Henry R. "Hank" Schrader ASAC (/ʃrdər/) is a fictional character in the AMC drama series Breaking Bad and a supporting character in its spin-off series Better Call Saul. He is portrayed by Dean Norris and was created by series creator Vince Gilligan. Hank's character development over the course of the series and Norris's performance have been critically acclaimed.

Hank Schrader
Breaking Bad character
Dean Norris as Hank Schrader
First appearance
Last appearance
Created byVince Gilligan
Portrayed byDean Norris
In-universe information
Full nameHenry R. Schrader
NicknameHank
Title
OccupationDEA agent
AffiliationDrug Enforcement Administration (DEA)
Family
SpouseMarie Schrader
HomeAlbuquerque, New Mexico, United States
Date of birthMarch 1966
Date of deathMarch 19, 2010

Character biography

edit

Henry R. Schrader[1] is the brother-in-law of main character Walter White, and is a Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agent in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Throughout the series, he leads the investigation of the methamphetamine cook "Heisenberg"—unaware that the elusive drug kingpin is his own brother-in-law. Hank is also faced with numerous threats from the rival drug cartels, which take a toll on his mental health as the series progresses; and eventually starts taking more extreme measures to find "Heisenberg" and arrest him.

Background

edit

Hank was a special agent with the DEA, where he rose through the ranks to become the supervisor of all investigations handled by his Albuquerque office, under the watchful eye of ASAC George Merkert (Michael Shamus Wiles) and SAC Ramey. He is married to Marie (Betsy Brandt), with whom he has no children. He is close to his family-by-marriage, the Whites: Walt, his wife (and Marie's sister) Skyler (Anna Gunn), and their son Walter Jr. (RJ Mitte). In contrast with the mild-mannered Walt, Hank is extroverted, ambitious, and apparently fearless, eager to take on dangerous investigations to further his career. Beneath his tough, unflappable exterior, however, he struggles with some of his own vulnerabilities: he had cold feet when it came to marrying Marie, and despite his ambition, he is afraid to move outside his comfort zone at work, primarily due to the effects of PTSD since killing Tuco Salamanca and subsequent bloody encounters during drug busts in El Paso.

As a hobby, Hank home brews his own beer, which he bottles under the name "Schraderbräu". After he gets shot by the Salamanca cousins, he spends part of season 4 taking up mineral collecting, much to Marie's chagrin.

Better Call Saul

edit

Season 5

edit

When Domingo Molina (later to be known as "Krazy-8") is arrested on drug possession, he spends two days in jail and then announces he is willing to inform to the DEA to make a deal with prosecutors. Hank and his partner Steven Gomez arrive to interrogate him. Just as Domingo is prepared to give out a list of dead drops that belong to Gus Fring's drug operation, Saul Goodman interrupts the meeting acting as Domingo's lawyer. Hank immediately is suspicious of this and believes there are no dead drops, but Saul's fast-talking leads to Hank accepting to release Domingo into his protection as a personal CI after getting and confirming Domingo's information on the dead drops. Hank and Steven leave, unaware this was a ruse by Saul, at Lalo Salamanca's command, not only to get Domingo out of jail before he could talk about the Salamanca drug operation but to expose their competitors to the DEA. Though Nacho Varga warns Gus Fring about this, he is unable to act without alerting Lalo to the mole in his organization.

Breaking Bad

edit

Season 1

edit

During Walt's fiftieth birthday party, Hank shows off a news report covering a meth bust that he had led. Later, Walt takes up Hank's offer to go on a ride-along. Based on a tip from Krazy-8, Hank's team raids a meth lab while Walt stays in the car, where he witnesses his former student Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul) escaping the bust but does not say anything to Hank. Secretly, Walt engages with Jesse to start to produce their own meth using chemistry equipment from the school Walt teaches at. Due to the precursors they used, the product gains a unique blue tint and has extremely high purity. Walt takes the name "Heisenberg" as he and Jesse sell the blue meth to the local drug trade. The blue meth and "Heisenberg" quickly draw the attention of Hank and the DEA. Hank's initial lead traces back to Walt's school, but Hank wrongly arrests the school janitor.

