Tag: vince-gilligan

  • TV Review: ‘Pluribus’

    Rhea Seehorn in ‘Pluribus,’ premiering November 7, 2025 on Apple TV.
    Rhea Seehorn in ‘Pluribus,’ premiering November 7, 2025 on Apple TV.

    Arriving on Apple TV on November 7 with its first two episodes is ‘Pluribus,’ the new show from ‘Breaking Bad’ and ‘Better Call Saul’ creator Vince Gilligan and stars ‘Saul’ veteran Rhea Seehorn.

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    The cast for the new show also includes Carlos Manuel Vesga (‘The Luckiest Man in America’), Karolina Wydra (‘Europa Report’), Miriam Shor (‘American Fiction’) and Samba Schutte (‘Our Flag Means Death.’)

    Related Article: Vince Gilligan Leaving the ‘Breaking Bad’ Universe Behind For New Show

    Initial Thoughts

    Karolina Wydra and Samba Schutte in ‘Pluribus,’ premiering November 7, 2025 on Apple TV.
    Karolina Wydra and Samba Schutte in ‘Pluribus,’ premiering November 7, 2025 on Apple TV.

    Given the sterling quality and awards haul of both ‘Breaking Bad’ and its prequel ‘Better Call Saul,’ there are naturally a lot of eyes on what creator Vince Gilligan does next. Can it live up to the zeitgeisty power and acting quality of either?

    The good news with his new series, Pluribus, is that it definitely feels of a par with those shows. The bad news for reviewers at least is that it’s very difficult to talk about without broaching spoiler agreements.

    Script and Direction

    Rhea Seehorn in ‘Pluribus,’ premiering November 7, 2025 on Apple TV.
    Rhea Seehorn in ‘Pluribus,’ premiering November 7, 2025 on Apple TV.

    Gilligan, who kicks off the series writing and directing at least the first two, has pulled off a minor miracle here, creating a drama with dark comedy running through it that manages to be both high concept and emotional.

    And he has built a powerhouse central character for lead Rhea Seehorn, who plays Carol Sturka, a misanthropic romance writer who is confronted with a very confusing, challenging situation that makes her even more of an outsider than usual.

    Gilligan and his fellow directors employ the measured, deliberate style of the previous shows, beautifully shot and superbly acted.

    Cast and Performances

    Karolina Wydra in ‘Pluribus,’ premiering November 7, 2025 on Apple TV.
    Karolina Wydra in ‘Pluribus,’ premiering November 7, 2025 on Apple TV.

    Seehorn is the anchor here and the actor, who was unbelievably snubbed for awards during her ‘Saul’ run, puts in a truly impressive performance. While some might be turned off by the rampant negativity of her character, she brings such depth and layers to the role and is endlessly watchable.

    Around her, the likes of Karolina Wydra, Miriam Shor and Samba Schutte also impress, but to say any more about their characters would be to risk giving too much away.

    Final Thoughts

    Carlos Manuel Vesga in ‘Pluribus,’ premiering November 7, 2025 on Apple TV.
    Carlos Manuel Vesga in ‘Pluribus,’ premiering November 7, 2025 on Apple TV.

    It’s frustrating not to be able to talk more about the show, but believe me when I say, this one is definitely worth watching. And if you like shows such as ‘The Twilight Zone,’ it’s even more highly recommended.

    ‘Pluribus’ receives 90 out of 100.

    Rhea Seehorn in ‘Pluribus,’ premiering November 7, 2025 on Apple TV.
    Rhea Seehorn in ‘Pluribus,’ premiering November 7, 2025 on Apple TV.

    What’s the plot of ‘Pluribus’?

    The most miserable person on Earth must save the world from happiness.

    Who stars in ‘Pluribus’?

    • Rhea Seehorn as Carol Sturka
    • Karolina Wydra as Zosia
    • Carlos Manuel Vesga as Manousos
    • Miriam Shor as Helen
    Rhea Seehorn in ‘Pluribus,’ premiering November 7, 2025 on Apple TV.
    Rhea Seehorn in ‘Pluribus,’ premiering November 7, 2025 on Apple TV.

