Better Call Saul: Smoke

Jimmy McGill is back on the path of becoming a conniving lawyer, and subsequently a Bun Slinger, in the season four premiere, titled ‘Smoke’. There was lots that I liked, and also a few things I didn’t.

Gene (Jimmy’s post-Saul persona) is being scraped off the floor at his job at Cinnabon after fainting. No heart attack, just over-exhaustion from keeping his guard up all the time. Maybe he should’ve chosen a different profession if he’s so scared of being recognized, me thinks. You know, somewhere a bit more quiet and private. Like a cubicle, instead of being a very public figure in the Omaha mall.

He’s brought to the hospital, where he’s going through all sorts of tests, but in the end nothing’s wrong with Omaha’s favorite bald bun guy. However, on his taxi ride home, he notices an air refresher dangling from the cab mirror, saying ‘Albuquerque’. That doesn’t really bring back fond memories, I imagine. But wait a second… This means the cabdriver’s from there, doesn’t it?

All Jimmy gets is an angry stare. Does the driver recognize him? I’d say chances are that he does. Jimmy gets out almost immediately, and starts walking through the snow, not knowing where he is, and whether the cabbie is coming after him or not.

Or not, it turns out. But his cover might be blown.

Gene can’t take the chance that he’s been made, so I expect he’s going to move someplace else in the coming episodes. (Or in the season five premiere, since the black and white stuff has been kept to an absolute minimum so far in the series.)

Back to Albuquerque, about ten years earlier: Chuck has chucked his last chuck. And burnt down his house with him. Jimmy’s devastated, as would be expected. Bob Odenkirk didn’t have to learn many lines, that’s for sure; Jimmy’s never been more quiet in his life.

Because of the wrap-up of Chuck’s suicide, the episode’s pretty somber. There are scenes that are not really that necessary, in my opinion, like Howard calling Jimmy about the obituary, for example. Yeah, we know Howard cares a lot about achievements, but we knew that already. This scene feels like exposition of a character we’ve known for some time now. It doesn’t show anything about Howard, or Jimmy, that we didn’t already know.

The lighter touches come from Mike Ehrmantraut, who’s being paid by Gus and Lydia for doing absolutely nothing. Easy as it seems, this is not Mike’s style. Even though he basically gets his own money back through this arrangement, Mike’s not one for sitting in his chair all day, watching daytime television.

And so he goes to work. As a ‘security consultant’ at Madrigal. It’s very funny to see him walk through the office and warehouse without anyone asking any questions. Actually, he’s the one doing the asking – and bossing people around.

After a day’s work, he has a talk with the manager, giving him a list of things that need improving. The manager doesn’t know anything about a ‘security consultant’, so he’d better make a call with Lydia. I bet he never needed to do that before.

We get a little Salamanca action, too, but not much. Gus has been tracking Nacho. One of his henchmen follows Nacho to a bridge, where he drops the evidence of him screwing around with Hector Salamanca’s pills. This is a little too convenient. Did Gus have someone track Nacho before everything went down? I don’t think so, because he didn’t really have reason to, did he?

So, Gus put a tracking device on Nacho’s car, after looking at Nacho, looking at the ambulance driving away. Gus had this curious look on his face. He had his doubts about Nacho, but tracking him immediately, and witnessing him throwing away the evidence off of a bridge… That’s a bit too convenient, even for Gus.

Back to Jimmy. Howard comes to see him, tells him he thinks that he’s responsible for Chuck’s death, because he pushed him out of HHM. Jimmy sort of agrees, by saying that’s Howard’s cross to bear. He gets up from the couch, and cheerfully makes a pot of coffee.

What’s going on here? Did Jimmy feel guilty at first, but he’s suddenly very much okay when Howard takes the guilt from him, in a way? Is that it? But why so cheerful all of a sudden?

If this scene is meant to show Jimmy turning into Saul – sort of in a Bruce Banner/Hulk kind of way -, then… I don’t know. But maybe that’s just me. I always considered ‘Saul’ an act. A character that Jimmy plays. But I suppose what the writers are going for here is: Saul is not an act. Jimmy did create Saul at first, but his creation is slowly turning into a multiple personality disorder. That means Jimmy’s no longer in control of his character. That means you either get Jimmy, or Saul, and no one knows – not even Jimmy – which one of them will show up, at any given time.

If this is indeed the direction the writers are going in, then I’m okay with Jimmy getting up and being weirdly cheerful. Heartbreaking as it is to watch.

Double Switch Of The Con Man

Saul Goodman AKA Jimmy McGill is back, in the season 2 opener of Better Call Saul, called ‘Switch’. And a switch it is. And then it is not.

Locked In
Like ‘Uno’, Saul’s pilot episode, ‘Switch’ starts with a black and white montage of what we can only assume is a flash-post-Breaking-Bad-forward. Creators Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould haven’t forgotten about Jimmy’s (Bob Odenkirk) Heisenberg-absent future. It’s a grey one. Jimmy’s working at a mall, takes out the trash after closing hours (accompanied by the song ‘Funny How Time Slips Away’ by Billy Walker), but accidentally locks himself up in the dumpster basement. There’s one way out: an exit door, with a sign that says: ‘Notice: Emergency Exit Only! If you exit this door you will activate the alarm, and the police will be notified. If you must exit and the’ – that’s as far as it goes. It’s possible that the warning’s just a precaution and no (silent) alarm will be tripped. However, it’s clear Jimmy doesn’t want to run the risk of encountering police. So he stays put. It’s a quarter past nine. It’s only until a quarter to midnight that he’s released by the cleaning guy. By that time, he’s engraved his initials in the wall. ’S.G. was here’. Or is it ‘J.G. was here’? It’s nice to get a look into the future, but I’m afraid that’s all it is. Nice. Better Call Saul is, above all else, a prequel story.

