It's also possible Saul did just anything that he knew if the cartel found out they'd kill him and threw out Nacho's name just because he knew Nacho was dead or otherwise incapable of retaliation.
The stuff with Jimmy in the restaurant was great.Wow, what an episode.
Jimmy is the least subtle spy ever, but that gave us the brilliant moment of seeing Fring appear in the background and staying out focus the whole time as Jimmy stared at the bagman, oblivious to the fact that he was being watched by the very person next to him. I honestly thought that would be the extent of Fring's appearance and I was going to be fine with that, but then lo and behold, we got Jimmy's first proper meeting with Fring. And it was...delicious.
I was surprised Mike fell for the obvious bait when Victor (I had forgotten he was in Breaking Bad until I looked him up on IMDb) drove off in a hurry from Los Pollos Hermanos. And it's a pity we didn't get to hear his conversation on the mobile. Hopefully we don't have to wait long for Mike's first meeting with Fring.
I'm a little surprised that Chuck's angle was to have a witness to Jimmy's home invasion and destruction of the tape. Is something like that really admissible, whether or not it was an obvious set-up? Would that only work if Chuck made a copy of the tape (which I'm sure he did)? I thought his angle was going to be purely to poison Kim's mind, and while that hasn't happened yet because of Jimmy's lie, it will eventually bear fruit.
The combination of Chuck's set-up of Jimmy, the potential of Kim's poisoned mind, and the first meeting with Fring, it looks like we're getting the beginning of Jimmy's transformation to Saul.
It's been said many times but it can't be said enough: The cinematography on this show is amazing. Not just the great use of reflections (I kept expecting someone to appear in one of Mike's side mirrors) and the vast New Mexican sky and landscape, but also the way characters are framed in a shot. The way Mike's car slowly appeared over the road's horizon and then Mike's head popping up as he exited the car was breathtaking.
It's been said many times but it can't be said enough: The cinematography on this show is amazing. Not just the great use of reflections (I kept expecting someone to appear in one of Mike's side mirrors) and the vast New Mexican sky and landscape, but also the way characters are framed in a shot. The way Mike's car slowly appeared over the road's horizon and then Mike's head popping up as he exited the car was breathtaking.
Poor Huell, he's probably still in that hotel room waiting for Hank and Gomie to come back for him.Very few shows are better staged and framed than Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul.
Great to see Francesca showing up. Can't wait for Heull to be a part of this too.
I thought the same thing, but I also knew I was missing some of the nuances because I've forgotten so many of the details of Breaking Bad. I really need to watch it again.I love the way Better Call Saul is re-framing some of the things we saw in Breaking Bad.
Now, the cartel massacre has new meaning for Mike because it fulfills Gus' implied promise of deferred comeuppance. Sprinkling heroin on a truck by shooting a shoe?
Yeah, it may have been cold, but Chuck deserved that retort. I was disgusted by Chuck's holier-than-thou nobility bullshit.And the emotional nuance on Jimmy's side. Chuck trying to calibrate Jimmy's punishment to his liking and thinking he's doing it to be noble. Jimmy's response: "You're going to die alone in there."
Yeah, I'm betting her fate will be disgrace and disbarment, but death is not out of the question. A lot of bodies dropped in Breaking Bad before the end. After all, Andrea died as means to motivate and not because anything she did. She died through association.True, Kim can be killed, but in this universe people with names don't die by random luck, they die because somebody took an action that logically resulted in their death. Seems more likely to me she will end up either being disgraced & disbarred because of Jimmy or she'll finally give up on him.
Damn, I knew that looked familiar! My memory of the deeper elements of Breaking Bad lore has faded from me. However, I do remember these particular characters, if not the history with Gus, aside from the general rivalry and ultimate conclusion, although I can't remember the catalyst of the feud. Once again, I clearly need to watch Breaking Bad again.I loved the way hey framed the opening shot of the episode to look exactly like Don Eladio's death scene. It instantly reminds you of what Fring has in store for all these people.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.