Saul, Jesse & Walter In The Desert | Breaking Bad | Better Call Saul
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- čas přidán 3. 08. 2022
- Walt and Jesse drag Saul out into the desert for a conversation.
Season 6 Episode 11 Breaking Bad: The partners escalate their enterprise to new levels.
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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."
#BetterCallSaul #BreakingBad #Sony
Saul, Jesse & Walter In The Desert | Breaking Bad | Better Call Saul
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Its funny when Jesse asked who Lalo was not knowing he’s gonna be dancing on top of his grave months later.
Daaaaam
When does that happen?
😭💀💀
@@VodkaNSunglasses episode S03E08 ‘I See You’ Jesse was bored in the superlab, decided to blow up his yellow hazmat suit and started dancing.
@@VodkaNSunglasses During that scene where he dances in the lab Lalo was buried under.
Jesse definitely feels a lot older, but Walt really managed to perfect his look and feel in season 2
IM ON MY TWENTYS BITCH
It’s so weird. Like I saw a recent interview with Aaron Paul and he still looks like Jesse. But here he looks different
@@lukekiely2450 exactly, jesse looks old here, while walter still exactly the same
It legit looks like they just recast Aaron with some guy lol. Still love him of course and glad they got him back. Agree that Cranston really captured it.
His voice matured a lot imo
14 years later Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul chemistry is still off the charts
It’s 99% pure, at least
Aaron looks old and sounds vastly different
@@Calebe311 crazy that people age as time goes on
@@billydeeznuts they could just not have brought them. This show is about Saul
@@Calebe311 They are integral to his story.
Jesse was so proud that he could correct Saul on the flask but then double checks with Walt just to be sure 😂 classic!
The teacher had finally reached the student. "This is the moment when" Jesse's true potential was seen. At this point Jesse could replicate the product on his own.
Good old need to prove yourself.
😄😄😄😂
@@mikemoss6045 THIS IS THE MOMENT JESSE'S POTENTIAL BECOMES SEEN. BRAVO VINCE.
Wires?
The round bottom flask is the flask with the round bottom
Seeing Walt and Jesse again is like bumping into your 2 friends you havent seen in almost a decade.
We saw them in el camino
@Hermann Lake hunt 🤓
@Hermann Lake hunt 🤓
@Hermann Lake hunt 🤓
Sit ere 9 yor hem ma d'kerli nimme zemme gsene 🤓
I like that they used this scene not just as fan service , but also to make a parallel with what Gene is now doing
they did say it wouldn’t just be fan service, and it would actually serve to progress the plot/progress the characters. very well done.
which is what exactly? Haven't been following the show by episode.
Well Better Call Saul is part fan service part good writing but it also serves to help the story
@@Ragnarok3918 To make it clearer, this is the point of no return for Jimmy as Saul Goodman, after he became Saul from breaking up with Kim entirely. The moment he ignores Mike's assessment of Walt and how much of an unpredictable element he is, Jimmy still goes head first into this and has the iconic scene at the end of his intro episode with Walt. Thus, like Walt before, he finally broke bad and that parallels with him taking his latest con job too far and blowing a fuse at a payphone, with his attempt to reach Kim as Gene.
I don't know yet if I consider the Walt and Jesse cameos a good add to the plot more than a good fan service.
I think I'll only know weeks after the finale.
Funny how Saul’s line “you’re Heisenberg” sounds almost the same as when Declan says it, yet it’s treated completely differently. Here Saul seems to be enjoying himself, almost excited to meet the Heisenberg, but over several seasons the Heisenberg name becomes something of awe and fear.
It also helps establish that, as slimey a lawyer as Saul is, he's clever He figured out a lot about their dynamic by just looking around for a minute or two. The whole scene does a lot to establish how criminally experienced and street smart he is compared to Walt and Jesse.
