Mike Physically Threatens Saul | Full Measure | Breaking Bad
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- čas přidán 5. 07. 2023
- Mike threatens Saul to give up Jesse's whereabouts.
From Season 3 Episode 13 Full Measure:
After killing the drug dealers, Walt has a tense meeting with Gus, who makes it clear that his patience has reached its limit. Walt professes not to know the whereabouts of Jesse, who he falsely claims has fled the state. Gus chooses Walt's new assistant, who turns out to be Gale. In a meeting with Gale, Gus says that with his overhead he cannot afford to lose even a week's production. Walt realizes Gus intends to replace him with Gale, the only other trained chemist, and that he will be killed once Gale masters Walt's procedure. After he is abducted by Gus's men, Walt calls Jesse and orders him to murder Gale, knowing that Gus will have to keep him (and by extension Jesse) alive once he is the only trained chemist left. Victor races to Gale's apartment to stop this, but Jesse arrives first and, after some hesitation, pulls his gun on Gale and fires.
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Breaking Bad follows protagonist Walter White (Bryan Cranston), a chemistry teacher who lives in New Mexico with his wife (Anna Gunn) and teenage son (RJ Mitte) who has cerebral palsy. White is diagnosed with Stage III cancer and given a prognosis of two years left to live. With a new sense of fearlessness based on his medical prognosis, and a desire to secure his family's financial security, White chooses to enter a dangerous world of drugs and crime and ascends to power in the world. The series explores how a fatal diagnosis such as White's releases a typical man from the daily concerns and constraints of normal society and follows his transformation from mild family man to a kingpin of the drug trade.
Better Call Saul is the prequel to the award-winning series Breaking Bad, set six years before Saul Goodman (Bob Odenkirk) became Walter White's lawyer. When we meet him, the man who will become Saul Goodman is known as Jimmy McGill, a small-time lawyer searching for his destiny, and, more immediately, hustling to make ends meet. Working alongside, and often against, Jimmy is "fixer" Mike Erhmantraut (Jonathan Banks), a beloved character introduced in Breaking Bad. The series will track Jimmy's transformation into Saul Goodman, the man who puts "criminal" in "criminal lawyer."
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And he still didn't give Jesse up, he gave Mike some fake Virginia address. Best Lawyer ever.
You’re Goddamn right 😎
Saul Goodman is a ride or die 😤
Mike is such a professional enforcer for Gus 😂😈
"i just talked you down from a death sentence to 6 months probation... I'm the best lawyer every." that scene where the criminal underworld starts give jimmy some confidence in himself was lowkey wholesome
Well he had no financial gain helping mike
Saul went back to Jimmy for a moment when he remembered what Tuco did to the twin skateboarders.
Well played!
shut up. you don't need a whole different series to explain why someone is scared of physical threats
And the Bagman situation
shut up dude
Saul being terrified of his legs getting broken makes a lotta sense after Tuco 🤣
I would be too 🤣
And Mike knows this as well the desert.
@@breakingbad I mean dude already has bad knees last thing he needs is finger knee-capitating what's left of them
what are you waffling about, who wouldn't be scared of getting their legs broken
@@banano2210 I imagine it’s scarier for Saul considering he knows what a leg break looks like.
It's sad seeing how Jimmy and Mike's relationship erodes by the time Breaking Bad rolls around. While it's undoubtedly because of things like Jimmy's participation in the Howard scam, and his continued work with Walter, it's still sad seeing Jimmy going from being one of the few people Mike can rely on in Better Call Saul, to _this_
Yet Mike still went to Saul for help before he died. Also he kept Saul out of the loop regarding the Salamancas so Saul wouldn't freak out.
@@CrossoverFan4life Him recognizing Jimmy for his utility isn't the same as the two having a necessarily amicable relationship
@@MadelineSawyer Their relationship was still friendly enough, Mike valued him for his resourcefulness but didn't respect him much morally (not that Mike was morally upstanding). But Mike still kept a professional relationship because he's not a hypocrite
@@aaronwylie6928 Which is still a step down from their dynamic between 2002-2004, where Mike at worst thinks Jimmy is foolhardy or erratic, and at best is fond of him for his peculiarities to a degree that he's willing to open up out of respect. By 2008, Mike is absolutely dutiful as Jimmy's PI, even as it comes second to his retainership for Gus, but their relationship is a far cry from when Mike would voice concerns for Chuck's death in Season 4, or telling Jimmy the plan for Lalo in Season 5 despite Jimmy being on a need to know basis with the whole situation.
