You know what? I absolutely LOVED that as well. Cranston and the writers were *SO* dialed in to how Walt's scientific mind worked, you just KNOW that was precisely the way he'd have replied. Anything else would have been disingenuous.
It’s funny how little Walt is in Better Call Saul but every scene with him posits him as such an insufferable asswipe instead of the potential badass he could be most of the time.
Yeah. Walt and Jesse were kinda like Chuck and Jimmy. They tried so hard to get the other one's respect, but Chuck always saw his brother as Slippin Jimmy, and Walt saw Jesse as a junkie
I don't think it is slowly paced -- the thing about pacing is that it doesn't exist, it is purely subjective and often used in place of discussing other things I have a feeling people who criticize the show are just wanting to see Saul and don't actually care to meet the show at its level and thus they think it is "slow" because there is so much buildup and depth that much be traversed to get to Jimmy going full Goodman mode
14:25 Jimmy is a petty man and so much of his Saul Goodman persona was a snub at Chuck for looking down on him not always doing the right thing. But after Kim left it also became about disproving the “we’re bad for each other” line. Saul is constantly sinking himself lower and lower, in part, to prove that he is a worse monster without her. He cannot accept that the best relationship he ever had was bad for him. What ‘cures’ Saul was learning that Kim confessed. Suddenly, his motives are at odds with one another. However cynically, he had convinced her to do the right thing, and if he allowed himself, for once, to drop his resentment and do the right thing as well, then at least he would finally have some small comfort in knowing they had made each other better people and not worse.
There is a saying in my country: only the grave can straighten up the hunchback. Even thought BCS ended the way it ended, Jimmy will continue to be Saul Goodman there in prison. Something tells me he will keep on doing his shenanigans and schemes through others, and he will be Saul Goodman until he dies. After all, he s in America. He has the right to study, he has the right to practice a profession, he can teach others and give the Saul gene further. Some people have such a toxicity level, that the air is only cleaner only after they physically disappear from the face of the Earth. Jimmy is one of them.
That's an interesting take; I never thought about it that way but it makes a lot of sense! I had perceived it that losing Kim made him completely cynical and he decided to just live for money because love and respect would never be his.
Saul and Walter grew up without Validation. And spent the rest of their life compensating to achieve it. Personal Validation is the 5th element - as important as the others. Without it we die. It can be derived internally or externally. Externally: by the acquisition of love, celebrity or domination If man reaches for external sources of validation, it is never enough. He will have to increase his acquisition of it with ever increasing scope and tempo.
It was pretty interesting to see Walt again in Saul Gone. For the entirety of Breaking Bad, a part of me was rooting for him, even though I understood that he'd become a bad and selfish person, he still felt like a close friend. But in Saul Gone he was shown from a perspective outside of himself and it was only then that I truely understood how rotten he'd become. I guess its always easier to justify your own behaviours than others.
That "One. All I need is one" line was so goddamn cold. One of the hardest hitting lines in either BCS or BB, you can really tell he doesn't care and just wants to be on top, even when going to prison.
@@That0therGeorge Exemplary artists often do. And I have to reinforce that your video analysis here is SPOT-ON. It's really incredible to see more and more people catching all of the nuances in legendarily expert-level storytelling. As another example, we could consider a film like "Blade Runner 2049"; there's *SO* much to detect, and yet in most cases... I'd easily argue that 96% or more of any viewer, reader or whatever will NEVER detect more than the "iceberg's tip". :) Seriously. WELL DONE. And just for reference, my background is 30+ years in production (acting, directing, writing, sound design, video editing, fight choreography, V.O., etc.). Nothing via Hollywon't nor Didnay nor the "richy rich" folks, but let me tell ya... I'm glad for that six ways to Suunsday, son. ;)
That was a threat though.. He’s saying that only one juror has to believe him for him to win the trial, which backs them into the corner of the plea deal because he’s so good at manipulating others
I always found it very artistic that right after the scene where he says, "I'll do everything in my power to be worthy of the name 'McGill,'" he ends up changing his practicing name to 'Saul Goodman.'
El Camino doesn't get enough love and some fans even dislike it. It's sad. I always trusted the writers to get this stuff right and they consistently blew me away. And they found amazing talent like Michael Mando and Tony Dalton to play pivotal roles and played to those performers' strengths and factored them into the story. This is how you DO a "cinematic universe". It's a shame more studios don't encourage this kind of approach because it results in amazing storytelling.
It's not terrible but it feels unfocused, sadistic (the torture scenes and cleaning lady's death felt a bit cartoonish imo), and a little contrived at times (mainly looking at that end duel, which, while I'm mostly fine with, did feel a little too much like "Look it's a Western!"). Still overall enjoyable tho, no hate, just my take.
@@The_Left-Hand_PathEl Camino came before point and shoot but the twist of texas standoff motif with the main antagonist being defeated with a cleverly planted hidden gun (or bomb) did get tired imo. it felt kinda uninspired when Jesse did it, essentially repeating the same way Walt killed Gus, but Lalo's death suffered the most from this.
@@The_Left-Hand_PathSorry if this comes off like an interrogation, but just out of friendly curiosity, why would you say El Camino was unfocused, the torture scenes and cleaning lady scenes were cartoonish, or that the ending shootout was contrived? The last of those points, I’ll honestly admit is one I’ve struggled with in the past, but your point about the torture scenes and the cleaning lady scene being “Cartoonish” is actually rather interesting. I’ve never thought of that before tbh, so I am curious.
The Breaking Bad writes watch Theon Greyjoy arch in GOT and decided make El Camino. Todd is fat, Walter is Megamind, but El Camino is about giving the final answers about Jessie, because I'm BB the end is all about Walter. Sorry my bad english fellas
I truly LOVE BCS better than breaking bad. Only because they have so much depth to each character. Even answering questions that we had when breaking bad ended. It’s a prequel and it truly shows in the detail and I really appreciate it.
Marie's character was meant to challenge how petty the men look when they lie and steal. She is just like Saul in the way that she needs to be grandiose and narcissistic. But imagine you nurse a loved one back to health after a horrific cartel attack. All the money, all the arguments over caregiving, all the pain you watch them go through, just for a con-man like Saul to rip him away. She had a right to be in the finale, I wish Anna Gunn had been treated better since Skylar and Saul do interact in breaking bad. I wish she felt safer to return.