Vravo Bince
666th like 😳
@@Supahpowahnerd890 exactly, he saw them as amateurs he could manipulate but obviously ended up way in over his head
Does it inspire awe?
love the way bryan slips back into the role so perfectly even after 9 years
Guy is a real pro
So is Aaron. 😂😂
Being proud of correcting Saul about the flask and asks Walt to be sure if he himself is right about it. 😂😂
That's classic younger Jesse right their.
Dude, its only been 2 years after El Camino
@@DVRX17 " uh oh, someone on the internet is not as Miserable and cynical as me that's not allowed 😡😡😡"
🤓🤓🤓 ACtUAllY arron pal was awful in his role as jesser
@@memergamer312 Aaron Paul didn't do well
Didn't care about his looks or that it will look bad and ruin the whole scene
Bryan Cranston is amazing. His acting is exactly like back in season 2. It's almost scary the guy's a time traveller.
It’s really cool how different his reaction is to “you’re heisenburg” is in this compared to in season 5. He seems almost embarrassed his name is reaching high levels of notoriety
It takes true talent to just slip right into character again after almost 10 years being away from it, especially when it’s such a complex character like Walter White. Bryan is one of Hollywood’s most gifted actors and BB gave him the platform to show that to the world.
Like he never took the hat off
Yup. The man is a total pro who knows his characters inside and out. He definitely showed up for this small part.
@@calebwitts1232 Great point. Pretty cool to see this.
Breaking Bad, El Camino, Better Call Saul, whatever man. Just keep bringing me that!
Tight tight TIGHT
@@eliavi3251 Yeah!
Kicks Like a mule with its nuts wrapped in duct tape
vince gilligan man he is a god damn genius
ecniv ovarb
My goodness, how great an actor is Bryan Cranston. He played Season 2 Walt perfectly, (not S1 Walt, not S4 Heisenberg!) he slipped back into that role and mindset, and made it look effortless.
I feel bad that no one is hyping up Aaron Paul’s performance
@@MikhailFederov His performance was good as always, but he's clearly not replicating s2 Jesse in the same way Cranston is replicating s2 Walt. Jesse just feels like his El Camino self, minus the trauma.
@@MikhailFederov because he didn't perform well?
Hi, I haven’t watch better call Saul yet but isn’t it supposed to be before breaking bad, why is Walter meeting with Saul.
Frfr
I love Walter's voice in the early seasons when he calmly and logically explained things to people with very mild and contained frustration.
He's a teacher! He talks like a chemistry teacher
It's honestly amazing how they made Saul just as important in this universe as Walter and Jesse, Looking at Breaking Bad it feels like a continuation of Saul's story until Walter messes everything up
The show managed to make the argument that Saul was the catalyst for them making it out of the small time and becoming what they did. It’s pretty incredible writing.
@@dairebeare7839
Gilligan is a wizard
Saul ruined his life. Not Walter.
@@dairebeare7839 Kindof how Gale vouched for Walt
Saul honestly feel like the protagonist of the BB/BCS universe now.
Bob’s acting when he heard Lalo’s name was so great. It was so subtle but you can tell that split moment where he remembers everything before changing the topic as quickly as he could.
This has not been said enough. That line alone was worth the scene existing. It was great.
Not to mention he looked hella uncomfortable when Walt turned off the van probably because of PTSD due to surviving the cartel shootout
@@spidermanfan2341 And the "not the desert" line in the previous flashback in the episode.
It’s actually kinda crazy how much better his acting has gotten since Breaking Bad
@@Bob-po2dp his acting in BB was already fantastic and a highlight too. bcs just gave him a bigger spotlight
I love the fact that the RV was having engine problems and the focus of the key being taken out of ignition which foreshadows Walt and Jesse getting stuck in the desert in the episode after this meeting occurs
Good spot, I remembered that too
Based pfp
I love continuation foreshadowing like this (I don't know what this called btw)
This reunion was both fantastic and bittersweet. Even though there are still two episodes left, I’m starting to experience ‘withdrawal’ from no more Better Call Saul.😂
Wasn’t really a reunion, was it
Same, its like 609 was the finale of "regular" BCS
3 episodes left?
