'Better Call Saul' Recap: Welcome to the Dark Side (2024)

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A review of this week’s Better Call Saul, “Bad Choice Road,” coming up just as soon as I leave the Yankees to play amateur ring toss…

“Oh, Jesus, what have I got myself involved with here?” —Jimmy

So, do we need to start referring to Kim Wexler as The One Who Mocks?

“Bad Choice Road” begins with a sequel to the great montage from last season’s “Something Stupid.” Again, a cover of the Sinatra song plays as we see Jimmy and Kim in split screen. In that earlier episode, the device was used to illustrate the growing emotional distance between them; here, it’s emphasizing the physical distance, as Jimmy and Mike finish the desert trek they began in “Bagman,” while Kim frets back in the apartment. Occasionally, the couple’s movements are in sync, but in wildly different circ*mstances, like when she enjoys a clean glass of water from the kitchen sink while he has to swallow more of his own piss. The original montage concluded with its separate images merging back together, even as Jimmy and Kim’s lives kept drifting farther apart. Here, the image is never whole, because our leads are in separate locations. But by the end of this fantastic episode, the two halves of Better Call Saul itself, long held separate, finally merge into one thrilling, terrifying story.

Jimmy and Kim have separately met with Lalo at the jail in past episodes (and Jimmy a few times before that, when helping with the Krazy-8 problem), but when he enters their home, armed with a gun and a smile, any distinction between the cartel and civilian aspects of the show has ceased to exist. Earlier in the episode, Kim quits Schweikart and co*kely, and Mesa Verde, because banking law now bores her; in the process, it feels as if the series has left behind nearly all interest in non-criminal life. Mike warns Jimmy about the bad road he has gone down, and how impossible it will be to get off it. Jimmy will later mangle the lesson in attempting to convince Kim that she’s made a terrible mistake by quitting her lucrative job, but it’s already too late for her, and him, and Better Call Saul. Everyone’s gone down Bad Choice Road now, and there’s no turning back.

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Where “Bagman” was focused almost entirely on Jimmy and Mike’s painful desert odyssey, “Bad Choice Road” is a pretty traditionally structured episode until that long climactic sequence in and around the apartment. We catch up with nearly all the cast (save Howard, who these days exists as a symbol of the life that Jimmy and the series are both leaving behind) and advance various subplots. Gus figures out that the bandits were hired by Juan Bolsa, who seems very displeased by the thought of Lalo getting out of jail and returning to Mexico to interfere in his business. Mike tries to negotiate Nacho’s release from Gus’ control — or, failing that, for the safety of Mr. Varga — but the Chicken Man is unyielding in his belief that Nacho is too treacherous to be managed through anything but fear(*). Lalo says goodbye to Hector, trying to assure the frail and bitter old man that he’ll be back once the heat dies down, but his final gaze at his uncle (who is participating silently in a nursing home birthday celebration, looking ridiculous and sad in a party hat) suggests he knows this is the last they’ll see each other. Kim quits the firm, and Jimmy even appears in court on behalf of a client, though the only thing we see is the awkward aftermath, as Bill Oakley taunts him for snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.

(*) Looking back on things, Gus has a point. Nacho previously asked Mike to kill Tuco, then poisoned Hector. Trying to murder difficult bosses is his go-to move.

'Better Call Saul' Recap: Welcome to the Dark Side (1)

Jimmy’s off his game because he’s understandably traumatized by what he did and saw in the desert. He’s moving slower due to the severe sunburn, but he also seems to be thinking slower. Familiar sounds like Kim running the juicer now remind him of gunshots and explosions. He’s lying to Kim about what really happened, unaware that she’s already seen the bullet hole in the travel mug she gave him. He is dismayed to realize that the only person he can talk to about it is Mike. When he sits in Mike’s sedan, he seems genuinely shaken by the thought of those dead men, even after Mike argues that it was a kill-or-be-killed situation. Memories of Fred Whalen’s murder trouble him further, and even Mike’s hints that Lalo will soon be taken care of upset him. This is as far removed as it’s possible to imagine Jimmy McGill being from Saul Goodman(*), who in his very first appearance was advising Walter White to murder an underling.

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(*) What a three-episode stretch this has been for Bob Odenkirk, from the manic Saul Goodman vitriol of “JMM” to the raw physicality of “Bagman” to the intense vulnerability of Jimmy throughout this one. He’s always great in this role, but the versatility required to play these three very different iterations of what is still clearly the same character is impressive even by the standards he’s set in previous seasons. I’d love to see Saulhave a huge night at this year’s Emmys (even if they wind up being held virtually), but Odenkirk and Rhea Seehorn in particular really ought to be the winners in their categories.

