Saul Tries To End His And Walt's Business | Live Free or Die | Breaking Bad
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 8 ก.ย. 2023
- Saul presents the cigarette to Walt, remarking that he had no idea Walt was going to poison Brock in the service of killing Gus.
Season 5 Episode 1 - Live Free or Die: In a flashforward, a ragged, bearded Walt, living under a different identity, has breakfast at a Denny's restaurant in Albuquerque on his 52nd birthday (a little over a year into the future). He pays for and receives a key from a patron, which he uses to open a car trunk containing an M60 machine gun. In the present, news of the three deaths at the senior center Casa Tranquila spreads as Walt heads over to see his family. Walt uses a giant magnet to destroy evidence of his and Jesse's activities stored on Gus Fring's laptop in the police evidence lockup.
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Breaking Bad follows protagonist Walter White (Bryan Cranston), a chemistry teacher who lives in New Mexico with his wife (Anna Gunn) and teenage son (RJ Mitte) who has cerebral palsy. White is diagnosed with Stage III cancer and given a prognosis of two years left to live. With a new sense of fearlessness based on his medical prognosis, and a desire to secure his family's financial security, White chooses to enter a dangerous world of drugs and crime and ascends to power in the world. The series explores how a fatal diagnosis such as White's releases a typical man from the daily concerns and constraints of normal society and follows his transformation from mild family man to a kingpin of the drug trade.
#SaulGoodman #BreakingBad #WalterWhite
Saul Tries To End His And Walt's Business | Live Free or Die | Breaking Bad
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I hate how Walt treats Saul like crap despite Saul being Walt's most helpful and loyal asset.
Basically the same can be said for both Jesse and Skylar
Kind of reminds me of another character….
“You’re not a real lawyer.”
@@SteveNathnFINALLY, someone who doesn't act like a complete psychopath about Skylar 😒
@@SteveNathn Are you forgetting that Walt saved Skylar from prosecution in season 5 and tried to keep her out of his business in season 4 before SHE insisted on getting involved?
He treats everyone like crap. Thats his thing.
Saul probably thinking internally: Mike was right, I never should’ve done business with this monster
🤡
And Mike should have followed that advice too.
Lmao, mike was so salty, he got what he deserved
Mike should’ve listened to his own advice
@@jordancooper1592No more half measures
Seeing Walt’s mannerisms in this scene really goes to show how he tries to act like Gus the moment he wins
Just because you shot Jesse James...
@@GATguy98 Don't make you Jesse James.
@@pedrobotelho2265 And yet, Jesse and James are two guys who have never been shot by Walt.
Actually, I think he was mirroring Tuco’s intimidation strategy in this scene given how dominant he was when he got into Saul’s face.
@@Jackal_El_Lobo34 maybe, but the formal way he talks, is very Gus like.
Walt is not a physically imposing man, but there’s an underlying malevolence about him that others can sense that gives him the ability to physically intimidate people.
I mean he has a decent height. He’s 5’10.5 making him taller than Saul, Mike, Gus and Jesse. Most people still had to physically look up to him.
hes the tallest person on the show. he's meant to be physically imposing
@@carloss7655Nah. The tallest person was the guy whom Walt and Jesse sold the RV to. Walt came up to him for asking the RV to be destroyed because Hank was catching upto them, did you see the height difference then???
@@johnnyissuper6955 Skyler was also pretty tall; it paid off later in the show in how she towered over Lydia and scared the crap out of her.
he will kill you one way or another.
Nacho warned Jimmy years ago about where this path led : "It's not about what you want. When you're in, you're in."
And then he urined. Bravo, David Chase
@@TheBanMan Long live the Sopranos!
And he learned that with Lalo , and he did the same mistake with walt
Nacho was speaking from experience once you sell your soul to the devil there are no refunds or point of return. In Jimmy's case, he never really got that because he didn't understand to the extent of how far he had gone.
@@Utilizador-gs3lx the worst part he did it willingly, after all he went through.
Hilarious how Saul, over the span of four seasons, gradually goes from salivating at Walt's ability to make him money to being completely exasperated at all the craziness he keeps getting dragged into.
Pretty sure thats the chain of events of every person in Walts life.