@@josecarranza7555 this series is 13 episodes
@@jamesduffy7549 I thought it was 14.
Great scene to emphasize how deeply involved Saul was with Walt and Jesse's criminal enterprise. Since Walt is dead and Jesse is undercover, Saul will most likely take the fall for many of their crimes if he gets caught.
*when
@@BtrDaze no, no
@@diodosos6263 si sr
No one has been caught. Saul is DEFINITELY going to jail, especially since he is a CRIMINAL lawyer. He practices the law and will face the FULL FORCE of the law.
@@BtrDaze
That's also my bet
Crazy how the second Jesse says “Who’s Lalo” Saul’s personality immediately reverts back to Jimmy. The last couple years Jimmy has hidden all the trauma he had to go through dealing with Lalo/Howard’s death/losing Kim under his Saul Goodman mask, but that comment brings everything back. But Jimmy immediately snaps back into his Saul Goodman persona and disregards the question, showing how far he’s come in transforming into the character we see in Breaking Bad. Top tier writing
I love the little "hints" of Jimmy that come forward every now and again
It's also crazy that in the episode, where Howard is killed, Lalo responds to Howards 'Who are you' with 'I'm nobody' and Jimmy responds the same way to Jesse's question 'Who's Lalo'.
Those two guys with mask has potential to be some of the most well written characters in Television! They should make a series about them
Idk man I think it would be kind of a bad if they did
@@iane7474 Still, it would be groundBREAKING
Not going to lie, I totally think they should name the show after the episode and call it "breaking bad", like they can do the whole chemistry theme with the "Br" and "Ba" for it. + It'd be pretty sweet to see more of Tuco Salamanca and given how Better Call Saul hasn't really shown all that much of him. Like, I wanna see him running stuff.
@@somerandompersonidk2272 Genius title m8
They definitely had great chemistry!
4:47 He managed to reference his ever loyal and dedicated fanbase in the near finale of the entire show's universe without it feeling overly forced or awkward. Bravo Vince
“Who’s Lalo?”
Be glad you’ll never have to find out, Jesse.
Damn, if Lalo was in BB, Walt and Jesse wouldn't last 2 seasons.
@@jasam381 yeah, imagine if they were trapped with Lalo in Hector’s hideout instead of being with Tuco. Walt and Jesse would’ve been the ones that’s sharing the ricin burritos.
“So Walter, Jesse, I just wanna hear the story…”
Honestly, I would be worried at first, but if Heisenberg could outsmart Gus Fring, whose to say he wouldn't outsmart Lalo?
@@Scout-164 gus lose because he underestimated walter & hector
lalo on the other hand would kill walter if he was deemed too dangerous to him
These writers are insane - while watching I was wondering why they needed that extra part of the scene where they are sitting in silence for the engine to cool or whatever. Just having Jesse ask about Lalo seemed uneeded for the extra 2 min. But in fact it creates more lovable Jesse-Walt banter about RV issues and, more importantly, shows that Saul (or rather Jimmy) can't be alone with himself. If the Saul train stops even for a moment, he'll actually have to reflect on his past (Lalo . Kim .. Howard ... Chuck!!!) - and he doesn't want to.
So true.
It adds an extra note of tragedy to his story since, we the viewers know that Lalo is both literally and figuratively dead and buried, and according to Jesse, is forgotten in ABQ, but as far as Jimmy's concerned Lalo came back from the dead once and could do it again. Lalo might as well be a ghost, a dybbuk, a sword of Damocles over McGill's head. Jimmy doesn't mind getting held at gunpoint by men with ski masks out in the desert but he's absolutely petrified of what Salamanca would do. Saul Goodman can pretend that he's not Jimmy, but he can't deny the weight of his past choices and the very real threat they could have on his future.
That is an absolute classic socipath.