I think Marie's stealing arc is as a subplot character to Walter. That's a stylistic device to better expose someone's character. She also commits crime. She also harms Skyler with it. She also gaslights Skyler about it. But when finally push comes to shove, she apologizes. A genuine apology. She doesn't repeat harming Skyler. The same way that Cliff is a subplot character to Chuck: Also leading a highly competitive law firm, but instead of not hiring and trusting Jimmy, he does. In no way whatsoever does Cliff do anything bad to Jimmy. He gives him a chance, almost anything he asks for. And is punished by jimmy's instincts for it.
@@Socragames I like your thoughts! I agree. Marie is just a bit grandiose and self centered but she loves her sister. It’s such a shame when the events unfold and she is torn between honoring her husband or staying loyal to her sister who was involved in the escalation.
Better Call Saul will forever be my favorite drama not only because I always loved the character of Saul Goodman in Breaking Bad because of how impressive it is as a prequel, stand alone show and drama. It truly is peak fiction and I am proud to call it my favorite television show of all time!
That's an interesting take; I never thought about it that way but it makes a lot of sense! I had perceived it that losing Kim made him completely cynical and he decided to just live for money because love and respect would never be his.
The Better Call Saul stomp is one of the best moments in televisual entertainment. You have all of these men who have men shat on by the system, men who look eerily similar to others Saul helped keep out of jail, celebrating the fact that he fought harder for men like them than anyone else ever did. Every man who has done time has wanted to have a Saul Goodman in his corner.
I like to imagine that while in prison Saul helped the other inmates with their cases and might have even released a lot of innocent people who were taken advantage of. Reminds me of the insane lawyer who tried to take over the US lol
i used to think he just took the money because his dad was just gonna end up giving it all away to scammers and chuck just always saw what jimmy did in a negative way
23:42 - FUN FACT: The ironic music cue as a film making technique was first used by John Carpenter in Halloween 2. Specifically, when the song "Mr. Sandman" by the Chordettes is played over Michael Meyers stalking Laurie through a hospital.
@@That0therGeorge It's fascinating to think that for the first 50 years of audible movies (talkies as they originally called them), the music was always 100% sincere in its intention. Because why wouldn't it be? It seems so obvious to us now but imagine being the first person to go, "Hey, how about instead of scary music over a scary scene, we play HAPPY music?!" "...Are you high?"
while certainly a fun fact, it is by no means the earliest use of an ironic music que. "We'll meet again" in Dr Strangelove (1964). not quite a non-diegetic que, but Danse Macabre in The Rules of the Game (1939). even silent movies like Gold Rush uses music ironically too romantic for the slapstick comedy that Chaplin portrays all the way in 1925. those are just a few very very well known film i could think of right of my head.
The "we had a good thing" speech that Mike makes isn't really 100% accurate. Walt couldn't actually keep his head down and cook, because JESSIE screwed up. Walt wanted to color in the lines for a bit, but then Jessie fucked up when he wanted to get revenge for combo. Even before that when Jessie lead Hank to the RV. After the whole situation with Jessie wanting to kill the dealers who corrupted that child, Gus was aiming to kill and replace Walt. There was no "keeping his head down and cooking" after he had to save Jessie from getting himself killed. After that everything spiraled because Gus wanted to replace Walt with Gale, then after Gale he wanted to replace Walt with Jessie. So was Walt supposed to just let Gus kill him? Walt isn't blameless but Mike saying he could've just cooked and relaxed is bs.
Yeah, it's kinda easy to blame Walt while Jesse and even Gus play their parts of Gus Fring empire destruction since Gus would killed him one way or another anyway, and he did even stated that with The Cousins.
The 3 flashback scenes in this episode were all so absolutely perfect. All echoing the theme of regret (and the avoidance of recognising it)- all perfectly encapsulating the characters shown and the relationship between them. All perfect moments with regards to previous events we have seen, and expanding upon them. This series alone was a real journey for 7 years, and the tears just streamed when it ended.
45:01 One thing that always makes me think about how much of the connections to BB are made up as they go is the character of Dan Wormald aka Pryce. He was supposed to be the "Danny" who runs the Lasertag which Saul keeps trying to make Walt use for his money laundering. So, not unlike Nacho and Lalo, it's a fun character who was created exclusively from just a couple of mentions in Breaking Bad, and indeed in episode commentary for BCS the creators mention multiple times how Dan could represent a connection to the original show in future episodes... but by the end they didn't do anything with it and it became just an interesting bit of trivia.
Yeah I think it just depends on how relevant said character can be to the current story. Nacho was pretty important throughout the whole series and Lalo was extremely important in those latter 3 seasons. However, I do still appreciate the smaller details like the "Danny" one that you mentioned.
I wish you were a much bigger and more popular creator. The care and creativity you put into every video of yours is amazing. I really hope this video especially blows up, though I do feel this way about all your videos
That's extremely kind of you to say, thank you. Thing is I do simply enjoy making these projects, how they perform in terms of views is more so a bonus for me. But I appreciate the kind words regardless.
Gotta say. The editing of the specific clips you used when you said specific things like the "he's climbed a lot since" and showing him climbing the ladder, and other shots like that are great. Im always fascinated by the ability to single out just the right clip for the context of what you're talking about.
Having the exit sign appear as soon as Saul or Mcgill at the time saying Chuck truly was a good lawyer is such a nice detail and hearing the faint noise that always appeared whenever Chuck arrived.
Notice that when Saul is talking about time travel he's told to "stay in his lane". When he returned to "his lane" and talked about the lost opportunity of suing Gretchen and Elliot, that still wasn't good enough.
The greatest missed opportunity in the whole of BCS - Irene should have been in the courtroom when Saul's burning himself to the ground. She would have turned to the person next to her and ask, "Is this how these usually go?"
"Walter may have done some awful things" **Him saying "I watched Jane die" is mouthed on screen** Dude my biggest props to you for this video is the editing. I LOVE just seeing the characters describe past events and you edited it to show what they're referencing for some reason haha.
He barely mentions it, but Mike clearly feels some guilt and shares in Jimmys regrets about Chucks death. Mike contributed to uprooting Chucks life on Jimmys orders.
As you stated in the video some people don't like how BCS is slow paced compared to BB, don't get me wrong i think both story telling types have their own merits but I think the reason my love for BCS is exactly that. As i have just finished watching the final episode a few days ago (my second binge but where i actually watched the final episode) i have come to appreciate how beautifully crafted BCS is through the slower pacing; where it therefore enables more fletched out characters, more focus on symbolism, music, and especially the calm inbetween the chaos. I love both shows and all the action they inherit but i tend to appreciate all the inaction aswell where there can be more focus on the cinematography and world-building. (Also Kim is the best character ❤)
Bloody OUTSTANDING analysis. Absolutely bang-on, dead-to-rights catching every detail. Great work. I mean, yes, we all know that Gilligan's work (and his team's efforts) over the decades has been brilliant. But these kinds of in-depth analyses are truly awesome to find. :) Reminds me of when people REALLY look closely at "Blade Runner 2049", or even things as far back as "Traffic", or "Inside Man". When exemplary work is on the docket, there's almost no end to the hidden underpinnings, golden but gloriously shrouded nuances, and powerful thematic underpinnings.