Saul pretty much manipulated Walt in to working for him, but it turned upside down pretty damn fast.
@@tk-hf4oz I think you got that backwards. Saul doesn't manipulate ppl, hes the one that gets manipulated.
Not only did Jimmy can’t keep his hands from cash drawers, he also couldn’t keep his hands from a pandora box that is Walt.
@@nont18411 Truth
1:38 This is something Chuck would say
2:53 This is something Lalo would say
Jimmy realized that Walter is his greatest nightmare, a 2 in 1 package for the people he hates the most.
Except Jimmy didnt hate Chuck
@@SamMito28of course not. He just had to pretend he did as a coping mechanism to manage his own guilt for knowing his own actions were the straw that broke the camel's back
@@Ch4rlz_ThA_Princ3 exactly
@@SamMito28 and people say my psych degree was worthless 😏
Its worth its weight in gold when it comes to reading & interpreting human behavior. Both fiction and non
And the similarities between Walter and Chuck explain why he put up with Walt’s awfulness despite not needing the money either.
2:16 A tiny piece of morality slippin’ through Jimmy (see what I’m doing?) here but it’s too late now because Jimmy chose to deal with the devil.
This should've been a huge wake-up call for Walt. When the guy who makes deals with the devil for a living tells you that he wants to cut ties, it probably means you went too far. Of course, that would mean that Walt would have to give up the cooking, and by Season 5 he's basically planning to die.
@@thevoidlord1796 He did gave up the cooking in the middle of season 5, he went out of the criminal business entirely, and it was just in that moment that Hank had to find out and drag Walter back to his old ways forcibly.
Slippin' Jimmy!
Hell! Jimmy created this devil!
What a sick joke!!
Even Saul at his lowest has moral doubts about putting a child in the hospital
Was that before or after they dissolved a child
@@nithinraj360 Whatever happened there
before
@@TheBanManwhatever happened there ?!
@@CatroiOzGod rest his soul.
The lawyer that Walt is referencing(Clarence Darrow) was the lawyer responsible for defending: Leopold and Loeb. It’s ironic because Howard Hamlin calls Jimmy and Kim Leopold and Loeb right before he dies. Lots of interesting connections.
Howard had also compared Chuck McGill to Clarence Darrow at one point.
Also the lawyer defending a teacher who taught evolution in the 'Scopes Monkey Trial', opposing the prosecution headed by former presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan. Darrow was generally known as a highly principled and competant lawyer.
okay now who's Leopold and Loeb
This is the moment that Clarence Darrow became Leopold and Loeb
@@wjnsnxnhsuj Psychopaths who thought they could come up with the perfect crime
Watching this after finishing Better Call Saul brings a whole another level to the show.
Better Call Saul makes Breaking Bad better
@@omegajrz1269facts
That's what the showrunners promised & they delivered!
Are you telling me that it just happens to bring a whole another level to the show? NO! HE ORCHESTRATED IT!!!
I'm literally on season 5 episode 6 of better call Saul and then I'm guna start breaking bad, never seen either before so I'm giving it a shot. It's a great show so far.
That was jimmy coming out of his Saul persona
The one time Saul realizes chasing the money is pointless if the risk is this huge and decides to walk away from what is essentially billion dollar deal, he is coerced into it and knows he can't walk away. He's trapped in this. It's a damn shame too cause despite his schemes, he IS a damn good lawyer and at times helps genuine people.
The one thing I would change is that he did not want to walk away because of risk. It was because Walt crossed a huge line and he and Saul both know it.
I’m sorry but Chuck was right Jimmy isn’t a real lawyer. He’s a con man with a law degree
walt at this point : killed gus, killed crazy 8, had brock poisoned, worked with hector to kill gus, orchested gale getting killed, turned down Jesse's offer of go-kart racing.
truly a dangerous man at this point of the series.
Yeah turning down Jesse to go go-karting was just too far..
One of these is not like the others...
...or is it
Jimmy thought he was dealing with Chuck, instead he turned out to be Lalo…
Plzz if Jimmy really wanted out Walter would have disappeared a lawyer like him who represent criminals for a long time he could have called in a few favours and it would have been all over
@@ratikantrout1865 Walter by this point is far more dangerous and unpredictable than Lalo, even in Sauls POV, Walt was about to beat that dude up and thats the same guy who just killed Gus Fring out of all people
@@evanmil0minefly Exactly. People forget that Walt outplayed Gus, the only guy who managed to outplay Gus ever.