Mike assures Jimmy that he will move past this trauma in time, and with Lalo heading toward a permanent end, it seems to Jimmy for a moment that he has a chance to return his world to something resembling normal. But some combination of fate, Kim, and Lalo have other plans for him. Like Mike says, once you go down the road, you’re on that road, no matter how hard you try to turn off it.

Lalo again proves much smarter than anyone wants him to be, realizing that he and Nacho didn’t pass Jimmy’s broken-down car on the drive down to the well to meet the Cousins. He orders Nacho to take him north in search of the thing, and is observant enough to notice the tracks Mike and Jimmy left when they pushed it into the ravine. Lalo seems damn near superhuman in this sequence, even making a heroically casual leap from the ravine’s edge onto the overturned vehicle below. In that moment, I couldn’t help wishing that we had gotten to see this guy face Saul Goodman’s most infamous client, because it’s like he has all the most dangerous qualities of Walt’s enemies — the physical threat of Tuco or the Cousins, plus a perceptiveness and grasp of strategy that can be Fring-esque, without being as blinded by revenge or as Gus or Hector can be — wrapped in one grinning, tenacious package. That won’t come to pass, though it’s possible he is still alive during the events of Breaking Bad. (Saul initially thinks that Lalo sent Walt and Jesse after him, though he could very well be out of the loop on all things cartel by then.)

Instead, we get something even more marvelous, and largely unexpected: Lalo getting verbally pantsed by our heroine, our adored, great Kim Wexler.

'Better Call Saul' Recap: Welcome to the Dark Side (2)

When Jimmy finds out that Kim has quit her job, he assumes she’s overreacting to his near-death experience. His desert adventure did influence her decision, but not in the way he thinks. While she’s alarmed by the possibility of him dying out there (and finally lets herself cry when he calls to say he’s alive), it feels more like she could have taken a day and a half off from work for a more mundane reason and still felt the same lack of connection and interest upon returning. She doesn’t want to be this person anymore, and hasn’t for most of this season. The gamesmanship about Everett Acker’s house was as much Kim subconsciously trying to escape a job she had grown to hate as it was her trying to do right by this cranky old man.

That said, Jimmy’s peril, and the ensuing lies he tells her about it, puts her on an emotional journey that perhaps helps ready her for Lalo’s arrival at the apartment door. She knows Jimmy is lying to her about what really happened, and even confronts him about it. But news that Lalo met his wife rightly terrifies Jimmy and makes him keep lying, even when she assures him she won’t judge him. At another point in their relationship, this would drive a wedge between them, but the fight that led to her marriage proposal fundamentally changed — or maybe just broke — something in Kim. Now, she just wants Jimmy, and will keep making concessions to allow the relationship to continue. Even knowing that someone shot at him, and that he won’t tell her about it, seems like something she quickly learns to compartmentalize. When they finally fight in their apartment, it’s not over what happened in the desert, but about Jimmy’s response to her leaving the firm.

They don’t get to take that argument to its conclusion, though, because suddenly Mike is making a frantic call to Jimmy, and Lalo is standing in their doorway, as unnervingly relaxed and chipper as usual. (“Hey, guys!” he declares, as if he came over for a Trading Spaces marathon with chips and dip.) They have no choice but to let him in, and as he crosses the threshold, Kim unequivocally passes over into the world that’s home to Mike, Gus, the Cousins, and, eventually, Heisenberg.

Between the argument about the law firm and Lalo’s pop-in, the apartment sequence runs about 16 minutes. That’s an eternity for a single television scene, even a bifurcated one like this. (The episode’s other acts are deliberately shorter to allow this one to run uninterrupted for those watching live.) On the one hand, it feels endless, because Lalo as usual is a dog with a bone, and keeps making Jimmy tell the story again and again, teasing out new details each time even as he doesn’t believe his attorney. The longer it goes, the tenser everything feels, as does the sheer wrongness of Kim being present for it.

But on the other hand, the sequence — like every other scene of this episode, written and directed by BB/BCS vet Thomas Schnauz — somehow also seems to fly by, because it’s so exciting and sharp. Soon, we are cutting between the apartment itself and the view through Mike’s sniper scope on the roof of another building in the development. Before Mike has to decide whether to take the shot, then deal with the messy clean-up such an act would entail, Kim literally steps in his path and saves the goddamn day, scolding Lalo as if he were just another annoying, mercurial client like Kevin from Mesa Verde. She raises reasonable doubt about the bullet holes by ascribing them to local vandals, then points out how shaky Lalo’s operation must be if he has to trust Saul Goodman with transporting this amount of money. She makes this big, scary man briefly feel very small.