@@That0therGeorge All good. And hey, if you're ever interested in more exemplary work which does indeed emphasize dramatic structure, powerful character arcs, deep thematic underpinnings, relevant world-building, and far more, give DD1-4 a shot... 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ "Before I start, I must see my end. Destination known, my mind's journey now begins. Upon my chariot, heart and soul's fate revealed. In time, all points converge; hope's strength, resteeled. But to earn final peace at the universe's endless refrain, we must see all in nothingness... before we start again." 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ --Diamond Dragons (series)
When I watched the scene of Mike advising Saul to not associate with Walk something click for me, one, hes stubborn, second, I belive Saul saw in Walt his possible fall down, as amature likely to get arrested and not verse in the criminal world of silence or get silenced he would eventually not by "his own" mouth get arrested, stopping his spree of "getting away with", Saul is the psychological of Jimmy, hence not evil but a part of his personallity that's been represed by Jimmy's action, low self-steem and ego. Thus, the shadow is pushing towards unity, so by taking accountability as the Saul persona, Saul and Jimmy unify an inner peace is achieved, that's why I think he lets go, accepts his fate and reconciliates why himself. Yes, a lot of people is hurt in this individual process, that's why I believe this is the most clear example of the pain we cause others by not accepting ourselves and the ugliness that is us. Amazing video bro :D
It’s so satisfying to see it pointed out that Walt was truly a blowfish all along. Just like in every other aspect of his life, he was incapable and below average. Watching how his ego inflates his contributions to Gray Matter each time that talks about it and how Gretchen was left dumbfounded by his delusional perceptions of how he left the company, I think it’s a safe bet that Elliot may have been responsible for ninety percent of the “discoveries”, while Walt’s assistance provided the other ten percent. Gretchen was the one who bank-rolled the startup, and Walt was the one tagging along because he was dating Gretchen, and friends with Elliot. And if the elements-of-a-human discussion from season one is anything to go by, it’s a safe bet that Walt wasn’t exactly the type of guy that you want inside you at the end of the day. He ended up in a below average career because he was below average. If he stayed at Gray Matter, his egotistical and alienating behavior would have driven away the massive network of genius chemists they’d need to hire. Imagine Walt being surrounded by hundreds of folks who are his intellectual equals?
The song at the end of face off actually isnt really cheerfull and positive. Some lyrics are, "Until you travel to that place you can't come back" and "Looking up at no stars in the sky, those white clouds have turned it black" implying that walt has done something that is so dark and despicable and that he has crossed a line that he cannot go back from.
True, but he also could've stayed and faced the music. If he walked in with his head held high, he would've be the John Dillinger of the Metropolitan Detention Center.
I feel like the slow phase increase the effectiveness of the show so much Walter was a sloppy criminal that’s why breaking bad was fast because Walter’s life spun out of control fast. Saul is smooth and calculated he is skilled at the craft of committing crimes and knows how to do things where he doesn’t get caught. So he’s slow and calculated unlike Walter who commits crimes without much thought and out of recklessness.
The connection with Chuck and Walt, both people with bad health conditions making choices that negatively effect people around them. Saul to me was looking to redeem what happen to chuck but in that time travel question when he is being threatened and walt started coughing. "It's over." I think he realized that just like with his brother he's relationship with Walt was over before it even started. They also had both the exact same view on him. He and walt are also poplar opposites of each other, Saul being good accepting his sins and Walt breaking bad. Kinda like Kendrick's album "DAMN" the order you watch the the series in picks weather they're gonna Live or Die.
Jessie represents in DAMN being forced into the situation and having no choice, in the end he was finally able to choose the life he wanted to live and got another shot at life.
In the flashback scene with Chuck, I think that maybe, for just a moment, Chuck felt shame for what he’s done to his brother, and maybe if Jimmy could’ve stuck around, things might’ve gone differently.
Funny enough, whilst I was editing that section, I did watch a video from a real lawyer on TH-cam who broke down that scene. He said that he has seen *somewhat* similar scenarios like it, but that it NEVER looks good on the lawyer as they seem involved in the case itself. Regardless, I really the scene in the context of the series.
I don’t feel that Saul (Jimmy) would have ever admitted to his crimes unless it fit the circumstances of how he lived his entire life. As the underdog, sticking it to the man and as a hopeless romantic convincing Kim that they’re on the same team. He wanted to be prosecuted as a CRIMINAL not a lawyer because he switches between the two however it suits him best at the moment.
30:19 "If you abuse that power, people get hurt!" => a store robber walks off scot free by way of Saul's parlor trick. Was Jimmy so fast to forget that his dad was a humble store owner as well?
3:45 But unlike Walt Mike meant it. For all the horrible things Mike did he actually wanted to provide for Stacy and Kaylee whereas Walt just wanted money, power and to be feared and used Skyler, Jr and Holly as an excuse.
Mike is absolutely more genuine, but I don't feel like he needed more than 2 million dollars for them to be supported. I believe there are two sides to Mike and one of those sides simply enjoyed working for Gus.
I believe there was a point where Walt was doing it for his family. But i think that reasoning expired fairly quickly into him learning to love the game
Probably the final show we need in the Breaking Bad Universe that we sadly won't likely get due to Robert Forester's death is a prequel series of a younger Ed The Disappearer establishing his disappearing business over the course of several years even before the events of Better Call Saul.
As an aside, Mike's ultimate rant sucked because it was a retcon. Walt changed dramatically after he killed Fring- going into Series 5. You could justify it because it was a big achievement, and now Walt was running the shop, but they then shift the focus onto Mike as having the moral high ground, when he never did. He's a hypocrite. Mike literally dragged Walt down to the laundry to kill him under Gus' orders; Mike also turned a blind eye completely to the kid that was killed (also arguably under Gus' orders), but somehow Walt is the moral vaccuum responsible for all the problems? Both Walt and Jesse also don't seem to bring up at all how Mike bats for Jesse now despite how much trouble Walt caused trying to save him, and Mike never mentions Jesse and his problem-causing in his rants either. It's almost like they put the series on fast-forward because they had to conclude with series 5, so they just made Walt into a psychopath outright from there on out and needed someone with some semblence of sanity and morality to contrast him. I love that final scene with Mike, it's so tragically perfect, but the rant is absolutely full of shit.
