Better Call Saul Serves Up an Epic Game-Changer That Asks: Is Jimmy Breaking Bad… Or Just Broken?
We saw serious fallout from all the recent carnage on Better Call Saul this week — and it left Jimmy McGill in a very different place.
Monday’s episode kicks off with a montage of Jimmy and Kim going about their usual days — he helps a bodybuilder client try on a neck brace; she gets hugs from a client’s grateful family — while Mike and his crew clean up the crime scene at Jimmy’s condo, wiping up Howard’s blood and extracting an incriminating bullet. When Jimmy and Kim get home, the place is sparkling clean, like nothing ever happened… but they still know something did happen. They stay in a hotel, with Jimmy trying to tell Kim that one day, they’ll get back into their routine and “suddenly realize we hadn’t thought about it at all.” But she doesn’t look convinced.

Gus returns home, opening the window blinds and letting the sun shine in after so much time living in hiding. He consults with Mike, who reports that the cops think Howard killed himself: “For all practical purposes, it’s over.” Gus wants to know when work can resume on the Superlab, and Mike says they’ll need a new crew and engineer. But Gus is insistent: “Start today.” Then he goes to a restaurant and has a glass of wine at the bar — Gus Fring, relaxing! — while having a lively conversation with a waiter named David, who recognizes Gus and knows he’s a wine lover. He regales Gus with tales of his travels through Europe, and Gus reveals he noted a rare vintage David once mentioned and bought a bottle, saving it for a special occasion. But when David leaves to fetch more wine, Gus’ face suddenly turns grim, and he quickly departs, telling the bartender to tell David he’s been called away. (Was it David’s mention of a wine’s “almost bloody flavor”?)


Kim heads back to court the next day, but she files a motion to withdraw from her case. She tells the judge it’s for “personal reasons,” and when he asks her to argue her latest motion, she says she can’t — “because I’m no longer an attorney.” She gave notice to the bar two hours ago, she adds. Jimmy meets her at home and freaks out, begging her not to throw her whole life away. He scrambles to come up with a way to undo it… but then he sees she’s packed up all her stuff, too. “You asked if you’re bad for me. That’s not it. We’re bad for each other,” she tells him. “Apart, we’re OK, but together, we’re poison.” He begs her not to do this and offers to do whatever it takes to make this work, telling her he loves her. “I love you, too,” she replies. “But so what?” Then she admits she didn’t tell him Lalo was alive because he’d run and hide and pull the plug on the Howard scam, “and then we’d break up. And I didn’t want that. Because I was having too much fun.” She walks off in tears and continues packing, leaving Jimmy shattered.
Next thing we know, Jimmy is waking up to the sounds of Journey’s “Any Way You Want It” — but he’s in a rotating bed in a extravagantly decorated bedroom with a sleazy woman next to him. Oh wow, we’ve just time-jumped right into the Saul Goodman era, haven’t we? Jimmy — er, Saul — gets ready for the day in his huge mansion, confidently barking orders into his phone earpiece and working on his increasingly severe comb-over in a gilded mirror while picking out a bright green dress shirt. In the car (with registration that indicates about a year has passed), he hears one of his own ads on the radio and gripes about the sound quality before getting to his law office, where Francesca is wrangling a lobby full of clients. He sits down at his desk, which we recognize from the Breaking Bad days, surrounded by Greek columns and U.S. Constitution wallpaper, and says, “Let justice be done… though the heavens fall.” (Remember: His brother Chuck said that same thing back in Season 3.) Ladies and gentlemen… Saul Goodman has officially arrived.
Whoa… Saul fans, hit the comments to share your thoughts on tonight’s game-changing episode.
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