@@MadelineSawyer Mike's reaction to Jimmy's airplane commercial shows he still likes him to be fair. Not to mention the fact that Mike didn't hurt Jimmy after realising it was a fake location.
wow!!! so unlucky that Saul left the room to make some coffee and Mike took advantage of the situation, poor Saul he has the worst luck possible.
except it was Saul playing Mike like a fiddle in this situation
Someone's having a hard time understanding a joke
A Nescafe--lol! Ahh, that Jimmy. How do you not love that weasel?
You can tell Mike was so done after Saul's stunt with Howard.
It’s funny by the way that Saul in this scene wears something similar that Howard used to wear
@cursed770could say the same for literally any other character in this universe really. Walts drug empire mostly consisted of pure luck, “right moment at the right time” and intelligent people being manipulated by less intelligent people. Mike wanted to kill Hector Salamanca for murdering the innocent civilian that uncovered his truths but didn’t kill Walter White for the deaths of so many people.
Yeah and how he changed to Saul and did more shameful shait.
But howard was the start. After that mike did only business with saul and didn't respect him.
I just noticed that Saul is wearing the shirt similar to the one Howard usually wears.
I was just going to say that too!
McGilligo Blue
It looks like those old-timey prison garbs with black and white stripes.
He probably kept it all this time when he bought it in the S1 Episode 3.
People have been saying it, but I'll chime in too. Despite how showy Saul was in Breaking Bad, there were little hints here and there that he was more empathetic than appeared. When he says that he just can't do it, and the he couldn't live with himself, that feels like there's still a sliver of Jimmy McGill there that hasn't died yet.
Moreover, I wore the same clothing that Howard usually wear.
Of course Jimmy was never fully gone. The time Walt had Saul call Hank to report a fake car accident, Saul was showing remorse for doing such a thing to a person. It reminded him of Kim. Whenever someone is facing the same turmoil that involves Gus and Mike, Saul knows that person will never be seen again and he actually liked Jesse cuz Jesse was pretty much how Saul was when he was in his Slippin’ Jimmy days.
this entire scene is Saul putting up an act though. the address that Saul gives Mike is a fake one, and his whole act about how he couldn't live with himself is just him faking it to really sell that the address is authentic. Saul was always going to give Mike the address because that's what he was supposed to do to throw them off of Jesse's tail
@@prodKaizoku I dunno... The way Saul reacts when he brings Walt to Jesse at the laser tag, the way he says "My very own PI threating to break MY legs!?" doesn't feel like an act. It feels showy. Even here where he scrambles to get another address for Mike to follow feels like a last minute "weasel my way out of this" kinda scheme. It wouldn't shock me if it was just some random address he had written down from a while ago.
Then again, he's such a good actor that I thought he meant every word of his testimony when he got his law license back. You never can tell with him
@@TheMaskedDonut I'm not sure if it's explained later in the same episode or the next one but Saul meets up with Jesse and Walt at the laser tag place and explains to Walt that Gus is gonna realize the address he gave Mike was false and they don't have a lot of time.
Never would’ve guessed these two walked through the desert together
If you pause at 0:01 you can see a blue ring on the side of Saul's head. But on closer inspection you can see it's not actually a ring, but a small Light-Emitting Diode pulsing at regular intervals, and each pulse symbolises that Saul's hands-free cellular device is currently switched on; and that he is indeed in conference.
Great job detective 👍
BRAVO VINCE!!!!
Shut up god these bravo Vince comments are so annoying
VRAVO BINCE
I figured he was just ultra douche. Once again Vince, amazing writing.
Jimmy and mike's relationship fell apart fast after what happened to Howard.
Yeah but Howard's skull fell apart even faster
@@memelottidamn
@@memelotti bruh💀
@@memelotti And I thought Howard couldn't get it any worse💀
Yeah I used to think this scene was inconsistent with their history in BCS (especially after the desert episode) but after S6 aired I was like yeah this makes total sense now.
The hamlindigo blue still echoes in Breaking Bad...
This is the exact moment when Mike physically threatened Saul
Bravo Bince
Vravo bince
Tragic patter
Excellent observation
Wait WHAT?!! I missed it! 🙃
If Saul had only kept some stickers in the office for occasions such as this . . . 😞
Took me a second, but I busted out laughing, well done!
