
-Outlived boss who only died because he was recovering
Respect
Then died because a man child had a tantrum
His biggest mistake was being unprofessional it literally took his life because of that lmao
It's funny, if you watch better call Saul you can see how much Mike really hated his life (and himself), aswell as all the mistakes he made to lead him here, making Mike seem kind of pathetic in a sense
I didn't get too emotional when I initially saw this, but after seeing all the BCS episodes with Mike, and learning about his background, it's disgusting he went out like this.
He was a part of the cartel. Involving yourself with crime specially when we’re talking about drugs you are risking your life, no matter how good of a person you might be once you go in the criminal world there are gonna be some consequences but props to mike he took it like a man
second most gut wrenching death in the show
Another scumbag bites the dust
@@ebbtide4233 it was also pretty gut wrenching for mike...😅
BCS makes Walt look like the anticrist
My man legit walks out of the car to die watching the sunset
What else could he do? At that moment he knew that everything he’d done over the past 6 years, everything he risked and did to try and secure his granddaughters future was all for nothing. He was going to die without saying goodbye and they will never know what happened to him
Honestly one of the saddest deaths in TV history
No. He flew out of the car, rolled down the hill and landed perfectly on that patch of grass. If he could beat a GTA character, he can do anything
Some Arthur Morgan shit
he didnt walk outta car to watch the sunset he tried to escape further shots made by him but figured it was all over
yeah
The audacity of Walt literally murdered Mike and tried to casually apologize like it was nothing.
Literally as opposed to only figuratively?
@@Youdontknowwhatliterallymeans sure, why not
Walt: I'm sorry Mike, this whole thing could have been avoided
Mike: Don't worry about it, we all make mistakes so no big deal.
@@thecoconutgum Audacity doesn't literally kill. It might cause someone to kill.
@@Youdontknowwhatliterallymeans 🗿
You can’t understand how much of a sad death this is until you’ve watched Mike in Better Call Saul, he was so close to being out the game.
@KLm I guess his full story and his motives/backstory and the people he warned Walt about aren’t for everyone.
Mike isn't the sympathetic character some people want him to be. Nacho's dad put him in his place.
mike was fine with killing and using children for the game, i do not understand why people have so much sympathy for mike
@@purplemonkeydishwasher4241 facto
@@supercooledits123 he cool
Mike was the only person brave enough to say to Walter's face what everybody else wanted to say.
And died as a result
Walter isn't the guy somebody scares of him
Nah Mike was wrong he wanted to run away with his money and start a new life what would have happened to partners in prison they would have switched and got walker and jesse caught
Marie told Walt to take his own life, that one ranks pretty damn high too.
@@howmanynamesaretaken tbf she didnt witness any in person crimes walt did
Mike was the only person who saw through all of Walter’s bs. He was never scared or intimidated by him once.
Seems that he should have been
@@joezigg3523 doesn't matter both of em died close in time
you say it like it wasn't a mistake
Mike made the same mistake that Gus, Tuco, Hank, Jack and Lydia made: they all underestimated Walter White. Everyone wrote him off as a minor threat, a nuisance, or a dying old man, and they paid dearly for it. Jesse was the only one who truly knew how dangerous and cunning Walt really was, which is probably why he survived until the end of the show.
@@silversnail1413 ultimately all of em died.. doesn't matter
You"ll never hate Walt more in the entire series than this sequence. Because Mike embodies everything Walt can't be in that business.
@@Mxxnberry Oh God. Thankyou.
@BxxDxx Hoodoo Ever heard of a concept called a scape-goat? If you install a crony as president, and you are head general, you have all the power and very little accountability for the President's actions. When the "president" fucks up, you install a new one, problem solved. There are several governments today that operate under this kind of power dynamic, where the person in power is "below" the person at the top, but only on paper, only as a formality for when something goes wrong. Kaspische, King moron?
Complete truth. Fuckin hate this scene. RIP to a real legend
@BxxDxx Hoodoo Let me get this straight, you're telling me that I'm in fantasy land, when I point out a real-world analogy to actual power dynamics that exist in the world. This entire conversation is about a literal fictional depiction. On top of that, you claim to have more experience than someone you've never met, on the internet, without literally any evidence or validation, and I've never met you and don't believe you, tbqh, AND you then proceed to try and explain the intricacies of FICTIONAL characters in the same show to base your argument, a FICTIONAL SHOW. You do see the irony, yes?
@BxxDxx Hoodoo The fact that you said "How can you even judge Walt as impulsive" shows that you don't seem to know much about what you're talking about. A large part of Walt's character is that he is very egotistical and will make stupid decisions on the fly. He killed Mike out of spite because he insulted him and hurt his ego. Another example is when he turned down Elliot's offer to pay for his treatment because his ego would not allow him to accept money from someone who made billions of dollars out of Walt's contributions to Gray Matter. He also hated it when Jesse started using Walt's formula without him and as a result, he got Gale kicked out so that Jesse would work with him and so that he could have a partner that is worse than him. You also said "The ego you saw and impulse control you saw are what ANYONE would go through duri6 their rookie YEAR OF ORGANIZATIONAL MULTI NATIO9 CRIME LIFE" but the vast majority of people who deal drugs don't murder someone simply because they insulted them.
