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  1. Confessions (. Breaking Bad. ) " Confessions " is the eleventh episode of the fifth season of the American television drama series Breaking Bad, and the 57th overall episode of the series. Written by Gennifer Hutchison and directed by Michael Slovis, it aired on AMC in the United States and Canada on August 25, 2013.

    • Summary
    • Trivia
    • Production

    Teaser

    Outside a diner in Arizona, Todd leaves Walt a voicemail about the recent change of management and that Declan is no longer involved. Inside, he brags to his uncle Jack and his partner Kenny about his role in the train heist, leaving out the killing of Drew Sharp. Afterward, Jack and Kenny visit the restroom, where Jack nonchalantly wipes blood off his shoe with a paper towel and flushes it down the toilet. The three then leave the diner and haul the methylamine trailer back to New Mexico.

    Act I

    Hank enters the interrogation room and tells Jesse he knows that Walt is "Heisenberg," which jolts Jesse out of his daze. Hank asks Jesse to give up information on Walt, having deduced that Jesse's recent actions are indicative of him no longer being Heisenberg's partner, but Jesse sarcastically asks him if he will beat him again. Hank mentions that Walt has done a number on him and seems to convince Jesse that Walt is a monster; however, when Hank once again asks Jesse to flip on Walt, Jesse...

    Act II

    Walt and Skyler then ask Hank and Marie to meet them at a Mexican restaurant called Garduño's. Hank is incensed, although Walt refuses to acknowledge Hank's statements about him running a drug empire. Walt mentions that neither he nor Skyler want the Schraders to involve their children, citing Marie's attempt to lure Walt Jr. away, with Walt adding that his son knows about his cancer and that his son would be destroyed if he heard Hank's accusations. Hank scoffs at the idea and reiterates tha...

    The opening line of Walt's fake confession where he tells his full name and address is a reference to Walt's confessional in "Pilot".
    Aaron Paul won an Emmy for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series for his performance in this episode.
    This is the last episode where Walt and Marie directly interact with each other. The last thing Marie says to Walt is for him to kill himself. This episode is also the last time Hank and Skyler int...
    This is also the last episode where Saul and Jesse interact with one another.

    Featured Music

    1. "Midnight Blue"by Rita Remington and the Smokey Valley Symphony (in the diner during the teaser) 2. "Everyday"by Mack Self (in the diner during the teaser) 3. "Gonna Romp and Stomp"by Slim Rhodes (in the diner during the teaser) 4. "La Casa de Olvera B"by Liza Carbe and Jean-Pierre Durand (in the Gardunia's Taqueria restaurant when the Whites meet the Schraders) 5. "Chaparrita A"by Liza Carbe and Jean-Pierre Durand (in the Gardunia's Taqueria restaurant when the Whites meet the Schraders)...

  2. Aug 27, 2013 · 5.11 Confessions. Another week, another grimly ironic title for another suffocatingly intense episode of Breaking Bad. After the final moments of Buried, where Hank and Jesse – two men with ...

  3. Aug 25, 2013 · Jesse realizes that it was Walt who poisoned Brock, and beats Saul down until he gets a complete confession to it. While it was clear to the audience that Jesse was aware that Walt killed Mike, Jesse finally confirms it out loud to him in the desert. Walt Jr. learns that Walt's cancer is back.

  4. Aug 26, 2013 · Skyler and Walt leave. When Marie and Hank watch the DVD, they get a huge shock. In Walt's confession, he manipulates the facts to make it look as if Hank forced him to start cooking meth. Walt ...

    • Denise Warner
  5. Aug 26, 2013 · Breaking Bad season 5, episode 11 recap. Allison recaps Breaking Bad season 5, episode 11, "Confessions" starring Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul.

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  7. Aug 26, 2013 · August 26, 2013. “Confessions” returns to the theme of the dangerous fragility of crushed American masculinity, which has always been Breaking Bad ’s grandest concern. Walt (Bryan Cranston) and Hank (Dean Norris) are both struggling working-class men who’ve recently experienced unexpected surges of great power with Walt’s advent of ...

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