Walter is totally in Gus Fring mode. Especially when he just sits there in the chair not speaking
And Lalo salamanca🔥🔥🔥
It's Heisenberg mode. Gus isn't wrapped up in pride like Walt.
@@reynochavier6297Gus also had pride. That’s why he’s dead.
2:20
That face right there shows that Walt wasn’t sorry about poisoning brock. He was actually proud of it.
No man. Walt wasn't proud of the actually poisoning of brock. Walt would never take pride for something so trivial as "feeding candy to a baby".
If he was proud of anything it was that his plan to eliminate Gus succeeded
He's not proud he did it, but he's happy that it worked though. What matters to him now is that he succeeded with the gambit and it paid off, so not his problem now-and I do think had it backfired and Brock did die, Walt would've felt bad about it.
I think he was sorry about poisoning Brock…at first. But once Jesse told him Brock was gonna be fine, Walt’s sense of guilt felt absolved, feeling he wouldn’t have to worry about it anymore.
If Walt could do that, and feel content knowing Brock would be ok, I think his sense of guilt about all he did, or could do going forward, left him completely.
Poisoning Brock is a tribute to him being a mastermind and coming up clutch in a way he never has before. He took out a massive drug lord that hardly anyone even knew about (Hank had suspicions, but they were still just suspicions). Not even his truthfully brilliant dea brother in law could come close to his brilliance. When Hank was just starting to follow his instinct, but he had nothing but instinct, Walt was burying him and his empire and absorbing it. Walt is incredibly proud and his only feelings about Brock being considered a negative is the insinuation that this brilliant piece of manoeuvering on his part can be considered a bad thing.
u walt haters never cease to amaze me
Blud think he's Gus 💀
Walt is such a tryhard, it makes me cringe
Hey what BLUD means? Please
@@FAKKER_rapBumbaclot
Walt’s better than Gus lil bro.
Why would he want to be Gus? He blew Gus to smithereens
1:49
A two bit bench lawyer, "that you need"
Yeah fr Saul is literally one of, if not the most important parts of his business and he always treat him like that 💀
“Fact is, Walter White couldn’t have done it without ME.”
Saul even played a very important role in bringing down Gus. If Saul hadn’t reached out to Jesse while he was being interrogated about Brock, Walt would’ve never found out about Gus’ one weakness 🛎️
@@jakandratchet9930imagine having the best two years of your life and cementing your legacy shortly before death only for that two bit bus bench lawyer to disintegrate your credibility by revealing that you were actually nothing without him.
Saul: hires Huell as a bodyguard after being threatened by Mike
Also Saul: gets easily intimidated by Walt
He's always had huell on the books if you watch 'better call saul'
I know Saul brought this upon himself, but I still felt a little bad for him being treated like this, especially knowing Saul was horrified that Walt poisoned a child.
Saul would cross many lines, but it says something when a man with no kids of his own shows more concern for children than a parent of two children.
The reality is having children doesn't make you automatically fells empathy about them.
Saul: Let's kill Hank
@@JKBDTS Tbf that suggestion was predicated on the fact Walt has already done this before... It was 'method' that already worked for Walt in the past and Saul likely wouldn't have suggested anything like that back in Season 3(if a situation with Hank arose).
Saul got treated like this. Then turns around and takes the blame for everything in the end of Better Call Saul.
@@nirjhar4803 In 3x07 when Jesse was considering snitching on Walt, Saul told Walt that if he actually tries to snitch, they will probably have to do something. Walt looks at him confused and Saul goes away. That's probably not an accurate description of the scene, but Saul clearly implied m*rder. (Censored because TH-cam)
Watching this scene with context of what happened in the previous seasons, Phenomenal scene
...so you mean just watching the show the way it was supposed to be watched?
ajajajajja@@spatchko
@spatchk I feel like he's talking about BCS seasons, but it could be just wishful thinking
Man watching this scene, I mean the great thing about this show is there are ZERO loose ends that haven’t been tied up. The BCS, ElCamino, like every character had a start, and arc, and a conclusion.