Hank generally teases Walt through this period. However, when Walt tells the family that he is suffering from inoperable lung cancer, Hank promises to be there for him, and to take care of Walter Jr. and Walt's unborn daughter should he die. He also takes Walter Jr. under his wing, trying to "scare him straight" when he believes Walter Jr. is smoking marijuana. Walt explains his association with Jesse to Skyler by falsely confessing to buying marijuana from Jesse. This information soon makes its way to Marie, and then to Hank.

Season 2

edit

After a drug deal goes bad, Walt and Jesse are kidnapped by the unstable Tuco Salamanca (Raymond Cruz) and taken to a remote abode with his uncle, retired drug cartel boss Hector Salamanca (Mark Margolis). Hank helps with efforts to find Walt, and traces him via Jesse to Tuco's abode. Just before Hank arrives, Walt and Jesse manage to escape, wounding Tuco in the process. Hank kills Tuco in a shootout and arrests Hector. Meanwhile, Walt and Jesse flee back to Albuquerque, where Walt explains his disappearance to Skyler as the result of a fugue state. Hank questions Hector about the blue meth and Heisenberg, but Hector refuses to answer. Hank also questions Jesse, but Jesse provides no conclusive statements to provide leads to Heisenberg.

Hank is promoted and transferred to the El Paso, Texas DEA office for killing Tuco. Though initially happy, Hank quickly realizes he doesn't fit in with his Spanish-speaking colleagues and also starts having panic attacks. During a joint DEA/Mexican police operation, an informant, Tortuga (Danny Trejo), is beheaded and his head used to hide an explosive, killing several DEA agents and officers; Hank escapes unharmed as he had fled on having a panic attack upon seeing the head of the informant. Hank develops symptoms of PTSD and transfers back to the Albuquerque office to continue his investigation into the blue meth.

Meanwhile, Walt and Jesse, having lost the Salamancas for selling meth, have engaged with Jesse's friends. One, Badger (Matt L. Jones), gets caught in a police sting, and Hank presses hard on Badger to reveal Heisenberg's identity. Walt gets help from the fast-talking lawyer Saul Goodman (Bob Odenkirk) to get a fall guy to act as Heisenberg, but Badger approaches the wrong person while Hank and his team look on. Walt rushes in to obstruct Hank's view to correct Badger in time. While Saul's hired Heisenberg is arrested, Hank suspects the real Heisenberg remains at large.

Season 3

edit

Hank remains committed to finding the identity of Heisenberg, but his superiors start to believe the case is unsolvable and want him to move on to other investigations. He picks up a lead on the case after Jesse uses some of the blue meth to pay for gas for the recreational vehicle he and Walt use to cook the product. Hank investigates all RVs in Albuquerque through the DMV and finds an RV without a renewed registration. Hank tracks the RV down to the mother of Jesse's deceased friend Christian "Combo" Ortega (Rodney Rush), who had been killed while selling blue meth on a rival gang's territory. As he surveils Jesse, Hank calls Walt for information on his former student, giving Walt the opportunity to get the RV to a junkyard before he can find it. Hank follows Jesse to the junkyard, where Jesse and Walt hide in the RV. Walt gives instructions to Jesse to prevent Hank from entering the RV legally and gets Saul to lure Hank away from the junkyard by phoning him with a fake claim about Marie being hospitalized. He abruptly leaves, allowing them to crush the RV in the meantime, destroying the evidence. After learning that the accident was a hoax, an infuriated Hank goes to Jesse's home and assaults him. Jesse is hospitalized and threatens to sue, while Hank is suspended from the DEA without pay.

As Hank is leaving his disciplinary meeting, he receives an anonymous call from Gus Fring's henchman Victor,[2] warning him that he is about to be killed by Leonel and Marco Salamanca (Daniel and Luis Moncada) in revenge for killing Tuco; though Gus has told the brothers to target Hank instead of Walt, Gus's intention is the destruction of the Salamancas and their cartel. Hank is able to kill one brother and mortally wound the other, but he himself becomes temporarily paralyzed from the waist down after the gunfight, with the doctors fearing he may become paraplegic without physical therapy. Marie finds their insurance will not cover this, and Walt and Skyler agree to help cover the costs, unbeknownst to Hank.