I do agree with your comment about Gus' ego though. He definitely hated the Salamancas - he wanted to personally kill Hector instead of letting Tyrus kill him instead.
By the way, dealing some drugs is certainly nothing to brag about, so you may want to refrain from bragging about it to random people on the internet.
I love how Mike decides to go on his own terms. He saw his share of gunshots...he knew that this one is fatal and he doesn't have long, but with all his experience he could have still ambushed Walt going after him and killed him as well, but he just decides to let all of them burn in hell together. Perfect arc for a perfect character.
Also, if he shoots back he dies a killer and his family sees that on the news. This way he fades away quietly.
Mike is burning too and no he couldn't have killed Walter, he was in shock and bleeding out. His first instinct was to get away, then the realization kicked in that it was over for him.
Walter at that point had a gun trained on him and if he did anything then he'd died right there sooner.
@@maylabrown4584 mike isn’t stupid he definitely knows that if he had enough energy to crawl a few feet he could’ve aimed a gun at least at walt
@@akraman7274 He couldn't have, he would have been in shock and already losing a lot of blood, he wanted to just get away at first but eventually he gave into it. His likeliness chance at survival would have been to stay in the car and then shoot Walter after hitting him with the door once close.
But again, Mike was in shock and pain, so it's very likely he wasn't thinking straight.
@@brianmerritt5410 bruh he's already killed dozens of ppl before I can assure you that
This was absolutely the point in the series where I started to root for Walt’s downfall. Killing sich a respectable person such a Mike just out of spite was absolutely unjustifiable.
W
Yeah but selling all the meth really had ya rooting for him😐😂
@@ethanwest420
Yeah fr I loooove meth
sorry mike
@@ethanwest420 we all knew it was fake right? Did you know it was fake because you acting as if these characters have committed real crimes, the joker has done some scummy shit but he has a fan base over millions but killing another character that people like for no reason impulsively when your fan base isn't very high makes a character disliked
What's even sadder is that when you realize that Kaylee is probably still sitting on that swing, waiting for her grandfather to return.
Oh this is even more depressing
It was no good money anyway.
Bro why
From an innocent child's perspective, that's tragic. But Mike is better off dead. Think of everything he has done.
@@Aivottaja
Wdym "from an innocents child perspective" ? When you consider a death you gotta count all perspectives and Mike had people he cared, provided and who depended on him.
Beetwen Mike and Walt, if we're going for a greater good mentality then Walt is better off dead a thousand timea over
Bald man energy was intense in Breaking Bad.
Big facts
Balding Bad ft. Walter, Mike, Hank, Gus, Jesse (later on), Combo, Ted, Ocho twins, etc.
Tight. Tight. Tight!
🤣🤣🤣
Breaking Bald.
First time watching breaking bad: Walt did a lot of bad things but i believe he's a good person, providing for his family with no other choice. Second time watching Breaking Bad: Walt had like 8 oppertunities to stop dealing meth. He let a young woman die out of spite, he has a massive ego and only cares about himself at the end. Watching him kill mike when watching it for the second time, it made me absolutely despise him.
By Season 5 Walt himself was the main villain up until Jack killed Hank.
after watching a few seasons of BCS
Jane dying saved Jesse tbh
He was literally given a choice at the start to get a job that could easily pay for his treatment. He chose meth because he wanted to fulfill his fantasies about being a badass.
@@plasticballs To be fair that job would have been humiliating to accept. It was a pity offer to work at his former own multi billion company as simple employee only offered to him because he had cancer.
The fact that Walt feels the need to explain himself, like Mike was gonna say no worries I get it or something lol
"It's all chill bro. I'm dying. Its good. You didn't mean it. I believe you. Just uh...shut the fuck up and let me die in peace."
"it's all good bro, everyone makes mistakes"
I would like to see Breaking Bad but with a Michael Scott figure who has a pathological need to be liked, even by people he has just killed for no reason
@@HeatyFrog that would be hilarious
Me: "The scene with Mike's death cannot be sadder."
Vince Gillian: "How about a 6-season spinoff series in which Mike gets a hell ton of screentime just to make you even more attached to his character?"
Exactly what happens, he is hell a lot more of a presence in BCS and not just that, his presence is in the capacity that humanizes him more too. Sad such a brilliant character had to die at the hands of a narcissistic fuck that Walt became
Lmfao
@@seanrosenberg5318 Walt became addicted to the power and prestige that his meth empire bestowed upon him.
That was his drug of choice.
Lol, just watched Episode 3 of Season 6, and his reaction to what happens made me come back to watch this again. His character's just so likable.
@@seanrosenberg5318 Ohhhh the poor hitman got killed what a tragedy. Jfc.
This scene is more disturbing than you think. For realism, Jonathan Banks (Mike) actually was brutally shot and killed by Bryan Cranston. Such dedication
Bravo Vince 👏🏻!
Where did this meme start from? See it ina buncha movies and tv scenes on yt
@@EAZIIMAN it’s a running joke for movie scenes that have a violent scene in them. Key word for the punchline is the use of the word “brutal”
@@mamakking4500 thanks i first saw this kinda comment in the terminator on youtube and seen it a bunch more times since
@@EAZIIMAN not sure but I’ve seen it a lot and not with just movies. I’ve seen comments like this on the Doom soundtrack or documentaries praising the cameraman for shots that were obviously cgi.
