Better Call Saul 6x13 "Walter White couldn't have done it without me" Season 6 Episode 13 Saul Gone
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- Опубліковано 14 сер 2022
- Better Call Saul 6x13 Season 6 Episode 13 Better Call Saul S06E13 6x14 BCS 6x13 Season 6 Episode 13
Series Finale.
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Better Call Saul 6x13 Saul visits Walter White
Better Call Saul Season 6 Episode 13 Saul visits Walter White
Better Call Saul 6x14 Trailer Better Call Saul Season 6 Episode 14 Walter White couldn't have done it without me will be uploaded next week! - Розваги
*_“Your honor, in my defense. Im literally the main character of this universe”_*
Well that about answers everything
“INNOCENT!”
No he's not
@@noobmaster-wj3qm he kinda is
@@noobmaster-wj3qm He is. Walter's dead, man
@@Insolitus_xl Walt's still the main character
Imagine Jesse chilling in Alaska watching all this shit on the news 💀😭
Wonder what his fake name is.
@@jiro110 Mr. Driscoll
@@TrialByDance Oh, right. I forgot about that
Jesse got away with it, deserved the same fate, suffered but that's no excuse
@@TrialByDance any relation to colm odriscol
That was Jimmy's "I did it for me" moment.
Its way bigger than that
@@kyle1137 he did it for Kim
This was the moment when Jimmy's plea became a confession. Vravo Bince.
@@thisbubblygoodness7611 I think he moreso did it for himself, that’s how I see it
@@eanderson9599 i think he put it down to 7 years for himself, to prove he can still do it, manifest lightning from his finger tips, saw Kim, changed his mind.
but thats just what i interpreted
This scene was perfect. He was not only accepting the consequences of his actions and proving to Kim that he could change, it was also his final fuck you to Walter White
It's funny you used those words to phrase it, because this is exactly when he understood he will never change and finally accept it.
@@A12C4 He will never change, he will NEVER change. Since he was a kid,. always the same.
Yeah but it's still not a believable decision. 7 years is plenty of time to accept responsibility. Nobody chooses to die in prison.
@@dwoodstwin What did Jimmy actually have outside of prison tho? The only person he cared for was Kim and if he'd taken the 7 years and shown he wouldn't change she'd never speak to him again
If Walt was still alive he’d be pissed at Jimmy taking credit for his empire. That’s awesome
waltuh white could power a whole country with the amount of spinning he is doing in his grave right now lmao
Lmaooo
Walter may not agree but it is true
"what I did was that
I DID THAT
I had people whom I could *use,* never people whom I needed
It's all the same story, peoole trying to take what it's not theirs
Taking the credit
Taking my money
Taking MY CREDIT"
@@isaacpianos5208 perfect
@@isaacpianos5208 Yep. That's sound just like Walt lol
Walter White just got resurrected out of pure rage hearing Saul say he couldn’t have done it without him
Walt had the chance to tell his own story when Saul told him to turn himself in, but did he listen to his attorney? No, he just had to be the man...
Walt is sending him to Belize
Walt would be utterly enraged.
Not really. By the end walt realzied he had become monster
@@vishishtmishra9082 Not really.
By taking the blame for laundering his money he also saves Skyler, because in reality she laundered his money
That was cool of him to not destroy Walt's last plan. It would've been pointless to destroy already hurt people.
She cut a deal with the feds anyway...
That was p cool of him
Well, She negotiated a plea bargain and I suppose She already confessed her Role (of course, Walt had already cleared her by a call before running away).
Well she and Saul were both complicit in laundering the money. She was just more directly involved but Saul was also aware and therefore complicit. He definitely laundered Jesse Pinkman's money. She however already had a plea agreement where she most likely confessed to laundering so whatever he says now won't change that.
People say this is purely out of love for Kim. Partly, it is, but this scene is beautiful because despite of telling the whole truth, he still mocks the law, showing its flaws. It's showing that law is not always for the best interest of the victims, that punishment can be negotiated with well-crafted lies, and if it wasn't for his own genuine redemption, the system would ALMOST reward him with only 7 years and ice cream.
Yeah the law has flaws but this is a unreal show... this is fiction not reality, in real life there is no way he can reduce his sentence with the amount of evidente against him no matter the bullshit he tells, this is not just about Walter White but Lalo Salamanca and a lot criminal he profited of because he helped them. There is no way he can reduce his jail time but stupid writers want to redime the irredimable and in the last episode they just make him regrets his crimes and tell the truth because he got caugth... sure...