You know what I love about this scene? In Breaking Bad, Saul Goodman is seen as a comic relief character. We get to don’t know the personal details of his life so he just comes off as a fun semi-one noted character.
But in this scene its reversed. Saul is the super textured character in this scene, and Walt and Jesse function as the goofy comic relief character.
Seeing it from Sauls perspective really highlights how goofy their situation really was.
I like how they use low light condition to "de-age" them
And the beanies staying on lol
Unfortunately they couldn't de-age Aaron Paul's acting.
They don't use de-aging in this show, let's be honest. Mike is supposed to be 60 in this show yet he looks like he's pushing 80, Gus is supposed to be somewhere in his 40's yet he looks 60. Don't get me started on Don Eladio 😂
@@H.K.5 dw some CZcamsrs soon are going fix this scene and then eventually have enough support on patron to deage every single character in ever single frame in El Camino and Better Call Saul to their respected and realistic 2008-2010 looks to match the timeline.
@@maxgallento be honest, I really don't care about the actor's appearance. BCS is so good in every aspect that I get lost in the story. If I was busy critiquing their appearance that would be a sign I wasn't paying attention to the important stuff.
Bryan Cranston is just plain amazing. You wouldn't even tell they shot this some 13 years after season 2 aired. Aaron though.... he's still awesome but definitely aged more noticeably.
You can't fault someone for aging!!Watching this and the original scene back to back his voice has really gotten deeper though. That's unexpected
Edit: Because people seem to think I was angry or something my tone in this comment is meant to be pretty jokey and I mainly wrote it to comment about the change in Aaron's voice. The way the OP wrote it made it sound a bit like he was saying it was Aaron's fault he aged, I know he didn't actually mean it that way though and again my comment was not serious.
@@Harri_Jay_Kay he's not faulting, just made a comment
Aaron Paul is a horrible actor. Extremely overrated. The guy singlehandedly ruined Westworld.
@@Harri_Jay_Kay nobody's getting faulted man, hea allowed to state an observation and a clear one at that! He did get older but was still able to embody young s2 jesse.
@@dann5480 Ha, a lot more went into ruining Westworld than just Aaron.
Anyone notice how Saul said “Nobody” when asked about Lalo just like Howard asking Lalo “Who are you?”, and Lalo responding with the same word?
kinda creepy really!
This is the moment Lalo became Nobody
@@lebaguette5393 Bravo Jorge de Guzman
Bob Odenkirk also played a “Nobody” in the movie Nobody
Vrabo Bince!
Ignoring the age differences, the actors slipped right back into where the characters were in Season 2 and made it seamless. Fantastic scene and it all fits together perfectly.
No, they didn't. Aaron sucked.
@@user-qn1zp5bi2h Wrong opinion alert?
@@dextergrif Sounds like cope. This was a lame cameo and they phoned it in.
@@user-qn1zp5bi2h lmao it was a terrible cameo felt so forced
@@dextergrif Yeah Aaron's acting was awful. I dont see Jesse at all
These two shows are so brilliant, I never would’ve thought there would’ve been a spin off explaining how saul got home when they kidnapped him in the desert
If Lalo met Walter & Jesse he would hired theses to cook for him
@@marteznelson-stephens9926then Walts ego would tell him to find a way to "get rid" of lalo
It’s like Bryan Cranston never stopped playing him. He’s just perfect. Like he never left.
Bryan Cranston did a amazing job to get in that S2 Walter. Just amazing.
Aaron Paul tried his best, but with him you can see he is definitely older in looks and voice.
Yeah, i agree, they both did great, Bryan returned to season 2 Walter White perfectly and Aaron did his best despite his obvious phisical difference from back then.
Jesse in this scene feels like the Jesse from El Camino, not S2 Jesse
Can’t really blame Aaron. As someone who’s in his 40s trying to play his own 20s self this was as close to perfect as possible. While Bryan Cranston has been looking and sounding like 50 year old for decades.
@@LakePlacidBear Good actor, older actor.