Everyone Walt had killed so far could be justified so way somehow. Krazy-8 and the cousin? They had a gun to there head. Tuco? A crazy meth head who would kill them. The drug dealers? They Killed a kid. Gale and gus? They forced his hand. But mike, mike is the first person that Walter has killed that can’t be justified. As far as the eye can see, THIS marks the point where Walter becomes the villain.
I'd argue Jane was the first act of outright murder he committed. Jane only rolls over onto her back because Walt was shaking Jesse to wake him up, and although Walt didn't notice this, he did let her suffocate and die for his own convenience.
He didn't kill Tuco
@@gloomingspider8981 I mean he had enough of an involvement to say that tuco’s death was on him.
@@youfool444 no
This is the moment wh-
His last words were "shut the fuck up and let me die in peace."
No matter how much it broke my heart that he died, it's still the most savage last line ever.
that profile with the 420 likes are perfection
I love that he's so done with Walt he just whispers to him
@@zkme2734Let's ne honest, even after getting shot. Mike would still beat the shit out of Walter, but he chooses to just "die in peace" since he's going out of town anyway and leave his life as Mike Ehramantraut so he'd still be gone. So death is the only good option for him to take an end of all his suffering.
Is your pfp a yaoi?
"Shut the fuck up and let me die in peace" - Master Oogway
There’s a definitely a moment in breaking bad where the viewer starts to despise Walt, I was on the edge of it all not completely rooting for him but still wanting him and Jesse not to get caught. This was the moment that I started actively rooting against him
To be honest I was rooting for Walt from season 1 to the finale.
I once heard someone say that pretty much every single bad thing Walt does you can rationalize individually, but eventually there comes a point where he does one thing and when you look at the totality you have to stop rooting for him, and it’s different for every person. For me, it’s this scene, but for other people it’s Jane’s death, Gale, him poisoning Brock, etc.
Walt poisoning Brock is what did it for me.
I started despising Walt in season 2 already. Around the time of Jane dying is when he really turns into Heisenberg for real I felt. In season 5 he is completely unredeemable from the very start. Killing Mike cemented it.
No, I liked Walt all throughout. But now I see him for the idiot he actually was.
That shot of Walt walking to his car and then turning around rapidly as the music changes is low key terrifying
High key! My stomach dropped when he turned around
@@SUPRESSOR106 yo I thought I was the only one who had that reaction the first time
I could hear the active self protection youtube guy in the back of my head lol if they ever go back to get something in their car nothing good is coming back out of it.
Omg yes. It was like a slasher film. The scene of the cousins butchering the reservation cop in season 3 after he discovers the dead woman covered in flies was also terrifying.
Just finished this episode and the music change literally made me jump
Funny how right after Mike finishes his rant about Walt, he is proven right.
Ironic
@@synical_zero0003 Opposite of Ironic.
not just that. He shot him because he KNEW Mike was right
@@synical_zero0003 thats not how u use "ironic"
Mike was chatting bollocks though. Gus didn’t turn on Walt due to walts ego but because Walt killed the dealers to save Jessie’s life
Waltuh...
I believe Walt really was doing it for the family at first. Definitely for the first 2 seasons. Season 3 was when he started to go downhill and by the end of season 4 he was only ever in it for himself. And the truth is, he made the same mistake more than twice, he didn’t give up.
He literally killed Mike because he hurt his feelings
Or because he was scared that mike would one day come for him
Remember all the times Mile tried to murder him just because his evil boss told him to?
@@saulgoodman5623 For real. Mike tries to act like Walt had such a sweet setup with Gus but somehow neglects the fact that he had put a gun to Walt's head on more than one occasion as a consequence of things Walt did to save Jesse...whom for some reason Mike just gives a complete pass to. Walt was in a life-or-death situation the entirety of season 4 but Mike likes to act as though Walt threw it all away because of his ego. For as huge as his ego was, it wasn't the driving force behind him getting rid of Gus.
he was already going to kill him
@@user-dy2wp8lc6c He also tried to break my legs so i think we're even.
Walt got murderously angry because deep down he knows that every single word that Mike said to him was TRUE.
Agreed 100%
And him killing Mike just proved it even more.
Especially when Walt couldve got the names from Lydia.
Except it's not because Mike's recollection of Seasons 3 and 4 is horseshit.
Walt's relationship with Gus went south due to his desire to protect Jesse, not due to pride. It's explicitly shown that Walt was actually ok with how much Gus was paying him. And Mike is in no position to criticise Walt for protecting Jesse as Mike himself ended up taking a liking to him.
@@J4hk2
Later in the series he told Jesse that he wants to keep going because he lost his fortune through grey matter so yes Mike was right about him...
@@harleyb7880 "Every single word is the TRUTH" doesn't mean "just the part about walt's ego".
This was the moment Mike became Kid Named Finger.
This was the moment the finger became cracked
imagine getting shot and the dude who shot u was like "...ayo sorry about that...I just realized...I didn't even need to do that."
