Breaking Bad recap: Buried money, buried secrets, and buried motivations (2024)

The lone bit of comic relief in "Buried," tonight's grim episode of Breaking Bad, came when Saul Goodman's henchmen Huell and Kuby settled in for a little quality time with the millions and millions of dollars Walter White has amassed through his meth empire. When Huell laid down on the massive pile of money, Kuby snapped, "We're here to do a job, not channel Scrooge McDuck," before giving in to temptation and jumping onto the pile himself.

The sad truth is that Huell and Kuby's DuckTales routine represented the most action that money has ever seen. When they finally returned the stash to Walt, he couldn't even be sure it was the right amount, because he's never even counted it. Instead, he spent a day transferring it from an anonymous storage locker to an even more anonymous hole in the desert, where it can serve as an Ozymandias-like tribute to his rapidly disintegrating empire.

Walt sealed up his blood money in plastic barrels before he buried it, just as he's sealed up most of bodies that have piled up in his furious wake. Of course, Walt didn't dissolve the money in hydrofluoric acid, as he did with various bodies. Instead, he buried it intact, preserving its coordinates on a lottery ticket he tacked to the refrigerator in the desperate hope that it can someday be recovered and passed on to Walter, Jr. and Holly. (For the record: 34, 59, 20, 106, 36, and 52 — the numbers that make up the coordinates where Walt stashed the cash — are also the atomic numbers for selenium, prasedodymium, calcium, seaborgium, krypton, and tellurium. I'll leave it to any chemistry whizzes out there to weigh in on whether or not that means anything.)

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Breaking Bad recap: Buried money, buried secrets, and buried motivations (1)

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But aside from Walt's burying, "Buried" largely pushed him to the sidelines in favor of Hank, Marie, and Skyler. At this point in the story, that's not a terribly surprising choice; while Walt is at the tail end of his arc, the rest of the show's characters still have plenty of time to consider what they'll do about his actions in the decades after Walt's (presumptive) death.

After a cold open that showed the aftermath of Jesse's desperate attempt to get rid of his own blood money, the show offered a détente in the diner between Hank and Skyler. It was just as riveting as last week's confrontation between Walt and Hank (and equally due, in no small part, to the strengths of the actors involved). Hank, as dogged as a bloodhound on the trail, played the conversation all wrong: He assumed that Skyler is a passive victim, and not an active participant in Walt's crimes. When Hank dismissed Walt as "a monster," it was obvious that Skyler was faltering; when he mentioned that Walt's cancer had returned, he failed to register the shock and pain she was obviously feeling. If he'd approached Skyler differently, Hank might have been able to convince her to turn on her husband (and had the star witness he needs to make his case). Instead, her own Heisenbergian survival instincts took over.

Last week's episode ended with Walt suggesting that Hank's best move might be to tread lightly. But in "Buried," it's Skyler deciding that's what Walt's next tactic will be. "Maybe our best move here is to stay quiet," she suggested as Walt laid feebly on the bathroom floor after his taxing burial.

As effective as these developments are — and as much as they offer much-needed forward momentum for a show that has just six episodes left — they don't quite jibe with everything else we've seen Skyler do since discovering Walt's dark secrets. When Walt asked Skyler if she's happy his cancer has returned, she doesn't say yes, and she doesn't look like the answer is yes. Yet it wasn't too long ago that Skyler was desperately looking for any way to get their children out of the house, and admitting that she was just waiting for Walt's cancer to come back.

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When did she flip, however reluctantly, to guarding Walt's secrets again? It was presumably sometime during the time the show skipped over last year — after Walt retired, and before we rejoined them at the backyard barbecue, where they were discussing taking a romantic European vacation together. Whatever transpired between Walt and Skyler over that lost time is pivotal to understanding her full motivations in "Buried" — and for a character that's often been unfairly dismissed by Breaking Bad fans as inconsistent or inconsequential, it's frustrating to see the show eliding over it.

It's no great surprise that "Buried" is an accomplished hour of television — this is Breaking Bad we're talking about, after all. But for all its strengths, "Buried" also illustrated the biggest problem I've had with Breaking Bad's otherwise airtight plotting: The denouement to last year's midseason finale, which offered an uncharacteristically rushed version of Walter's decision to retire from the meth empire that he'd told Jesse was his end goal just two episodes earlier.

The writer's strike of 2007-2008 meant that Breaking Bad's first season was abbreviated to seven episodes, but every season after the first clocked in at 13 episodes — until last year's fifth season, when the show took a break after eight episodes. (Technically, the episodes that are airing now are the "second half" of the fifth season. But the gap between last year's "midseason finale" and last week's "midseason premiere" was long enough that each "half" has essentially served as its own mini-season.) In last year's "Gliding Over All," Breaking Bad elided over a wealth of potential storylines set during Walt's reign as the king of a meth empire with a brief montage set to "Crystal Blue Persuasion." The goal was clear: The writers wanted to move the story along quickly enough that the half-season could end with Hank discovering that Walt was the Heisenberg he'd been looking for all along.

