Mike's days as a police officer in Philadelphia catch up to him when he's questioned about a tragic event from his past.Mike's days as a police officer in Philadelphia catch up to him when he's questioned about a tragic event from his past.Mike's days as a police officer in Philadelphia catch up to him when he's questioned about a tragic event from his past.
Rhea Seehorn
- Kim Wexler
- (credit only)
Patrick Fabian
- Howard Hamlin
- (credit only)
Michael Mando
- Nacho Varga
- (credit only)
Michael McKean
- Chuck McGill
- (credit only)
Rick Anglada
- Albuquerque Police Officer
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
Step into the dark
A stunning episode and a defining moment in this series. We follow mike into his past and discover the car parking attendant is much more than he seems. Something I've loved throughout this season one has been the lighting and how its used to portray each character. In Mikes episode we descend into almost pure darkness, one scene that stands out is a beautiful shot of Mike inside his symbolic prison that is his parking attendant booth highlighted with a halo of street lights and almost complete darkness. A moving episode and perfectly sets Mike up as a force to be reckoned with as well as his dark origins.
A movie potential
The themes and writing in this episode are thought provoking. The acting amazing and even if you didn't watch the previous episodes and only watched Breaking Bad, this will be a great prequel for Mike. This episode not only made this show better but also added more to the Mike in Breaking Bad.
10/10
Mike: "I broke my boy".
Better Call Saul so far has been amazing and it's episodes have been great, until I sawed Five-o which I think is one of the best episode of this season so far and possibly in TV history.
Jonathan Banks was just perfect in this episode. He broke my heart with his excellent performance and he also reminds us why we loved Mike in Breaking Bad. I heard from critics and pretty much everyone that Jonathan Banks might win a Emmy or a Golden Globe because of this episode and I will be so over the moon if he dose win, because he actually give a groundbreaking and the best TV performance of the year. Most actors nominated or probably win don't really break any new grounds when it comes to they performance, well to me it didn't wow me, but this performance right here is just a masterpiece of acting.
We got shows like The Walking Dead which is on right now as I'm speaking but every Monday I'm not normally looking forward to Walking Dead that much to be honest, but I'm always looking forward to Better Call Saul. Why you may ask? because the show has such intelligent and brilliant writing that glues me into the screen and get's me interested every week.
I'm not going to say anything else about this episode, just watch it it's amazing.
Better Call Saul so far has been amazing and it's episodes have been great, until I sawed Five-o which I think is one of the best episode of this season so far and possibly in TV history.
Jonathan Banks was just perfect in this episode. He broke my heart with his excellent performance and he also reminds us why we loved Mike in Breaking Bad. I heard from critics and pretty much everyone that Jonathan Banks might win a Emmy or a Golden Globe because of this episode and I will be so over the moon if he dose win, because he actually give a groundbreaking and the best TV performance of the year. Most actors nominated or probably win don't really break any new grounds when it comes to they performance, well to me it didn't wow me, but this performance right here is just a masterpiece of acting.
We got shows like The Walking Dead which is on right now as I'm speaking but every Monday I'm not normally looking forward to Walking Dead that much to be honest, but I'm always looking forward to Better Call Saul. Why you may ask? because the show has such intelligent and brilliant writing that glues me into the screen and get's me interested every week.
I'm not going to say anything else about this episode, just watch it it's amazing.
Gilligan and Gould in the writers hall of fame
I have covered in previous reviews the contribution Joss Whedon is considered to have made to the modern TV drama (the "long arc") but watching this incredible episode I could help but think that Gilligan and Gould need acknowledgement too.
We already know (Breaking Bad) that their key theme is human foibles. This episode, which seems at first glance to break almost every rule of episodic TV (the star is barely doing a cameo?) is a tour de force not only for Banks' acting but also for way the viewer is hooked off the top and just cannot walk away.
Incredible TV.
And notice how all the episodes for the season end in "O" -- showing off maybe, but they earned the right.
((Designated "IMDb Top Reviewer." Please check out my list "167+ Nearly-Perfect Movies (with the occasional Anime or TV miniseries) you can/should see again and again (1932 to the present))
We already know (Breaking Bad) that their key theme is human foibles. This episode, which seems at first glance to break almost every rule of episodic TV (the star is barely doing a cameo?) is a tour de force not only for Banks' acting but also for way the viewer is hooked off the top and just cannot walk away.
Incredible TV.
And notice how all the episodes for the season end in "O" -- showing off maybe, but they earned the right.
((Designated "IMDb Top Reviewer." Please check out my list "167+ Nearly-Perfect Movies (with the occasional Anime or TV miniseries) you can/should see again and again (1932 to the present))
Mike, Mike, Mike
Mike Ehemantraut returns (actually he goes back in time) to his earliest appearance. In "Breaking Bad," he was already the cool foundation of Gus's drug empire. Here we meet the Philadelphia cop whose son was gunned down by his own kind. Mike is damaged by this and has done something (but we don't know what it is). He visits the widowed daughter-in-law who makes him tell the story. Saul has suddenly been embedded in the criminal world we saw in "Breaking Bad." Mike's character is so sound and so taciturn that he is hard to like, but we can't take our eyes off him. I thought after the last episode this was that actor playing a different character. I apologize for my stupidity.
Did you know
- TriviaSaul (Bob Odenkirk) and Mike (Jonathan Banks) are the only main characters that appear in this episode.
- GoofsThis show takes place years before the events of Breaking Bad, but yet Mikes granddaughter Kaylee appears to be the same age in the as she is in breaking bad.
- Quotes
Mike Ehrmantraut: You know what happened. The question is, can you live with it?
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 67th Primetime Emmy Awards (2015)
- SoundtracksOpening Credits Theme
Written and Composed by Dave Porter
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Filming locations
- Two Fools Tavern - 3211 Central Ave NE, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA("McClure's" - Philadelphia bar scene)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 42m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 16:9 HD
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