I'm still kinda pissed Mike died, bro. So unnecessary.
Yeah I would tell him to shut the f*** up too.
Nah because besides the names he would have needs mikes permission to kill his guys, which mike would never give. Alive at least. Now Walt doesn’t need to look over his shoulder to see if mike is waiting in the wings to kill him.
Bryan Cranston actually hated that dialogue and wanted it removed too. Corny
@@tealruby582 really? How do you know that
Its ironic how Walt becomes like cancer to everyone around him as seasons go on.
I do not have cancer, Skylar. I AM THE CANCER
Ikr
@@Rockaholic237 lmfao 🤣
Coz he really is. I liked him at first but je got worst and worst as time passed and greedy.
likte tony soprano
I feel so bad for mike, he was such an amazing character :(
My favorite character
Mike originally asked Saul to bring him the bag, but Saul wouldn’t do it. After watching BCS it’s that much more heartbreaking to see Mike & Saul’s relationship fall apart towards the end of Breaking Bad even after everything they’ve gone through together.
They don’t really have a friendship type thing so it’s not really something to be sad about, the chemistry they had should be the one we are sad about
What a nice thing to say to Mike just as he’s dying. “Hey, I just realized I didn’t have to shoot you. Oops.”
He was planning to kill him, forgot about the 12 men? lol
I think he was trying to save face that he murdered Mike out of necessity and nothing was personal, but the truth is, he shot Mike in a fit of rage because Mike insulted him.
Walt might be the best chemist ever walked the planet, but seriously, he was also a petulant manchild when his ego came into question.
@@korawitbuttramee618 Well explained bro, guys if you haven't watched house of cards it's a must.. I would love to hear your views on Frank Underwood lol
@@korawitbuttramee618 You nailed it.
@@korawitbuttramee618 Correct. There was literally no reason to shoot Mike. How was he going to get the names from a dead guy? It was pure murder out of his hurt pride and ego.
I love that Mike chose to sit down in the evening sun, look at a beautiful view, and just think about granddaughter, and the things he loves in peace, instead of trying to run away and live. He knew his fate, and he accepted it. He made the choice to die the way he wanted to, instead of trying to run away from someone like Walt. Even after he knows he’s gonna die, he continues to have a backbone, continues to be strong, and doesn’t give Walt any satisfaction. Best character in the entire show.
Agreed, I never thought I would see a fictional character as a role model.
I really thought he survived or something.
Same place he talked to Jesse at in El Camino
Walt made a dude smoothie from him
best death
Mike's soul has been shattered throughout his remaining years. First Matty, then Werner, then Ignacio, and now himself. He is no different to himself going out, because he is all emptied. He saw no use in killing Walt and accepted his death. He can finally rest from everything he has gone through the past five or so years.
Excellent observation.
Mike knew he "lost his soul" when he killed those 2 cops. So becoming a fixer/enforcer/assassin wasn't much of a leap. He knew he was lost and the best he could do was to try and provide for his DIL and granddaughter. While he would have never gone down like this (absolutely ridiculous to think Walter could have gotten to him that easily), he also probably knew there was no happy ending for him in this story.
So this is the kid named Finger huh?
Such backstory.
I looked up "Finger dies Breaking Bad" and this showed up lmao
Gus meeting up with Mike in the Afterlife would be like, ''Let me guess...Walter White?''
There's a line growing by this point.
probably a walter white support group in the after life lmao.
Hahahaaaww!!
You're goddamn right!
I read this comment in Gus's voice
It's just so sad. Especially after watching Better Call Saul, knowing the whole time - THIS is how Mike will die.
No poetic justice, not a blaze of glory... Just shot out of pettiness.
Although Gilligan could potentially create a spinoff for Mike, either before BCS or after this. I, probably you and a lot of others I'm sure wouldn't object to somehow Mike surviving this and faking his death to Walt. Given the character development on Mike it wouldn't be all that far fetched
@@seanrosenberg5318 mikes sitting in a tub of acid, he’s not coming back lmao
@@seanrosenberg5318 We can only wish. He gets melted and dissolved in the next episode.
@@seanrosenberg5318 no
Mike pretty much sealed his own fate once he decided to kill the German foreman.
That was his point of no return.
Don't forget that he aided Fring in some pretty horrible acts.
“But no you just had to blow it up” well last season I think he took that a little to serious
1:00 "You know he's right Walt, acxept it"
1:06 YO WHAT THE FU--
They didn't have to kill Mike. Damn it!
Under for sale
Sucked but Mike wouldn't have let Walt just whack all his guys in prison that were about to flip now that the hazzard pay was gone. Mike expected Walt to just drop his life completely and go on the run at this point, he couldn't let that happen. Mike was also wrong about it all being Walt's fault, Jesse is the one that screwed everything up by trying to kill Gus' dealers, Walt sacrificed so much to save Jesse and then Gus declared war on Walt. Yes Walt had a ridiculous ego and maybe he would have moved against Gus anyway but Jesse and Gus forced his hand in the story.
Mike knew the game. Everyone knew the game, or eventually learned it the hard way.
Hey Paulo, thanks for your classes. You're amazing! Love Breaking Bad and your teaching skills.