Imagine The Gunny rolling into town in his modified cement truck or his bean-van to pick up Jimmy and seeing the whole town swarming with cop cars, black SUVs and low flying helicopters. “Just pick me up this dumpster. Here’s some diamonds.”
Great video though there is one thing that you forgot to address and that is in the scene with Walter and Jimmy talking about regrets. Walter was looking at the watch that Jesse gave him in Breaking Bad season 5. But then he lies and says Grey Matter is his biggest regret. Showing that both are lying about their regrets.
18:16 I think it could be interpreted as money but I don’t think money is even the smallest bit of Walter’s problem I think he only wants the fame and attention for being successful. I think you kind of mentioned this but just wanted to expand with my opinion
20:00 i get Mikes rant referenced so often... and i am not really behind it. It only went south because Gus used Kids AND wanted to kill Jesse. At one point when stuff was settled Walter had to take actions to save his partners life. Even before that to get him in. I refuse blaming it on Walter alone. Also the scene with regret seemed a bit too shallow for Walter and felt out of character. In BB he himself went over the idea when he had to stop, regretting, and came up with the moment he watched that African Documentary.
"Fact is, Walter White couldn't have done it without me."
We know he's faking it
Legendary line
Saul: Walt! You sussy Baka.
Fact is, Walter couldn’t have gotten white if he was away with it
Fact is, Saul Goodman Couldn't have done it without me!
By : Mike Ehrmantraut
Walt getting so worked up over the mechanics of the time machine instead of engaging with Saul's thought experiment is so in character.
Absolutely. There was also a lot of added stress at that time.
You know what? I absolutely LOVED that as well. Cranston and the writers were *SO* dialed in to how Walt's scientific mind worked, you just KNOW that was precisely the way he'd have replied. Anything else would have been disingenuous.
It’s funny how little Walt is in Better Call Saul but every scene with him posits him as such an insufferable asswipe instead of the potential badass he could be most of the time.
@@Novastar.SaberCombat this was also right after ozymandia's Walt is not in the mood for his shit.
So is sauls, he only thought of money
My theory on why Saul wanted to connect with Walt so much is because he reminds him of Chuck
simple fact; it was about money
Yup, even Bob Odenkirk confirms about it.
Yeah. Walt and Jesse were kinda like Chuck and Jimmy. They tried so hard to get the other one's respect, but Chuck always saw his brother as Slippin Jimmy, and Walt saw Jesse as a junkie
@@bajorekjon if you watch the saul recapp youll see it was all about money thrills
And Lalo. Walter is Chuck and Lalo combined.
The slow pace makes the story feel more realistic.
Agreed.
I don't think it is slowly paced -- the thing about pacing is that it doesn't exist, it is purely subjective and often used in place of discussing other things
I have a feeling people who criticize the show are just wanting to see Saul and don't actually care to meet the show at its level and thus they think it is "slow" because there is so much buildup and depth that much be traversed to get to Jimmy going full Goodman mode
@@AstralBelt Well, most people would consider it slow because they are used to movies and video games. I meant it as a compliment.
@@AstralBeltpacing exist, you measure them by the amount of plot progress within a certain amount of time
I rewatched BCS and I was never bored! I really prefer it over BrBa 😂
If I were Saul, my answer to the back in time icebreaker would be to stop myself from doing the Chicago sunroof.
But then he wouldn't have met Kim. It makes more sense that he chose his missed opportunity to make peace with his brother.
"If I were " has got to be the most pointless hypothetical. If you were you would do exactly what did because you wouldn't be you, you would be .
@@real.sugarconeYou sound like Walt when he responded to the “Time-Machine-Question”.
(I see your point, but still)
@@Gioveggie it was at that moment that sugarcone became heisenberg
@@real.sugarconeobviously it means if you were controlling the character like a video game.
14:25 Jimmy is a petty man and so much of his Saul Goodman persona was a snub at Chuck for looking down on him not always doing the right thing. But after Kim left it also became about disproving the “we’re bad for each other” line. Saul is constantly sinking himself lower and lower, in part, to prove that he is a worse monster without her. He cannot accept that the best relationship he ever had was bad for him.
What ‘cures’ Saul was learning that Kim confessed. Suddenly, his motives are at odds with one another. However cynically, he had convinced her to do the right thing, and if he allowed himself, for once, to drop his resentment and do the right thing as well, then at least he would finally have some small comfort in knowing they had made each other better people and not worse.
This is a good take.
There is a saying in my country: only the grave can straighten up the hunchback. Even thought BCS ended the way it ended, Jimmy will continue to be Saul Goodman there in prison. Something tells me he will keep on doing his shenanigans and schemes through others, and he will be Saul Goodman until he dies. After all, he s in America. He has the right to study, he has the right to practice a profession, he can teach others and give the Saul gene further. Some people have such a toxicity level, that the air is only cleaner only after they physically disappear from the face of the Earth. Jimmy is one of them.
That's an interesting take; I never thought about it that way but it makes a lot of sense! I had perceived it that losing Kim made him completely cynical and he decided to just live for money because love and respect would never be his.
Saul and Walter grew up without Validation. And spent the rest of their life compensating to achieve it. Personal Validation is the 5th element - as important as the others. Without it we die. It can be derived internally or externally.
Externally: by the acquisition of love, celebrity or domination
If man reaches for external sources of validation, it is never enough. He will have to increase his acquisition of it with ever increasing scope and tempo.
It was pretty interesting to see Walt again in Saul Gone. For the entirety of Breaking Bad, a part of me was rooting for him, even though I understood that he'd become a bad and selfish person, he still felt like a close friend. But in Saul Gone he was shown from a perspective outside of himself and it was only then that I truely understood how rotten he'd become. I guess its always easier to justify your own behaviours than others.
I think most people relate to that. Ultimately, he is the protagonist in 'Breaking Bad'. But protagonist ≠ good person in that specific case.
That "One. All I need is one" line was so goddamn cold. One of the hardest hitting lines in either BCS or BB, you can really tell he doesn't care and just wants to be on top, even when going to prison.
Yeah, Bob nailed the delivery of that line.