@@LakePlacidBear nah Aaron didn't even try.
i LOVE the fact that this scene contains actual foreshadowing for a Breaking Bad episode
at 3:30
If you recall, this scene takes place in Season 2 episode 8 ("Better Call Saul").
The next episode is "Four Days Out", when Jesse forgets to take the key out and the RV breaks down in the middle of the desert.
There's an even bigger foreshadowing at the end. Not of events exactly but of an episode title. Saul's final line in this scene about "getting found buried in a sandstorm for a thousand years". That's the statue of... Ozymandias.
What do you mean?
...well no, the RV was prone to cutting out, it had happened previously several times in season 1 of BB as well.
@@josecarranza7555 The episode "Ozymandias" gets it's name from a poem/myth (I don't exactly remember) of the statue of a once powerful and successful king, buried in the sand for a thousand years, forgotten and lost to time. Since that episode basically marked the fall of Heisenberg's "empire", quite literally because of things buried in the sand, it gets that name.
Now Rushpan says that the buried in sand for a thousand years comment Saul made might foreshadow Ozymandias, which I personally don't think was intentional, but it is directly after another episode foreshadow so it could be.
2:32 Missed opportunity for Jessie to say "Bitch"
Not to be confused with "Saul, Jesse & Walter In The Desert | Better Call Saul | Breaking Bad"
Edit - Not to be confused with being original, sure, but the joke IS that I’m mirroring the last video, hence the exact same wording
Copied from other video
@@ABC-ik9vj not pretending otherwise! Deliberately mirroring it as a joke
Whoever runs this yt channel knows how to capitalize on the memes 🤣
original
Jesse saying "Lalo" has a big "Vader saying Padmé" energy.
Simply amazing how both Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul manage to jump right back into their characters and how they were at that specific time; with all the elements from BB like the shaky camera, this sequence really feels like a scene straight from 2009, almost as if it were cut from the original episode
Also great idea to have barely any ighting around in order to hide Aaron Paul's aging, overall a fantastic cameo sequence
It looks like there was a bit of de-aging CGI employed to both of them as well.
Not Aaron Paul
@@7stiano123 Not Aaron Paul what?
@@7stiano123 No him too, especially that constant bickering he has with Walt at that time
Aaron makes it a bit obvious he’s talking like he’s got a gobstopper in
I love how you can very clearly see Saul Goodman without a hint of Jimmy McGill or Gene Takavic in this. The majority of the episode seems to be Gene becoming Saul once again, but I don't think we'll see another moment in the last two episodes involving Jimmy, the mischievous optimist with a heart.
there's a hint of Jimmy, tho. When Jesse asked about Lalo. Right after he answered Jesse, he immediately asked Walt to try starting on the RV again to distract the conversation and avoid any more silences because he do not want to think about everything that's happened again.
@@zumabbar I saw that more as a normal defense mechanism than a hint of Jimmy, but I could be interpreting it wrong. I like your rebuttal.
Personally I think he failed to bring the mannerisms and voice from Season 2 Saul to the episode, I definitely still see a bit of the Jimmy he's been playing in BCS. Watch the scene of him talking to Walter at the school compared to this scene. I think he's got a bit more of a youthful energy here and his voice has too much energy compared to the lower, sleazier tone he talked with at first. It doesn't help they didn't try to use prosthetics to make him look a bit fatter and the hair is too nice looking compared to the god awful greasy combover. Bryan easily did the best at slipping right back in to where he was in S2, totally feels like that exact version of Walter.
@@Tribrachidiumheraldicum Hmm. I'll have to have a rewatch of that episode.
@@Chigger oh yeah, what i meant was it was Jimmy when Jesse asked. It was Saul taking over immediately when he asked Walt to get going.
I would paid so much just for these three to have a series like this, no bad ending whatsoever and full of comedy.
We can't have eveti. We want in this life
Same!
