Breaking Bad Season 5: Episode 14: Jack kills Hank HD CLIP

preview_player
Показать описание
What’s happening in this Breaking Bad clip?
Jack (Michael Bowen from Walking Tall and Kill Bill) holds Hank (Dean Norris from Total Recall and Death Wish) at gunpoint. Walter (Bryan Cranston from Godzilla and Total Recall) does everything he can to prevent Jack from killing Hank. But Hank doesn’t want to beg, and knows Jack is going to kill him no matter what. Hank was right. Jack shoots him.

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.

Like this video if you want to see more episodes and tell us what you thought in the comments below.

Don't forget to turn on notifications to catch our next videos!

Keep up with us on Facebook!

Binge Society brings you the best of your favorite movies and TV shows! Here you will find iconic scenes, moments, and lines from all the films, characters, celebrities and actors you love. As movie fans, we give you content we know you will enjoy!

#crime #breakingbad #tvshow #aaronpaul #jonathanbanks #walterwhite #bryancranston #season5 #lastseason #hanksdeath
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

This is the moment Hank became a mineral

vintagefilms
Автор

Hank: “Nah Walter, I can’t bring you to the DEA raid. It’s too dangerous without any training”
*Directed by Vince Gilligan*

dumpmuch
Автор

He really is the hero of the story; killed Tuco and the twins, uncovered Gus and his secret lab, uncovered Walt and drove him into hiding, he beat spinal injury and regained the use of his legs, survived an explosion in Mexico and beat PTSD, all within just one year

invizig
Автор

Regardless of the ups and downs of their relationship, I can’t help but think that a huge part of what crushes Walt about Hank’s death is the inevitable realization that his own actions deprived his kids of an Uncle who would have been a great father figure in their lives after his own death.

Hank would have been such a rock for Walter Jr. and Holly, and, instead, they will grow up without both their father and uncle.

YesManNomad
Автор

The most chilling and grueling scene when Hank says, “You’re the smartest guy I ever met, and you’re too stupid to see… They’re minerals.”

TheMagicConkshell
Автор

Walt really valued Hank's life that he was ready to give up the $80m.

smanslam
Автор

Hank's refusal to try and make a deal shows his integrity to the very end. There are many badass characters in this series but it takes a real man to never bow your own morality in the face of intimidation.

TheAmbientUniverse
Автор

“You’re the smartest guy I ever met. And you’re too stupid to see… he made up his mind ten minutes ago.” Is one of the most heartbreaking lines that I’ve heard on TV. Hank realizing his fate and that no matter how much Walt tries to convince Jack, that Hank is going to die anyway. Such a gut punch of a line and this whole episode and show is brilliant.

jacksonbess
Автор

The arrogance of Walt to believe that Heisenberg and Walt’s lives would never cross paths

jamiethomas
Автор

There is not a SINGLE scene that brings me more of a chill than when hank said “You are the smartest person I’ve ever met, but you are too stupid to see.... he made up his mind ten minutes ago.”

johnpetty
Автор

2013: saddest moment in the best show on tv
2020: shitpost meme

fbistatmajor
Автор

2:53 I love that detail of how Heisenberg came out when he was telling Jack to address Hank as his name and not just "Fed".

peoplesdreamsneverend
Автор

Walt's expression when he falls over and cries looks like Gus's when Eladio killed Max.

stendhoul
Автор

“you want me to beg?” i actually realized he was the only character in the entire series to never beg for anything.

superdannny
Автор

Walt’s anguish isn’t for himself, it’s for Walt junior and the rest of their family. Walt junior just lost a very strong bond with a moral male figure that Walt cannot replicate. Such a compelling tragedy

jasonschoenecker
Автор

If you look closely at his expression at 3:10, that's the EXACT moment Hank knew he was going to die, and started making the best of his time left, demeaning Jack.

jacksonholt
Автор

There’s 2 deaths in this scene. Hank dying and whatever was left of Walter.

sirtwigo
Автор

"You're the smartest man I ever met"

Hank finally accepting walt as a man

usaydshaheen
Автор

I cried like a baby in this scene. Great character development, great story, and great acting. I feel so sad for Hank.

honeydew
Автор

I love this scene, because it's the first time there are irreversible real-world consequences to family that are directly caused by Walter, and he's impotent to do anything to stop it.

Saul Goodman on the other hand, would have had Jack driving him, Jesse and Hank to the nearest gas station, and wishing them well.

masondegaulle