Season 4

edit

Hank struggles through his recovery due to his helplessness, harshly lashing out at Marie, and tries to collect minerals to pass the time. His interest is piqued when the Albuquerque Police Department asks him to help with looking over evidence from the murder of Gale Boetticher (David Costabile), who had been Walt's lab assistant at Gus's meth superlab under an industrial laundry. Gale was killed by Jesse on Walt's orders to prevent Gus from having them replaced with Gale. Among the evidence is a lab notebook with Gale's notes on the construction of the lab, the synthesis of meth, and other details that lead Hank to believe Gale was Heisenberg. During a shared dinner, Hank talks about Gale's notebook, and Walt drunkenly suggests Gale was merely copying the real Heisenberg's work.

Hank is curious at this comment, and reviewing the evidence again, makes a connection between Gale and Gus. Hank, only just starting to physically recover, leans on Walt to help him investigate Gus's activities, the Los Pollos Hermanos restaurant chain and its parent company, Madrigal Electromotive, and properties they own in Albuquerque, including the industrial laundry. Walt panics knowing that this not only may lead Hank to discover that he is Heisenberg but may lead to Gus taking deadly action to end Hank's investigation, as his relationship with Gus was already strained over Gale's murder. Walt has Saul fake a threat on Hank's life, and the DEA arranges for around-the-clock protection for Hank's and Walt's families, temporarily halting Hank's investigation. This also allows Walt to operate without interference to take out Gus by working with Hector after learning he and Gus are nemeses. Hector claims to want to talk to the DEA, and Hank is brought under protection to help with the interview, but Hector then refuses to cooperate and is returned to the nursing home. This was part of Walt's plan as Gus, learning of Hector's interview, goes to see Hector, upon which Hector triggers a pipe bomb Walt had planted on his wheelchair, killing them both. Walt and Jesse subsequently destroy the superlab.

Season 5

edit
Part 1
edit

The destruction of the superlab leads to evidence directly tying to Gus and the drug trade, and Hank is heralded as a hero. They secure a laptop from Gus's office and put it into police evidence. On learning of this, Walt and Jesse with help from Mike Ehrmantraut (Jonathan Banks) use a giant electromagnet to try to wipe the laptop, making a mess of the evidence room. The police find nothing on the laptop but from a picture frame broken in the destruction, the numbers to several accounts of Gus's that point to Mike's informants that have been helping to keep the drug trade secret. By this point, Hank's superiors have concluded that Gus was Heisenberg and tell Hank to drop the case, but Hank still believes there is more and wants to pursue the informants tied to the accounts. Walt gets the informants' names and arranges for their murders before they can be questioned.

Several months pass, in which Walt has accumulated around $80 million and has left the drug trade. Despite blue meth still being on the streets, Hank has no leads and therefore has given up his investigation and moved on. At dinner at the Whites, Hank goes to the bathroom and while there, pages through a copy of Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman that Gale had given Walter. He recognizes the handwriting from Gale's notebook, and from Gale's dedication to Walt, referring to him as his "other favorite W.W.". Hank is shocked to conclude that Walt is Heisenberg.

Part 2
edit

Hank feigns a stomach bug to leave early, taking the copy of Leaves of Grass with him and suffering another panic attack. Later, he sneaks a GPS onto Walt's car. Walt discovers the copy of the book missing and the GPS device, similar to the one used to track Gus, and confronts Hank. Hank asserts Walt is Heisenberg, but Walt neither confirms nor denies, only that his cancer has returned and by the time Hank can prove anything, he will be dead. Hank demands Walt to tell Skyler and the children to stay with him, but Walt refuses. Hank tries to talk to Skyler, but she stays silent about what she knows. Marie learns some details through Skyler, but Hank still has insufficient evidence to go forward against Walt.

