Better Call Saul

Summary

Better Call Saulwas a television serial categorized by unbelievable attention to detail and was chock - full of countless allusion , recall , and symbol for observant viewers to spot . Much likeBreaking Badbefore it , this prequel serial reward audiences who paid close attention , and every instalment was full of legion moments that could be analyse , endlessly draw aside , and discussed for their insightful relevancy to the overall narrative . This show begged to be rewatched because , with each subsequent viewing ofBetter Call Saul , newfangled detail unveil themselves .

The obvious ordered details that viewers expect out for when watchingBetter Call SaulwereEaster egg toBreaking BadandEl Camino , but these only scratched the airfoil of the small details that audiences may have missed . Better Call Saul’screators , Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould , not only ensured that this show could live up to the legacy ofBreaking Bad , but in many ways , its committedness to detail even exceed the previous show . With consistently gamey caliber throughout its six - time of year run , there were so manysmall details that viewers might have missed when watchingBetter Call Saul .

8B Is For Belize

Season 1, Episode 10, ““Marco”

From the very first season ofBetter Call Saul , the serial was throw in small Easter eggs and references toBreaking Badfor eagle - eyed viewers to spot . One especially satisfying reference add up in the first season close , whenJimmy McGill hosted a lotto game and continually draw the varsity letter B. Jimmy went through some classic exercise when he pronounce B was for battleships and Bourbon before stating : “ B is for Belize . Beautiful plaza , so I ’ve get wind , I would have it off to go there , but have ’s look it , that ’s never give out to happen . ”

For those not paying close aid , this may seem inconsequent , but Belize has a much mysterious meaning in the world ofBetter Call Saul , as it was Saul ’s secret computer code for killing undesirable adversaries inBreaking Bad . When Saul talked to Walter White about sending Hank “ on a trip to Belize ” in the Season 5 episode “ Buried , ” he was n’t talking about him move on a sunny vacation . Subtle callback like this were whyBetter Call Saulwas one ofthe best prequels everproduced .

7Beneke Fabricators

Season 4, Episode 1, “Smoke”

There were so many wink - and - miss - it moments throughoutBetter Call Saulthat made it a series that just beg to be rewatched , analyzed , and meditate over in the years after its finis air . One tiny detail that only the most paying attention viewer would have spotted came in the fourth time of year premiere as Jimmy searched through the classified advertising in the newspaper . When the camera panned to the paper , the intimate name of Beneke Fabricators could be briefly reckon alongside the other advertizing .

6“I Like It. I’m Good At It.”

Season 4, Episode 6, “Piñata”

Better Call Saulwas full of visual callback and book of facts that made the show fascinating . One highly subtle here and now came in Season 4 when Kim told Jimmy about her new position doing pro bono work for the public defender ’s berth . While Jimmy appear at Kim mystify and did not understand why she would be doing something that appeared to throw such lilliputian amplification for her , she simply replied , “ I like it , I ’m full at it , and I ’m help people . ”

Hearing this inBetter Call Saultook viewers back to the finale ofBreaking Bad , as Walter White take duty for his dreadful human activity and no longer hid behind his abstract thought that he did everything for his family . When Walt told Skyler he did it for himself because “ I liked it”and “ I was good at it , ” it was one of the most psychotherapeutic moments in all ofBreaking Bad . AsKim mimic these same lines but for very different reasonsit highlightedBreaking BadandBetter Call Saul’sunderlying theme of utilizing potential for good or bad .

5Werner Ziegler & Walter White

Season 4, Episode 5, “Quite a Ride"

Werner Ziegler was the German engineer hire by Mike Ehrmantraut to manage the building ofGustavo Fring ’s Superlab inBetter Call Sauland was first see in the Season 4 sequence “ Quite a Ride . ” Werner was a fascinating graphic symbol when it total to obscure details thatBetter Call Saulviewers may have missed , especially when he was compared to theBreaking Badprotagonist , Walter White . In a direction , Werner and Walter can be seen as juxtapositions of one anotherwhose stories mime and differentiate from each other in meaning way .

Like Walter , Werner was an underappreciated ace who found himself run with Mike and Gus only to become a liability who need to be dispose of . While Walter retaliated and eventually get over Gus ’s plans to have him defeat , Werner accepted his portion and was ultimately executed by Mike . Werner also apportion a name with the German scientist Werner Heisenberg , whose namesake became Walter ’s condemnable identity , further play up the interesting and often unnoticed parallels between the two grapheme .

4Gene’s Robbery

Season 6, Episode 12, “Waterworks”

After Jimmy McGill was forced to give up his life as the criminal lawyer Saul Goodman and move to Omaha under the new guise of Gene Takovic , he could not help but go back to his old way and continue pulling off yet another con . InGene ’s robbery in Season 6,Better Call Saulpulled off one of its most cunning obscure item that only the most observant viewer would have spotted . This was when Gene took picture of his victim ’s fiscal portfolio , which amount to $ 737,612.62 .

