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Ten years before the events of Better Call Saul, Chuck defended his younger brother Jimmy after Jimmy defecated through the sunroof of a romantic rival's BMW, unaware the man's children were in the back seat. [9] As a condition of helping Jimmy, Chuck demanded that Jimmy abandon his work as a con artist and take a legitimate job in HHM's ...
Better Call Saul is a spin-off of Breaking Bad, a popular crime drama television series that ran from 2008 to 2013. [9] [10] It is primarily a prequel that focuses on Jimmy McGill, a former con artist aiming to gain respectability as a public defender, and chronicles his gradual transformation into his eventual Breaking Bad persona of Saul Goodman, the flamboyant criminal lawyer with ties to ...
The episode received critical acclaim, on Rotten Tomatoes, the episode holds a 100% rating with an average score of 8.64/10, based on 15 reviews. The site's consensus reads, '"Sabrosito" juggles narrative strands while advancing Better Call Saul's overall narrative arc—and setting up moments Breaking Bad fans have waited patiently for.' [5]
Spoiler alert: This review contains spoilers for “Saul Gone,” the series finale of “Better Call Saul.” It turns out that there was one person the once and future Jimmy McGill would put ...
With plenty of questions left about where Season 6 might go, the series' third-to-last episode is a dreamlike return to where one particular Albuquerque lawyer has been.
After the heavy physical violence in the preceding weeks, here comes a different dose of the beautifully crafted anguish that this show has perfected.
“Better Call Saul” is, at the start of its two-part final season, still twin shows — a riveting one and one that, even while well-made, can feel like yesterday’s news. The good news for ...
Henry R. Schrader [1] is the brother-in-law of main character Walter White, and is a Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agent in Albuquerque, New Mexico.Throughout the series, he leads the investigation of the methamphetamine cook "Heisenberg"—unaware that the elusive drug kingpin is his own brother-in-law.