As fun as it was to see Walt and Jesse butting heads like the good old days, this scene has such an ominous feel to it. Something about the deathly silence of the New Mexico desert really put me in Jimmy's shoes. He hates it there, it makes him think of the seven million. That makes him think of Lalo, who makes him think of Howard, who makes him think of Chuck. All of his trauma is linked together so tightly and he has noone to share it with.
Even if you've never watched Breaking Bad they do such a good job at making these two a fun and interesting duo. I can definitely see someone watching Better Call Saul first and being excited to start Breaking Bad just to get more of the exasperated professor and his smartass pupil.
I’ve never watched breaking bad and this is one of my favorite scenes
@@studs_and_bricks7687 gonna get some spoilers for BrBa in the last two episodes
@@shahanahsan05 yeah but I don’t really mind
@@studs_and_bricks7687 Bro, you are gonna watch it right??
@@studs_and_bricks7687 trust me you don’t want breaking bad spoiled for you
It’s amazing how little fear Saul has of these guys even though he respects Heisenberg he doesn’t care what he says to him he’s so confident in himself that he just carries on as normal demanding the 80k taking the front seat etc
He knows he’s safe. They need him and seem like inexperienced nobodies. Besides, almost anythings better than what he went through in the desert.
@@rickym6301 Very true but it’s still funny how little fear he has of them once he knows they aren’t the cartel
@@jacob4690 I mean you can’t blame him. Can we remember a time where him trying settle and talk with the cartel ended well? LOL
4:47 Everyone at Vince after watching the episode
just when you thought this show can't get more perfect !!
No such thing as perfect but mkay.....
@@LJAndrews1986 you must be fun at parties
@@verahatesvera He doesn't get invited to parties.
@@bacababy he hasn't heard of parties
As a huge breaking bad fan, i didnt like better call saul, although entertaining at times for the most part i found it to be slow and flat out boring. For 4 complete seasons nothing happens and i just gave up and started searching what happens afterwards
A truly iconic moment in Television history and storytelling 💎
Whoever is holding the account deserves a medal. I can't believe they actually did it 😂
A true gigachad
AMC
Well this is the official channel of both BB and BCS.
I read somewhere that Vince Gilligan typed up a VERY detailed memo for the three of them about where each of their characters were emotionally during this Breaking Bad timeline. I think that was an incredible stroke of genius, because only he could give them insights and nuances noone else could. And the effort obviously worked. This really felt like an extension of the scene outside.
Tom Schnauz even sneaked in a "bravo Vince" reference
Writer writing… brabo vince…
Walt's reaction in this scene and s5 when both Saul and Declan say "You're Heisenberg" really reflects how much he changed
1:57, i like the little detail of the breaking bad camera handheld style
This was a huge balancing act on all actors for their characters to behave accordingly prior to their sequential arcs, years & years later. Bravo!
Jesse definitely looks and sounds 15 years older lol.
Better than El Camino tbh
@@psychwardpussyeater Not really, he looks exactly the same as he did in El Camino minus the fake scars.
@@H.K.5 he definitely lost some weight compared to El Camino. So I think he looks slightly better.
@@maxgallen That's what I was talking about, and the low lighting softens his aging.
His voice sounds mostly the same!
Hearing jesse say "whos lalo" sounds so surreal
2:25 Walter: I am the one who DRIVES!
Saul makes many references to Frankensteins monster in this episode, which perfectly explains how Saul “created” the monster that Heisenberg became, and how Saul began his own downfall
Exactly
1:41
Saul: And that makes you... you're Heisenberg
Walt: You're Goddamn Right
Just a reminder that the fate of every character in this universe became sealed when Mike became security for Pryce. Domino effect.
I love how the Breaking Bad shots are done with shaky cam just like the old show. Helps sell the difference in time periods.
Love that he calls Jesse “Igor” and stops short of calling Walt “Frankenstein”, because actually Walt is Frankenstein’s monster and Saul himself is Frankenstein.
Something about seeing all three of them in character standing in the RV will always put a smile on my face, a celebration of Breaking Bad.
