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Character Review: Walter White

Character Review: Walter White

By Hemanta BhattaraiPublished 3 years ago 3 min read
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Character Review: Walter White
Photo by Denis Oliveira on Unsplash

Walter Hartwell "Walt" White Sr., better known by his secret name and business name Heisenberg, is the American drug lord. She has been a chemist and chemist at high school in Albuquerque, New Mexico, who was diagnosed with chronic lung cancer and began making crystal methamphetamine. To protect the financial future of his family, he started making meth Jesse Pinkman, a former student.

He meets one of his students Jesse while on a drug trip with Walter White, a family man and a handsome boy, and brother-in-law Hank. When Walt first saw a suspicious student, he and Jesse Pinkman fled through a window during a robbery to visit an interested person, Hank, who did not tell Hank about it.

Things get tense between the two when it comes to the last two episodes, and things get worse when Hank dies after being shot by a gang, leaving Walt with the difference that he didn't plan to kill Hank's family, which means he doesn't do Must. Walt knows he has to kill himself because he has to connect everything loses with his family and live a life with lung cancer hiding from true friends.

For the third time, when Jesse in hospital presented his poignant proverb after Hank beat Schrader and became a gangster in the way Walt had ruined his life, Walt told Jesse that he was his motto and he should have been in the chair. Walt’s pride killed Hank, arrested Jesse, and ruined his entire family life. While Walt was involved until the end of Breaking Bad in his personality and his evil desires, the undeniable fact was that he started his journey with good intentions and never forgot about them at all.

One of Walter White’s motives as a person is his desire to be a good parent to his children and as the series goes on it becomes clear that this also includes being a parent to Jesse. As the series progresses, we see Walter becoming more ethical and Jesse becoming more ethical.

Throughout the series, Walter White goes through a huge and important arc of the character. The story of Breaking Bad is the story of Walter White’s character and evolution as he encounters the character’s most interesting and extreme experience.

Walter White indulges in a Breaking Bad, in which Tony and Walt warn the public and forgive their deceptive behavior for the deception they are committing against their family, in contrast to Tony Soprano. If Walter had not been diagnosed with cancer, if the DEA agent had not taken him to a meth clinic and seen Jesse fall out the window, Breaking Bad would probably not have gotten cancer. Instead of focusing on Walter White and his personal life and involvement in the drug business, the writers have raised other characters and stories to ensure that interest remains in them.

While Breaking Bad exposed Walt's true identity as a proud man who tried to satisfy his own image by becoming a mythical Heisenberg, it also revealed the complex personality born of Jesse. The final season of Breaking Bad focuses on Walter White, so it’s fitting that Jesse, the show’s main character, is his cinematic grace. Here are 10 key turning points in Walt's negative transformation.

Walt wanted to boil a lot of meths that would be enough to cover his medical expenses, family care, mortgages, education, and Skyler's basic living expenses. As he tossed his $ 250,000 suit against Skyler, he was shocked, unsure of how to pay the $ 7 million he earned at the Meth Lab for the family car wash and convinced Jesse to kill Gus by making castor poison in a lab Jesse hid in one of his cigarettes. That decision, in turn, gave Walt the guidance he needed to discipline Jesse, who was killed by Gale in the season finale.

When Walter White tells Vince Gilligan, the founder of Breaking Bad and the final champion of his fate, that the cancer is gone, the cartels catch him. Jack Welker and his gang appear with his brother-in-law at the last minute and Walt has just minutes to call them to save Gus from him before Jesse betrays him with a painful revelation.

Walter White's performance earned Bryan Cranston a fourth Emmy nomination, an award from the Television Critics Association, a three-time nominee for the Golden Globe, and a Screen Actors Guild Award. Admittedly his dark decline in the world of meth cooking was planned and born out of a combination of despair and desire to apply his vast knowledge of chemistry but ultimately it is his root forever.

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About the Creator

Hemanta Bhattarai

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