Better Call Saul S04E10 Featurette | 'Jimmy's Emotional Breakdown' | Rotten Tomatoes TV
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- Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024
- Check out the new Better Call Saul Season 4 Episode 10 Featurette starring Bob Odenkirk! Let us know what you think in the comments below.
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US Air Date: October 8, 2018
Starring: Bob Odenkirk, Rhea Seehorn, Michael Mando
Network: AMC
Synopsis: Jimmy turns the page on his reputation. Lalo tracks a loose end in Gus' operation. Mike is forced to make a difficult decision.
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The speech to the girl, along with the car scene got me. I legit cried
The speech he gave to that woman has a great degree of truth to it. People won't ever look past your mistakes, or worse they'll hold them over you. Someone who tries to play it straight to win back society's favour is inherently doomed because they'll have to work three times as hard as the average person to look good in the eyes of others, with the constant threat of being seen as the sum of their mistake hung over their head. That's why someone like Jimmy, who's tried playing it straight and got nowhere, is telling her not to waste her time when society won't give a shit about her. It's the same reason why a lot of criminal offenders will reoffend because nobody cares about them simply because they have been labelled a 'criminal'.
eiffel0108 as someone who has made (not big though) mistakes, that part was a major element in building up the sadness of this whole episode
Yeah, you shouldn't shun someone for their past mistakes. Everyone deserves an opportunity at redemption.
Yeah, that's why Jimmy's story resonates with me. It's one man's path to redemption. However in this case, this man's nature prevents himself of it and just falls deeper. Willfully.
Everything in life is a race and we all slip up at some point. Chuck slipped up late in his life and couldn't recover. Jimmy made slipping into a lifestyle, even when given an honest oppertunity at Davis and Maine.
Comment makes no sense. Jimmy did get the second chance. People do change their opinions. I am sure of that, how do i know? Because ive changed some over the years, havent you at some point? What it takes to change is empathy. You cant hate a person you understand emotionally, impossible. And as seen towards the end of the season, Jimmy did just that. Faked emotions so they could empathize with him.
The reason Jimmy failed to do it before is because he lived in self fullfing prophecy. He thought they thought of him as slippin Jimmy, which made him act as slippin Jimmy. He never did anything legally. How do you expect someone to stop thinking of you as slippin Jimmy when you constantly act as one?
We've been Christie Esposito at some point of our lives, maybe not because of shoplifting, but because we don't have enough work experience, we didn't go to the prestigious university they expect us to be from, or we just don't fit all the standards they hold up. it's up to us to overcome that.
That’s why it’s so hard to root for Vince Gilligan’s protagonists, ultimately (in a good way). They are so relatable with the struggles they go through but they go down a dark path which most of us would not and release their pent up darkness from the world back into it.
Sad reality
@@Last_Respecter you don't have any idea how many people go down the dark path
@@Last_Respecter The dark path isn't always bad. I would say it's going down a non-traditional path, which a lot of people do, which actually helps us relate to the characters.
Those examples are nothing like her situation. When you have any sort of offence on your record, corporations see you as "tainted" for the rest of your professional career.
This episode was a pure masterpiece.
Perhaps the best in the whole show so far. Just masterful.
Daniel Córdova *facts*
I overlooked this episode when the first time I watched, did not realize how impartant the scholarship meeting, the opening scene singing with Chuck, thought that was just another boring unrelated brotherhood flashback, as Chuck was out of scene long time ago. The talk to Cristy, the cry, the little change he come back the apartment, the appeal, the result, the exposure of whole show, the implicition and appearance change and born of Saul, epic
that car was Jimmy's crawlspace
The inclusion of the red exit sign in front of the car during Jimmy's breakdown, calling back to Chuck's own meltdown in the courtroom, is just the perfect cherry on top of this episode. The presence of Chuck's judgement of Jimmy was always looming over him this season.
He even looks like and has Chuck's manner of shaking his head shortly before the meltdown
The inclusion of jimmy crying in the car, calling back to the fact that he is sad, is just the perfect cherry on top of this episode.
It’s just a coincidence there’s no hidden meaning. You’re like one of those English teachers.