3:35 they zoomed in on the ignition light. a reference to when jesse left the keys in the ignition for 2 days and they got stranded in the desert.
REALLY? Thanks for pointing that out for us all
I had a big smile during this whole scene
Finding a show like this is rare
I love the moment at 3:51...Saul notices the cough but does not want discuss it
Lmao I always thought they awkwardly stared at each other for no reason
I likes how when Jessie asked who Lalo is Jimmy says “nobody” as when Lalo was asked who was he couple of times he always said “I’m nobody”
This whole scene is showing how much control Saul was able to establish right away in their dynamic. Walt really couldnt have done it without him
Picking a scene where they're wearing the ski masks is genius to not only a) not have to have Bryan with a shaved head and b) hide Jessie's hairline that gives away his age. Also the low lighting helps too.
Saul doesn't like to be in silence because he remembers his past as jimmy, thinking about Lalo, chuck, Howard, and Kim... 💔
Greatest reunion in web series history.
Jimmy really believed Lalo was still out there. Even after he left Albuquerque he knew Lalo was the only guy that had the resources to track him down outside of the government.
0:11
2:27
2:55
Those lines made me feel like I was watching the season 2 of Breaking Bad
LMAO they actually did it. They did the exact title as the last one with the show and episode name switched, just like the top comment from the last video. Brilliant. It's even the same length.
What do you mean?
1:26 Walt is Saul's little fish
nice catch
I love how they titled this clip exactly the same way they named the Breaking Bad one
Some of the early easter eggs in Better Call Saul could feel a little... not forced, but maybe unjustified, like Krazy 8. But Walter and Jesse here worked amazingly on a thematic level. Now that Better Call Saul is confident in itself, the cameos work really well
Krazy 8 made sense tho? He used to deal with the Salamancas, so they showed us how it worked
Krazy 8 makes sense. Nacho knows a lawyer which sucks saul and they need him to bail him out but instead makes him into a DEA informant. Every camoe in BCS serves a purpose
Krazy 8 is the one that makes the most sense actually. Shows us how low he was in the gamez even seeing him in his work uniform from when he talks with Walt about his good old days, and then we see how he made Saul meet Hank, and how he turned into a DEA informant.
I love that when jesse asks saul about lalo he says hes “nobody” the same thing lalo said when howard asked him who he was before getting shot in the head
In this episode, Aaron sounded like he was so tired.
Next episode Waterworks, that’s the Jesse we know and love.
I love cutting to this clip while rewatching Breaking Bad. Just watched the scene from S2E8 of BB that precedes this moment, and figured I’d glance here again just before continuing. Really gives everything from both shows so much more weight.
The levels of story telling that this show portrays is just legendary. What a way to tell a prequel story that enhances the original series in so many ways without breaking the established lore. IMO BCS is better in more ways than I expected (camera work, themes, more relatable). LOVE BREAKING BAD AND BETTER CALL SAUL
4:47 Here Jesse says "Bravo", which actually means "Bravo Vince." Brilliant fourth wall breaking.
A nice touch in this scene was the fact that Walt took off the keys from the ingition and killed the power of the RV, refairing to the episode when Jesse didn't and they were stuck in the desert for days.
Man.. The level of details in both shows is INSANE !!!
I mean it's the episode after this is set because 4 days out is after the better call saul episode
Absolutely amazing how their attention to detail goes beyond fundamental storytelling and nostalgia. Even the camerawork (BB handheld effect vs BCS steady cams) is switched up to feel like BB as if this is an extension of it, and is included in the identity of Walt and Jesse even seen through the eyes of the audience or through Gene's memory in the future.
They've altered the cinematography to fit the narrative a couple of times throughout the series. "Quite a Ride" from season 4 comes to mind.
This was the moment Jimmy’s life went to complete hell. Meeting these two is why Gene is where he is now. Now Gene is starting to break bad, showing us that Jimmy is the true protagonist of this universe, not Walt.