Not just that, but he does the exact opposite of what he's done through all of his career: he "screwed up" on saying the truth, raising his sentence time by going for the facts instead of lowering it with a good talk or straight up lies like he's done for his clients.
nothing is really about justice. it’s all about expediting the process.
“THE LAW IS SACRED!”
That’s my favorite line from Chuck simply because of how painfully obvious that it’s total bullshit. Chuck was incapable of admitting he was ever wrong about anything.
@@kaj7135 In his mind it is but in reality its a flawed set of rules made by flawed people, and corruption runs ramped
I love the “I was terrified... but not for long” part and Bob’s smile afterwards.
I read this in the "Call an ambulance..... but not for me" voice
You mean Kevin Costner
@@AniematedSteph Nice profile picture
@@SpcyToast same 💀
Bravo Vince
When his lawyer legit tried to quite in the middle of the case is so funny
He's only there for council.
Oakley was co-council. Saul was representing himself.
He knew he was about to have to take the L
Fr man lmao
I actually felt bad for bill he would’ve gotten more famous if Saul took the 7 years
3:46 walt's ego crushed in like 3 seconds
Walter likely would’ve given him a “I am the danger” speech or murdered him for that lmao
@@Henry-yf2np it's true, if Walt saw Saul as a threat, even only to his ego, he'd have found a way to get rid of him. But that's part of the difference between the two. Saul/Jimmy for the most part knows when to speak vs to shut up, when to lay low etc. In other words he has street smarts. Overall, I'd say Jimmy actually had the higher IQ of the two.
@@sir_john_hammond jimmy did not have a higher iq then Walt stop it 😂
@@lostandneverfound6287 I'm talking about general intelligence. I find a lot of so called geniuses are actually prettty stunted in some ways, Walt being the perfect fictional example. He couldn't even profit off his own invention. That was no one's fault but his own. His own stupidity. Being a "genius" does some people no real good.
@@sir_john_hammond True. Some geniuses can’t even tie their shoes or perform simple actions. Saul definitely has more practical intelligence.
This trial feels like witnessing actual real history
I know Vince Gilligan says he’s finished with this series.
But I would love, if as a joke they did a true crime documentary on all of breaking bad.
Like acting like it’s real and doing interviews with people involved. Doing interview in prisons and getting “experts” in.
You know the usual stuff you see.
@@ad1170 I'd love that too
It's like watching a recap between BB and BCS
@@margarethmichelina5146 But better
@@ad1170 They did a joke episode of American Greed about Saul
Walter White couldn't have done it without me - straight facts. Saul was a lawyer that Walter and Jesse definitely didn't deserve but they were lucky to have him.
Its not about him, its about contacts who they find because of him.
@@robertorpg2132 He got Badger out of jail and away from snitching on them, is the entire reason Jesse was able to get his aunt's house, and so many other things. The Laser Tag place Jesse hides from Gus's men in, before he kills Gale, was Saul's.
It is about him. They'd be dead without him. The contacts are only one part of that.
@@Kelohmello straight facts,
without Saul, Walt will never be connected to Fring and most likely either being killed by his men due to competition of drug market or ended in jail because of Badger snitching
@@Kelohmello Saul also lead them to Gus taking an interest..
That's the only reason Walt wasn't dead to the fucking Terminator Salamanca cousins literally camping in his bedroom with a freeging axe.
That alone is massive enough.
@@ragerodracir Nope, of Walter heard that, he would have started fighting Saul, and a disappointment Mike would have gotten up from his seat, and dragged Walter away.
Incredible that the judge gave jimmy several chances to shut his mouth so he can take the 7 year prison sentence and it ultimately lead to 86 years. Ah, jimmy..
It was him finally taking responsibility
In the writers' view, Jimmy HAD to do that.
The brilliant writers managed to create a dedicated cult following so strong that even when they wanted to DESTROY Jimmy/Saul/Gene, they did it in such a way that they, the writers,
don't cause friction or disdain from their follower audience towards them.
But they just had to destroy him, so that the show would end.
GENIUS:
How to do it without alienating the audience?
They can't destroy him directly, so......they make him destroy himself!
That there is just a stroke of creative genius.
Not only destroy him in the present, but also in the past. They try all sorts of time-machine tricks to even go as far as to destroy him in our eyes in the past.
Even if it means Gene breaking character completely.
Even if it means Saul senselessly throwing a meager 7 year sentence out of the window & get what is practically a life sentence just to see Kim.
They just can't do it themselves so to speak; so they get Saul to do it to himself.
@@josephfarrugia2350 it sort of sounds like you just don’t understand character development or pathos.