I know people lose their minds a little bit over this show, but I’ve never seen anything that has better writing, acting, everything. Bummed as anyone else the Breaking Bad universe came to a close but you can’t deny all angles were covered lol.
Skyler, Flynn and Marie's characters weren't properly wrapped up
@@jellybabiesarecool4657every main character was tied up. Yeah they were technically main characters, but the story didn’t revolve around them. They weren’t relevant outside of the context of Walt. The only one I’d agree with is Skyler, she wasn’t really wrapped up when she probably deserved to be. Marie and Walt Jr were pretty much side characters tbh.
@@maxwell2162 but the thing is we literally got subplots revolving around Marie.
@@maxwell2162honestly if they ever decided to make another property it should be around skyler. Something present day, Post-Heisenberg
@@jellybabiesarecool4657 Marie got justice on Better Call Saul
I like how Walt doesnt realize that Saul is to law what Walt is to chemistry.
Even if Saul hadn’t gotten involved with Walt, he probably still would have had to go on the run sooner or later, given the nature of his work
Normally Saul's suits are super tacky but his suit and tie are absolutely on point here. In fact, this may be the most dapper he's ever looked. Pure 🔥
Do you think maybe that was done on purpose because this was the one time in the show he kinda tries to to the right thing and cut ties with walt?
@@BOBINDUN absolutely
Says the fashion setter, right?
yeah he looks cool here but i like his colourful suits as well
Just imagine he had a clean cut here too
"You're not Clarence Darrow, Saul" - underrated insult and honestly surprised that Walt knows who that is
When you think about it Saul has people that can and want to protect him, Walt doesnt
I find it both hilarious and so clever that saul is the only character who still wears the wayfarer 515 pin, at this point almost a year after it happened (he’s even got a book on aviation law on his desk lol). Reason being is that he definitely has multiple clients that were impacted by the crash and it’s a huge revenue stream for him
Saul didn't understand he was talking to the One who knocks
Until he’s coughing too much to knock…
Jesse was the one who knocked
That’s cause his home has a buzzer
0:20 Live Heisenberg reaction
Walt would never do this in front of Mike
You are right he killed him instead 😂😂
I can only imagine if Jesse told Mike why exactly he turned on Gus, and helped Walt kill him. If Jesse got to the specifics, I think Mike might remember that Lily of the Valley plant from Walter’s backyard, that is, if he noticed it before.
I’m sure Mike realized Walt manipulated Jesse into helping him, but he just didn’t know how.
@@jakandratchet9930yeah how cool would it have been if Mike found out that Walter poisoned Brock and that hè wanted to tell Jesse, but that Walter killed him before hè could tell Jesse!
@@Mr.Therizinosaurusthat would have been epic
Looking back at it all, this makes me wish Kim Wexler was around here to put Walt in his place.
Walt is powerless against blondes lol
That’d be a nice what if. In an alternate universe, Jimmy was the one to recognize that they’re evil together after D-Day and it’s him leaving Kim that sends her into becoming the counsel of WW and JP, however practicing law under the name of Giselle St. Claire
Nah, Walt will kill Kim, just like he killed Jane when opportunity struck.
@@R.E.M_69 Walt did not do that to Jane
@@JadeiteMcSwagThen how about Lydia in the final episode? If he can kill an overly cautious woman who take extra steps to avoid conflict, he can still do the same to Kim, that ricin is some powerful stuff.
2:55 moms reaching level 9567 on candy crush😂😂
This is my favorite Saul suit it looks so good on him
i find it hilarious how even though he is a corrupt lawyer, he has a sense of ethics
Ethics? I’m sorry, I must be hearing things. Did you actually just use the word ethics in a sentence?
This was the moment when Saul tried to end his and Walts business.
It’s really amazing to me how much this feels just like Better Call Saul, the continuation between the two shows is literally insane
A little fun fact, not sure if it was intentional, but Clarence Darrow, who Walt tells Saul he is not, famously represented Leopold and Loeb. Howard negatively compares Jimmy and Kim to them in his final scene
I really hope he wins that Emmy in January.
Such an underrated scene for Saul Goodman. It shows his code and limitations.