What the hell are you talking about!? The one who had the most relevant decisions was always Walter, he was the one who manipulated Jesse, destroyed the Salamancas, killed Gus Frick, enslaved Saul
Goodman was just the catalyst for what Heisenberg was going to do
@@mateberg I think what he means is Walt and Jesse hit a road block and would have never been able to get past it without Saul. Saul can function on his own, Mike can function on his own, Gus can function on his own, but Walt and Jesse can’t. Walt and Jesse have always needed someone outside of themselves on a higher level to progress. That isn’t to say Saul, Mike, and Gus work alone, but they can make things happen with people they already have. Walt and Jesse aren’t nearly as skilled and don’t have nearly the same connections. Even later in to the game, Walt burned to many bridges on his way up, so when he finally got close to the top, he still had very few people he could rely on. Walt speed ran The Game, but he did Any% rather than 100% or Classic%
@@CactusCanon Thank you.
Did Jesse just actually say "Bravo" at the end when RV went back online? Pete really made a tribute to Bravo Vince.
I could read comments about people's analysis' of characters forever. People seem to have such a deep understanding of these characters, and I love reading stuff from their perspective. I know the fandom will live on, but I will miss this show sorely and I don't think we'll ever be given a tv series like this or Breaking Bad again
It’s crazy that Aaron and Bryan both really haven’t missed a step despite not playing their roles for over a decade
Watching the best chemistry again
so well done, almost like a missing scene, or cut scene
Crazy how you can clearly pinpoint this as Season 2 Walt just based on Bryan's mannerisms alone. Nevermind the appearance or scene placement
1:18 Saul liked the flask so much that he had to look at it this long lol
28 seconds, only putting it down after being told to. He must've been amazed by the light refractions on that thing
2:55 gotta be the funniest line delivery out there. Walter and Jesse were just hilarious sometimes.
I almost forgot how slightly comedic Jesse and Walt were together in season 2. They did a great job refreshing our memory.
I love how this video not only has a near identical title to the previous one, but its also the exact same length. Genius
I think the shots in 3:14 and 4:48 have a nice touch to them, because they show both Walt being in the driver's seat and Saul being in the co-driver's seat, which kinda makes sense for the whole story of BB that Walt was the "driver" and Saul similarly was "co-driving" into their whole mess.
Also nice that Jesse is facing the opposite direction as he was probably most often times against many parts of the actions and the most morally character out of them.
You really think too much. It's just a scene, no deeper meaning of that
@@cockbenny734 Man it really isn't that deep when the shot is taken in such an obvious way.
@@cockbenny734 not how filmmaking works. Scenes have meanings, and every detail is an added piece, not a natural occurrence.
I hope we get to see more of walt and jesse in final 2 episodes of BCS
Sad that this magnificent universe is finally coming to an end 💔
you'll see them, Bob confirmed it.
2 more scenes i think
One with Walt and one with Jesse each I think
@@tonybussoli1676 dude I think it was when he teach Jesse money laundering and Walt fired saul
you never know what other spin-off they might make
The RV stalling and Walt taking the keys off the ignition to let the RV cool down for abit is a beautiful yet chilling foreshadowing/call back to the next episode in BB
When the RV won't start in 4 Days Out
10 years after the end of the show and Bryan and Aron's performances still both perfects! They really were born for this roles.
Honestly, I didn't really like Jesse's acting here. The Jesse in this scene feels like the El Camino Jesse instead of the energetic season 2 Jesse. While Bryan and Saul feel just like they did in season 2.
The chemistry still intact between both of them. Amazing!
I absolutely love how this is shot exactly like an early Breaking Bad episode.
Even the way camera moves like in BB. Great detail
It's so crazy that they made these two great shows from throwaway lines in El Camino.
GTA vibes like no tomorrow for BB and BCS
4:25 That "Find ud buried under a sandstorm a thousand years from now" is a reference/callback to the Ozymandias poem which inspired Breaking Bad's season 6 episode 14 of the same name