Ha-ha! Sure they did. Just another senior dumb hitman
What’s interesting about this scene that I don’t see a lot of people talking about:
Walt had already stolen Mike’s gun from his bag before Mike told him off...
Jesus your right I didn't even think about that
Yeah that murder was premeditated. He just needed a trigger (no pun intended) to resolve his feelings so that he could go through with it.
Maybe he had 2 guns?
@@ibelieveinsomething3895 na the gun was missing from Mike's bag
@@blue_jorquera ok thx
Rip kid named finger
Mike is like a dad Jesse wished he had
And walt is the dad he deserved
Walt in Season 2 when Jesse suggests they become the new Tuco "What are you gonna beat your homies to death when they "diss" you"
Walt in Season 5: Kills Mike for "dissing" him.
He also killed him because he wouldn't have let Walt kill his guys in prison. If Walt didn't kill Mike: 1)He'd be in jail since Walt didn't kill the guys in prison, 2)Even if he did kill the guys, Mike would've killed Walt.
@@BlasterzHD i don't think Mike would actually kill him tbh
It’s kill or be killed yo!
@@AdiXn583 he would without a second thought
No this murder was premeditated. He can get the names from Lydia as he says and he had already stolen the gun before the “diss” occurred.
Mike was the only one that was never afraid or intimidated by Heisenberg, he's the most badass character on Breaking Bad
Gus Fring, Tuco Salamanca, Hector Salamanca, Hank Schrader- Am I a joke to you
@@suhaibarifuddin1753 i mean tuco never hurt or touched walter and im pretty sure he was intimidated by him when he blew up the building
Franchesca thought he was a joke
Gas was too cautious and calculating. Not enough to be a badass.
Tuco was a junkie psycho- not a real badass... who else?
Hank Schreder? He was a PTSD soldier. Not a badass, but a pretty tough fellow!
Don Hector? This one is 1 step from being a badass if not for his age and poor health.
The REAL BADASS for me is Lalo Salamanca! That’s the guy! 👏🏻😄
@@suhaibarifuddin1753 Hank actually feared.
Mike is a lucky man, he died in peace.
Not everyone gets to go like this in a criminal world.
Walt always had an ego but, I think the moment shit really hit the fan was when he killed Gus. That's the moment his pride and his ego shot up by an overwhelming degree. Before that, you can see that although he was egotistical, a lot of what he did was for his family. Afterwards, all the danger he got was brought upon by himself.
He IS the danger!
I don’t understand how you can shoot someone on television but can’t say fuck lmao
Amen
To be fair, it’s uncensored on TV. This CZcams channel just censored it so they don’t get ads taken off their video.
Cuz the violence is fake.. but the words are real man.
Edit: I thought it was obvious but since it isnt: THIS IS A JOKE! I AGREE YES THIS IS A DUMBAPPROACH! YES THE VULGAR LANGUAGE IS ALSO AS MUCH AN ACT AS THE ACTUAL VIOLANCE. STOP "correcting" ME FUCKING HELL
Think of the kids watching
@@filthyjones6150 It sad how thats a real argument for swearing on TV. Its so dumb lol.
“He killed him, like, over nothing” - Jesse Pinkman on Tuco Salamanca, season 2.
Season 2
@@adambennett9688 I’ll change it thanks
@@liavhanegbi2729 👍
I thought it was season 1?
@@conormerrigan4803 nope it's the first episode of season 2
01:01 Love the use of the single shot to show us what Walter is feeling. No close ups, no cut aways, no words, just good old fashion camera work, acting, and music.
Modern Hollywood wishes it could be this good.
.....is this and Better Call Saul not modern Hollywood?
@@ScootyPuffJrSux I haven't seen Better Call Saul yet, so I have no idea how good it is. But no, I wouldn't call this Modern Hollywood. This is old school.
@@tjjordan4207 this is not old school
If instead of paying most of their budget on famous, viewbait actors such as The Rock or Jason Statham, they'd spend it on the quality of their movies, Hollywood would still be doing fine.
@@ScootyPuffJrSux I think he means that Hollywood didn't make Breaking bad or better call Saul.
The landscape was actually insanely beautiful
As soon as Mike said "You should have known your place!" that was it. Walt's ego couldn't handle it
He also was in a quite secure place when he saw the TV interview and heard he had almost nothing to do with gray matter. His ego couldn't handle it and he had to go settle the score.
@@laurocoman He was not in a secure place. His ego led him to being an overqualified high school teacher in the first place. Gets cancer and cant afford his treatment bills. Ego refuses all help as "charity." Man's ego was out of control his whole life.
@@carltonbanks5470 don’t forget that he was insecure about being with Gretchen because he felt intimidated by her family, so he left her and Graymatter. He walked away from a [soon to be] billion dollar company.
@@princessmarlena1359 what do you mean he was intimidated by her family?
@@t8spy526 by Gretchen’s family. They were/are very well-to-do, and Walt came from more…shall we say, “Humble beginnings”. His dad died at a young age, and his mom raised him with the “We take care of our own” mindset of refusing help, ever.
Telling Walt to shut up, were probably the best last words Mike could've say, as it showed his true relation towards Walt.