That was the point bro
@@josephfarrugia2350 this show doesnt have a cult following. Its huge
Imagine Badger watching this and hearing his last name get mentioned.
lol
underrated comment
@Ribby The Party Frog Dude, Walter White was my uncle all along.
Word yo.
Badger and Skinny pump fists.
Badger's gonna be the new legal name
This was the exact moment he stopped being the best hitman west of the mississippi
Best quotes in both shows
"I did it for me"
"Walter White couldnt have done it without me"
“Whatever happened to me, it’s on me”
"You will think of ME"
"I was having so much FUN!"
Don’t forget
“Whatever happened to me, it’s on me.”
@@kevinnigins9488 lol the conversation they never had
Walter: Guys I’m sorry I brought you guys into this “I did it for me”
Saul: no “Walter white couldn’t have done it without me”
Jesse: no mistah white “whatever happened to me, it’s on me”
And "I was having so much FUN!" -Kim Wexler.
I fuxked ted
@@tacofingerz7247 Yup. Yup. Yup.
“Walter White couldn’t have done it without me.” He’s right; there wouldn’t be a Heisenberg without Saul Goodman.
@jay yeah, but Saul was the reason he was feared. The people he introduced him to helped him build up his empire. Heisenberg was just a name but with Saul’s help he became a legend.
He wasn't just right, he was goddamn right.
In that one sentence there is pride that he did pull it off and shame at what it resulted in. Superb acting.
Walter White has always been Heisenberg, the difference is that he started doing the things he wanted when he turned 50. Both Walter White and Saul Goodman couldn't have achieved the success without each other, Walt needed Saul to grow his empire, but Saul wouldn't have earned a shitload of money if it wasn't for Walter White.
Sauls not wrong... As he once said to Walt and Pinkman. "You two suck, at pedaling meth" Without him, none of Walts genius, amounts to the empire they built
Peddling
I always remember the scene where he outright tells Jesse the government cares less about him being a drug dealer and more about him being a tax cheat. And Jesse just flat out ignored Saul's completely correct advice about how you need to launder money if you want to avoid detection.
They both wouldn't have achieved their success without each other, as Saul mentioned in the trial he earned a shitload of money because of Walt.
It still throws me off how Walters reign only lasted 2 years.
More like just over a year, all the shit with hank and having to leave wasnt too long after his 51st bday
Yeah, and I think Seasons 1 - 4 were all in less a year
Seasons 1 to 3 took place between late 2008 and early 2009 while season 4 and 5 took place between mid 2009 to late 2010
And a kill rate higher than real life serial killers
to me i always imagined i being longer due to walter’s beard basically changing every season and jesse too. I’d think it was at least 3-5 years.
The trial accomplished several things. Proved Jimmy can express true guilt and remorse for his action by willing to throw away a 7 year sentence. It’s also a big fuck you to Walt, making sure the record is aware of how critical Saul was to the meth empire. It was also a fuck you to Chuck who believed the law was sacred, yet despite that Jimmy thru completely legal process got his sentence down to 7 years. And he proved to Kim and Chuck that he can change and express regret
I don’t know about the Chuck part
It wasn’t a f-you to chuck, because at the end of his admission he states that he probably caused Chucks suicide by causing his split from HHM. He was finally admitting to himself that he broke Chuck and then Kim and it was time to come clean.
It was both a apology to his brother and also proving he’s smarter since he did reduce that sentence to 7 years using the law that his brother revered so much where it’s not all black and white, it’s gray mostly. At the same time proving he is the better person too by owning up to what he did instead of “getting away” with it because morally he wants to be that good person. He’s the exact opposite of Walter, Walter was the good person on the outside but inside he wanted to be the drug empires biggest kingpin. Jimmy on his exterior was a lying conning ambulance chaser corrupt lawyer who could get away with anything but inside he’s still jimmy mcgill who cares about everything and wants to be a person who gets respect and goodness.
@@jammin2575 Yeah, I feel like it was more of a f-you to the law as a whole that Chuck always said is so sacred, since it only took Saul a few lies and he reduced an 86 year sentence to 7 with some ice cream on a lax prison. He finally admited for his years of messing with the law but he felt it was necessary to make a point of how broken it is
I think this is my favorite analysis of this scene I’ve heard yet. You covered everything.
I’m so glad Jimmy finally took responsibility for ending. Sure he’s in prison but it’s like he can finally let his demons rest.
It's a nice parallel to the other 2 protagonists: Walt chose to die satisfied with his actions despite how horrible they were, Jesse chose to escape and leave that life behind him as a new person, and Jimmy chose to acknowledge it and face the consequences.
