Finished it, read some reviews, and disagreed with a lot of them. A good number of people hated on this, but it was good. I feel like another Netfilx movie or two could come out of this, but if not that's fine too. It was engaging, satisfying, felt like an extended version of a really great episode and then some. I was expecting something good, but not insanely amazing like the episode where Gus was killed which had so much build up. It was interesting to see Pinkman's aftermath and all of the new flashbacks. Everything made sense. It's weird to read all of the hater's replies; most of them complained about the movie not focusing on other characters from the last season but if they rewatch it carefully most of their answers could be generally found. Gretchen and Elliot's aftermath consists of donating the money and staying rich, the White family will try to emotionally recover and will likely stay under WITSEC's care way beyond Jesse's story here, and Marie will be an annoying, helpless widow also protected by feds. It was a solid story though, and heck, I'll probably watch it again later this week. I mean, sure I'd like to see what happens to Walt's kids directly after the last episode plus 10-20 years later, see more of Jesse, and more from Pete and Badger, but I didn't need it with El Camino. Really good and unexpected gem in my opinion. You need to finish the show to appreciate this. If you have finished the show and the movie and aren't sure whether you liked the movie or not, go ahead and consider the remaining what ifs, but be grateful we recieved a really smart addition to the Breaking Bad story. It's okay to not be 100% certain about what happens with every detail of everyone's story through this movie. Gilligan loves subtext and subtlety. He did a solid job. El Camino is worth the watch.