Jesse is arrested and Hank tries to convince him to turn against Walt, but Jesse refuses, still angered over Hank's prior assault. In an attempt to dissuade Hank from investigating him further, Walt creates a fake confessional videotape claiming Hank is Heisenberg and that Walt was blackmailed into making meth for him. Hank also realizes that his post-shooting physical therapy was paid for with Walt's drug money, making him an accessory after the fact. Walt and Jesse have a falling out after Jesse learns Walt poisoned the son of his girlfriend Andrea (Emily Rios) to enlist his help in eliminating Gus. Jesse attempts to burn down Walter's home in retaliation, but Hank stops Jesse and convinces him they should work together to take down Walt.

Hank initially tries to have Jesse meet with Walt while wearing a wire, but Jesse backs out at the last minute, fearing Walt will kill him. Instead, Jesse suggests they target Walt's money, which they know has been hidden as cash somewhere locally. After tricking Saul's bodyguard Huell Babineaux, Hank has Jesse call Walt pretending to have found the money and preparing to destroy it. Walt takes off to the money, buried on the Tohajiilee Indian Reservation, but when he arrives there, he realizes Jesse has tricked him. Walt then orders a hit on him through Jack Welker (Michael Bowen), the leader of a neo-Nazi biker gang that sells Walt's meth.

Jesse soon arrives with Hank and Gomez, and Walt tries to call off the hit, preparing to surrender himself to Hank. However, Jack's gang arrives anyway and a firefight breaks out, in which Gomez is killed and Hank is critically wounded. Walt pleads to Jack to spare Hank's life, offering his entire fortune to Jack. Hank refuses to beg for his life and chastises Walt for not realizing Jack already made his decision. Accepting his fate, Hank is shot by Jack. Jack's men bury Hank and Gomez's bodies in the hole Walt had stored his money, stealing most of it but leaving one barrel containing around $10 or 11 million for Walt.

Several months after Hank's and Gomez's deaths, Walt returns to Albuquerque from hiding in New Hampshire. He meets Skyler and provides her a lottery ticket with the GPS coordinates of their bodies to negotiate a deal with the authorities. Walt proceeds to avenge Hank's death by killing Jack and his men with a remote-activated machine gun before dying of a gunshot wound from a bullet that ricocheted into him during the attack.

Post Breaking Bad

edit

During the final episodes of Better Call Saul, taking place in 2010, it is revealed that Skyler was successful in making a deal with the prosecutor and that the bodies of Hank and Gomez were successfully recovered. In the final episode, Marie accuses Saul of enabling Walter and the events that led to Hank's murder. During his trial, a repentant Saul forgoes a plea deal and confesses the full extent of his involvement in Walt's drug empire. Acknowledging the role he played in causing the deaths of those associated with Walt, including Hank and Gomez, Saul shocked the courtroom but gave Marie and Blanca closure in their husbands' deaths.

Casting and creation

edit

Prior to being cast in Breaking Bad, Dean Norris had a history of being typecast as law enforcement and military type characters. Norris reasons "I guess you have a certain look, it's kind of an authoritative law enforcement-type look, and that look is certainly the first thing that people cast you with before you get a chance to do some acting."[3][4][5][6] Vince Gilligan had talked to an actual DEA agent about creating Hank's character.[5]

Development

edit

Critics have commented on the character's development. NPR writes of his character's evolution "Hank Schrader has evolved from a knuckleheaded jock into a complex, sympathetic and even heroic counterpoint to the show's anti-hero, [...] Walter White."[3] Mary Kaye Schilling of Vulture opines "It's thanks to [Norris] that Breaking Bad's Hank Schrader has gone from a cliché-spewing booya DEA agent — essentially comic relief — to a savvy, vulnerable mensch who could be the show's ultimate hero." Norris notes the realism of Hank's "tough cop" and "cliché machine" persona, comparing his mannerisms to his best friend growing up, also a cop.[5] Norris explains that people with jobs in law enforcement have to put on a bravado facade because they have to deal with unscrupulous people all day; the only other option would be to let the job affect them personally, which would compromise their effectiveness.[7]