When Walt is scary like this, I wonder where he's taking it from. Maybe being a teacher he could use those situations "The class is over when I say it's over"
2:32 the camera angle when he stands up
When you dance with the devil, you'll dance until the very end of his tune.
Better Intimidate Saul
"So... you took it upon yourself to give away $622,000 of my money to a man who had been sleeping with my wife."
the delivery of that line is extraordinarily good
And sounds really badly out of context.
That's literally what every Skyler's hater says to go against her, even if, in context, she was doing the right thing.
@@cynicalipShe had no guarantee he would use that money to get the IRS off his back. And she also had no idea if Walt needed that money for something that would keep them alive
It was really not good for them to progress without Walt considering he earned every dollar of that. Really selfish of Sky to do it as if she changed up his bacon in the morning… which ya know did happen lmao
Cuckolding Justifications @@cynicalip
Walt tries to act like he's in control, but really if it weren't for Saul, he would've been nowhere.
Yes, but it was too late. At this point, Saul didnt have an off ramp.
It was nice to see that although Jimmy lost himself in the Saul Goodman persona, he still tried to cross the line.
Walt's face at 00:20 😂😂😂
Me when i bust
It's Lalo new🔥
Hit Saul with the Heisenberg stare
My honest reaction:
I want a compilation of scenes from Breaking Bad that feel like scenes from Better Call Saul. This is definitely one of them.
" I'm your huckleberry".. what a great reference to Tombstone.
Even Saul couldn’t sweet talk himself out of doing business with Walter 😂
Walt from Season 1 was a completely different person from Heisenberg in this scene
0:52 Walt’s expression gets me every time
Great scene, but can we just agree that the physics of Saul's chair at the end were like 👌.
"We're done when I say we're done"
Walt’s presence and body language in this scene is so great. He’s had his moments in the show where he went full “hardened sociopathic criminal” before this, but here is the first time it doesn’t feel like a show, or like a brief dip into it to get out of a situation, here is the first time it feels like “Yes, this is who I am now.” His completely still and calm demeanor and his emotionless stare is just perfect.
Saul was right, Walt wasn't even Fredo he was more like Sonny.
This is when Saul should have put out a hit on Walt. He knows a guy, who knows a guy.
Walt would have Saul killed in no time
Exactly he could easily but Walt had enormous plot armor.
Walt would end him + his gf Kim
@@muhammadeyssa23648 Walt only knows jacks gang and “two best hitman of missisipi”. Do you know many criminals Saul knew? Probably an army he just puts out a hit
Saul (in his mind): "Please not my legs"
"one leg, each???"
Walt thinks he’s gus, genuinely embarrassing 💀
So funny how quick it gets to his head 😂
When you pull off something like what Walt did nothing will scare you at that moment😂
Walt is better than Gus lil bro.
Didn't Walter kill Gus?
Walt literally outsmarted Gus and won bro, who is the embarrassing one here 😒
You'd think that with the type of clients Saul deals with, he would've been intimidated by one of them at least once before. But the difference between his regular clientele and Walt is that the petty criminals and street gang thugs suddenly find themselves at the mercy of the law where their skills are useless. They rely on Saul and wouldn't think to bite the hand that feeds them. But Walter is an intelligent guy who knows what table he's playing at. He genuinely may have been the first to try.
And then Walter and Saul made out
This is the moment Saul became Walt's dingleberry.
The cuts to poker face Walter are hilarious
0:20 Walt be like 🗿
1:21 One my favorite little details about this scene is that Saul has an “Aviation Law” book on his desk. I find it hilarious that in his free time he’s studying the FAR’s so he can get clients and money from the flight 37 crash pay outs 😭
I actually like how Walt isn’t even raising his voice here. Yet he comes across as Gus Lite
Fredo became Vito
1:00 “And you didn’t think to control my wife like I do?”
Fun fact: this is the last scene we see Walter with the bandage on his nose
woah
the beginning of this clip is so funny, "not to be misconstrued as an i told you so"
The only reason Walt didn't get clipped by someone was that he was the protagonist.
like saul really wanted to get out, he was just threatened by walt to stay him. so messed up made me cry
Thats so weird like he could have him killed
Imagine if Walt said, "Ethically? You're not Charles McGill" instead of Clarence Darrow. Since Chuck is one of the best lawyers in Alberqueque.