@@That0therGeorge Exemplary artists often do. And I have to reinforce that your video analysis here is SPOT-ON. It's really incredible to see more and more people catching all of the nuances in legendarily expert-level storytelling. As another example, we could consider a film like "Blade Runner 2049"; there's *SO* much to detect, and yet in most cases... I'd easily argue that 96% or more of any viewer, reader or whatever will NEVER detect more than the "iceberg's tip". :)
Seriously. WELL DONE. And just for reference, my background is 30+ years in production (acting, directing, writing, sound design, video editing, fight choreography, V.O., etc.). Nothing via Hollywon't nor Didnay nor the "richy rich" folks, but let me tell ya... I'm glad for that six ways to Suunsday, son. ;)
he was so done with feelings lol
That was a threat though..
He’s saying that only one juror has to believe him for him to win the trial, which backs them into the corner of the plea deal because he’s so good at manipulating others
@@riplix20 Yea, that's what I'm saying. It's an ice cold threat. Absolutely no morals, he just wants to be on top.
I always found it very artistic that right after the scene where he says, "I'll do everything in my power to be worthy of the name 'McGill,'" he ends up changing his practicing name to 'Saul Goodman.'
Bob is such a fantastic actor that he can act within his acting really effectively.
@@That0therGeorge I wouldn't have realized it if you hadn't post your analysis; you did a great job on the video essay.
@@Veckoza Thank you! I'm really happy to hear that.
El Camino doesn't get enough love and some fans even dislike it. It's sad. I always trusted the writers to get this stuff right and they consistently blew me away. And they found amazing talent like Michael Mando and Tony Dalton to play pivotal roles and played to those performers' strengths and factored them into the story. This is how you DO a "cinematic universe". It's a shame more studios don't encourage this kind of approach because it results in amazing storytelling.
It's not terrible but it feels unfocused, sadistic (the torture scenes and cleaning lady's death felt a bit cartoonish imo), and a little contrived at times (mainly looking at that end duel, which, while I'm mostly fine with, did feel a little too much like "Look it's a Western!"). Still overall enjoyable tho, no hate, just my take.
@@The_Left-Hand_PathEl Camino came before point and shoot but the twist of texas standoff motif with the main antagonist being defeated with a cleverly planted hidden gun (or bomb) did get tired imo. it felt kinda uninspired when Jesse did it, essentially repeating the same way Walt killed Gus, but Lalo's death suffered the most from this.
@@The_Left-Hand_PathSorry if this comes off like an interrogation, but just out of friendly curiosity, why would you say El Camino was unfocused, the torture scenes and cleaning lady scenes were cartoonish, or that the ending shootout was contrived? The last of those points, I’ll honestly admit is one I’ve struggled with in the past, but your point about the torture scenes and the cleaning lady scene being “Cartoonish” is actually rather interesting. I’ve never thought of that before tbh, so I am curious.
@@luaugod420 To be fair Gus' OCD makes it much more likely he'd leave a gun hidden in random areas
The Breaking Bad writes watch Theon Greyjoy arch in GOT and decided make El Camino.
Todd is fat, Walter is Megamind, but El Camino is about giving the final answers about Jessie, because I'm BB the end is all about Walter.
Sorry my bad english fellas
I truly LOVE BCS better than breaking bad. Only because they have so much depth to each character. Even answering questions that we had when breaking bad ended. It’s a prequel and it truly shows in the detail and I really appreciate it.
Oh yes, it's a perfect prequel in every way.
Marie's character was meant to challenge how petty the men look when they lie and steal. She is just like Saul in the way that she needs to be grandiose and narcissistic. But imagine you nurse a loved one back to health after a horrific cartel attack. All the money, all the arguments over caregiving, all the pain you watch them go through, just for a con-man like Saul to rip him away. She had a right to be in the finale, I wish Anna Gunn had been treated better since Skylar and Saul do interact in breaking bad. I wish she felt safer to return.
damn shame really, always felt strange that we didn’t see her in court with Marie at the end
@@jengbiffIt wasn't strange to me at all. Marie lost her husband because of Saul's conspiracy with Skyler's husband.
I think Marie's stealing arc is as a subplot character to Walter. That's a stylistic device to better expose someone's character. She also commits crime. She also harms Skyler with it. She also gaslights Skyler about it. But when finally push comes to shove, she apologizes. A genuine apology. She doesn't repeat harming Skyler. The same way that Cliff is a subplot character to Chuck: Also leading a highly competitive law firm, but instead of not hiring and trusting Jimmy, he does. In no way whatsoever does Cliff do anything bad to Jimmy. He gives him a chance, almost anything he asks for. And is punished by jimmy's instincts for it.
@@denisesudell2538 Not to mentions Skylar being just as guilty as Saul at that point, makes sense she wouldn't be there.
@@Socragames I like your thoughts! I agree. Marie is just a bit grandiose and self centered but she loves her sister. It’s such a shame when the events unfold and she is torn between honoring her husband or staying loyal to her sister who was involved in the escalation.
Saul is probably giving legal advice to his fellows inmates.
That wouldn't surprise me.
For a price
The editing is really good in this. The way you match up the footage to what you’re saying is very satisfying
Thank you! The editing process can take a long time, but I think it's worth it.
Better Call Saul will forever be my favorite drama not only because I always loved the character of Saul Goodman in Breaking Bad because of how impressive it is as a prequel, stand alone show and drama. It truly is peak fiction and I am proud to call it my favorite television show of all time!
Same, it checks all the boxes.
That's an interesting take; I never thought about it that way but it makes a lot of sense! I had perceived it that losing Kim made him completely cynical and he decided to just live for money because love and respect would never be his.
The way he pronounces "and i made millions" is one of the best acting I've seen.
Oh yeah, it is a brilliant emphasis on the "millions".
9:46 Saul: "He offered me money. I declined. Any lawyer would"
Saul, at the time: "I don't take bribes from strangers; it was kinda low anyway!"
Yeah it is amazing how many lies he told in that scene.
@@That0therGeorgeand Marie knows it was a lie since She is also has a Criminal mind just like Saul.
6:15 “this is my own private domicile and I will not be harassed”
we could’ve had 2 more seasons
The Better Call Saul stomp is one of the best moments in televisual entertainment. You have all of these men who have men shat on by the system, men who look eerily similar to others Saul helped keep out of jail, celebrating the fact that he fought harder for men like them than anyone else ever did. Every man who has done time has wanted to have a Saul Goodman in his corner.
BCS really blew me away. As a long time Breaking Bad fan I think Sauls story has overtaken it as my favourite. Fantastic writing amd performances
I love both as well, but prefer Saul slightly more.
I like to imagine that while in prison Saul helped the other inmates with their cases and might have even released a lot of innocent people who were taken advantage of. Reminds me of the insane lawyer who tried to take over the US lol
I think that is very likely the case.