Gilligan says Hank was supposed to be a "hail fellow well met and a figure of worship for Walt, Jr.," but developed him when he realized how "smart, sensitive, and well educated" Norris was. Norris and Gilligan both wanted Hank to be smart and capable; "Otherwise," Norris said, "he's just a doofus and you'll dismiss him." Norris notes that Hank bullies Walt in the pilot and the first season, and makes racist jokes about his DEA partner Steven Gomez. However, his racist jokes toward Gomez were toned down as the series progressed and were turned into good-natured ribbing.[5]

Sean Collins of Rolling Stone considered Hank in the pilot to be an "obnoxious blowhard". Gilligan had not considered the character as much more than a foil to Walt at first. However, as Gilligan got to know Norris, he developed Hank into a "more nuanced and complex character" who makes both "personal and professional growth".[7]

Frazier Moore of The Associated Press writes of Hank's introduction in the pilot; "Hank seemed a potentially problematic character. With his cocky, macho style, he was perilously close to a stereotype"; however, he has said "Norris has brought depth and nuance to his character, emerging as fully the equal of his fine fellow cast mates [...] as he displayed not just braggadocio but also emotional trauma." Norris and Gilligan admitted that Hank began as a "mechanical construct" whose main purpose was to provide comic relief.[6]

Hank begins showing signs of post-traumatic stress disorder in "Breakage" after killing Tuco Salamanca in "Grilled", the first deconstruction of his "tough cop" persona. Norris attributed the PTSD to the fact that it is actually very rare for law enforcement officers to draw their weapons, let alone kill someone in a combat situation. Mary Kaye Schilling praised the way the writers handled the PTSD and how they waited an entire season to explain the cause of it.[5] Noel Murray of The A.V. Club compared season 1-era Hank to a "veiled (and unacknowledged) Vic Mackey parody," but praised his development which began with his suffering PTSD.[8] Seth Amitin of IGN noted that Hank's PTSD humanized the character, as Amitin thought of him as an "emotional rock" who is usually unfazed. However, Amitin thought that Hank's humanization and inner struggle fit in with the other character's arcs and the series' themes.[9]

Emily Nussbaum of The New Yorker writes of Hank's fight with Walt, the series "placed Hank, once a minor, comic character on the show, dead center in the role of hero."[10] Graeme Virtue of The Guardian writes Norris "evolved his character Hank Schrader from cocksure DEA meathead to the closest thing the show has to a moral center."[11]

Hank went through significant character development in the third season episode, "One Minute". Norris felt that Hank's self-realization in the episode was the turning point toward his becoming a better man, and set the stage for his decisions later in the series; Norris opined that "Hank wants a clean soul." Norris kept tearing up while filming a particularly dramatic speech, though the director kept telling him not to. Norris was eventually filmed from the side to obscure the fact that he was crying.[5]

In the early fourth season episodes, Hank is bedridden after being shot multiple times in the chest by Tuco Salamanca's cousins and is increasingly hostile toward Marie while she tries to take care of him. Gilligan and the writers liked the idea of Hank not acting heroically or noble in his suffering. The writers felt this arc would be most true to Hank's character.[12]

When asked about how Hank could have not known his brother-in-law was Heisenberg, Norris said that Walt was Hank's blind spot; Hank had this preconceived notion of a drug kingpin in his head and it did not coincide with his image of Walt as meek and oblivious. After Hank finally discovers that Walt is Heisenberg, Norris had to balance betrayal with rage, citing the hurt of Walt's betrayal of his trust as his most significant emotion.[5] Norris said that, in the episode "Blood Money," Hank's emotions finally take over.[13]

Norris has said that he thinks Hank's moral code is concretely defined in "One Minute," when he accepts the consequences for assaulting Jesse even though he could have gotten away with it.[14] In an interview during the first half of season 5, Norris expressed his puzzlement at viewers who "don't know who to root for", and that he sees Walt as a straightforward villain.[15]

Norris asked Gilligan to kill Hank off midway through the fifth season, as Norris had already booked a comedy pilot before he knew AMC would stretch the fifth into two years. Gilligan declined his request, as Hank's arc was integral to the series' final episodes.[4][16][17] When the spin-off Better Call Saul was first announced, Norris initially stated that he wasn't interested in appearing, saying that he felt the Breaking Bad story was complete and that a spin-off would be unnecessary.[18][19]

