Jimmy and Kim deal with a last-minute snag in their plan; Lalo is forced to make an unexpected move.Jimmy and Kim deal with a last-minute snag in their plan; Lalo is forced to make an unexpected move.Jimmy and Kim deal with a last-minute snag in their plan; Lalo is forced to make an unexpected move.
Michael Mando
- Nacho Varga
- (credit only)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaHoward tells Jimmy and Kim they're like "Leopold and Loeb... two sociopaths." Nathan Freudenthal Leopold Jr. and Richard Albert Loeb, usually referred to collectively as Leopold and Loeb, were two wealthy students at the University of Chicago who kidnapped and murdered 14-year-old Bobby Franks in Chicago, Illinois in May 1924. They committed the murder - characterized at the time as "the crime of the century" - as a demonstration of their ostensible intellectual superiority, which they believed enabled and entitled them to carry out a "perfect crime" without consequences.
- GoofsDeveloping the pictures in the darkroom, the camera guy tells Jimmy and Kim that "you can't rush the process." That is correct, but they have obviously enlarged a lot of negatives already. They are in a hurry, and they took a lot more pictures than they actually need. Manual enlarging takes a lot of time, which makes that step the bottleneck. In reality, they would try to avoid enlarging as many negatives as possible by selecting the best pictures beforehand and only blow up those few. For that, you would first make a quick contact print of all the negatives, and go over that with a loupe, not select a few prints after enlarging all the negatives.
- Quotes
Howard Hamlin: Who are you?
Lalo Salamanca: Me? Nobody. I just need to talk to my lawyers.
Howard Hamlin: Oh, is that right? You want some advice? Find better lawyers.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 74th Primetime Emmy Awards (2022)
Featured review
Gould and Gilliagan Outdo Themselves
In the months to come, where Better Call Saul cements itself into the echelon of truly remarkable television shows, this will be one of the episodes pointed to as evidence of the show's greatness. For a "midseason finale", compared to really the only episode that makes sense, "Gliding Over All", this episode is by far the more impactful. The revelation Hank makes at the end of the episode, indeed as with "Plan and Execution" is indeed one that shifts the canvas sideways and completely changes the course of what has been building for four and a half seasons (or five and a half in this episode's case.)
Truly remarkable how something of such levity turned into the headstone that would contain the souls of Jimmy and Kim. Indeed, what was revealed to be their deceit was something that did relatively little harm, but it culminated with a "wrong place, wrong time" scenario whose harm is now immeasurable. The implications this has on the overall tone and writing of Better Call Saul are immense, but it, at the very least, has turned the entire atmosphere into one of morose and taints some of the brighter more congenial moments with a mar of doom. Truly an episode that will, for me at least, keep me from watching the series through such rose-colored glasses that knowing the harrowing outcome of some of these jovial plotlines glues them to the inevitable.
The beauty of Chuck's character is that his attitude and outlook made his death one of calloused exaltation (he indubitably dug his own grave by building the inescapable or perhaps insurmountable walls of isolation that would eventually drive him mad). Not much sympathy is felt for Chuck because he shunned the very world that allowed him his success, the world where Jimmys were allowed their guise, where his peers didn't revere him as a monolith, where his anxieties were tied to his career and not to dealing with the fallout of purposefully maligning his brother. Chuck loved Jimmy, but it was in denying this and failing to see that room exists in this world for Jimmy's antics and that he could even be bested by them should he take them on head-to-head. Chuck very well could have remained at the top if he accepted Jimmy for who he was in the world of law, but he believed that if Jimmy is able to operate in his field it delegitimizes all of the effort and honor and esteem Chuck saw in himself as he saw in the law. By always holding Jimmy to a lower standard, he was able to keep his mind and heart at ease that Jimmy couldn't amount to anything, and it was in this that Chuck saw Jimmy finding success as an afront to his own self-image. If Jimmy could do it, it made Chuck less. What he failed to realize, however, is that sleezy shyster Saul Goodman, if anything made the legal austerity of Chuck McGill that much more legitimate. In a way, having someone like Saul Goodman to undermine and manipulate the sanctity of the law made someone whose earnest diligence and ethical mastery of the law a testament to how prodigious they really were. So, him personally exalting Jimmy of pedigree and using Jimmy's love to lambast this point, effectively forced him to refuse the world of its empathy and drown in a pool of self-pity. It is hard to pity a man whose existence is marked by self-pity, and ultimately when one pities themselves so much they eventually reach the point where it becomes impossible even for oneself to pity themselves, and thus Chuck's story came to a satisfying end.
I won't say why that parallels this episode outright, to avoid spoilers, but to those who watched it, and understand the implication, it should be noted that this sentiment is not shared in light of this episode. It's a good sentiment to have when the main characters are the authors of the disasters in their story, so missing that sentiment after this episode makes it truly a tough pill to swallow.