28:44 I've always wondered if Chuck knew his dad kept falling for the sob stories of con men even before Jimmy started stealing from the till.
That's a good point. I'd imagine so because Chuck has always been able to see how things really are in those sorts of situations.
@@That0therGeorgeI'm not so sure. I think Chuck's perspective was skewed because of his bitterness toward Jimmy.
@@That0therGeorgell
i used to think he just took the money because his dad was just gonna end up giving it all away to scammers and chuck just always saw what jimmy did in a negative way
No hw didn't, he blamed Jimmy for his father's store failure, he tells this to Kim and says something similar in his "I'm not crazy" monologue.
Walt definitely should have treated Saul better. Shit , listen to Saul sometimes
Yeah, Saul often had great advice and could've kept him in check.
You’d be asking too much from Walt 😂 the guy was simply incapable of treaing anyone right.
23:42 - FUN FACT: The ironic music cue as a film making technique was first used by John Carpenter in Halloween 2. Specifically, when the song "Mr. Sandman" by the Chordettes is played over Michael Meyers stalking Laurie through a hospital.
That is a good fun fact.
@@That0therGeorge It's fascinating to think that for the first 50 years of audible movies (talkies as they originally called them), the music was always 100% sincere in its intention. Because why wouldn't it be?
It seems so obvious to us now but imagine being the first person to go, "Hey, how about instead of scary music over a scary scene, we play HAPPY music?!"
"...Are you high?"
I didn’t need another reason to think John Carpenter is the greatest director of all time my friend…. But thanks anyway.
while certainly a fun fact, it is by no means the earliest use of an ironic music que. "We'll meet again" in Dr Strangelove (1964). not quite a non-diegetic que, but Danse Macabre in The Rules of the Game (1939). even silent movies like Gold Rush uses music ironically too romantic for the slapstick comedy that Chaplin portrays all the way in 1925. those are just a few very very well known film i could think of right of my head.
The "we had a good thing" speech that Mike makes isn't really 100% accurate. Walt couldn't actually keep his head down and cook, because JESSIE screwed up. Walt wanted to color in the lines for a bit, but then Jessie fucked up when he wanted to get revenge for combo. Even before that when Jessie lead Hank to the RV. After the whole situation with Jessie wanting to kill the dealers who corrupted that child, Gus was aiming to kill and replace Walt. There was no "keeping his head down and cooking" after he had to save Jessie from getting himself killed. After that everything spiraled because Gus wanted to replace Walt with Gale, then after Gale he wanted to replace Walt with Jessie. So was Walt supposed to just let Gus kill him? Walt isn't blameless but Mike saying he could've just cooked and relaxed is bs.
Yeah, it's kinda easy to blame Walt while Jesse and even Gus play their parts of Gus Fring empire destruction since Gus would killed him one way or another anyway, and he did even stated that with The Cousins.
The 3 flashback scenes in this episode were all so absolutely perfect. All echoing the theme of regret (and the avoidance of recognising it)- all perfectly encapsulating the characters shown and the relationship between them. All perfect moments with regards to previous events we have seen, and expanding upon them.
This series alone was a real journey for 7 years, and the tears just streamed when it ended.
Absolutely agreed. I feel the finale largely being a look back through both series was a good call.
"It'saul goodman!" 😁
"It'saul gone..." 😐😢😭
45:01 One thing that always makes me think about how much of the connections to BB are made up as they go is the character of Dan Wormald aka Pryce. He was supposed to be the "Danny" who runs the Lasertag which Saul keeps trying to make Walt use for his money laundering. So, not unlike Nacho and Lalo, it's a fun character who was created exclusively from just a couple of mentions in Breaking Bad, and indeed in episode commentary for BCS the creators mention multiple times how Dan could represent a connection to the original show in future episodes... but by the end they didn't do anything with it and it became just an interesting bit of trivia.
Yeah I think it just depends on how relevant said character can be to the current story. Nacho was pretty important throughout the whole series and Lalo was extremely important in those latter 3 seasons. However, I do still appreciate the smaller details like the "Danny" one that you mentioned.
This was truly the moment it was s'all gone man
I wish you were a much bigger and more popular creator. The care and creativity you put into every video of yours is amazing. I really hope this video especially blows up, though I do feel this way about all your videos
That's extremely kind of you to say, thank you.
Thing is I do simply enjoy making these projects, how they perform in terms of views is more so a bonus for me. But I appreciate the kind words regardless.
TH-camrs are almost as bad as journalists.
Perfect show and a perfect finale. Great video :)
It is indeed. Thank you!
this video is a MASTERPIECE!!!!! ur absolutely goin places
That is extremely kind of you to say. Thank you!
Gotta say. The editing of the specific clips you used when you said specific things like the "he's climbed a lot since" and showing him climbing the ladder, and other shots like that are great. Im always fascinated by the ability to single out just the right clip for the context of what you're talking about.
And the “analyzing writing” part… and it’s Jimmy editing / copying the letters. Perfect
Thank you both! I'm really glad you enjoyed the visual editing.
Having the exit sign appear as soon as Saul or Mcgill at the time saying Chuck truly was a good lawyer is such a nice detail and hearing the faint noise that always appeared whenever Chuck arrived.
Yeah, Peter Gould did an excellent job with all the callbacks in the finale.
Notice that when Saul is talking about time travel he's told to "stay in his lane". When he returned to "his lane" and talked about the lost opportunity of suing Gretchen and Elliot, that still wasn't good enough.
That's Walt alright. Never saying what he means.
This episode hit different. I don’t know why but it feels so surreal.
For me, it feels like so many things in one. It feels like the ultimate conclusion to both series and then some.
saul: *pours piss out of a bottle*
george: already fantastic writing
My analysis could've ended there.
The greatest missed opportunity in the whole of BCS - Irene should have been in the courtroom when Saul's burning himself to the ground. She would have turned to the person next to her and ask, "Is this how these usually go?"
That would've been superb.
I just really love the poetry of
Its all good man --- Saul Goodman --- Its all gone --- Saul Gone
Yeah, it is a really good through line.
Saul Goodman’s arc is what Tyrion Lannister should have been in the tv show.
When people let myself believe this is better than Breaking Bad, the main series you know you did something special
Much like 'Alien' and 'Aliens', both are brilliant but in their own way. It doesn't matter which one you prefer.
Better call Saul is phenomenal one of the top twenty shows I’ve ever watched, however breaking bad is a little better
@@That0therGeorgeor Godfather 1 or 2
"Walter may have done some awful things"
**Him saying "I watched Jane die" is mouthed on screen**
Dude my biggest props to you for this video is the editing. I LOVE just seeing the characters describe past events and you edited it to show what they're referencing for some reason haha.