I like how a crook has more compassion and understand the value of second chances over a bunch of straight arrows
It's easy to judge all criminal activity as "inexcusable" when you've never been put in a position where it's one of the better outcomes.
When Jimmy is talking to the shoplifter, and he says “You don’t matter all that much to them,” and “the winner takes it all.” Phew man I’ve got goosebumps. Jimmy is pushing down his true feelings about Chuck.
earlier in the episode where he was "crying" at chuck's grave i thought to myself that i wanted to see jimmy actually like CRY for real because i had realized that i had never seen him do that. and then they delivered about 30 minutes later and it was sad and hard to watch and i cried along with him.
And then he delivered a second fake cry and performance that moved everyone else to cry.
@@fraundakelmbrilpondaprost90 he made us cry like suckers...
@@fraundakelmbrilpondaprost90 that's interesting that he's able to cry about chuck only when he's alone after an emotional breakdown, whereas he fake cry when in front of an audience
He did cry before that in the episode he starts struggling to make ends meet with his commercial-making service
Chuck created Saul Goodman and kept him on a short leash, when he was out of the equation Jimmy had to deal with this side of him alone, but Goodman won the fight in the car scene.
and it's so devastating when you see it like this
This, definitely, is the most stupid comment in the internet
@@pedrososap Care to explain why? It's my point of view. You don't share it? good for you sir.
@@bigbrother3465 Chuck created Saul? Saul has always been Jimmy's alter ego. Chuck was the ONLY one who saw it clearly and warned everyone of the dangers of giving power, real power, to that persona. In the end, he turned out to be right. Kim, a wonderful woman and professional is going deep into the dark size. In love, confused and horribly influenced by Saul... and as far as Jimmy, we know how bad it all turned out for him in the end, working at a Cinnamon in Nebraska, fully paranoid, hiding and hoping not to be found.
I know we all want to root for Jimmy, and its true, he may have been dealt a bad hand at times, but he is the sole responsible of his fate by not correcting his actions.
@@pedrososap And i agree with most of it, more now than before S5. But you cannot deny that Jimmy was trying to make an honest life before Chuck decided not to hire him for HHM (When he delivered mail)
2:10 What's left of Jimmy McGill finally dies. From this point on he's Saul Goodman. Ironically he adapts the very personality Chuck told him to embrace.
Jimmy is such a broken character. Just like this girl, his brother held his past mistakes against him, and actively prevented him from succeeding. Imagine how much better his life would have been if he's was given a chance to start clean
that wide angle shot when Mike shoots Werner ...
Werner trying to make one final bargain and then accepting death was heartbreaking.
Even Mike, stoic as he may be, was clearly devastated on the inside for having to kill his one friend.
that scene made me hate Gus
@@girishchandra8996 i mean yes but Werner knew. He knew it would happen. Why would someone escape like he did. Work 6 months and then never work again.
I get that he was just trying to meet his wife, but goddamn there are millitary people who don't see their family in years, and many more examples like that. My father is in millitary so I know how it feels. Jeez this guy couldn't wait 10months after getting paid an amount that he will never have to leave here ever. And he probably could have kept the secret, but Drunk him couldn't be trusted. He was too naive.
@@rahulxdagar I get what you mean, but being in an isolated underground facility only seeing a dozen guys would be really mentally stressful for even a short time. Just think, this guy doesn't even get to see the sun, moon, or stars
"...he doesn't really realize it, but he fools Kim" this breaks my heart ugh
4x10 "Winner" is one of the best episodes in the entire series. So many important transformations happened, from Jimmy fully becoming Saul, to Mike having to kill his friend for Gus, to the start of Kim's rift with Jimmy
Somehow, the cry of Jimmy reminds me of crawl space ending from Breaking Bad. In both of those episodes, their original self died inside, and the other person took over that. In Walter's case, it was Heisenberg. In Jimmy's, it was 'Saul'.
This episode has always shown me that Jimmy is a good person deep down
but in that universe, good people usually die or worse
Wanna re-up on that take seeing where he's at now?
@@alpharoo2581 No. Still good.
So this is the official moment where Jimmy died... Lotta people have been saying Jimmy died since season 1 lmao
This is the moment that Jimmy became Heisenberg.
Well played V. I. N. C. E.
