@@goranpavlovic9051 the last or second last episode in I think season 2 (maybe 3.) I think its called unexpected witness or something along those lines.
@@lasselyngsnielsen4504 Right. But he didn't know it was friends who were going to rescue him. He assumed he was a dead man who wouldn't see the inside of a cell. With the firing squad quote, and his smile, he thought he was dead.
Joshua Brown no but it shows he is aware, remember he was doing a job. He had no personal affiliation with the people involved, if he didn’t do his job he’d just be wasted.
@@cryko5301 No, because that was a purely selfish move. He only did it to get revenge on Reynolds and the company for betraying him. That wasnt a heroic move. Testifying for Sara was purely unselfish. He only did it to save her
We all hated Kellerman in season 1, but after that, he always provided moments of relief. whether it be testifying for Sarah or providing the exoneration for everyone.
Kellerman is my favorite character but he wasn’t all that much smarter, it was president Reynolds neglecting him which made him defect, he just did it at the perfect time with Mahone not knowing he was rogue at the time
I always thought they killed kellerman here too. but then SUPRISE....NEXT thing we know he's a congressman. Always a spin when it comes to Prison Break
@ScAnDeLeZ Nope, there's no such thing as "supposed to die". Every "surprise" usually have scenes where their deaths are open to interpretation. For instance, Veronica's death was obvious and confirmed, she had a bullet in her head. So is Terrence. But for Scofield and Kellerman, there were no obvious scenes. The production did so because they know those characters will be used to surprise us the following season.
@@sheffrudytke1086 Well Prison Break taught me that as long as we don't see the dead body we don't know if a person is really dead (it happened with Michael and Kellerman as well). So maybe Kellerman is alive considering Van Gogh was hesitating on shooting him
Kellermans character development was brilliant. As you can see this was a man he believed in what he was doing and was also corrupting he’s own mind just as much as the company was. I love he’s redemption story. Only thing I will say and might not be a popular opinion but I think they didn’t spend enough time on he’s story. it was pretty fast how he went to big time villain to massive hero. But again I really did like he’s character and he’s development.
To be honest I disagree. For a "villain" he was super developed: his past and relation with the vice president, how seeing his partner betraying him broke him, how he went from believing in the company to hating them and working against them, his past in the army, his relationship with his sister, his sad and alone life as Owen K... Hell the guy had more character development than some main characters...
@@gregsoon521 9/11 is not a blatant evidence. It is just a probable theory that makes sense if you assume here and there. I was interested in the 9/11 topic as well and I looked it up deeply. It is just a good theory that 9/11 had some ''evil intentions''. I personally believe that theory, but its not evidence at all.
I love Prison Break so much, i have seen this show at least 3 times.. everything about this show is amazing, storyline character development, directing acting and amazing soundtracks everything is amazing ❤ best show ever!
This really should have been a nice end for the show. Kellerman takes the hit so that Sara, Michael and Lincoln can be free. They start a new life in Panama. The end. No Sona, no Scylla, no Yemen.
I love the setup here. The cops pull off to what looks like a very discrete road next to a river (You think this is where the hit goes down). Kellerman says: "In the French resistance it was considered a high honor to face a nazi firing squad, that you did you job, the highest honor was to smile when they shot you... Took you long enough." With a simple smirk making you think that the hit was on him. Lo and behold, it was actually on the cops.
Landon Pratte To be fair, there’s a lot of questions to be asked concerning who they were, who they were working with and why they did it among many others that was just overlooked by the show. So it isn’t like their question is unwarranted y’know...
I love when you hear real life stories like this where no matter the type of crime committed someone comes forward to explain the truth of the actual events whether they are complicit or have a conscious shows you their true character if they feel guilty about the wrongs they have made or just realize it is the right thing to do at the cost of their freedom and I respect that. Just sad it is very rare when something like this in any case actually happens in real life
"She did so because she feared for her life which was appropriate...as I had orders to kill her." ~Sara's realization that he actually was her friend and defied orders for her~ ~Sara is speechless after being exonerated~ "I literally don't even know what to say to you." “It was good knowing you, Sara"
@@nikolinadobreva3078 By this scene, confessing to everything to get Sara free of charges, kind of proves he feels remorse for what he did to her. There are other scenes who show it as well.