Thank you. Yeah I always try to get the best possible visual match for each line in my scripts. The one you highlighted felt very appropriate.
@@That0therGeorge NP mate I just tell it like it is :) Have a great one!
@@Zyborggian Thanks again and you too.
He barely mentions it, but Mike clearly feels some guilt and shares in Jimmys regrets about Chucks death. Mike contributed to uprooting Chucks life on Jimmys orders.
I just finished rewatching the series 2 days ago
This video came in the right time
Awesome to hear - what did you think of the show?
This is such a well made video. Probably my favorite BCS/BB analysis
That is very high praise - thank you so much!
As you stated in the video some people don't like how BCS is slow paced compared to BB, don't get me wrong i think both story telling types have their own merits but I think the reason my love for BCS is exactly that. As i have just finished watching the final episode a few days ago (my second binge but where i actually watched the final episode) i have come to appreciate how beautifully crafted BCS is through the slower pacing; where it therefore enables more fletched out characters, more focus on symbolism, music, and especially the calm inbetween the chaos. I love both shows and all the action they inherit but i tend to appreciate all the inaction aswell where there can be more focus on the cinematography and world-building. (Also Kim is the best character ❤)
Yeah I do agree with people who call it a "slow-burn" but only in a positive way.
i started rewatching this show as soon as i finished it.
this is a great break down. thanks for this
Thank you for the kind words. I'm happy you got a lot out of it.
Bloody OUTSTANDING analysis. Absolutely bang-on, dead-to-rights catching every detail. Great work. I mean, yes, we all know that Gilligan's work (and his team's efforts) over the decades has been brilliant. But these kinds of in-depth analyses are truly awesome to find. :) Reminds me of when people REALLY look closely at "Blade Runner 2049", or even things as far back as "Traffic", or "Inside Man". When exemplary work is on the docket, there's almost no end to the hidden underpinnings, golden but gloriously shrouded nuances, and powerful thematic underpinnings.
That's extremely kind of you to say, thank you.
And yes, there's certainly a lot to unpack with masterpieces such as this and 'Blade Runner 2049'.
@@That0therGeorge All good. And hey, if you're ever interested in more exemplary work which does indeed emphasize dramatic structure, powerful character arcs, deep thematic underpinnings, relevant world-building, and far more, give DD1-4 a shot...
🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨
"Before I start, I must see my end. Destination known, my mind's journey now begins. Upon my chariot, heart and soul's fate revealed. In time, all points converge; hope's strength, resteeled. But to earn final peace at the universe's endless refrain, we must see all in nothingness... before we start again."
🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨
--Diamond Dragons (series)
Love your videos. Excited to watch this one!
Thank you! This is by far the most time I've spent on one project, so I hope you enjoy this one as well.
15:24 Had me cracking up!
Great video mate! I hope to see the viewership numbers explode soon ;))
Glad you liked that visual haha. I thought it was very fitting.
Thank you very much, that's kind of you to say.
The rewatch is so much better. Definitely my most favorite show of all time.
Yeah, I found myself picking up on new details with each re-watch.
When I watched the scene of Mike advising Saul to not associate with Walk something click for me, one, hes stubborn, second, I belive Saul saw in Walt his possible fall down, as amature likely to get arrested and not verse in the criminal world of silence or get silenced he would eventually not by "his own" mouth get arrested, stopping his spree of "getting away with", Saul is the psychological of Jimmy, hence not evil but a part of his personallity that's been represed by Jimmy's action, low self-steem and ego.
Thus, the shadow is pushing towards unity, so by taking accountability as the Saul persona, Saul and Jimmy unify an inner peace is achieved, that's why I think he lets go, accepts his fate and reconciliates why himself.
Yes, a lot of people is hurt in this individual process, that's why I believe this is the most clear example of the pain we cause others by not accepting ourselves and the ugliness that is us.
Amazing video bro :D
That's an interesting theory.
And thank you!
It’s so satisfying to see it pointed out that Walt was truly a blowfish all along. Just like in every other aspect of his life, he was incapable and below average. Watching how his ego inflates his contributions to Gray Matter each time that talks about it and how Gretchen was left dumbfounded by his delusional perceptions of how he left the company, I think it’s a safe bet that Elliot may have been responsible for ninety percent of the “discoveries”, while Walt’s assistance provided the other ten percent. Gretchen was the one who bank-rolled the startup, and Walt was the one tagging along because he was dating Gretchen, and friends with Elliot. And if the elements-of-a-human discussion from season one is anything to go by, it’s a safe bet that Walt wasn’t exactly the type of guy that you want inside you at the end of the day. He ended up in a below average career because he was below average. If he stayed at Gray Matter, his egotistical and alienating behavior would have driven away the massive network of genius chemists they’d need to hire. Imagine Walt being surrounded by hundreds of folks who are his intellectual equals?
I love the little edits you made on Mike, Walt, Saul, quotes. 💪💪
Thank you!
just realized its supposed to be like "its all gone" 😭😭
It's Saul Gone'man.
The song at the end of face off actually isnt really cheerfull and positive. Some lyrics are, "Until you travel to that place you can't come back" and "Looking up at no stars in the sky, those white clouds have turned it black" implying that walt has done something that is so dark and despicable and that he has crossed a line that he cannot go back from.
34:56 he got away with it by dying
True, but he also could've stayed and faced the music. If he walked in with his head held high, he would've be the John Dillinger of the Metropolitan Detention Center.
Amazing video keep making more.
Thank you and will do!
June 1982. That's when it all went wrong for me.
I remember subscribing because of your awesome videos about this show, and this one's another banger. Loved it.
Thank you so much, I appreciate that you have stuck around.
I feel like the slow phase increase the effectiveness of the show so much Walter was a sloppy criminal that’s why breaking bad was fast because Walter’s life spun out of control fast. Saul is smooth and calculated he is skilled at the craft of committing crimes and knows how to do things where he doesn’t get caught. So he’s slow and calculated unlike Walter who commits crimes without much thought and out of recklessness.
I am high watching this and I just want to say I love how good your editing is
Damn dude I watch a lot of Video Essays & this one's good keep it up.
Thank you, I appreciate that!
Amazong video, thank you so much for this
No, thank you. That's very nice of you to say.
Thatsa very good BCS video good job man im following u!
Thank you! Hope to see you about in the future.
0 clue why my bells got turned off, great to see a new vid!
Thank you!
Great work. Really enjoyed this.
Thank you! I'm happy that you enjoyed it.