He hated Walt and for good reason
@@joetamburello6292 Walter melted him in the barrel and for a good reason
Walt deserved every bit of resentment he got from Mike
@@dextermorgan6292 you genuinely such a weirdo
The more I watch Mike in Better Call Saul, the more I hate Walter White.
Waltuh didn't put his d away
Despite all the scenes and deaths in this show, this scene in particular (tied with Jesse's reaction to Andrea getting shot) is the most difficult to accept. For all the bad things Mike was, this just felt unjust. He was impossible not to love.
And after BCS, this gets even more depressing.
“Yah we definitely need to censor the cuss words with an annoying beep.”
*showcases brutal murder*
'Murica
Murder is fine. Sex or cussing? Unspeakable
It's not censored in the actual show just on CZcams
@@gin.gefilms no crap
the true American Way
3:14. "I'm sorry, Mike."
There are some times when the words, "I'm sorry" are worse than useless. This was one of those times.
Sorry that I just killed you for telling me your opinion Mike
Why would that make it worse?
@@DemoniteBL It's worse when he's dying and still tries to make amends with him after having a fit killing him
The last thing you wanna hear after you get shot, are the lamentations of the shooter.
@@chickenwar1 Not why he killed him.
Waltuh... Put your d away Waltuh...
😂
I hate that the stupid beep at 3:22 turns the scene comedic for me
Lmfao me too 😆
Walt: Insults mike for getting followed by the DEA
Few episodes later: leaves damning evidence on toilet for his DEA brother in law to find.
after he killed mike
he became mike
Not even a few episodes. It was the next fucking episode it's even better
How is Walt so smart but at the same time so damn stupid?
@@Christian-97 Plot convenience
@@Christian-97 It was his ego. He felt so smart about himself that he got away with what he did. He never thought he'd get caught.
Most twisted thing here? Walt basically tells Mike he's gonna kill all of his men when he gets the names from Lydia.
😬
You're right. That's cold.
I don’t think mike would care
walt loses all sense of morality the more he deals in the meth business, hence he becomes more strict to to take care of business
@@zeuszo_o1593 Seriously? Mike did all of this just to save his men
Waltuh put your...
this was the most heartbreaking scene, I felt so bad for Mike.
Mike was who Walt claimed to be. He really did what he did for the sake of his family. And he saw right through Walt’s lies. He knew exactly who Walt was.
EDIT (BCS Spoilers): Forgot I wrote this comment but to be clear, I'm not saying Mike is a good man. I'm saying he wasn't motivated by ego and pride like Walt was. He wanted to help his family but he definitely deluded himself into believing having a moral code or honorable motives justified doing terrible things. His scene with Nacho's father made it painfully clear he's ultimately still a bad guy no matter how hard he tries to maintain his integrity.
Bald
Walter didn't get his children killed and sacrificed 80 million dollars to save Hank's life. Mike got his son killed because he didn''t want him to embarrass him in front of his corrupt cop buddies.
The moment Walt ordered the hit on Gale was the moment Mike saw exactly who Walt really was
Mike and Walt are one and the same, the only real difference between them was that Walt was able to come to terms with the fact that he was living a power fantasy, whereas Mike couldnt free himself of the narratives convenient to him. Its the case with most criminals, really. This myth of circumstance "forcing" you to become a monster, this idea that these are good men made to do bad things because of the situations they find themselves in. What a load of crap, "thieves with a sense of honor" ought to be torn apart by dogs, not revered and idolized.
Great observation
The only thing I love in this scene is how Mike destroyed Walt's Ego before Walt shot him.
“He can’t keep getting away with it!”
you are pretty unknown
@@ep1k_4 seeming sus lately
@Aidan Fox don’t break bad
"He won't"
Yes....Yes he can.
Mike: “you and your pride and ego!”
Walter’s pride and ego: “oh yeah?”
Walter’s pride and ego: “oh yeah?. Oh yeah! OH YEAAAAH?!”
WHY?
Walt’s ego: “Oh yeah? Take this!” 💥 🔫 😂
Walter's pride and ego: Singing "Spending the night together"
His last words were “Shut the fuck up and let me die in peace” Legend
This scene is way sadder after Better Call Saul.
This scene is crazy. A real Jekyll and Hyde moment. Walt walks out of frame, disrespected and upset. Then back in frame walks Heisenberg, rageful and murderous.
@@TheSaladin777 🤡
@@TheSaladin777 Well, that was stupid.
there is no Heisenberg, just Walts out of control ego.
@@grbmajor6645 congrats you missed the entire plot line of the show clap clap clap
@@TheSaladin777 Stfu
"I just realised Lydia has the names. I can get them from her"
Bryan Cranston hated this line. He felt it was pointless and made Walt look like an asshole, not for killing Mike, but for not caring that he did. He regrets not bringing it up before the day of shooting. When on sight he debated it with the director of the episode, but he was taking too long to discuss it and daylight was running out; you can even see the time of day change from Walt shooting Mike and the two by the Rio Grande. Jonathan Banks was getting upset, and Cranston felt bad because it was Banks' last scene on the show, so he did what he could with the line to make it work by pacing around like a caged animal in his realization, and hoped for the best.