Nah Im pretty sure he died when Chuck told him he never cared about him. Jimmy was always trying to make him proud, everything after that is Saul.
🅱️ravo 🅱️ince
@alexgear959 for me it was the first big argument in S1 when Chuck said "you're not a real lawyer. People don't change." And after that Jimmy says to Mike at the end of the season that he knows what stopped him and it won't stop him anymore. That was kinda the signal that the realization he had of Chuck not wanting him to be a lawyer definitely turned him onto a darker path, but for sure their last conversation sealed the deal for Jimmy.
Damn i didn’t realize both jimmy AND mike died this episode
This hits differently after Kim was revealed to be a shoplifter as a young girl in the recent episode. Jimmy and her really are meant to be. Always in each other's corners.
I thought the same...as lovers and partners in crime and deed I am pretty sure Kim shared that part of her life with Jimmy
easily the best episode in the series. the best.
I think it would be Awesome that he meet again with that girl in his Gene mode xD
That scene was set in 2004, Gene era is set around 2011, many months after Breaking Bad. So the actress playing the girl would look too young to play the same character 7 years later.
I think there was a part of Jimmy that always wanted to be proven wrong. It's why I think he looked up to Chuck so much in the first place. He always wanted someone to come around and show him that you could "win" by being part of the good guys. And Jimmy was never shown that was an option for him. In fact, one of the most important things I've found about BB and BCS is that in neither series, the good guys win. Yes, the bad guys do lose and face their final comeuppance, but there is never a point in which the good guys all survive, bad guys off to jail, all the money going back to its rightful owners. Not one single point.
S"all good man
Saul was constantly being given bad cards all his adult life, some are on him but Chuck was the dealer. Chuck is then surprised and agitated when "Slippin Jimmy" never folds but instead bluffs his way to victory after victory.
Jimmy talking to the girl was a powerful scene because I kind of agree and disagree with Jimmy there.
I like that he tried to stand up to the girl. She basically got denied simply because she shoplifted at some point in her life. The firm saw her mistake and she was done for. It really sucks that the mistakes you made as a kid or a teen can really mess up your future. I feel like everybody deserves a chance at redemption. They certainly should have given the girl a chance and I am glad that Jimmy gave her one.
What I don't like is that Jimmy basically said "You are right, they are wrong, keep doing what you're doing and take shortcuts to get above them". This shows that he always has and will be Slippin Jimmy. We already see where this way of thinking got Jimmy in Breaking Bad. I don't think it's all his fault though, people like Chuck are partially responsible for Jimmy ending up on this path, but it's sad to see Jimmy come down to this.
Well, we see him bribing officials and fabricating evidence back in season 1. So he might always have become Saul no matter what.
Of course we don't know what would have happened if his brother had hired him and had him learn from other respectable lawyers.
I think that is the idea of jimmy-Saul transformation, a character breaking bad, maybe not in the way walter did but he's a guy who just want a second chance, but he's so conditioned by the way people looks at him and all that he learned since he was a kid, his father was a good man, his brother was a good man, he was trying to be a good man too but he learned that good mans never win
@@robinvik1 i think he def would be better than he is now if he had chuck guidance but sadly chuck couldnt put away that hate and see that jimmy was really trying.
Jimmy was so broken as a man after his turbulent relationship with his brother, his death, and the lawyers at HHM having no single ounce of compassion for others. He just slipped back to the persona of Saul Goodman, because that is the act, a mask that can deal with things Jimmy can’t.
@@tommyblade8093Jimmy had already set in motion the events that would lead him to working for the cartel and developing his underground connections without Chuck's side of the story unfolding yet. In the worst way, Chuck was right - Jimmy being that charismatic, creative, and disrespectful to the letter of the law would eventually result in a lot of people getting hurt once he got a law degree. Chuck just went about being right in the worst possible way. It's possible Chuck being supportive would have slowed this transformation into Saul, but it does seem inevitable. We saw Jimmy go straight with a good, secure legal position in the show, and he absolutely hated it and tried to get himself fired because it wasn't as exciting as scheming and tricking people. That's who Jimmy is - he's egotistical and short-sighted beyond his own personal goals, but usually has good intentions for what he's doing. But, there's a saying about good intentions.
