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Jesse lives on in ‘El Camino’

Aaron Paul reprises ‘Breaking Bad’ role in new Netflix film

By JONATHAN LANDRUM Jr., Associated Press
Published: October 13, 2019, 6:05am
2 Photos
This Oct. 6, 2019 photo shows Aaron Paul posing at The Four Seasons Hotel to promote his Netflix film &quot;El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie&quot; in Los Angeles. The film, a continuation of the &quot;Breaking Bad&quot; series that concluded on AMC in 2013, premieres Friday.
This Oct. 6, 2019 photo shows Aaron Paul posing at The Four Seasons Hotel to promote his Netflix film "El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie" in Los Angeles. The film, a continuation of the "Breaking Bad" series that concluded on AMC in 2013, premieres Friday. (Rebecca Cabage/Invision) Photo Gallery

LOS ANGELES — Aaron Paul’s character in the popular series “Breaking Bad” was supposed to get killed off at the end of the first season. But producers had a change of heart after witnessing the strong chemistry between his Jesse Pinkman character and Bryan Cranston’s Walter White in a pilot.

The decision to keep the story revolved around the duo for five seasons panned out for the series, which won several Golden Globe and Emmy awards. Paul won three supporting actor Emmys for his breakout portrayal of the overly emotional, loud-mouthed and meth-taking Pinkman.

Now, Paul returns as Pinkman in the Netflix film “El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie,” which premiered Friday on the streaming service. The movie has cameos from some of the show’s best characters.

“The dynamic between Walter and Jesse changed the whole dynamic of the series and my life,” said Paul, who has gone on to star in the TV series “The Path” as well as the films “Need for Speed” and “Central Intelligence.”

“This was a role of a lifetime,” Paul said. “I thought I said goodbye to this guy years ago. So, it’s sort of nice to revisit in this state of mind and continue this journey with him. Then reconnecting with everyone from the show. It was like a family reunion.”

“Breaking Bad” concluded its five-year run on AMC in 2013. The show primarily focused on White, a high school chemistry teacher struggling to financially support his family, including a son who has cerebral palsy, while he was diagnosed with terminal cancer.

In desperation, White uses an old RV as a place to build a lucrative meth empire with the help of Pinkman, a former student, before their drug operation turns violent. The series ended with White dying from a gunshot wound after using a remote-controlled machine gun to kill an Aryan Brotherhood gang and free Pinkman, who had been held captive for six months.

“El Camino” picks up after a scar-faced, dusty Pinkman flees the bloody scene in a stolen El Camino vehicle. The story focuses on Pinkman as he tries to escape his former drug life to start anew while on the run from the police.

“He’s a different person,” Paul said of Pinkman. “Jesse has gone through torture and chaos. He’s a combination of all those things that happened to him in the past. He’s escaping from captivity. He’s been there for half a year. He’s been tortured and forced to cook a drug that has completely destroyed his life and destroyed the lives around him.”

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