All Comments about...

Better Call Saul: Season 1

1x09 Pimento

Who needs enemies when you have a brother like that, fuck chuck

loading replies

Every episode is great, and this one was not the exception. Saul is such a complex character and yet so normal. I like the way it is played by Bob Odenkirk because it looks genuine, every gesture he does looks genuine. And this episode was especially beautiful because after all the crap and sacrifices he still gets to help his brother. The final scene was awesome.

loading replies

Now, Let me tell you why I'm loving Better Call Saul so much.

Bob Odenkirck's magnificent acting, I mean, did you saw his eyes when Jimmy's brother was telling him all that stuff at the ending? Sadness. Bloody good stuff.

This episode itself was brilliant, because it was about loyalty and Jimmy, Saul, whatever you wanna call him, he thought he was finally doing something great, something he could share with his brother. Yes, he works hard. And his brother, on the other side, never thought that way, even when he saw his brother's excitement, I'm sure all he was thinking was HHM, and that's awful, his ideals are awful and maybe he is too. But hey, can you blame him? I think not, because we all have opinions on things that really matter to us and it's hard to change the way we see it.

The thing about this ep is that you get to recall every single thing Saul has done, good or bad. He's not evil, he's not a saint, he's a regular guy trying to be better. And you can feel sorry for him, because even when he does his best, he can't.

loading replies

that last scene :( , poor jimmy

loading replies

A few hours after I had finished this episode I kept thinking about it and I just realized that the one who asked Jimmy to change his name was Chuck and not Howard. Knowing this the billboard situation is completely different. Again, poor Jimmy.

loading replies

This was the episode where I realized that Bob Odenkirk, is great when it comes to scenes where he doesn't talk, but his body language speaks the story, that final scene of this episode is masterfully done.

loading replies

What a great episode! Just one thing: whyyyy couldn't Jimmy have taken his case to a rival law firm?

loading replies

That's how you do character-driven drama. Perfection.

loading replies

"Slippin Jimmy with a law degree is like a chimp with a machine gun." -Chuck

loading replies

his own brother :broken_heart: i saw it coming but that didn’t make it any less sad

loading replies

I knew it was Chuck the one who was gonna screw Saul... The scenes with Mike and the final one with Saul were the best of the episode.

loading replies

Root in the depths of hell, chuck

loading replies

74 | That were hard words for Jimmy to swallow. He felt betrayed, but the arguments against him were kind of right. Being a lawyer is a sacred thing to do because it's dealing with the law. People could get hurt by it. It was impressive that with this kind of story Better Call Saul could deliver it well. Chuck and Jimmy's interaction was the best part of the episode.

•••••••••••••••••••••••

Rating: 73.58

Plot

P1: 1.3
P2: 1.3
P3: 1.3
P4: 1.5

Director: Thomas Schnauz

Favorite Characters

1.6: Michael McKean as Chuck McGill
1.5: Bob Odenkirk as Jimmy McGill
1.4: Rhea Seehorn as Kim Wexler
1.3: Jonathan Banks as Mike Ehrmantraut
1.1: Patrick Fabian as Howard Hamlin
1.0: Mark Proksch as Daniel 'Pryce' Wormald

Written by Kornelius Harda Wicaksana

loading replies

"You're like a chipmunk with a machine gun".
"The law is sacred".
Please, Chuck. spare me your naive and idealistic bullshit.
You are a lawyer. You are either a shark or a tuna.
Yes, you are right. If you abuse power, people will get hurt (nod to Breaking Bad), but at the same time, this is how the game has always been played and you are not the one who is gonna change that.
Don't hate the player, hate the game.

loading replies

Man, what an episode. Finding out after all this years! It's hard... But that's real life unfortunatly!!!

loading replies

Man, what a fantastic episode. Mike gets his "What color is the boathouse at Hereford" moment from Ronin, and Jimmy finally finds out that it's been Chuck holding him back all this time in one of the most devastating monologues in the series. I think only Chuck's "the truth is, you've never mattered all that much to me." admission to Jimmy can top how fucking brutal Chuck was in this episode.

loading replies

I don't know why but that Parking Lot scene reminded me a lot of Breaking Bad to Norah Jones "Black"

loading replies

OMG It's Steven Oggs, Trevor the psycho from Grand Theft Auto V! -
Michael Mando and Steven Oggs...

I need sometime to process this

loading replies
Loading...