In the end, Walt and Gus proved to be the worst of them all. One was consumed by ego, the other by hatred and a thirst for vengeance.
anyone else not sad that Chuck is gone?
Been waiting on this ever since watching all the previous commentaries on BCS and the study of Gene Takovic
Thank you, I hope the wait was worth it.
It's all gone
The connection with Chuck and Walt, both people with bad health conditions making choices that negatively effect people around them. Saul to me was looking to redeem what happen to chuck but in that time travel question when he is being threatened and walt started coughing. "It's over." I think he realized that just like with his brother he's relationship with Walt was over before it even started. They also had both the exact same view on him. He and walt are also poplar opposites of each other, Saul being good accepting his sins and Walt breaking bad. Kinda like Kendrick's album "DAMN" the order you watch the the series in picks weather they're gonna Live or Die.
Jessie represents in DAMN being forced into the situation and having no choice, in the end he was finally able to choose the life he wanted to live and got another shot at life.
brilliant work!!!
Thank you so much!
This is the moment Saul became Goodman
Saul only kept the yellow car because of inertia.
In the flashback scene with Chuck, I think that maybe, for just a moment, Chuck felt shame for what he’s done to his brother, and maybe if Jimmy could’ve stuck around, things might’ve gone differently.
I think so too.
It is interesting that Mike does work for Saul even while working for gus
Working for Saul is more of a side hustle I guess haha.
This was such an experience.. breaking bad and then this like it was so epic..
Most TV series don't even end well once. We got three different endings in this universe and all of them were great.
30:09 this actually wouldn’t be allowed without at the VERY LEAST letting the judge know beforehand.
Funny enough, whilst I was editing that section, I did watch a video from a real lawyer on TH-cam who broke down that scene. He said that he has seen *somewhat* similar scenarios like it, but that it NEVER looks good on the lawyer as they seem involved in the case itself. Regardless, I really the scene in the context of the series.
I don’t feel that Saul (Jimmy) would have ever admitted to his crimes unless it fit the circumstances of how he lived his entire life. As the underdog, sticking it to the man and as a hopeless romantic convincing Kim that they’re on the same team. He wanted to be prosecuted as a CRIMINAL not a lawyer because he switches between the two however it suits him best at the moment.
30:19 "If you abuse that power, people get hurt!" => a store robber walks off scot free by way of Saul's parlor trick. Was Jimmy so fast to forget that his dad was a humble store owner as well?
Yeah but Jimmy robbed him - "There are wolves and sheep in this world".
Great show, great video essay 👍👍
It is, and thank you!
Walt and Mike both basically telling Saul "you've always been like this"
Yep and although not in this episode, it is something that Chuck has said multiple times as well.
3:45 But unlike Walt Mike meant it. For all the horrible things Mike did he actually wanted to provide for Stacy and Kaylee whereas Walt just wanted money, power and to be feared and used Skyler, Jr and Holly as an excuse.
Mike is absolutely more genuine, but I don't feel like he needed more than 2 million dollars for them to be supported. I believe there are two sides to Mike and one of those sides simply enjoyed working for Gus.
I believe there was a point where Walt was doing it for his family. But i think that reasoning expired fairly quickly into him learning to love the game
@@That0therGeorgetrue
Fake, Mike already got them enough money so they never had to work before he even met walter.
Probably the final show we need in the Breaking Bad Universe that we sadly won't likely get due to Robert Forester's death is a prequel series of a younger Ed The Disappearer establishing his disappearing business over the course of several years even before the events of Better Call Saul.
you made me like saul gone more thank you
Glad to hear it. Thank you for watching.
As an aside, Mike's ultimate rant sucked because it was a retcon. Walt changed dramatically after he killed Fring- going into Series 5. You could justify it because it was a big achievement, and now Walt was running the shop, but they then shift the focus onto Mike as having the moral high ground, when he never did. He's a hypocrite.
Mike literally dragged Walt down to the laundry to kill him under Gus' orders; Mike also turned a blind eye completely to the kid that was killed (also arguably under Gus' orders), but somehow Walt is the moral vaccuum responsible for all the problems? Both Walt and Jesse also don't seem to bring up at all how Mike bats for Jesse now despite how much trouble Walt caused trying to save him, and Mike never mentions Jesse and his problem-causing in his rants either.
It's almost like they put the series on fast-forward because they had to conclude with series 5, so they just made Walt into a psychopath outright from there on out and needed someone with some semblence of sanity and morality to contrast him. I love that final scene with Mike, it's so tragically perfect, but the rant is absolutely full of shit.
Saul really didn’t interact with Ignacio that much
Yeah it was mostly season 1 and then season 5 with Nacho introducing Saul to Lalo.
He was the first guy in that life he represented. And he kidnapped Saul in the first episode
To think about it, Kim has indirectly saving Jimmy's soul just like how Luke has indirectly saving Anakin's soul.
loved the nobody clips
Haha, thanks! They seemed appropriate to include.
Imagine The Gunny rolling into town in his modified cement truck or his bean-van to pick up Jimmy and seeing the whole town swarming with cop cars, black SUVs and low flying helicopters. “Just pick me up this dumpster. Here’s some diamonds.”
Great video though there is one thing that you forgot to address and that is in the scene with Walter and Jimmy talking about regrets. Walter was looking at the watch that Jesse gave him in Breaking Bad season 5. But then he lies and says Grey Matter is his biggest regret. Showing that both are lying about their regrets.
The audience won
Very true.
It left me so empty... that i have a hard time enjoying it for its greatness
18:16 I think it could be interpreted as money but I don’t think money is even the smallest bit of Walter’s problem I think he only wants the fame and attention for being successful. I think you kind of mentioned this but just wanted to expand with my opinion
I think it's both. With the car purchase and such like, it's clear that Walt likes the material things that come with being rich.
Great video dude
Thank you!
Does anyone know the name of the song that starts 38:44 ?
Coffee Cold.
20:00 i get Mikes rant referenced so often... and i am not really behind it.
It only went south because Gus used Kids AND wanted to kill Jesse. At one point when stuff was settled Walter had to take actions to save his partners life. Even before that to get him in. I refuse blaming it on Walter alone. Also the scene with regret seemed a bit too shallow for Walter and felt out of character. In BB he himself went over the idea when he had to stop, regretting, and came up with the moment he watched that African Documentary.
Please anyone, what's the name of the piece that starts playing at 39:15????
Coffee Cold.
@@That0therGeorge thanks a lot, really enjoyed the video
@@kubaklajmon7635 You're welcome, it's a great song. And thank you!
Ah the old tale of Ozzy Man Diez