“If you don’t trust your men with your money,” she tells him, summing up the simple but firm closing argument, “you have bigger problems than if you trust Saul Goodman.” Then she advises him, “Jesus, get your sh*t together!” Whether or not Lalo believes Jimmy, Kim successfully refocuses his anger towards a target south of the border. He leaves, allowing her, Jimmy, and Mike to exhale, even though none are particularly at ease with what just happened — and what almost happened next.

It’s a knockout performance (by both Kim and Rhea Seehorn), and one suggesting Kim could do just fine working on Jimmy’s side of the street if she wanted to. Earlier, Jimmy had admonished her for visiting Lalo: “You don’t see Lalo. I see Lalo, OK? I’m in the game. You’re not in the game.” We don’t want her in the game, because we know how the game ends for everybody in this world, Jimmy/Saul/Gene included. But protective as I am of Kim, that amazing scene had me hoping she keeps playing for a while.

Some other thoughts:

* Continuing our ongoing discussion of exactly what Saul knew about the Gus Fring operation prior to telling Walt, “I know a guy who knows a guy who… knows another guy,” here we see him ride in an SUV with both Victor and Tyrese. We’re nearing the point where I wouldn’t be surprised to find out that Saul really knew Gus the whole time, and also knew that Mike was really Gus’ employee, and that the bulk of his relationship with Walt and Jesse (after the fortuitousness of Walt hiring him to represent Badger) was all a case of Gus playing puppeteer.

* If you listen carefully to the movie Jimmy attempts to watch with Kim, it’s the Cary Grant/Rosalind Russell/Howard Hawks classic His Girl Friday, which is about a woman who keeps returning to a relationship she knows is deeply unhealthy for her, with a man whose charm and wild professional lifestyle she ultimately can’t resist. And now I would very much enjoy seeing a version starring Odenkirk and Seehorn as Walter and Hildy. Or, I would if we weren’t already getting it.

* On her way out of the S&C offices, Kim makes sure to grab the fancy tequila bottle from the time she and Jimmy scammed Ken Wins into paying for it — the symbol of the attraction Kim can’t quite shed to the criminal life.

* A stuntman did the jump onto the Suzuki Esteem, even though Tony Dalton kept asking if he could. He has experience with crazy stunts, having spent some time earlier in his career as co-host of a Jackass-style Mexican show called No Te Equivoques. Here’s a young Lalo being a reckless idiot while bubble wrapped. Enjoy.

* Lalo tells Hector that Tuco will be a free man again in 11 months. Tuco’s first appearance on Breaking Bad doesn’t say how long it’s been since he got out of prison (which is where Skinny Pete met him), but it’s June 2004 on Saul right now, and Breaking Bad starts in September 2008. So either Tuco was out much longer than it seemed in “Crazy Handful of Nothin'” (where, from Jesse’s perspective, he has only just taken over distribution from the late Krazy-8), or he may have some additional incarceration in his future. But Lalo’s suggestion that someone needs to keep an eye on Tuco provides us with a possible explanation for why Hector is living in squalor with Tuco circaBBSeason Two rather than staying in the nursing home. Depending on what happens to Nacho, Hector may be the only trusted person left in the crew by the time Tuco gets paroled.

* Finally, when Kim hands over her company car keys to her baffled assistant Marcie, that leaves both spouses temporarily vehicle-free.

'Better Call Saul' Recap: Welcome to the Dark Side (2024)

FAQs

Why did Better Call Saul end so abruptly? ›

Gould and the writing staff knew by the time the fifth season finale aired two years prior that this was the right ending for the series. They realized that Saul spent his career making a mockery of the justice system, so it was fitting to them that he ended the series as a part of it, only this time as a prisoner.

What is the black and white scene in Better Call Saul? ›

Throughout Better Call Saul Season 6, all future events (after the main storyline of Breaking Bad ends and Saul lives a low-profile life in exile) are shown in black and white. Normally, events happening in the past are shown as black and white, while events in the present or future are shown in full color.

Why does Kim cry on the bus Better Call Saul? ›

The breakdown on the bus was not solely caused by Kim's confrontation with Howard Hamlin's widow, but rather the culmination of guilt, grief, and the realization that her previous life in Albuquerque was gone, leaving her with a mundane existence in Florida.