Watching this scene again after watching Better Call Saul makes this even more phenomenal then it already was.
After watching BCS I don't think Saul is as afraid of Walt as he is of losing what he created. Seeing how dangerous and more exposed the business is under Walt.
Saul: 😟
Walt:🗿
Walt was right with this one. Saul acting behind his back almost causes Walt entire family demise. You need to be ruthless in this game.
Exactly!
He really wasn’t. Dude disgusted even the scammer-lawyer with his actions
@@lancenwokeji6349 Except "scammer-lawyer" never presented an alternative to Walt's "wrong" actions. That's why it's impossible to take people like you seriously.
@@afonsodeportugal It was up to Walt to think of ways to get Jesse back on his side that didn't involve cruel manipulation or child endangerment. And Walt was the reason Jesse didn't want him around in the first place. Walt was the reason Walt had to do those wrong actions.
@@lancenwokeji6349 Wrong. Jesse was the one who led to the conflict between Walt and Gus. It was Jesse's confrontation with Gus's dealers that first caused the fracture. Then it escalated to the point they had to kill Gale in order to save themselves.
And no, it wasn't up to Walt to think of alternatives, because *there was no alternative* . Gus' mind was made, he was going to kill Walt no matter what. And Jesse was too out of Walt's reach to change his mind.
If you really think there was an alternative, then you have the onus to say what you would do instead. It's too easy to criticize Walt when you have no alternatives.
I swear to god man. It took 3 seasons to perform the ricin poisoning on a person.
Five, it took five.
The ricin had a longer character arc than Hank.
Brock was poisoned with Lily of the Valley, not ricin
The ricin was never used until the final episode
@@gabraltar7506 He had a small quantity of ricin, not enough to kill but enough to hospitalize him.
@@Fimuu No, he didn't. It was Lily of the Valley, not ricin!
Saul misdirects Walt by saying Huell’s hands are big and clumsy. He’s not going to snitch on his pickpocket
That’s Jimmy McGill talking not Saul
Damn if Saul would have showed the prosecution this video he would have went to 7 years to 3 years probation.
2:42 at this point you call Huell. He's not even going to be reasonably happy.
Walt took the word ethically to another whole new level. 😂
It’s hard to think Walt could be this intimidating in season 1
1:39 chuck McGill cameo in brba
That speech Saul almost went with at the end of the series to save his own hide, claiming that Walt made him do it all, was at least partially accurate. Jimmy chose his path long before he met Walter, but he really was coerced into much of what he did.
No, the point of that speech was that it was his choice to work for Heisenberg 98% of the time. This scene is likely part of the exceptional 2% in which he was coerced
@@lancenwokeji6349 Nah, after this scene, its 100% coercion. He tried to quit, Walt said no. He literally can't quit so after this scene it is not by choice.
@@MysteriousTomJenkins No. If he was given the choice maybe an episode or two later, he wouldn't quit because he saw the dollar signs. If he was wanting to quit that badly after this point, he would've said so during his testimony at the end of BCS. But he didn't.
Did that cigarette have the ricin in it?
Yep
No, it was just a cigarette and he was worried about Walt's lung cancer. Saul always looks out for his clients.
@@AntAir hahaha gold
No its a bubble gum cig
All that series was great/perfect/special.🤯
"Fine, but my percentage just went up 10 points."
He's not taking sides
Walt stands up: “Done? What’s done?”
Did slipping Jimmy just used the word ethically in a sentence?
"we're done when i say we're done"
2 seconds later: "okay, we're done 😁"
Walt become insufferable in season 5. He's just extremely lucky Gus underestimated him. and is taken out as soon as he does business with the wrong guy (Uncle Jack). He is a paper tiger, and yet he doesn't even know hes made of paper
Bryan Cranston's voice is so deep
If the voice actor of Optimus Prime wasn't available (idek if the man is alive) Cranston would make a great alternative
He would be dope as Optimus. I always imagine him being the english dub voice of Heihachi from the Tekken games as well.
This is the moment where Walter said we are done.
As Mike said "Just because you shot Jesse James, don't make you Jesse James!"
I feel bad for Saul he totally got played by Walt exactly like jesse. But tbh he deserved what happened to him later