Saul having Tuco flashbacks on the desert.
And flashbacks of being targeted by a gang after Mike saves him in the desert.
What many people lose is that this is one of the only times Saul is able to “scam” Mike.
Heartbreking to see this after knowing all the things they lived together in BCS
0:14 this is the exact moment Saul made a Howard Hamlin reference in Breaking Bad before he was even planned to exist in a spin off show. What a talented storywriter that is Ginge Villigan!
Bravo Vince
He said "How would one track him down? I wonder". He said "How would" not "Howard"
Mike's threatened Walt, he's threatened Jesse, he's probably threatened someone before breakfast this morning. It's what he does!
0:27 “The sooner you can get back to whatever the hell this exactly” Mike is full-blown confused as to what the hell he’s seeing you can hear it in his voice lol. Leave it to Jimmy to daze someone as hardened as Mike through sheer eccentrics lmao. Just another reason Jimmy is my favourite character in this universe
Man after watching BCS, it makes me sad to see Mike and Saul acting this way towards each other. If you ask me, I like to think that there is a part of Mike that understands the pain Jimmy went through that caused him to become Saul, but the reason he still threatens him is for the same reason Mike killed Werner. Mike cared about both of them, but he still had to follow orders, so he had to put his morals aside and had to do what he was being paid to do. You know what I mean?
@@petert2481 Nah, I disagree. Mike cared about Werner too, but he still had to kill him under Gus's orders. Mike and Saul are just their worst versions of themselves by the time Breaking Bad rolls around, so that explains a lot.
@@petert2481Nah its because what happened to Howard. The writers are solid, your thinking and brain power is as liquid as an abortion
@@petert2481 It isn't poor writing lmao, Mike absolutely would after Jimmy went batshit with his Saul persona.
@@petert2481In what way is it poor writing
I think it's just that at this point, they hadn't quite figured out how Mike and Saul's relationship should be. Heck, they didn't figure out who Jimmy McGill should be.
- Sohl, put your attorney client privilege away
No
Saultuh, I need pinkmans location saultuh,
Im not following the attorney client privilege right now saultuh
After all the crap these two went through, especially in the desert. It’s sad to see their relationship get reduced to this.
"Howard one track him down" bravo Vince bravo.
This was the moment Saul realized he better fuel Huell
This is the hardest Mike ever is. No reasoning or explanation. Cold and hard.
After what happened to Howard, it's easy to see why Mike had such a deep contempt for Saul.
1:40 It's insane how Saul mentions trust and attorney client privilege. Later on in the series that same scenario he mentions comes into fruition when Mike's guys start falling like dominos because the lawyer switched sides on him. Thus I like to believe that when Mike was sitting on that rock after getting shot; he was thinking about his family and Saul. He came into that realization and literally dropped dead.
As sleazy as he is, Jimmy never rat on his clients. That’s lowkey honorable of him.
That's why Saul is the best lawyer
So weird seeing mike call him saul instead of jimmy
He never calls him Jimmy in BCS.
@@dannycalypsehm does mike ever refer to Jimmy by name? Cause I actually can't remember him directly talk to Jimmy by proper nouns or names apart from 'you'
@@billross9132 That's what I'm saying.
Even though certain Saul and Mike scenes in BB seem a little weird with the added context BCS gave us-- It still works. You gotta figure that yes, JIMMY and Mike had a decent relationship. But Saul Goodman and Mike do not. Mike sees him as nothing more than a shell of who he once was, it actually makes a lot of sense that Mike would be extra cold to him.
I don’t think that for Mike there is actually difference between Jimmy and Saul, I think he didn’t like him much from very beginning and we can see it through show or BCS but they had some moments when Mike isn’t annoyed by him, like the moment in desert when they talking about Time Machine travel or when Jimmy was scared for life of Kim, and also when Mike tried to show sympathy about Chuck’s death in season 4, these moments are one of the most that we can actually say they were not cold between those two, all other time it was just business.
1:56 😂😂😂 Mike
0:34 Saul think he Shane💀💀💀💀💀
After bcs seeing everything these two have been through it’s weird seeing mike act like this towards him
I think Mike lost a lot of respect for Saul after he ignored his suggestion to stay he hell away from Walt. I see it as he resents Saul more and more with every inconvenience brought by Walt and Jessie, since Saul is ultimately the one who connects the two parties.