Do you ever see Walter in Better Call Saul? ›

The iconic character has also twice made guest appearances in the “Bad” universe — 2019's “El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie” and now, alongside Aaron Paul, appearing in the final season of “Better Call Saul,” as that was when the Bob Odenkirk-led prequel finally caught up to the events in “Bad.” Adding to and re- ...

Why did Saul get 86 years? ›

Even though Jimmy tries to be optimistic in his talk with Kim, the reality is that he received an 86-year sentence for his crimes in Breaking Bad. This was designed to give Jimmy no way out since he fully confessed to everything in Better Call Saul's finale, which means any future deals are off the table.

What happened to Kim Wexler at the end? ›

At Howard's funeral, Kim lies to Howard's wife Cheryl about Howard's supposed drug use. Shortly afterwards, Kim surrenders her law license and prepares to leave Albuquerque. When Jimmy arrives home, she tells him that she loves him, but that together they hurt too many people, then leaves.

Why was the cigarette in color Better Call Saul? ›

The final use of color is when Kim Wexler (Rhea Seehorn) visits Jimmy in prison at the end of the Better Call Saul finale. It's a small moment that symbolizes the importance of Kim to Jimmy's life, the color of the cigarette lighter representing the fact his old flame was the only color in his life.

How does Saul Goodman become a Gene? ›

Saul Goodman first requested an identity change in Breaking Bad season 5's penultimate episode, "Granite State." With the help of Ed Galbraith, also known as "The Disappearer," Saul became Gene Takavic, the manager of the Cinnabon in an Omaha shopping mall.

Is Gene Takovic after Breaking Bad? ›

However, the series also works as a sequel to the original series, with it occasionally giving glimpses into the post-Breaking Bad timeline. As it turns out, Saul Goodman fled Albuquerque and is now living in Nebraska under a new identity as a Cinnabon manager named Gene Takovic.

Does Saul really love Kim? ›

's answer and say that Saul doesn't really love Kim, but Jimmy McGill absolutely does. And this is a theme throughout the show.

Does Kim Wexler hate Jimmy? ›

Despite Kim and Jimmy's unconditional love for each other, Kim left him and Albuquerque after one of their schemes went horribly wrong, causing her to believe that they were bad for everyone around them. She subsequently retired permanently from her law career, and divorced Jimmy later that year.

Do they mention Kim Wexler in Breaking Bad? ›

Rhea Seehorn's Kim Wexler. Kim becomes as close to Bob Odenkirk's Jimmy McGill as can be during Better Call Saul's latter seasons, but doesn't receive so much as a glancing mention during Breaking Bad - an oddity the spinoff needed to address before the end.

Why does Walt kidnap Saul? ›

Saul has already offered to be Badger's legal counsel. Walt poses as Badger's uncle and goes to Saul's office. Walt offers Saul a bribe to keep Badger from confessing, but Saul refuses. Walt and Jesse resort to kidnapping Saul, threatening to kill him if he does not keep Badger from informing on them.

How many years between Better Call Saul and Breaking Bad? ›

Most of the show takes place over the six-year period before the events of Breaking Bad, spanning approximately 2002 to 2008. Jimmy is inspired by his older brother Chuck McGill to leave his Chicago-area conman past, when he was known as "Slippin' Jimmy".

Why did Jesse give Walt a watch? ›

A very nice gift from Jesse

A classy gift for Walter White's 51st birthday. Considering his line of work and schedule, he can definitely make good use of the chronograph function. After Walt receives the watch, he heads home to another confrontation with his wife.

Why did Jimmy confess at the end? ›

However, as explained in Walter White's Better Call Saul finale scene, the ending is about regret. This is why Jimmy also confesses to the court about his involvement in pushing his brother Chuck to the brink of suicide, even though it technically had nothing to do with Jimmy's RICO case.

Did fans like the ending of Better Call Saul? ›

The series finale concluded a two-part season that once again captured the qualities that have elevated “Better Call Saul” to the elite ranks of television dramas, with many fans and critics saying it is just as good as, if not better than, “Breaking Bad.”

Did Better Call Saul get cancelled? ›

The sixth and final season of the AMC television series Better Call Saul premiered on April 18, 2022, in the United States, and concluded on August 15, 2022. The thirteen-episode season was broadcast on Mondays at 9:00 pm (Eastern) in the United States on AMC and its streaming service AMC+.

Is there going to be a spinoff of Better Call Saul? ›

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