And God forgive him too
The way I see it, with everyone chanting "Better Call Saul" and everyone around him in prison being nice to him, it almost feels like he was more free in prison than he was as Gene.
@@Laufield I don't think God cares about people very much
@@SecretlyStarscream Agreed. Being Gene was a more horrible prison to him.
Its great how Jimmy is literally telling the 100% truth about his first encounter with Walt. He was terrified because he thought Lalo was still alive but after realizing Walt was the man behind the "blue stuff" he immediately got exicted about being his lawyer.
And not to mention Mike warned him not to help Walter
@@Pwilliams4000Everything Mike warned people about turned out real it's actually insane guy is like the prophet of this bb universe
Walt: Dead
Saul: In Prison
Jesse: Dead
@@giggitymaster8799
What??
Jesse is not Dead, lol😂
He is in exile
@@giggitymaster8799Jesse is alive and well chilling in Alaska under a new identity.
“No offense your honor but i think i know the law here better than you do” - just brutal and genius 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Trying to turn the judge against him so that she would stop being sympathetic and advocating in his interest. Saul and Jimmy working hand in hand to turn himself in.
@@StronkyHose that's right, very good analysis!
@@StronkyHoseDamn, whatta comment!!! 👏👏👏
He should have won the Emmy just for this scene alone.
next year they will surely put better call saul back because the 2nd part of season 6 hasn't come out yet
Yeah he should have
This half of the season is eligible for the next Emmys I think
Gonna be tough with the Succession guys
This scene and show is extremely well written and executed. Probably one of the best shows ever!!!
3:22 "and i made millions" this man's acting is out of this world
Bob was Brilliant throughout this whole BB and BCS series’ but those final episodes!! Sheeeeeshhhhhh! Brilliant!
he was probably method acting and channeling his real life bank account XDXD
Vrabo Bince
@@BrutalCarnage "They couldn't have done this show without me, and I made millions"
Money IS the point!
His facial expression when he says "MILLIONS!" shows his true love for money never died throughout the whole franchise. A huge bravo to Bob Odenkirk for his brilliant acting and attention to detail. This is just excellent TV as a whole.
I always thought the way he says "millions" reminded me of how Walt always said it, always an emphasised M or B in billions, and a really sharp i sound
Ravo bince
Walter would have straight abhorrently reprimanded Jimmy if he ever heard Jimmy said this out loud in front of the world lmao
he woulda pulled a mike bro
Walt would’ve sent Saul to Belize
Doesn't mean he's wrong. Without Saul, Walt's blue meth wouldn't be on the market.
@@TomasZombieDogGame why not to Billy's?
Why would he, Walt always knew he needed him and others but he mastermind behind it all
"I liked it. I was good at it" but Saul edition
Saul's "I did it for me" moment
All 3 protagonists had 3 different ways to end their life of crime. Walter died without punishment. Jesse moved on from it. And Jimmy accepted the consequences.
Edit: by punishment I'm referring to jail time
"without punishment" his family hate him, his brother in law was killed because of him and he damn suffered from it, and well deserved suffering since this is a story about bad guys
Yeah but he's dead, his family suffered much more than he did
@@zaimox8586 I'm referring to jail time
@@pekillas2593 by punishment, I'm talking about jail time
It's a western ending. One is in jail, one went out in a blaze of glory, and one rode off into the sunset.
Loved the reference to Chuck with the Exit Sign
Hellll Yeeeeeaaaaaaa!!! Now that I think about it…was chucks trial the last time we see Jimmy in court??? Regardless there isnt a lawyer in this world better than Jimmy Mcgill!!!
@@Giiiiiiiooooooooo Well, "Jimmy" in court, but we do see a couple scenes in Season 4 and Season 5 of Saul Goodman working in court.
"Walter White couldn't have done it without me"
There's such a perfect mix of pride and regret in his delivery
Jimmy knew from the beginning of the negotiations he was doing this. He arranged Montrose as his prison of choice because it was full of clients he had helped. He tried to sell the story about Howard only to fish to see if Kim had come clean. Finding out she had told him he was doing the right thing and it would be ok to actually proceed with destroying his life for absolution. This wasn't done just for Kim. It was done so he could clear his conscience and pay respect to those he had hurt as Saul. He intentionally made the court recognize him as Saul not Jimmy on the register so Saul Goodman would be taking Saul Goodman down. Jimmy McGill will live out the rest of his days protected by criminals who think they owe something to Saul Goodman.