Out
Jimmy’s been offered the job at law firm Davis & Maine. A huge opportunity to break into the serious lawyer business, but he wavers. It’s not exactly clear why. I guess it’s because he just loves conning people too much. He also wonders if Kim Wexler (Rhea Seehorn) is part of the equation. Are they finally going to happen, now that he’s about to play in the big league? She assures him those are two completely separate issues. The clever thing to say. However, that’s just what Jimmy needed to hear to decline the offer. He’s out. No more law. No more lawyer. Just fun pretending to be somebody else, taking people’s money and taking them for fools.

Clarity
This means drifting like an 80 year old in the pool and being served on, apparently. He’s done everything that was expected of him. Played by the rules. Now, what does he have to show for it? I’d say a job at a prestigious law firm, but that seems to be a minor detail. Jimmy just wants to live, by… sitting on his ass, drinking cocktails. It’s not long before Kim shows up to ask him what the hell is going on. A midlife crisis? More like midlife clarity, he says.

Perfect Recipe
To show her what he means – because he can’t quite explain it – he cons some stock broker at the bar, and lets Kim play the part of his sister. She’s reluctant at first, but gets into the groove after a while. Free food, not to mention the free (very expensive) tequila – stock man Ken (Kyle Bornheimer, Brooklyn Nine-Nine, Agent Carter) insists on paying the cheque -, can do that. Jimmy and Kim exit the bar drunk and exhilarated; the perfect recipe for romance. They end up in bed together. We just get to see the morning after, though.

Switch #2
Has it been the spur of the moment? Have Jimmy’s feelings finally been returned? My guess is they haven’t. No matter how great it was to brush their teeth together. As Kim leaves to go to work, Jimmy leaves to float around some more in the pool. That’s when it hits him. Cocktails aren’t everything either. He saddles back up, switches again, contacts David & Maine, is not too late, and settles into his new (proper) office.

PLAYUH
There’s not a whole lot of Mike Ehrmantraut (Jonathan Banks) in the episode, but there is of Daniel Warmolt (Mark Proksch), the guy who’s been hiring him. Daniel’s gotten a bit too sure of himself and thinks he can do the exchanges with Nacho Varga (Michael Mando) by himself. Sure, he can, even without Mike as his backup. But you still don’t want to get too friendly with Nacho, especially with your new PLAYUH licence plate and the car to match it, and your full name in the glove compartment. Before he knows it, Daniel’s house is trashed and his baseball cards are gone. His secret stash, too, most likely. It’s a great role, and we haven’t seen the last of him yet. Check out Talking Saul for more inside information and a sneak peek of next week’s episode.

Better Call Saul: Marco

Maybe it’s because last week’s Pimento felt like the season finale, maybe not, but Marco – which does put a lid on the first season of the Breaking Bad spinoff – feels a lot like an, albeit nice, filler episode.

The B
As we know, Jimmy’s cut ties with his brother Chuck and their case against the elderly home. Except for the money he’ll get when it’s all over, of course. He does, however, stay on as Bingo Caller. Still upset by his brother’s betrayal – and having to call out only B numbers, the B of Betrayal and Brother – he reveals why he had to go to jail, all those years ago, before getting saved by Chuck and the mailroom at HHM. It involved two cub scouts, a car and Jimmy defecating on it because its owner had slept with his (now ex-)wife.
It might be the least thought through scene of the whole season. Why is the letter B getting to him? Why tell that specific story? If he wanted to tell the bingo players anything, it’d be about his brother calling him a chimp with a machine gun, wouldn’t it? The story about his jail time needed to be told, but this felt a bit to contrived.

The Bar of Broken Dreams
Jimmy’s got nowhere to go, basically, after leaving everything behind. He winds up back in a bar in Chicago, to visit his old friend/ex-partner-in-scams Marco. Before he knows it, they’re back in the game, conning people for money and sex. You’ve got to give credit to the writers, for coming up with really nice scamming tactics. It’s so well written (and acted), it’s totally believable someone would fall for it. It’s Ocean’s Eleven meets Trees Lounge.
After a week of fooling people, Jimmy has to get back to Albuquerque. His former clients are all over his voicemail; he’s needed elsewhere. Marco convinces him to stay, for one last ‘heist’. In the world of drama, that means trouble – and trouble they get, but in true Saul fashion, in quite a different way than you’d expect. During their Drunk Guy With A Rolex Passed Out In The Alley routine, Marco suffers a heart attack – and dies.

The Best News of his Life
During Marco’s funeral, Jimmy gets a call from Kim. The case is even bigger than they thought, so another law firm has been brought on board. Davis & Main has set its eyes on Jimmy, mainly because the people in the elderly home keep asking for him (and because Kim and Howard put in a good word). Finally. A real firm. A real job. It’s the best news he could ever receive.
Jimmy returns to Albuquerque, only to have a change of heart at the last minute. He touches Marco’s ring, thinks back to how much fun they’ve had and how good they were at it. Also the job he did with Mike Ehrmantraut comes to mind. They had it all, but decided to do ‘the right thing’. Exit Jimmy McGill who’s ‘building something’. Enter Slipping Jimmy, on his way to becoming the scheming Saul Goodman.