Yeah, no idea where he got all that money from, he did lose a bit of hair so maybe there was a massive 5-10+ year time skip.Loved the episode; but felt Kim leaving Jimmy was really rushed.
Are we now going forward with Saul in his mansion etc?
How did get that mansion? Would love to see a 10 min synopsis of him moving and decorating etc
Good catch. I think Fring and that Sommelier were kind of hitting it off and it hit Gus that he didn't want to let any of his enemies have a way to hurt him again.Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but that wine interlude with Fring at the bar; was it Gustavo giving up on happiness or a life that could have been?
I think it serves several purpose.What they did to Howard is one of the most calculated Evil things I've seen on TV.
Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but that wine interlude with Fring at the bar; was it Gustavo giving up on happiness or a life that could have been?
I think the cab driver dude maybe is a private investigator kim hired to find him.I think Gene will meet Kim again in Nebraska in the future scenes.
An interpretive question about the prior episode:
When Saul sends Kim to do Lalo's plan instead of himself, how do you interpret his intentions?
I assumed that he wanted to save Kim, thinking: Lalo will just kill us both afterwards anyway, it's a no-win, so Kim needs to leave this apartment and save herself. His face gave me that sense, when he said somewhat sadly "you gotta go."
But, if you agree with that... what was Kim's interpretation? She tried to go through with it. Was she (A) doing it to save Saul despite his intent to save her, or (B) did she misinterpret his intentions?
I think that moment, either way, is the critical decision point for their relationship. It mirrors when Heisenberg asked Jimmy to kill to save his life, but a bit inverted. Since she found herself going through with it, she realized the dark things she was capable of in her life with Saul, even murder, and that was the end for their relationship, even if it took a while to fully materialize in her mind.
I belive Saul just wanted her to get out of there. She decided to to the deed to save him. I took it as she understood he was saving her.
There doesn't have to be one exactly, all that remains is the "future" timeline of Gene, the post Breaking Bad storyline and what all that has been leading up to.So I'm confused.
Who exactly is the antagonist in these last episodes?
The last episode pretty much reveals that that Jimmy fully becoming Saul Goodman (the change in personality, behavior, the mansion, the hookers etc) is due to him coping with the loss of Kim. That he is the indirect cause of person he loves leaving him. Although they both love each other, being together means innocent people around them will get hurt or die because they both bring the best and worst out of each other.Are we thinking now the next 3 eps will be Gene only?
How did Saul go from his apartment with Kim to that mega mansion?
Won't that be explained?
So I'm confused.
Who exactly is the antagonist in these last episodes?
Yeah that's what Jimmy was doing pre-Saul days.I got my timelines mixed up. I thought we first saw Saul in Breaking Bad working in a back office of a hair salon. Did that happen in Better Call Saul?
So I'm confused.
Who exactly is the antagonist in these last episodes?
I’m going to Cinnabon first thing in the morning.Tonight's episode will be very polarizing, but damn I loved it.
Great episode but can someone explain the meaning of it? Was it that he just cant stop himself?
He had to do it because the lady in the scooter, her son recognised Saul.
Great episode but can someone explain the meaning of it? Was it that he just cant stop himself?
Basically blackmailing the guys, if they rat Gene out, they both go down with him due to that robbery.
Really good episode, i just wonder again where it goes from here....
They all black and white now?
Ah. I'm talking about the meaning of the whole episode. I get what was going on but just wondering what is the episode building for.
I might be wrong but that could be the end of the story. Him hanging up the shirt and tie could be the end of Saul. The intro tape getting cut short might also be hinting at that. I took it that those were Gene watching his old commericals and he's watched them so much they are worn out (they quality degrades with each season). The robbery was Saul appearing again to deal with Jeff. Now he has blackmailed him Gene can go back to his quiet life.Ah. I'm talking about the meaning of the whole episode. I get what was going on but just wondering what is the episode building for.
We dont know what that was about,What about the end with the shirt and tie?
Speaking of Jeff, I don't really like the recast. I think the actor did a good job, but his portrayal is so different from his appearance last season that it feels like a different character altogether.
Ah. I'm talking about the meaning of the whole episode. I get what was going on but just wondering what is the episode building for.
Apparently the other guy wasn’t available due to scheduling conflicts. But to me this is really not acceptable, they had a long time between seasons to sort it out and the only regular cast member they needed to have in the same room on any of his scenes was Odenkirk.Why did they recast Jeff?
Yes, it shocked me. The original Jeff was alot more menacing.Apparently the other guy wasn’t available due to scheduling conflicts. But to me this is really not acceptable, they had a long time between seasons to sort it out and the only regular cast member they needed to have in the same room on any of his scenes was Odenkirk.
I spent much of the episode convinced that this new character must be one of the other guy’s little henchmen friends, and that I must have forgotten a scene where that was established.Yes, it shocked me. The original Jeff was alot more menacing.
It is wrapped up: she's gone.Most story lines are wrapped up other than what’s Kim up to