Another thing, forcing Kim to show up was kind of an FU to her making her fly all this way and up and her life again, but she needed that. She felt guilty for being part of Howard's death AND chuck's, and she needed to feel some sort of punishment for it. When James looked back to her for acknowledgment and saw her Stone Cold face, he knew he hadn't gone far enough, he hadn't said enough, and that's when he mentioned chuck. Only after he came clean on THAT crime which Bill said wasn't the crime, did she soften up just a little bit. Her burden finally lifted.
Wasn't Montrose the prison he *didn't* want to get sent to?
He wanted a low security prison in North Carolina that had a golf program, and almost got it before his confession.
@@TheMemeRepository Would Saul tell the Government what he really wanted or tell them he didnt want something that seemed terrible knowing hed plant an idea in their heads so theyd think it was a terrible punishment? Jimmy was going to do the right thing all along, he just wanted to show the judge just how far hed broken the DA to be in front of her with a 7 year offer first. He ruined careers in that room.
@@jasonmckie4402 He clearly only decided to do the right thing after he heard about Kim confessing about Howard. Up until then, everything he said was serving the goal of getting the lightest possible sentence.
Ok, but why? He was threatening Marion to stop her from reporting on him, he was running from cops, hiding in a dumpster and trying to call Ed to get away, he was laughing hysterically in a cell out of desperation, and then he just decided to take the harshest punishment possible? Why? Wouldn't it make a lot more sense that finding out about Kim made him change his mind?
As much as Walter white is a manipulative villain, Saul is right. Walter’s journey was filled with mess that could’ve led to instant failure, but Saul helped and him saying this and admitting it shows how regretful he is, such a beautiful show.
True he was the only one along with jease that really found peace so he did reach his journey
This was also very similar to Nacho confessing everything before his demise. Also like when Gus was telling Lalo everything before he took care of Lalo.
In their final moments….people show you who they really are…
It's also similar to when Jimmy set up his own "accidental" confession to the Sandpiper residents, when he admitted he was manipulating Irene so her friends would stop ostracising her.
@@itsallgoodman4108 And which of them are cowards.
I love how Walter thinks he's some mega mind who did it all on his own and always downplaying Saul as a lawyer yet Saul is the one who carried his whole operation. This scene is such a satisfying spit on his legacy and ego
Yep, that's it. Couldn't have said it better myself.
Wow that's worth getting out near the end of his life or if he's on deaths door
It’s not just his love for Kim , it’s his ego. Everyone he ever respected is gone, his friends are gone, his family is gone, he ruined things with Kim. All he has left is what he achieved, that’s his legacy. Wouldn’t have felt right for his character at all to portray himself as a victim even though it was a great legal defense
No. He just wanted to rest in jail. If he would be convicted even for 7 years, he couldn't be a lawyer again. And he was already old, finished. All money gone. Probably watched closely by the DEA/FBI even after the release. And his friend would get a life sentence, so he replaced her, with his last stand.
If that was the case, why the hell would he not want to go by the name of Saul? The one that actually made him famous? And besides, he never had an issue with playing victim to manipulate people, that's literally what "Slippin' Jimmy" is! I'm sorry, but there's only one way to interpret his decision.
Walter was the egotistic character, and perhaps from whom you are reading this episode, but no, Jimmy did it because it was the right thing to do
If he just wanted to start over he could have taken the 7 years deal then go to Mexico after released. But he already knows what it is like to live under a different identity from the vacuum guy just saying
@@Spider_Cuh706 It’s just another prison…
This is the moment Saul Goodman became Jimmy McGill
0:57 Bill's reaction to when he says "But not for long" is priceless
All he did was look up
He is like, "What the f***?"
In a world where crooks in business and politics go unpunished and where anti-hero movies with “sympathetic” villains are popular … Better Call Saul was desperately needed.
Jimmy McGill is the first fictional character in so long to do the right thing for the right reasons, and to do so despite losing everything. It’s such a beautiful story and inspiring in these tough times.
The problem with today’s media (especially Marvel and DC) is that the writers cannot separate heroes from villains that they accidentally wrote heroes to do even more horrific stuffs than characters that are supposed to be villains while at the same time, they made “sympathetic villains” to be overly heroic.
@@nont18411 Agreed.
its always a symptom of weak writing. they want all the edge and brutal violence of a villain, and also the easiness and clarity of a hero, with none of the moral ambiguity \@@nont18411
Holy Pimiento Sandwich, that acting at 1:07 is phenomenal. She wants to protect him, her natural instinct to stop him confessing
She maybe forgived him.
"...you will think about ME!"
