The former storyline I find bland and-besides the novelty factor that will appeal to fans of Breaking Bad-wholly superfluous. Writers: Vince Gilligan 👨🏼🇺🇸 (40 eps), Peter Gould 👨🏼🇺🇸 (40 eps), Gordon Smith 👨🏼🇺🇸 (22 eps), Ann Cherkis 👩🏼🇺🇸 (11 eps), and various ( 3 ♂, 2 ♀, all white)īetter Call Saul is a meditative exploration of two lightly linked story arcs-one that follows criminals involved in the Albuquerque drug trade and the other, a story of a man’s inner struggle between good and evil and how that affects his relationship with his older brother. What did you think of the season finale of Better Call Saul? What was your favorite moments of the season? What are you expecting from Season 2? Share your thoughts in the comments below.Creator: Vince Gilligan 👨🏼🇺🇸 and Peter Gould 👨🏼🇺🇸 Or at least more fun than a pile of depositions. But to Slippin’ Jimmy, Esq, it promises to be more fun than a barrel of monkeys. To Chuck, a chimp with a machine gun is horrifying.
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From keeping that pile of KettleKash, or signing on as Nacho’s full time mouthpiece. Now that he realizes that winning Chuck’s respect (or Kim’s heart) is a lost cause, there’s nothing to keep Jimmy McGill from his true nature. Mike saw it when he enlisted him to do the bump-and-dump in the interrogation room.Īnd even, in a strange way, Chuck saw it. Nacho saw it, when he came to the nail salon with the Kettleman job, assuming he was in the game. The irony? At some level, while Jimmy is a genius at getting people to believe whatever con he’s running, he can’t hide his true nature from anyone who's paying attention. (Go Landcrabs!) And, it seems, working side by side with Kim, who's happy to let him paint her nails but nothing more. Slippin’ Jimmy in Cicero? The Chicago Sunroof? Although Chuck brings it up in every conversation as though it happened last week, it was actually 10 years ago.įor the better part of a decade, Jimmy has been living in Albuquerque, on the straight and narrow, working in the mailroom at HHM, getting his law degree by mail. On a purely narrative level, the wildly entertaining Cicero sequence solidified the timeframe for us and answered a few important questions. But not too far away from Kim.īut at another level, it's living a lie, something that Jimmy has been doing for the better part of a decade. A fresh start, far enough away from Chuck. Those airquotes are what Jimmy McGill-or is it Saul Goodman by then?-is thinking about as he sits in his Suzuki Esteem in the parking garage before his meeting about the partner track position with the guys from that firm in Santa Fe.Īt some level, the job that Kim helped to hook him up with is perfect. does “the right thing.” The airquotes are all. (Although how Chuck would have gotten the in the first place cash remains to be seen.) James M. He saves himself from a death sentence by keeping slightly less volatile criminal from rotting in jail for a couple of decades.And in the midst of getting the Krazy Kettlemans to take Kim’s deal, for a brief shining moment, Jimmy finds himself with $1.6 million in cash on his desk, ready for the taking.īut Jimmy does what Chuck would do. He found himself talking a homicidal maniac out of imposing the death sentence on the two skatepunks. At least until he stumbles upon an eight-digit class action RICO case.īut in there somewhere, came Jimmy’s finest moments. With the boost in visibility from his billboard stunt, he’s finally attracting clients.Īnd seniors who offer him Hydrox and ask him to write their wills for $140.Īs he tells Marco, he’s making a living, but hardly making bank. He takes Kim’s advice and goes into elderlaw.