Aka the shadow government. Like Putin once said, Obama had a lot of good plans and intentions, but he couldn't accomplished them coz US had another government controlling them
My God the memories. Back in 2011 when I started college, I used to watch this show with subtitles on to learn English. I wrote down so many words and learned a lot from this show. I was majoring in English, but pretty much this is how I learned the language.
Actually Bellick isn’t a villain. Bellick is trying his whole life to be something he wanted to be but isn’t. He wanted to be respected and loved. Sometimes those people can go to extreme lengths when given power.
I'll never forgive Kellerman for what he did to Sara, but at the same time I love him. If it wasn't for Kellerman both Scofield and Linc would be dead.
The truth was nobody wanted to work for company but company was forcing u to work for them with a reason, either with a direct older of being paid alot of money , promising promotions or final decision they force u through threatening ur lovely Family. Facts
Before Season 5, I considered Kellerman a hero at this point. But after Season 5, it's clear that they just straight up murdered these cops to save him. I don't think they really planned on him to return in Season 5 until they actually thought of making it.
They should’ve given kellerman’s betrayal of the company more of a storyline, Kellerman’s testimony pretty much just comes out of nowhere as a Deus ex machina scene.. Really wish they would have made him like Mahone, and had him join the team so he could somewhat redeem himself too
@@Paniekzaaiertje it could have been that he was expecting to be killed since that's what happens to people who spill the secrets of The Company, and he was surprised how long it took for them to find him.
@@Paniekzaaiertje No, no ,no. This scene is Kellerman being killed!! It's just that the writers changed their minds and brought him back in later seasons because he's a popular charactor. A bit like they did with killing Sarah. (She's dead, her head's in a box, oh no, now she's alive again.)
@@Weeble68 If this supposed to mean Kellerman was dead, then the writers did a terrible job. Not only did the scene at no point suggest that Kellerman was being shot, it also was never mentioned anywhere in the rest of the series.
There was always a dramatic irony to it all- the guy who did the ground work of a set up might never actually want to do the damn thing. Kellerman was a seeming enemy who was also just a guy who was cajoled into a job he didn’t want to do. The assassin was actually the key to living at most times. He himself had no interest in it. He was just a disgruntled employee himself.
Then they shat all over that perfect scene of Kellerman's honorable death with a quick horredous attemp at a quick cash grab with season 5, which is btw one of the worst seasons of any show i've ever watched.
Theodore actually deserved to be released at the end of S4...the way he remembered Balleck after he had just found out about his death was one of the best scenes in that season. To bad his past was against him
but he was sent back to fox river at d end of season 5 which is one thing I dont understand...I mean it was all self defense right there when he killed that agent...
True. Altho S5 wasnt as good as the rest. I missed Mahone. And it was way too fast. No descent building. Granted, it was no complete season but a mini-series.
He did not confess to "free" the two "innocent". He knew that the tables had now turned and it was his head on the "chopping block". In the end it is his "head" that gets the ax. He totally underestimated the loyalty of those in a much higher position than himself and the utter destruction that a certain "she/he" was able to bring with the simple way of his/her wand and a sprinkle of his/her pixie dust. Planted evidence, when brushed over, exposes itself. What you think you know, you don't. The backstories you think you know, you don't. The historical data in which you built your tiny world of existence, was exposed. It isn't the one who is smoozong in life that you need to worry about but the one who is confident traveling alone and is not out for the "spotlight" that will or could, quite literally, rip your little world to shreds. Those are not the only cuffs playing out within similar scenes. It is his girlfriend working side by side with him to help him pull off his con. In the end, they all go to prison but only a select few will actually ever get out.