    Other TV Series Written by Vince Gilligan:

    Buy Vince Gilligan Movies and TV on Amazon

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  • Vince Gilligan Plans New Show After ‘Better Call Saul’

    Jonathan Banks as Mike Ehrmantraut and Bob Odenkirk as Jimmy McGill / Saul Goodman / Gene Takavic in AMC's 'Better Call Saul.'
    (L to R) Jonathan Banks as Mike Ehrmantraut and Bob Odenkirk as Jimmy McGill / Saul Goodman / Gene Takavic in AMC’s ‘Better Call Saul.’

    ‘Better Call Saul’ comes to an end next week. And while fans might be left sorry that the ‘Breaking Bad’ TV universe isn’t continuing to expand, creator Vince Gilligan is ready to move on to pastures new.

    The veteran TV writer/producer/director has been spending any downtime from ‘Saul’ duties preparing a new series that will have nothing to do with either Bryan Cranston’s Walter White or Bob Odenkirk’s Saul Goodman. In fact, it’s a wholly original show.

    There’s mystery swirling around this next project as Gilligan has yet to offer up details; and since the pitch session with various interested parties is set for the next couple of weeks, we’re still waiting to learn what it might entail.

    Deadline has heard that the new show hews more closely to another classic show from Gilligan’s past, ‘The X-Files’, where he was an executive producer and director. But it’s reportedly not quite as sci-fi or conspiracy heavy as that.

    Instead, sources are calling it a blended, grounded drama that is set in a recognizable world but with a tweak. And, as is usual for a Gilligan project, it’ll explore the human condition through interesting characters. Just fewer scenes of those characters cooking meth in a dodgy RV.

    'Breaking Bad' and 'Better Call Saul' creator Vince Gilligan on 'Conan.' Photo courtesy of Team Coco YouTube Channel.
    ‘Breaking Bad’ and ‘Better Call Saul’ creator Vince Gilligan on ‘Conan.’ Photo courtesy of Team Coco YouTube Channel.

    In typical Gilligan fashion, he’s also worked out a series of documents that will help potential buyers navigate this new world. We’re certain plenty of networks and streamers will be looking to snap up a collaboration with the man who has created two of the most beloved shows in recent memory.

    Gilligan has had more time to ponder fresh horizons as he stepped back from ‘Saul’ in recent years, handing more of the reins over to co-creator Peter Gould and spending less time in the writers’ room – at least until he returned to help guide the show to its conclusion in this final season.

    Talking at this year’s virtual summer Television Critics Association panel for ‘Better Call Saul’, Gilligan expanded on his thinking about stepping away from the universe he created.

    “You can’t keep putting all your money on red 21,” he said. “I feel like we probably pushed it doing a spinoff to ‘Breaking Bad,’ but I could not be more happy with the results. Then I did (‘Breaking Bad’ story follow-up TV movie) ‘El Camino’ and I’m very proud of that too. But I think I’m starting to sense you’ve got to know when to leave the party, you don’t want to be the guy with a lampshade on your head. I don’t have any plans right now to do anything more in this universe. I know I probably gave the same answer at the end of ‘Breaking Bad.’ I gotta prove to myself that I got something else in me. I’m not a one trick pony, that’s what I’m hoping”.

    He did finish with “never say never,” so if fans want to keep the hope alive, they can cling to that.

    ‘Better Call Saul’s series finale airs Monday on AMC.

    Giancarlo Esposito as Gus Fring, Bob Odenkirk as Jimmy McGill / Saul Goodman / Gene Takavic, and Jonathan Banks as Mike Ehrmantraut in AMC's 'Better Call Saul.'
    (L to R) Giancarlo Esposito as Gus Fring, Bob Odenkirk as Jimmy McGill / Saul Goodman / Gene Takavic, and Jonathan Banks as Mike Ehrmantraut in AMC’s ‘Better Call Saul.’