It's more likely Jimmy getting Howard killed
Tbh, they were always kind of a dysfunctional duo. Saul fully immersing himself in his Saul Goodman lifestyle and Mike getting closer to Gus then amplified that. I think's totally believable.
Mixture of what happened with Howard and then afterwards continuing to work with Walt
Anyone else find out Saul is wearing a shirt that closely resembles Howard?
II always thought that this scene was Mike just doing his job, and he is - but after Howard I think Mike really does not like Jimmy at all, beating him wouldn't have made much a difference to whatever conscience he had left.
"When at advantage, your enemy must believe you are at disadvantage. When at disavantage, your enemy must believe you are at advantage."
-Sun tzu
Rip Howard Hamlin 🙏🏽 😢
RIP bozo 🤣
@@josiahgonzalez942 shut your mouth
After Jimmy got Howard killed, Mike was no longer interested in respecting Saul
Jimmy and Kim's actions definitely lead to his death, but I wouldn't say they caused it. They had no idea Lalo would be coming back and Jimmy didn't even know he was still alive. Still a very messed up and terrible thing for them to have done either way.
He talks about the desert, which happened in Better call saul.
Do not touch anything on my desk. Not sure why but I use that every chance I get .
Bro how clever is Saul to have predicted this exact situation and write down the fake address in advance. He planed this whole exchange ahead of time in order to dupe Mike, very very clever is Saul
One of many scenes that are enhanced thanks to BCS.
Waltuh
I wonder if that's the same undershirt that Howard Hamlin wore in his suit...
Saul wearing hamlindigo blue 😂
This is the moment saul made a nescafe
Mike: it’s the right thing.
Show just how far gone he is that he’s willing to kill Jesse and Walter just as a precaution. They wouldn’t even be in this mess had Gus just dealt with those two drug dealers for Jesse when he asked.
nO COmE On mAN MiKE iS My FaVOriTe hE’s sUcH a SwEeThEaRt
Mike would kill you for 5 bucks if Gus told him to
Well the one time he went against Gus wishes he almost got killed by Tyrus
No he wouldn't
He always hate it when someone who is not "in the game" gets killed, even if his morality clearly declined between Better Call Saul and Breaking Bad, which is what makes his character arc tragic
@@ramhthewatermelonthat's not much of a point still, sure he might feel bad but at the end of the day when Gus says jump Mike asks how high
Literally. Everyone says Mike is their favourite character, that he's the least evil character (besides Howard) and that Walt is just bad, but the fact is Mike is just as bad, if not worse than Walter and his only justification is "Chicken man said so". This fanbase is so braindead sometimes it's honestly baffling to me.
@@velikan420 You're talking as if Mike was just a monster without nuance. Of course he's bad, he's very immoral during Breaking Bad but there's much more to his character than that, just like every main characters in BB/BCS anyway
This is the moment where Mike had enough of Saul's tomfoolery.
Chicanery, even
Obviously when this was written howard, kim, and chuck werent a thing but man this scene really hits different when you realize what is going on in their heads
now lets both get comfortable
I love this scene, Mike and Saul built of each other so well
Saul folded like a taco 😂😂😂
Taco Saulamanca
[Saul, a few inches away from Mikes boot]
Mike: You’re good right there
Saul went to make himself a Nescafe, and change his underwear!
0:58 ironic. We all know what Mike is indicating
This is the moment Saul left the room and made himself a Nescafé.
"Look, Mike, there are rules to this uh, lawyer thing."
"...is that right?"
translation:
"I remember what you did to Howard and I remember cleaning up your mess. Don't high-road me and don't bullshit a bullshitter."
Does anyone notice that Saul looks like Howard?
Howard is kind of the mike of bcs.
Mike represents a successful walter white what walt perceives himself as a dangerous well respected criminal who did it for his family (this is reconned by bcs)
Howard represents a successful jimmy mcgill
Jimmy doesnt like talking about his problems and refuses to see a therapist. Howard does take therapy. Jimmy tries to dodge responsibility in the same sort of way chuck does by shifting it to others. Howard takes responsibility for his actions. Howard was crushee by chucks death but ultimately came out a more positive individual. Jimmy was crushed by chucks death but tries to reppress his emotions and couldnt move forward and regressed as a person.
Howards take away from the HHM scholarship meeting is that people deserve second chances and jimmy deserves said second chanxe
Jimmys take away from the HHM scholarship meeting is that no matter how hard he tries and no matter the work he puts in he will never be given a chance to become a better person and people will only see him as slippin jimmy.