When watching the episode with his wife, his worst fears were realized. She scoffed, turned to him, and said, "What and asshole"
Interesting. Where/When did Cranston talk about that?
@@bigchungus4722 He discusses it in his autobiography, A Life in Parts. Great read. I recommend the audio version read by the author
It was a childish line, but Walt isnt acting stone cold this scene. He's shaking, anxious, remorseful. Mike is a bit different from the other murders, isn't he?
What better demonstration of lack of control than to speak a pathetic cop out?
Walter White is indeed an asshole, cultured, competent in his field, skilled, but full of himself, lacking in "soft" social skills, persuaded that being a good scientific mind automatically makes him better then his colleagues / competitors even in other fields, in wich he is a noob
I didn’t mind the line. You can see by his eyes he regrets shooting Mike right after doing it. It was like his mind was trying to process what the hell he just did and his mouth just blabbed. Amazing acting as always.
0:22 me to the class clown when he pushes the nice teacher too far
“WE HAD (different teacher) WE HAD JOKES”
This is the exact moment that Finger got clipped.
Rip, Mike was one of my favourite characters
@2BuckGeo how tf did he survive
@2BuckGeo
I think Franimu was talking about Mike the character dying in Breaking Bad. Not Jonathan Banks dying for real.
@2BuckGeo He doesn't die? Really? What's the show community?
Jonathan Banks is such a great character actor. He made you really care about the awful person he portrayed.
As well as Mark Margolis, Hector Salamancas! You may not have cared about Hector as much, but you understood him. Great actors!
@@goldengram3865 indeed!
A guy: *is bald*
Vince Gilligan: Hey you wanna be part of my show?
Was rewatching tonight after a few years and was thinking the same thing. Too funny.
Breaking Bald
I'm working on getting bald myself, can't wait for the phone call.
For real😂 almost everyone is bald. Even Jesse who had hair went bald
Mira a quien me encuentro por acá. Dale que esos perros no se pasean solos
Kid named finger:
Kid named finger death scene
This was the exact moment where Mike became a fucking corpse.
You're god damn right.
Lol
The floor is floor
This one is creative
you solved the mystery sherlock
I think this scene was necessary so the viewers could grow a little hate towards Walter. Mike was one of the most beloved characters in Breaking Bad, Walt killing him made the viewers grow hate towards him.
I’ve been rewatching this and I hated Walt long before this scene. Sick bastard. The ones I rooted for were Jesse and Hank.
Lol i hate him long before this scene. Mike was right. He just had to cook and enjoy money. And even after he fucked up Fringe gave him chances to continue
maybe this was never planned but vince did this because people actually liked walt for some reason lol
I didn't hate him, I actually still wanted him to succeed, probably because he was the main character
I loved Walt til the end
I can't help but say that Mike is pretty wrong here. He plays the blame game for Walt blowing up the lab, but it wasn't Walt's ego that made him go against Gus. It was Jesse's complications, and Walt's fear.
If we really go back in time, to when Walt was truly safe, and 'could have made all the money he wanted', Walt would've had to let Jesse get killed by the Cartel. I think you and I can both agree Walt should've done that, but you can't deny, Walt saving Jesse was something any of us would've done.
It's ironic, Mike blames their downfall on Walt, when it was actually triggered by the only person he cared for out of all of them, Jesse.
W take
I don’t think it’s something Walt should have done.
Walt didn't care about Jesse, it was like his dog or his possession. It was the only person who obeyed to him blindly. In the end when he doesn't obey anymore and threatens him, he pays an hit on him. So yeah, he screwed up with Gus because of his pride
You are one smart guy among everyone else here in the comments.
@@mariobaratti2985 Well Walt called the hit on Jesse because he went home and saw his house drenched in gasoline. It wasn't that Jesse 'stopped blindly obeying' Walt, it's that Jesse literally is coming for Walt and his family.
I don't know about you but no matter how much I love somebody, if they are coming for my family, I'd react pretty much the same way.
It's also essentially common knowledge that Walt did in fact love Jesse, to an extent. Maybe you have a surface level understanding of their relationship, and I get that, the things Walt tells people like Gus point to this conclusion, but that's about it. It's widely agreed that Walt didn't just see Jesse as a slave.
That "so this is how it ends?" face really hits hard
Mike’s face at 2:35 is just perfect. Completely in shock at, and trying to make sense of what Walt just did and that he was about to die.
"I should've killed him as I had the chance to"
More like "did this motherfucker seriously just kill me? “
@@chickenwar1 half measure
You know the more I think about it the more I realized it was probably for the best for Mike to die. I mean think about it the man can't see or provide for his grand daughter anymore and he'll always be on the run plus he's too old now. This is my head canon but I think that was the reason why he didn't overreact too much when he was shot.
Damn, another half measure.
"My favorite scene was killing Mike".
Bryan Cranston
@@sdog173 he said it as a joke in a cast reunion to Johnathan Banks bc he was getting emotional about being able to play mike lol
@@sdog173 very Bryan Cranston-y humor
honestly, cant blame him. good scene. achieves everything it's supposed to and more.
the funniest part is that he actually hated Walt in this scene
@@xomi9722 To be honest, Mike was an asshole to Walt from the beginning to the end 😏.
there’s nothing in this world as corruptively powerful as someone’s pride
Even in his last moments Walt continues to apologize and tries to manipulate him like he did to Jesse but Mike saw and still sees right throw his lies and apologies
I think Walt was genuinely sorry about killing him, he seemed to do it impulsively after being enraged.