Peter Gould was initially hesitant to include Hank in Better Call Saul since the character had primarily been developed and written by Gilligan, who despite serving as co-executive producer had not been in the writer's room for the show since Season 3.[20][better source needed] Despite his earlier lukewarm reception to the spin-off Dean Norris himself, however, welcomed playing the version of Hank before he became afflicted with PTSD and depression.[21] He particularly enjoyed the on-screen reunion with Steve Gomez actor Steven Michael Quezada.

While conceiving the story for El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie, Gilligan considered to include Hank in the story, feeling that his inclusion would have been great, but ultimately desisted from the idea due to his feelings that the film should focus only in the most important characters in Jesse Pinkman's life, which Hank wasn't.[22]

Reception

edit

Hank's development as a character and Norris's performance have both received critical acclaim. Frank Girardot of Pasadena Star-News, an old friend of Norris', says that he watched Norris grow into the role, and praised him as "a damn good actor. Certainly the best on TV right now."[23]

Dean Norris's acting in "Blood Money", especially the climactic scene where Hank confronts Walt over the latter's identity as Heisenberg, was lauded by critics. James Poniewozik of TIME wrote "Norris and Cranston are both eye magnets here, and the force just arcs between them as your attention is drawn irresistibly to both at once."[24] Cinema Blend's Kelly West said Walt and Hank's conversation might have been one of the "most heated and emotional moments of the series," praising Cranston and Norris.[25] David Berry of National Post and Scott Meslow of The Week also praised Norris.[26][27] Steve Marsi of TV Fanatic wrote of the climax "Dean Norris's expressions conveyed how dismayed, distraught, vengeful and stunned he was at the same time."[28] TVLine named Dean Norris the "Performer of the Week" for his work in "Blood Money."[29] In doing so, TVLine highlighted Hank's development over the course of the series, citing the character's evolution from "an unapologetic blowhard" in the pilot to "someone you truly want to see win."

Ross Douthat of The New York Times called Hank the hero of Breaking Bad and wrote that "one of the show's most impressive and important achievements has been the construction of a compelling, interesting, entertaining good person, capable of competing with Walter White, the anti-hero, for the audience's attention and interest and affection."[30]

In 2011, Norris was nominated at the 37th Saturn Awards for Best Supporting Actor on Television for the third season, but lost to John Noble for his performance as Dr. Walter Bishop in Fringe.

