Breaking bad why is it blue




















Walt refuses, and Lydia is later scared off by Skyler. Lydia enlists the help of Jack's Gang , intending on taking Declan's operation by force if he won't allow Todd to return as cook. Declan refuses, and Declan's crew are all killed by Jack's gang. They seize all the supplies for the meth lab, and take it back to their compound. Todd continues to cook meth, though was never able to match the quality set by Walt, and even "burned" the meth, destroying its signature blue color.

Dissatisfied with the consistent disappointment, Lydia decides to try and cut her losses and exit the business. Todd, however, informs her of the rise in quality, and the blue color. Lydia questions whether Walt was working with him, but Todd tells her that they had Jesse held captive.

Having no problems with this as long as the meth was up to par, Lydia continued to use Todd while also manipulating his feelings for her to do what she wanted. Jesse attempts to break out and is caught. The gang decides to punish him by having Todd kill Jesse's ex-girlfriend, Andrea Cantillo. Combined with the continued physical and emotional abuse, and the added threat of them going after Andrea's son, Brock , of whom he was very fond, Jesse gives up and accepts his situation.

The continued success of the business, caught the attention of the fugitive Walt, who believed that Jesse had bartered a deal with Jack for his life. Enraged, Walt returns to Albuquerque in order to put an end to their business, and rectify his mistakes.

Walt slyly placed a pack of Stevia, spiked with Ricin, at her table. Lydia feigns interest, and Walt leaves. Lydia orders Todd to have Walt killed, as he is a loose end, believing that once he is gone, she will never be able to be implicated in the meth empire, and thinks nothing of adding the spiked Stevia to her tea.

Walt heads to the compound that night with the intent of killing Jesse. However, when Kenny pulls a gun, Walt demands that Jack owes him for partnering up with Jesse instead of killing him as agreed. Insulted, Jack orders Jesse to be brought to him, and states that he will kill Walt himself. Seeing the poor state Jesse is in, and realizing that it is his fault, Walt tackles him to the floor, much to the amusement of the gang.

Walt then triggers the automated M60 turret that he rigged in his trunk, which tears through the walls of the building, killing all the gang members except for Jack and Todd. Walt is critically hit with his slightly elevated body, taking a bullet for Jesse.

Todd, horrified, looks out the window to see what happened. Jesse uses this opportunity to strangle Todd with his handcuffs, killing him in retaliation for Andrea and Drew Sharp 's deaths, and his own imprisonment.

Walt confronts Jack, who was also critically hit, and bleeding. Jack attempts to bargain for his life, though Walt hears none of it, and shoots him in the head at point blank range. Probably the most important hue in Breaking Bad is blue.

The most obvious instance of this is the blue sky meth that Walt and Jesse make, signifying its purity and therefore its value. But the blue symbolism goes even deeper than that. Marie, being the sister of Skyler and wife of Hank, is represented by purple, which sits between blue and red colors on the color wheel.

While Walter's signature product is sky blue in color, the meth made in the show technically should be yellow. The characters' relationships to the drug is represented by their colors' locations relative to yellow on the color wheel.

Marie is farthest from the meth drug trade, being neither a user, cook, hired hand, nor narcotics officer, and is represented by purple which is opposite yellow on the color wheel. The characters that are closest to the drug, principally the cooks Walter White, Jesse Pinkman, and Gale Boetticher, all wear yellow jumpsuits in the meth lab and frequently wear yellow in other scenes of the show.

Gustavo Fring, while not a meth cook, wears a yellow shirt when working at his fast-food chicken restaurant Los Pollos Hermanos. Skyler White and Hank Schrader, and their colors, represent two end-member relationships to the drug trade and Walter White.

Skyler's blue represents loyalty and peace, while Schrader's red represents violence and anger. Partners who are loyal to Walter White receive money represented by green, a mixture of blue and yellow , while those who oppose him are met with violence represented by orange, a mixture of red and yellow.

Skyler White in green at a meeting with her lawyer after discovering Walter's bag of money. Symbolism: Loyalty, power, magic as in the "magic of chemistry" that Walt and Gale talk about , sadness, purity, water, sky, coldness. A single line of dialogue foreshadows what's to come years later.

If you were to rewatch it now, then you would probably pick up on all kinds of Breaking Bad Easter eggs that went over your head the first time. And if you're planning your next Breaking Bad binge-watch on Netflix, then you definitely want to pay attention to the colors the characters wear. Colors play a key role in the series. Think about it: Two of the main characters are Walter "White. The meth they sell is famous for being blue. The colors certain characters wear indicate specific aspects of their personality, and you can even track a character's development through the colors they tend to wear.

Beige is a pretty boring color when you get right down to it. Your eyes are never drawn to it in a room. Yet Breaking Bad took this innocuous color and turned it into heavy symbolism that plays an integral role in Walter's character arc. In the first season, every time we see Walter White teaching a class, he's wearing beige. He has a beige sweater during his birthday party. This symbolizes to the audience that Walter White at the beginning of the show is a boring guy.

He doesn't look like the kind of person who's done anything fun in his life. Walter and Skyler dress up in what they think are rich person party clothes, only to discover that all of the other guests have on beige clothing. While Walter has begun his slow descent into Heisenberg, the bland party shows that in this scenario, Walt is safe. There won't be any gunfire and explosions taking place any time soon. Walter slowly loses his predominantly beige wardrobe as the series progresses, and he substitutes it out for some very interesting colors we'll get into shortly.

Characters who drag Walter deeper within the meth business have a proclivity for wearing yellow. When we're first introduced to Jesse, he wears a lot of yellow clothing, particularly that yellow hoodie he has on in the pilot. Later in the series, when Walter and Jesse start working for Gus Fring, they have to wear yellow jumpsuits for the industrial levels of meth they're now producing. Speaking of Gus, think about the color scheme of Los Pollos Hermanos.



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