"...couldn't do it without me"
"me" always beats in this show
I do love that jimmy Mc Gill killed Saul Goodman. Crucified him in court, gave away the most badazz of all badazz plea deals for individual spiritual redemption. Just perfect. No actors no director, no producer could have done it better, Chef's kiss!!!
Spiritual redemption while he is rotting in prison and he will barely be able to see Kim, anyone who thinks you can get spiritual redemption when you have to live the rest of your life in prison is living in fantasy land.
@@1997lordofdoom Seems like you completely missed the point bozo
@@1997lordofdoom Jimmy McGill found the real freedom of finding himself. I think of the story of Death of a Salesman, a successful salesman dies and commits the sin of never having known who he was...
Crucifixion is a very painful death, its use was perfected by the Roman's who left many people in the humiliating State outside of Jerusalem. So Jimmy found strength when the love of his life showed up. The deepest parts of his being were able to take ownership over all the decades of running away, even if it meant suffering great consequences.
Also Nacho"s Dad told him to turn himself in. Nacho wasn't able to own that the conspiracy was from Gus Fring. Even after being betrayed and facing death, he could not afford to be honest because of his father. Blue meth is one hell of a drug and the Breaking Bad universe is a severe one.
@@lil7725 "what??? this guy doesn't agree with the popular opinion?? bozo missed the point!!"
@@lil7725 Omg someone did not like the finale, he must have missed the extremely deep and complicated point, what a bozo.
im glad Walt is six feet under because if he'd heard that you bet Saul was getting shanked in prison
"I liked it. I was good at it."
"The fact is Walter White couldn't have done it without me."
Even when he is going down he is taking someone with him who tried to help him. Feeling bad for his bald lawyer.
It won’t count as a loss because he was representing himself…the other lawyer was just council, so it won’t count as a loss on his record.
Honestly he did this to help Bill... I thought that was clear. Bill will be able to say for the rest of his career that he got Saul Goodman a sentence of 7 years before Goodman screwed it up.
@@kalorakalora that's how I saw it as well. Not only that, but being the lawyer the famous Saul Goodman chose regardless of the verdict would get you attention from the clientele he's targeting
@@fireburn95rs Sorry, may I ask what is the negative impact for Jimmy's lawyer there, should he continue to be his lawyer?
@@neardarkroad1347 bad reputation from losing a case
I still love how the room reacts to the name “Walter White” dude was as close to Voldemort as you can get. Although he died he will always be the boogey man
That scene… it was ALL about that scene. Pure gold, pure cinema, pure storytelling right there. When you put all the stars alignements it happens that. That universe is seriously just too perfect.
This is the moment where the Wayfarer 515 ribbon made a cameo. Bravo Vince!
That cameo was a banger
This is also the moment Kim saw Jimmy McGill again since 'Fun and Games'.
@@jiro110 since the last episode actually
@@grapefruitjuice9473 Kim heard him from a phone call but didnt see him irl until the finale
@@lebaguette5393 nah remember the divorce papers last episode?
I think Jimmy made that plea bargain, and threw that away in that moment so that Marie understood he didn’t have to spend the rest of his life in jail. He knew he deserved it, but he wanted to prove above all else he still had some decency, at least some humanity. He could have kept his mouth shut and served barely any time. He did the right thing, and will spend the rest of his life in prison simply because it was the right thing.
not only did the right thing, but he did so through the mechanism of pulling a con. He conned the government to thinking that he was going to plea for only 7 years. He conned Kim to get her to show up in the same room as him. He conned Bill for being a jerk to him all those years with Petty and a prior. He told the truth the only way he knew how. By screwing everybody else over
you can redeem yourself without going to prison, just live your life differently prison is for mans law not gods.
yeah but this is a show. also i think saul was severely depressed out in the real world. even if he served his 7 years and got out, he would be under severe investigation and would never be do what he wants. he is a con-man at heart. he is a people person. and he also is a pretty good lawyer. he can do all of that in prison@@vincenthammons-kd9du
What a great scene. Not only Jimmy was accepting the consequences of his actions, but at the same time he was showing how good of a lawyer he was (although a criminal one) after years and years of being treated as a joke attorney by his collegues, his brother and Walter. And that settlement of 7 years was him just playing Saul Goodman one last time, showing once again that he was capable of getting away with it, even though this time he didn't want to do it. His final message was "That's how good I was".