References

edit
  1. ^ "Sunset". Breaking Bad. Season 3. Episode 6. April 25, 2010. AMC.
  2. ^ ampedd_up (August 20, 2012). "Great of you to do t…". r/breakingbad. Retrieved June 15, 2024.
  3. ^ a b Gross, Terry (July 19, 2013). "Breaking Bad "Blood Money" Review "Hello, Carol."". NPR. Archived from the original on April 15, 2021. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
  4. ^ a b "'Breaking Bad': Dean Norris Asked Vince Gilligan To Kill Hank Off So He Could Do A Comedy Pilot". Huffington Post. February 4, 2013. Archived from the original on June 27, 2017. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Schilling, Mary Kaye (August 11, 2013). "Dean Norris on the Breaking Bad Premiere, Hank's Machismo, and Bryan Cranston's Overachiever E-mails". Vulture. New York City: New York Media. Archived from the original on June 14, 2018. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
  6. ^ a b Moore, Frazier (August 22, 2013). "'Breaking Bad' star Dean Norris never misses it". The Associated Press. Archived from the original on April 10, 2018. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
  7. ^ a b Collins, Sean T. (August 13, 2013). "Q&A: 'Breaking Bad' Star Dean Norris on the Many Faces of Hank". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on September 11, 2017. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
  8. ^ Murray, Noel (April 5, 2009). "'Breaking Bad' Breakage Review". The A.V. Club. Archived from the original on August 20, 2013. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
  9. ^ Amitin, Seth (April 6, 2009). "Breaking Bad: "Breakage" Review". IGN. Archived from the original on December 29, 2013. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
  10. ^ Nussbaum, Emily (August 12, 2013). "Breaking Bad Season Premiere Reviewed". The New Yorker. Archived from the original on August 15, 2013. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
  11. ^ Virtue, Graeme (August 19, 2013). "Dean Norris in Under the Dome – the triumph of the TV co-star". The Guardian. Archived from the original on August 20, 2013. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
  12. ^ VanDerWerff, Emily (October 10, 2011). "Vince Gilligan walks us through season four of Breaking Bad (part 1 of 4)". The A.V. Club. Archived from the original on October 12, 2011. Retrieved October 6, 2019.
  13. ^ Collins, Sean T. (August 15, 2013). "'Breaking Bad' Q&A: Dean Norris Treads Lightly With Hank Schrader". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on August 16, 2013. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
  14. ^ Tannenbaum, Rob (September 12, 2013). "Dean Norris Explains Hank's Moral Code on 'Breaking Bad.'" Retrieved September 19, 2013.
  15. ^ Dean Norris on Playing Hank in "Breaking Bad." Archived January 23, 2018, at the Wayback Machine Conan. August 29, 2012. Retrieved September 19, 2013.
  16. ^ Eby, Margaret (August 1, 2013). "'Breaking Bad' actor Dean Norris asked for his character Hank to be killed off show". New York Daily News. Archived from the original on August 14, 2013. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
  17. ^ Dekel, Jon (January 31, 2013). "Breaking Bad's Dean Norris to series creator: Please kill my character". National Post. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
  18. ^ "'Better Call Saul': Dean Norris Out for 'Breaking Bad' Prequel, Aaron Paul In?". February 28, 2014. Archived from the original on June 6, 2020. Retrieved June 6, 2020.
  19. ^ "'Breaking Bad's Dean Norris Doesn't Approve of 'Better Call Saul' but the Show Will Go on Without Him". October 12, 2014. Archived from the original on June 6, 2020. Retrieved June 6, 2020.
  20. ^ Insider Podcast
  21. ^ "Exclusive: Dean Norris on revisiting his 'Breaking Bad' character on 'Better Call Saul'". USA Today. Archived from the original on March 3, 2020. Retrieved June 6, 2020.
  22. ^ Fernandez, Maria Elena (October 14, 2019). "The Breaking Bad Movie Almost Had a Very Different Ending". Vulture. Archived from the original on October 15, 2019. Retrieved August 11, 2022.
  23. ^ Girardot, Frank (August 12, 2013). "'Breaking Bad's' Dean Norris shines". Pasadena Star-News. Archived from the original on March 2, 2022. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
  24. ^ Poniewozik, James (August 11, 2013). "Breaking Bad Watch: I Am the One Who Gets Knocked Out". TIME. Archived from the original on August 14, 2013. Retrieved August 12, 2013.
  25. ^ West, Kelly (August 11, 2013). "Breaking Bad's Blood Money: A Closer Look At Those Intense Final Moments". Cinema Blend. Archived from the original on August 14, 2013. Retrieved August 12, 2013.
  26. ^ Berry, David (August 12, 2013). "Tread lightly: The final season premiere of Breaking Bad, 'Blood Money' recapped". National Post. Archived from the original on August 13, 2013. Retrieved August 12, 2013.
  27. ^ Meslow, Scott (August 11, 2013). "Breaking Bad premiere recap: 'Blood Money'". The Week. Archived from the original on August 12, 2013. Retrieved August 12, 2013.
  28. ^ "Breaking Bad Round Table: "Blood Money"". TV Fanatic. August 12, 2013. Archived from the original on August 15, 2013. Retrieved August 12, 2013.
  29. ^ "TVLine's Performer of the Week: Dean Norris". TVLine. August 16, 2013. Archived from the original on August 18, 2013. Retrieved August 17, 2013.
  30. ^ Douthat, Ross (September 18, 2013). "The Hero of "Breaking Bad"". The New York Times. Archived from the original on September 21, 2013. Retrieved September 20, 2013.
edit