This was the episode they went from BCS to what we know in BB. Mike killing for Gus for the first time. And Jimmy turning full Saul
I think Jimmy tries to get back at Chuck in a way by pretending to like doesn’t matter to him in the same way Chuck said
That's true, huh? He could get reinstated but never had big future as Jimmy McGill
This world is a cruel and lonely place and nobody gets what they deserve.
jimmys speech was unironically extremely good life advice
Good. Now don't make us wait friggin 18 months for the next season.
They won't. We just had to wait this year because it took some time for the show to get a fourth season but this time they're already writing the fifth season.
i heard next season will be in april 2019
*sigh* Delayed until 2020
sigh, this comment didn’t age well.
Wow, the season ended in august 2018, and it comes back at february 2020. Exactly 18 months. Joke is on us, I guess
The thing is people like Jimmy who is the people guy, normally tends to be more accept the "rules" of these circles, means that he accept that he could never gain the righteous highly lawyer status because of his background, while Chunk is the person who set the rules and further made him become an embodiment of corruption, which is an interesting contrast
Christy Esposito :D Giancarlo Espositos dauther? :D
The writers of the show like taking the names of real people they know. Like Gus' partner Max was named after Max Arciniega, the actor who plays Domingo aka Krazy-8.
And Jane margolis, same subname of Mark margolis, aka Héctor Salamanca
This was my favorite episode on all the series. The Saul Goodman’s totally take over. 😎☝🏼
Such a great show. It's so relatable.
This is one of the best episodes in the show in my opinion
This might be the only moment jimmy let all his emotions out...
This is Jimmy talking to Saul
The ending is depressing, really a stubborn character, really poor.
that is how Jimmy is, the ingenuous of the series as how they portray this character making you think he finally became "good" and then they shock you back with how he really is... thats amazing
If Jimmy hadn't been denied the episode before I don't think he'd've become Saul Goodman.
Still waiting for the day of getting a breakdown like Jimmy
Why
I mean it's something almost every single human being goes through throughout their life
It’s not fun, needed an icepack
It's not fun at all. Be glad you haven't had one.
This is the moment where Jimmy McGill becomes Saul Goodman
So far:
Number of deaths in Jimmy’s half of the show - 2: Marco and Chuck
Number of deaths in Mike’s half of the show - Countless
The elder lady from Jimmy's commercial also passed away
She made up her mind 10mins ago: she is gonna marry rich
I never understood the killing of Werner. Why weren’t the other workers ever killed too? Gus had to know that they would ask what happened to Werner.
The other workers never stepped out of line
Once you break the trust of people like that, theres not a damn thing you can do to win it back.
The kid's surname ESPOSITO came from the surname who played Gus Fring's real name, just saying.
remove random crits
Why was Jimmy crying?
Jimmy had been pretending chucks death didn’t get to him all season long
Jimmy just unfortunately described what it was like being Black for millions of Black Americans....Jimmy went through all that and he was White, so imagine a Black Jimmy...
God millions of Black Americans are criminalized by the very system that Jimmy works for...As a Black person, I’ve seen it happen and it’s happened to me...Being Black, you have to run that much faster and jump that much higher and work that much harder just to be even considered among the AVERAGE white people, let alone the above average...A white person with a record statistically, has a better shot at landing a job than a Black person with no record...
I agree brother. I've studied the systematic institutionalized racism in the US both in court cases (Trevor Martin's death) and in police enforcement. I
The storyline with Huell and the cop a few episodes earlier was, to me, showing how unjust the justice system is toward black people and showing how prevalent systemic racism is in the US (and the rest of the world). The lengths they had to go to in order to save Huell from jail was insane.
And in the scene where kim is talking to the prosecutor, she brings up so many other examples of people who have done worse and got less of a sentence. We don't know their ethnicities obviously but in my mind they're all white because that's how America seems to roll apparently.
Its funny that all the people I've discussed this with think I'm reading too deeply into it but I think they're not thinking about it deeply enough.
@@WhiteWolf496 The main problem with Huell was that he actually broke the law before the incident. It had very little to do with his skin color dude
Only a communist race baiter like you would make something not about race, about race. Seriously go take a pinochet airlines helicopter ride.