Remember that scene in season 4 when he goes for a job a copying machine and bullshits himself into having it and then he basically calls the owners idiots for hiring people that easily and quits? this is a bigger version of that, Saul had God tier speech abilities
he would have been such a fantastic sales person. but his brother's constant nagging, his bad company of friends kind of made him fulfil a self-fulilling prophecy
Your honor, my contribution to Walter White's drug empire was so significant that they made 6 more seasons of the show.
In none of the two versions we hear from him he’s lying, he’s just telling another face of the same story, he’s just showing one last time how good he is, even in redemption, showing that what was sacred for his own brother it’s more rotten than milk left outside the fridge for years. He showed two different REAL emotions in two different moments to make everyone understand how broken our society is, being the old same show-off he’s always been in the process
"I made *millions*"
I love the little hint of pride in his voice there. In spite of losing everything, in spite of his regret, in spite of all it cost him, Jimmy is still a little bit proud that he achieved what he did.
This was Saul's "I liked it. I was good at it. And I was alive."
I loved this scene. It was great seeing Jimmy pull off one final con on everyone in that courtroom, including himself as Saul. Felt thematically appropriate for the show, was a great surprise, and the whole process of it just made me love the finale. He has them all thinking he's going to do his plea deal he worked out earlier, which is the most Saul Goodman deal ever, and turns it into a big dramatic confession. I'm not sure if Chuck would have loved or hated it, since it was one of those Perry Mason moments that Chuck mocked back in season 3. But it was so good to watch.
Walter was driven by his inability to admit he did it all alone. The smartest man. What a post death shot across his bow.
More like doing it with some help from Jesse, Saul and Mike.
I'm glad Marie is back
@Koosh We are glad that you guys are glad for him
@@jiro110 we are glad that we are glad that you are glad that he is glad that Marie is back
@@zayn2780 Gladception ?
And no Skylar and Flynn in courtroom 😞
@@Laufield they dont care, Skyler probably realizes she got drug money from Grey Matter and Saul knows about it, she´ll keep her mouth shut and not come to the court.
What surprises me is Flynn not coming to the courtroom, not coming there and confronting Saul´s BS and call him a drug money launderer.
Bro this scene was just so good
This and Nacho’s ‘It was ME’ scene, such a damn good fucking show
This goes way too hard, especially the last line
Mad respect to the judge for trying to protect Jimmy and prevent him from ruining his plea deal.
This scene to me determined what a brilliant ending the series had
Jimmy proved that he could change, thus ending Saul Goodman.
Walter got an epic Darth Vader/Anakin Skywalker sacrifice.
Jesse got a fresh start in a state he loved.
Perfect endings all around!
It’s amazing how BCS made BB a footnote in Jimmy’s story.
I just realised...from the entire universe of bb, only Jimmy got jailed.
Every one who was majorly involved, died.
Only Jesse was left who started it all.
"You"ll never watch Breaking Bad the same again after BCS season 6" Bottom line: as long as Heisenberg was stuck with Krazy 8 or even Tuco, he couldn't grow too big. The real deal was Gus Fring. Because Gus had a huge, well-oiled drug organization backed by Madrigal, Schuler, Lydia, Los Pollos, the trucks... But Fring was hidding in plain sight. Even Walt did not noticed him first time he went to Los Pollos Hermanos ! The only two people that cound unmask Gus to Walter were Mike (Gus security) and Saul (Gus laundering, kind of). With a prescient Mike bluntly refusing to put Walt in contact with Gus, it was *Saul that made the meeting possible* . And from there, it just came crashing down - to Face off and then, into season 5 after Gus died.
I like to interpret that Saul always wanted to take the deal, but as soon as he heard Kim confessed he realized that if she can change, so can he.
Saul Goodman died that day. Jimmy mcgill woke up from the grave.
I literally can't stop thinking about this hard quote. One thing's for sure: the writers of the Breaking Bad universe sure know how to make meaningful and memorable dialogue.
"Sir, we're here to talk about your speeding ticket."
No matter how many times I watch this scene, I get the same chills every time. The confession, the passion behind it, the significance of it, this is just such an amazing scene. What a way to end a show! I'll miss Better Call Saul.
Agree... It could take decades before we see a show with that high level 😢
man, the breaking bad universe is truly over man. it was so fantastic. i have only been watching for 1.5 years, but jesus. its all gone man@@VictorBello-nw9nv
@@VictorBello-nw9nv I've heard the Sopranos is really good, though I've never actually watched it
“walter white couldn’t have done it without me “ TRUE
1:39 DEA: Your Honor, let that man spit!
Wish you had left in the "you got that?" at the end, which was badass.
the monstercat professional commenter to better call saul fan pipeline
1:49 - this is the moment Bill Oakley became screwed.