Damn - you're right the apology is definitely manipulation - flipping back so suddenly from his rage
I just feel like he was genuinely sorry because why would he try to manipulate someone if he's already going to do whatever you say to him? Walt is still a fucking degenerate for killing Mike because it was unnecessary but I do feel like he felt sorry immediately after pulling the trigger.
@@edwinrodrigues8244 well yeah he’s bipolar
Mike wouldn’t have let Walt kill his guys though. Walt would be looking over his shoulder rest of life.
Mike had every intention to kill Walt, and could have. But then he saw a place by the river that caught his eye and accepted death. In those last few moments of his life, he wanted them to be calm and focused on a sunset over the river, rather than waste his last moments killing Walt. Every second was precious time, and he wasn't going to waste it. I'd imagine that after being a killer like he was, he saw how soo many people went out, and knew he didn't want that for himself, that being able to take a moment to face it and reflect, rather than have it immediately end, was worth more than anything else.
Best analysis yet :)
I agree
Great comment, and greatest show ever.
Good theory but considering that he dies seconds later, he most likely sat down because he couldn’t walk anymore due to his body collapsing, he probably didn’t even have the strength to hold the gun anymore
@@Aztronaut001 What you're saying is still compatible with what C North said.
Collapsing, "I can't walk anymore, oh, well damn I see the beauty around me. Shut up Walt I want to die in peace"
To be fair, Walt was only protecting Jesse who got mad at Gus for using and killing kids in his drug operation.
Walt became power hungry when he had to take over the Meth lab, because he’s afraid Gus will kill either Walt or Jesse and replace one of them with Gale who’s more obedient.
If Gus banned kids in his drug operations or Jesse would just calm down, then everything would have worked out.
"Fingers death breaking bad"
I searched like this on search bar 💀
I love how Walt took Mikes advice, no half measures.
Thank you! Mike tried to kill Walt first over far less. I love that Walt rubs it in and says that he'll just get the names from Lydia lol!
@@josemexicanmexican7602 it wasn’t even a necessary measure…so what are you getting at?
@@javieremoya yes it was. Mike wouldn't have allowed him to kill the guys in prison. That boosted Walt's reputation, which was excellent for business. It also saved money. Mike was willing to kill Walt, so it was also completely nessesary without all the other benefits.
@@josemexicanmexican7602 the "reputation" he got from it was one of a killer. It's literally the reason Huell ends up talking, knowing Walt wouldn't hesitate in having him killed.
Mike coulda still shot walt, so it was a half measure (and pointless). The fact he was already dead, mike probably just didnt feel like bothering and chose to have some peace in his last moments instead.
Walter, by killing Mike even if it wasn't unnecessary, showed how he become ruthless just like Gus, the man he was afraid about. This scene was needed to show the fact Walter White is the most dangerous villain, all his ego took him even to kill the people near to him.
walt isnt afraid of gus, idiot, he frustrates walt, because walt wants to become him
@@lcdream4213 Well when Gus told Walt that he would kill his family he went crazy trying to escape from him. When Walt killed Gus, at first he tried to become like him, thinking he could become the new boss, but he did not get his professionalism, just his ruthless. Btw that's just my opinion
@2BuckGeo At first yes
He had to kill Mike. There was no other way
@@rayloc420 He could just intimidate him, in fact Mike was moving in another country to run away from the police and the DEA.
Me when someone insults me for no reason: 0:09
Walt really became a villian, I was starting to hate him with every season, killing Mike was the tipping point. This is still without a doubt the greatest show of all time
Killing Mike was a good move. Mike wrongly blames Walt for things screwing up in the end of Season 3 when it's really Walt's loyalty to Jesse and saving his life that started the rift with Gus. Not long after, Gus tries to kill Walt, but Walt succeeds. After that, Gus makes a continuous plan to kill off Walt, so Walt's only option to save himself, Hank, and his family is to get Gus first. Of course, when Walt needs to tie off loose ends with Gus's snitches, Mike refuses and uses a failing half measure (when he should know better).
Stay Walter is the goat
Greatest show of all time? There are a lot more shows that I believe, you need to watch mate.
@@rithiek5446 sad. Breaking bad is easily the best
@@rllydeaigo no it's not. "Best" or rather "Perfect" as many people claim it to be doesn't have flaws. Hardly any show can be perfect tho, but it's not best either. The Sopranos is better. Sorry, but, Breaking Bad is great, one of the best, but it loses it's grip when characters act out of their characters for the sake of plot or the ending.
"Best" show doesn't have 20 characters out of which 5 or 6 behave like actual people and rest only do things required for the plot, it has characters that actually feel real, and realistic. Breaking Bad is a crime drama, not a fantacy tale to have flawed(unrealistic) scenes (which there are not many, and I can personally think of only 3) but having those few flawed scenes means that its neither perfect nor best. Watch Sopranos :)