For a show that's normally so focused and precise, the change in tempo was a little jarring, but the actual events of "Gliding Over All" were riveting enough that the gambit worked. But I couldn't help but think about those five hypothetical extra episodes Breaking Bad could have had last year as I watched "Buried" tonight, which saw Skyler stoutly refusing to join Hank and Marie as they encouraged her to abandon Walt — an option that it seems like she might have leapt at just a few episodes ago.

But while Skyler has cast her lot with Walt, there's a weak link left in Heisenberg's chain: Jesse Pinkman, who's sequestered in an interrogation room with Hank at the episode's end. Though Jesse's two appearances book-ended "Buried," he didn't say a single word in the entire episode. We'll see if Hank has any more luck getting him to talk in next week's "Confessions."

Read more Breaking Bad recaps:

Breaking Bad premiere recap: 'Blood Money'

Breaking Bad recap: Buried money, buried secrets, and buried motivations (2024)

FAQs

What happened to the rest of the money in Breaking Bad? ›

Jack and Todd's Theft: Unfortunately for Walt, a neo-Nazi gang led by Jack and his nephew Todd discovers the buried money. They steal approximately 80% of it, leaving Walt with only a fraction of his fortune [3]. Walt's Lack of Concern: Surprisingly, Walt doesn't seem to care about the remaining money.

What are the coordinates where Walt buried his money? ›

The GPS coordinates where Walt buried his barrels of cash are 34°59'20.0"N 106°36'52.0"W. It is actually not in the middle of the desert, but a lot in Albuquerque Studios in Albuquerque, New Mexico where most of the interior scenes of Breaking Bad were filmed.

What episode does Walt bury his money? ›

Buried
SeasonEpisode
5B10

Did the dea take Kaylees money? ›

In “Better Call Saul”, he tells Ziegler that he was married for 25 years. Kaylee was his granddaughter, not his daughter. We don't really know what happened to her after Mike's death. He wasn't able to leave her any money, the Feds took that.

Where did all of Walt's money go? ›

What happens to Walt's money in Breaking Bad? - Quora. In the last episodes of Breaking Bad, Walter's fortune of 80 million dollars is split among 8 barrels of money. He buries it out in the desert to ensure that it can't be used as evidence against him by the police.

How much did Gus pay Walt? ›

Season 3. Gus is pleased with the quality of Walt's blue meth and offers him $3 million for three months of his time to cook more in a high-tech "superlab" hidden under an industrial laundry that Gus owns. Walt initially refuses, but Gus eventually convinces Walt that he should cook for his family's financial security.

Who is the richest character in Breaking Bad? ›

1 Gus Fring

Though he mostly used Los Pollos Hermanos to launder money, Gus still made some money from the restaurant chain. This easily makes Gus the wealthiest character in Breaking Bad.

How much was Tuco paying Walt? ›

Afterwards, he arranges for a meeting with Tuco under the name "Heisenberg," demanding $50,000 from Tuco-$35,000 for the Meth Tuco took from Jesse, and $15,000 for pain and suffering for Jesse's treatment.

How much did Jack steal from Walt? ›

Jack instructs his gang to dig up the $80 million. He leaves Walt one barrel with about $11 million and takes the rest for himself. As they are about to leave, Walt spots Jesse underneath a car and tells Jack to fulfill his contract to kill Jesse.

Where did Walt hide the ricin? ›

Also, in "Felina", it is revealed Walter has placed the ricin in the Stevia sweetener than Lydia pours in her chamomile soy milk tea.

Where did Jack bury Walt's money? ›

Walt rushes to his car and speeds to Tohajiilee Indian Reservation, where he has buried his money.

How much money does Walt have at the end of Breaking Bad? ›

By the time he retired from the drug business permanently, Walt had accumulated over US$80 million from his involvement in the drug trade.

Why was Walter White's house abandoned? ›

After Walt's exposure as Heisenberg, the house is abandoned by Skyler and the children, and Walt has already been forced to leave and adopt a new identity.

What did Walter Bury in the desert? ›

Later, when Hank, Gomez and Jesse find out that Walt may have buried his money in the desert, they fool Walt into thinking that Jesse found the money and was about to burn everything. Walt rushes back to the location where he buried his money in Tohajiilee, hoping to save it from Jesse's wrath.

How much money did Jesse have left at the end of El Camino? ›

How much money did Jesse Pinkman have at the end? - Quora. At the end of El Camino, Jesse had more than $230k in cash and a 1988 Toyota Land Cruiser (the movie is set in 2010). When Skinny Pete asks Jesse if he has any cash, Jesse says no. He and Badger then give Jesse approximately $8,000 in cash.

Did Walter White's family get the money? ›

After Breaking Bad

In an interview, show creator Vince Gilligan confirmed that Walter Jr. eventually received his father's drug money through Gretchen and Elliott Schwartz, which he had arranged beforehand.

How much money did Walt leave behind? ›

In the period when he was in hiding, Walt spent some money on supplies, but when he returned to Albuquerque he left $9 million in the hands of Gretchen to give to his family.

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