"Walter White couldn't have done it without me". Saul is goddamn right.
People say this is for Kim and for his personal reasons, but i believe it was because of Chuck. He wanted to finally prove that he could change and make things right. Man i believe the Chuck era was so important with the ending.
it was both. the exit sign is there. so is kim.
Maybe of course not everything he said is the purest truth, but he's right about one thing for sure. If it wasn't for him, Walter would have been dead long ago, or behind bars. For example, if he hadn't brought Walter and Gus together, the Salamanca brothers would have killed Walter long ago. He also helped with money laundering. But in the end, Walter considered him an ordinary clown
But Walt was wrong.
jimmy's ambition just barely lost out to his new found sense of right and wrong all in one scene. really good work
Jimmy, you finally Broke Good
Goodbye Saul goodbye Walt and It’s S’all Gone Man
"It ain't all good, and that's the truth" -De La soul
And so Jimmy finally proved Chuck wrong. He was capable of being more than just Slippin' Jimmy.
Jimmy wanted people to know that he was the best damn lawyer and mastermind of all time. He also wanted redemption, wanted Kim's respect, and wanted to go out on his terms. He got it all with this ending...
1. Spending 7 years as he had argued with the prosecutor would've been redemption. He would've been in his 60s by the time he was released so it would've been punishment enough for him.
2. Kim isn't exactly innocent in all of this, she got Howard killed. Love blinded Jimmy.
3. "His own terms" were that he argued with the prosecutors for an entire day to have his sentence reduced from the death penalty to 7 years. It makes no sense to drastically change like this the very next day during the court hearing. This was just very poor writing.
What I found most interesting , and ironic, is that Jimmy , a character who has spent almost his entire life avoiding the consequences of his actions as well as helping others do the same, did the *ONE THING* Walter White never could because of his pride: Admit his faults.
He had the chance to get a relatively measly sentence of 7 years, but decided to admit his guilt instead and give all the victims of Walt's mess peace of mind by apologising personally.
Hell, Saul might have gotten the best fate out of anyone who ever worked with Walt. Sure, he'll spend the rest of his life behind bars but ,ultimately, he got to keep his soul.
I love the judge's voice. The way she says "obstruction of justice" is just so cool for whatever reason.
"But not for long" the gag omg
It’s crazy that the only way Jimmy could be free was to be imprisoned
Saul probably got the best ending, he confessed to everything and now he is prison chilling with the boys.
Sauls death and jimmys redemption
this ending is perfect because despite him going in for life he actually showed everyone that he can change .
Imagine if instead of seeing Elliot and Gretchen, Walter had watched Saul's trial broadcast at the end of Better Call Saul where he says "Walter White couldn't have done it without me" (not possible due to the chronology of this universe, but if it had been done it would have been great, uniting the endings of both series in a great way)
I guess Walt would have had 4 strokes in a trenchcoat that day.
that would be cool as fuck but i dont think saul would have guts to say it knowing that he killed 10 people in 3 jails in 2 minutes
If Walt didn't see the Swarchz then it's kinda possible...
That would be cool but Walter was dead long before this scene
Joe Driscoll is chilling in Alaska
People seem to think that without Saul, Walt couldn't be able to do money laundering, but that's not what Saul helped Walt with. In fact, Saul wasn't very good at this and Skyler ended up helping him more do that. But there are many more things Saul played a key part, a few but important examples are:
- Saul took Badger out of jail, thus protecting Jesse and Walt since Badger would've told everything about their business.
- Saul was the connection that joined both Mike and Gus with Walter. Without this connection they wouldn't have met each other, or possibly Gus would've just killed Walter as soon as he realized he was selling in his territory. Also, without Mike keeping an eye on Walter and Jesse they would've died very soon, or ended up in jail.
- Saul protected and hid Jesse when Mike and Gus were going to kill him, which in turn lead to Gale's death.
- Saul was the one who helped Walter poison Brook, which ended up in Gus' death.
Also he gave Walter the contact to the disappearer
Well, I know a guy who knows a guy, that knows another guy...
3:37 it’s like Marie was saying “well i’ll be damned, he’s owning up to his actions”
this was the moment when Breaking Saul became Slippin Jimmy
I find it hilarious that the only reason Jimmy wanted Bill to be his defense was probably absolutely demolish his chances of getting another case ever again. In Jimmy's final moments of being Saul he takes down the true antagonist of the series.
This show provokes so many emotions dude. I thought he'd say the same story, and stuff, then he bogged down, but for the best. I love this scene so much.
This is my favourite show of all time.