Ultimately what both men have a tallent in is selling people on ideas. Jimmy sells schemes. Howard sells cleints.
Jimmy is a charater who fails to change because he struggles to
A. Take responsibility
B. He is trying to be accepted by chuck somebody who deap down doesnt want
Problems howard doesnt have and ultimately jimmy finally changes when he finally takes responsibility and finds acceptance
Last things last
Jimmy this now their visual simularies probably was either a coincidence or meant to reflect somthing different back when howard was supposed to be the villain.
But yeah howard is basically the successful jimmy mcgill
Best criminal lawyer ever.
Jimmy once thought this guy was a tough sell when he was a parking attendant
does the desert reference have something to do with the money-desert episode from BCS?
Slippin' Jimmy always finds ways to fool everyone, even his own conscience. But not Mike.
But he did fool Mike by giving a fake location for where Jesse is.
This was the moment Saul became a spokesperson for Nescafe.
For guys that haven't watched BCS, Mike would never rescue Mr.McGill from an ambush in a desert and motivate him to keep living, this scene proves it.
This is the exact moment that Saul made a Nescafe
Mike never forgave him for not having the right stickers.
Nice
1:28 this is the moment Saul became Saa
And people are saying Walt was worse than Mike.
Walt used people who WERENT in the game like Brock and Andrea. Mike only hurt people who were aware of what they were involved in. Walts a monster and Mike is just a bad guy but not evil.
@@ryanclark7962he had to poison brock becauss jesse left him and he needed him to protect himself against gus, didn’t he? :D
@@chesschannel1361 and that justifies him poisoning a CHILD? No.
@@ryanclark7962 What was he supposed to do then? Waiting when gus killed him ?
This is what happens when you won’t let the man slide with out the stickers
I wonder if he made that Nescafé, bet it was damn good
Wow
So different than their Juan Valdez Bump and Dump days
Saul, dont make me beat you tell your legs dont work
This really is the scene where saul made himself a Nescafé
2:06 you can see the actor trying not to laugh lmaoo
That’s more of a sneer. Mike usually does it.
When Mike say:"or I drive you ro the desert" Saul rember 2004
Best product placement for Nescafé ever! (Saul wanted to keep his legs in operating condition, so that he could continue to prepare that refreshing Nescafé coffee,)
1:57 💀
I agree with Saul on not giving up Jesse. One of the rare times Mike doesn't respect his own set of rules.
Me and Michael...
Solid as they come...
me and micheal...
it's not a question now...
wöæo...
Lmao
Once Slipping Jimmy, always Slipping Jimmy.
I know a lot of folks feel like Mike and Jimmy's relationship fell apart after what happened to Howard but honestly I feel like that's a copout.
Yes, Howard's death is certainly Kim and Jimmy's fault but Mike would place the blame on Lalo or maybe even himself for taking his security off of Kim/Jimmy as opposed to placing the sole fault on Jimmy for something he knows Jimmy would never have wanted to happen.
Makes much more sense to me that Mike's frustration here is because Saul continues to choose Walt despite warning him otherwise but even then this does still feel a tad inconsistent.
Interesting nonetheless.
Saul drops a dime on Mike to the ATF…..
No sé por qué todos le temen a Mike si es un anciano. Digo, sí, es letal cuando tiene un arma y si está preparado es peor, pero en una pelea mano a mano o ése intento de amenaza de romperle las piernas no debería tomarse tan enserio viviendo de un anciano de 60 años o más 😂
Mike literally took out a gang member with his hands. Mike is strong asf and very aware of his surroundings.
😂😂😂😂😂
We had a good thing, and you pretending otherwise only wastes my times and serves to annoy me.
😂😂😂
Mike is a bit old to be going around beating people up.
Its not about age though is it
@@purpledream2991 When it comes to the physical body? It kind of does, Mike might throw out his back or break his hip in an actual fist fight. Then again, this is a fictional show after all.
@@insanity4082Nah, it's fine around until 80!! as long as one stays fit, like Mike
hi
hi :)
1:10 that’s actually a really good argument…but it’s Mike we are talking to so yeah
That’s what Saul is famous for.
That line was the most Jimmy McGill thing ever too lol
I never liked this mike. Such a brute.
first also nice
Third
Seeing such a confident guy like saul being intimidated was pretty impressive