This would have seemed like a completely random number to the average viewer , but it was actually the same amount of money that Walter White wanted to impart behind for his family . early on inBreaking Bad , Walter calculated this figure and planned to get out of the meth business once he had reached it so he could see to it his kinsfolk ’s wellbeing after he died . This was not a coincidence , asGene ’s looting symbolized Jimmy once again going down the same destructive way that Walter didand that , by going back to his biography of crime , Jimmy was no better than Walt .

3Zafiro Añejo Tequila

Throughout Better Call Saul

With the A1A Car Wash , Schraderbräu , and Los Pollos Hermanos , theBreaking Baduniverse was no unknown to fictitious businesses and brands , andBetter Call Saulcontinued this tradition with the inclusion of Zafiro Añejo tequila . This alcohol-dependent life first appear inBreaking Badwhen Gus Fring invest a poisoned bottleful of it to Don Eladio Vuente and the cartel , which he used to kill them all . While this was the drink ’s only appearance inBreaking Bad , it was spotted several time throughoutBetter Call Saul .

In the second season , Jimmy and Kim conned the stockbroker Ken into buying them guess of Zafiro Añejo . Jimmy gifted Kim a feeding bottle in the third season to celebrate the Sandpiper event ’s imminent settlement . In Season 4 , Kim and Jimmy drink a bottle after Chuck ’s suicide . Finally , in the sixth time of year , Jimmy almost bought a bottle to celebrate his and Kim ’s plan to break Howard . With so many coming into court , Zafiro Añejo was a significant swallow in the relationship between Jimmy and Kim , as they used the tequila to signify clock time of celebration and pathos .

2Juan Tabo Blvd, New Mexico

There were very few coincidences inBetter Call Saul , as the writing was so immaculate that even the midget detail was often related to other second within theBreaking Baduniverse . One interesting detail that continually popped up throughoutBetter Call Saulwas Juan Tabo Blvd , an Albuquerque , New Mexico street that featured its fair share of callback and allusions . The first was that this was the street that house Gale Boetticher and where he fulfil his wrong end after being shot by Jesse Pinkman inBreaking Bad .

However , Juan Tabo was also the locating of the Dry Spa and Nail Salon , whose utility room Jimmy McGill used as an office during the other season ofBetter Call Saul . As a actual street in Albuquerque , it ’s no surprise that it pop up numerous times throughoutBreaking BadandBetter Call Saul . Although it ’s interesting to think that while Jimmy McGill was slowly build up up his legal practice , Gale was just down the street , unaware of the fate that would befall him just a few unforesightful years later .

1Colors And Symbolism

One thing that setBetter Call Saulapart from so many other television series was its incredible use of color , which symbolize the case ' moral decline as the series march on . Much like inBreaking Bad , color was a central indicator of the honourable standing of its characters and the complex psychology behind their actions and decision . The flash - forward scenes with Gene whole dispatch color to stage how much Jimmy had drop off from his unfortunate felonious relationship with Walter White .

InBetter Call Saul , colour was used as a storytelling tool throughout , and if audiences were ever in doubt about how they should find about the characters , all they had to do was glance at their kit , and it would let out a world of information . Those on the effectual side often wear down navy , racy , and gullible , while outlaw were usually seen in red and orangish . Acontrast between cold and warm hue like these was visualize throughoutBetter Call Saul , with Jimmy often stick in the middle , unsure which side of that divide he need to land on .

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Cast

good Call Saul follows diminished - time attorney Jimmy McGill as he navigate the legal world to make end fulfil . The series , set six age before his skirmish with Walter White , chronicles Jimmy ’s evolution into Saul Goodman , with notable interactions alongside fixer Mike Ehrmantraut .

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Bob Odenkirk in Better Call Saul

Custom image by Debanjana Chowdhury.

Bob Odenkirk as Jimmy McGill / Saul Goodman hosting a bingo game in Better Call Saul Season 1, Episode 10, ““Marco”

Better Call Saul follows small-time lawyer Jimmy McGill as he navigates the legal world to make ends meet. The series, set six years before his encounter with Walter White, chronicles Jimmy’s evolution into Saul Goodman, with notable interactions alongside fixer Mike Ehrmantraut.

Beneke Fabricators seen in Better Call Saul Season 4, Episode 1, “Smoke”

Rhea Seehorn as Kim Wexler in Better Call Saul Season 4, Episode 6, “Piñata”

Werner Ziegler and Mike From Better Call Saul

The financial figures from Gene’s robbery in Better Call Saul Season 6, Episode 12, “Waterworks”

Bob Odenkirk as Jimmy McGill / Saul Goodman holding a tequila bottle in Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 9 “Wiedersehen”

Dry Spa and Nail Salon on Juan Tabo Blvd, New Mexico in Better Call Saul

Bob Oedenkirk as Saul Goodman in the desert with Jonathan Banks as Mike Ehrmantraut in Better Call Saul.

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Better Call Saul