Better Call Saul REACTION 4x10 [Edited - Early Access]
Added 2025-02-02 01:20:02 +0000 UTC
Comments
Correction: Mike only allowed Walter a phone call after he claimed Jesse's still in town and he can get Jesse to meet him, which he then uses to get Jesse to kill Gale.
ajs
2025-02-04 13:40:23 +0000 UTC
Werner: “Let me speak to Mr. Fring, I will make him understand.”
Heisenberg: “If I could just talk to Gus, I know I can make him understand.”
In both cases, Mike allows a phone call. Werner saves his wife and accepts his fate, but Walt uses his to save himself and Jesse.
Full name of the famed German physicist: Werner Heisenberg
Craig Manning
2025-02-02 18:22:14 +0000 UTC
I love watching you two because it’s so frustrating watching reactor channels that just don’t get things or only seem to understand the surface level. Of course, just as in Breaking Bad, the characters have multiple levels to them; Especially Jimmy, a compulsive liar and consummate performer. You can’t take what he’s saying at face value. He is lying to other characters, to the audience, and to himself.
I absolutely think the scene where he’s alone in his car is meant to show us that there is a deep well of repressed emotions within him that we almost never get to see. In that scene, Jimmy is alone, not putting on a show for anyone, and he is shown to be in terrible pain.
Notice how before this, he says to Kristy “you never mattered all that much to them,” which echoes Chuck’s last words to him. I think Jimmy is unable to face Chuck’s death because it means the approval and love he so desperately wanted are now gone forever. As long as Chuck was alive, he could cling to the hope that one day things between him and Chuck could change. But Chuck’s death permanently kills that possibility. Chuck’s last words to Jimmy will now forever be “You never really mattered all that much to me.” Jimmy I think is stuck in a childlike state of denial and lashing out, because he is psychologically trapped in this state of being the little brother longing for big brother’s approval; And now that Chuck is dead, he feels stuck there forever, unable to move on, because the validation he has been chasing all these years is now permanently denied to him.