As far as the episode as a whole went, however, there were moments of cinematographic genius (or stupidity), particularly in the earlier sequences, which really showcase just how much fun this show must be to make for the entire cast and crew. The pacing was stupendous, and I don't think I've felt this season much malaise to knowing how little time was left in the episode, but this episode could have been an hour longer and I would have no complaints. Every second of this episode was thrilling, and every development truly gunning for that endgame importance. With this episode we enter the final stages of the serious, and with this episode, I am, for the first time, extremely nervous how it will play out for Kim and Jimmy (particularly Kim, as we know Jimmy at least survives beyond Breaking Bad.) I'm also left wondering when they season cold opens intersect with the main story as there is very little (roughly 5-7 hours) of screentime left for the series and how those last handful of hours will play out is as big a mystery to me as this universe has ever presented. Surely we all knew Walt would eventually keep from maintaining his façade (technically, he only maintained it for the better part of two seasons until Skyler figured it out), and that it wouldn't end well for many of the actors involved, but only knowing that Jimmy, Mike, and Gus make it to Breaking Bad still leaves a lot of time for everyone else to eat the dust.
Overall, very impressed with this episode and how it weaves into the bigger picture. Still shocked. 10/10.
Truly remarkable how something of such levity turned into the headstone that would contain the souls of Jimmy and Kim. Indeed, what was revealed to be their deceit was something that did relatively little harm, but it culminated with a "wrong place, wrong time" scenario whose harm is now immeasurable. The implications this has on the overall tone and writing of Better Call Saul are immense, but it, at the very least, has turned the entire atmosphere into one of morose and taints some of the brighter more congenial moments with a mar of doom. Truly an episode that will, for me at least, keep me from watching the series through such rose-colored glasses that knowing the harrowing outcome of some of these jovial plotlines glues them to the inevitable.
The beauty of Chuck's character is that his attitude and outlook made his death one of calloused exaltation (he indubitably dug his own grave by building the inescapable or perhaps insurmountable walls of isolation that would eventually drive him mad). Not much sympathy is felt for Chuck because he shunned the very world that allowed him his success, the world where Jimmys were allowed their guise, where his peers didn't revere him as a monolith, where his anxieties were tied to his career and not to dealing with the fallout of purposefully maligning his brother. Chuck loved Jimmy, but it was in denying this and failing to see that room exists in this world for Jimmy's antics and that he could even be bested by them should he take them on head-to-head. Chuck very well could have remained at the top if he accepted Jimmy for who he was in the world of law, but he believed that if Jimmy is able to operate in his field it delegitimizes all of the effort and honor and esteem Chuck saw in himself as he saw in the law. By always holding Jimmy to a lower standard, he was able to keep his mind and heart at ease that Jimmy couldn't amount to anything, and it was in this that Chuck saw Jimmy finding success as an afront to his own self-image. If Jimmy could do it, it made Chuck less. What he failed to realize, however, is that sleezy shyster Saul Goodman, if anything made the legal austerity of Chuck McGill that much more legitimate. In a way, having someone like Saul Goodman to undermine and manipulate the sanctity of the law made someone whose earnest diligence and ethical mastery of the law a testament to how prodigious they really were. So, him personally exalting Jimmy of pedigree and using Jimmy's love to lambast this point, effectively forced him to refuse the world of its empathy and drown in a pool of self-pity. It is hard to pity a man whose existence is marked by self-pity, and ultimately when one pities themselves so much they eventually reach the point where it becomes impossible even for oneself to pity themselves, and thus Chuck's story came to a satisfying end.
I won't say why that parallels this episode outright, to avoid spoilers, but to those who watched it, and understand the implication, it should be noted that this sentiment is not shared in light of this episode. It's a good sentiment to have when the main characters are the authors of the disasters in their story, so missing that sentiment after this episode makes it truly a tough pill to swallow.
As far as the episode as a whole went, however, there were moments of cinematographic genius (or stupidity), particularly in the earlier sequences, which really showcase just how much fun this show must be to make for the entire cast and crew. The pacing was stupendous, and I don't think I've felt this season much malaise to knowing how little time was left in the episode, but this episode could have been an hour longer and I would have no complaints. Every second of this episode was thrilling, and every development truly gunning for that endgame importance. With this episode we enter the final stages of the serious, and with this episode, I am, for the first time, extremely nervous how it will play out for Kim and Jimmy (particularly Kim, as we know Jimmy at least survives beyond Breaking Bad.) I'm also left wondering when they season cold opens intersect with the main story as there is very little (roughly 5-7 hours) of screentime left for the series and how those last handful of hours will play out is as big a mystery to me as this universe has ever presented. Surely we all knew Walt would eventually keep from maintaining his façade (technically, he only maintained it for the better part of two seasons until Skyler figured it out), and that it wouldn't end well for many of the actors involved, but only knowing that Jimmy, Mike, and Gus make it to Breaking Bad still leaves a lot of time for everyone else to eat the dust.
Overall, very impressed with this episode and how it weaves into the bigger picture. Still shocked. 10/10.
helpful•13210
- unkommon
- May 24, 2022
Details
- Runtime50 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
- 1080i (HDTV)
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