Empire (UK)

EL CAMINO: A BREAKING BAD MOVIE

★★★★

- DAN JOLIN

OUT NOW CERT 15 / 122 MINS

DIRECTOR Vince Gilligan

CAST Aaron Paul, Jesse Plemons, Matt Jones, Charles Baker, Scott Shepherd

PLOT After speeding away from the neo-nazi compound where Walter White met his end, Jesse Pinkman (Paul) is desperate to get out of Albuquerqu­e and finally push the traumatic events of Breaking Bad into the past. But it isn’t that easy. He’s a very wanted man, and he hasn’t got a penny to his name...

BREAKING BAD WAS always about difficult situations. Vince Gilligan’s lauded crime series regularly placed its protagonis­ts, odd-couple meth-cooking team Walt (Bryan Cranston) and Jesse (Paul), in a seemingly inescapabl­e trap, ramping up the complicati­ons and tension to cuticle-chewing degrees before revealing the pair’s usually ingenious exit route. Typically, it was Walt who did all the problem-solving, while incredulou­s Jesse looked on, until the time came to cheer the results (“Yeah, bitch! Magnets!”).

El Camino is pure Breaking Bad in the way it lays out one, big, feature-length difficult situation: namely Jesse getting the fuck out of Dodge. But this time there’s no Heisenberg to help out.

If we’re completely honest, Cranston’s presence is missed, but it can’t be helped — Walt definitely breathed his last on the floor of that meth lab. And he’s not missed as much as you might expect. Heisenberg’s story is over; Mr Chips became Scarface. Now it’s Jesse’s turn. Paul has to carry the film — he’s in virtually every scene, and his shoulders are strong enough to bear the load, knowing the character as intimately as he does.

Besides, he’s got plenty of Breaking Bad company. While the story picks up from the very second we last saw Jesse, hurtling down the road in an El Camino, it also furnishes the narrative with extensive flashbacks. So as well as enjoying a brief reunion with his old bros Badger (Matt Jones) and Skinny Pete (Charles Baker) post-breakout, we also get to explore Jesse’s tricky relationsh­ip with Todd (Jesse Plemons), the polite psycho who killed his girlfriend and acted as his chief jailer during Jesse’s horrific incarcerat­ion and enslavemen­t by Uncle Jack’s gang. These scenes are initially a little strange, given how much Plemons has physically changed since making the show (although Paul remarkably doesn’t look a day older), but the mind adjusts after a little while. There are other guest appearance­s too, both in the ‘now’ timeline and the ‘then’, but they’re best enjoyed unheralded.

It’s not just the familiar faces that make this film a must for any Breaking Bad fan — and this is Breaking Bad, not a distinct side narrative such as Better Call Saul. Writer/director Vince Gilligan keeps the same steady, detail-oriented pace — both in terms of plot advancemen­t and character developmen­t — and maintains the vivid, slightly askew visual style that distinguis­hed the show throughout its five seasons, from the dancing, time-lapsed skyscapes to the desolate beauty of the New Mexico desert, where anything

(or anyone) can disappear forever.

El Camino does feel more like a Western than anything he’s done before, even going full-on Sergio Leone come the climax, which might be a bit too much for some. But in a sense it represents Jesse coming of age as a character. He’s no longer the sidekick, the comic-relief, the bruised, battered and befuddled victim. He is, finally, the hero.

VERDICT

Starting the moment Breaking Bad ended, this is very much a ‘what happened next’ double-episode. Which means, short of resurrecti­ng Walter White, El Camino does precisely what you want it do.

 ??  ?? Jesse (Aaron Paul) goes on the run — without Walter — in El Camino.
Jesse (Aaron Paul) goes on the run — without Walter — in El Camino.

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