  • ‘Breaking Bad’ Movie ‘El Camino’ Gets First Teaser, Release Date

    ‘Breaking Bad’ Movie ‘El Camino’ Gets First Teaser, Release Date

    AMC

    The “Breaking Bad” sequel movie will be here sooner than anyone thought.

    Netflix has dropped the first teaser for “El Camino” and announced the film’s release date: October 11. The film is also expected to be broadcast on AMC at a later date.

    “El Camino” brings back star Aaron Paul as Jesse Pinkman and follows up on his fate after the AMC series finale. The official description of the movie says, “In the wake of his dramatic escape from captivity, Jesse must come to terms with his past in order to forge some kind of future.”

    “Breaking Bad” creator Vince Gilligan wrote and directed the movie.

    The teaser features Skinny Pete (Charles Baker, reprising the role) telling law enforcement that he has no clue where Jesse is.

    In the series finale, Walter White (Bryan Cranston) sacrificed himself to rescue his former meth-cooking partner Jesse from an neo-Nazi gang. Jesse fled, as Walt lay dying, in a stolen Chevrolet El Camino.

    It’s unknown if Cranston or any other “Breaking Bad” alums will make an appearance in the film, via flashback or in the present time.

    Fans were surprised recently when Bob Odenkirk, who stars in the “Breaking Bad” prequel series “Better Call Saul, revealed that the movie had already wrapped filming. 

    But in an interview with The New York Times, Paul confessed that filming had taken place even before the movie’s existence had been uncovered by the media. “The movie had already happened and was in the can. It was done,” he said.

    When anyone asked him what he was doing during that time, the actor noted, “I just said I was doing this small little indie out in New Mexico and that was it. No one second-guessed it.”

    Paul added, “I definitely had people asking, ‘Are you doing ‘Better Call Saul’?’ And I’d go, ‘Hey, man, I wish I was. But they’re on hiatus right now.’”

     

  • The ‘Breaking Bad’ Movie Is a Sequel With Aaron Paul, Will Air on Netflix and AMC

    The ‘Breaking Bad’ Movie Is a Sequel With Aaron Paul, Will Air on Netflix and AMC

    AMC

    A few precious details are finally emerging about Vince Gilligan’s upcoming “Breaking Bad” movie.

    The two-hour film, which was announced last November, will be a sequel starring Emmy winner Aaron Paul. It will follow the escape of a kidnapped man — Paul’s character, Jesse Pinkman — and his quest for freedom.

    Gilligan is writing the script and sources tell The Hollywood Reporter that he will also direct.

    Deadline reports that the movie will stream first on Netflix, then air on AMC — a reversal from the original series. Netflix is often credited for the show’s rise in popularity and ratings in later seasons. Even Gilligan himself acknowledged that when accepting the show’s first Emmy for Best Drama.

    “I think Netflix kept us on the air,” he said at the time. “Not only are we standing up here, I don’t think our show would have even lasted beyond Season 2 .… It’s a new era in television, and we’ve been very fortunate to reap the benefits.”

    Paul’s co-star Bryan Cranston is not likely to reprise his role as Walter White in the movie, though if Gilligan asked him to  make a cameo, he said, “I would, absolutely.”

    “I don’t know if there’s an appearance — flashbacks, flash forwards — but I’m excited about it because it’s ‘Breaking Bad’ and it was the greatest professional period of my life and I can’t wait to see all those people again, even if I just come by to visit,” Cranston said.

    “Breaking Bad” ran for five seasons from 2008 to 2013 and told the story of Walter White, a chemistry teacher who turns to making meth after a cancer diagnosis and enlists the help of former student Jesse.

    The series is regarded as one of the best in television history and earned numerous awards, including 16 Emmys (three of which for Paul as Best Supporting Actor). The show also generated a spinoff, the highly acclaimed “Better Call Saul,” which will return for a fifth season later this year.

  • ‘Breaking Bad’ Movie in the Works From Creator Vince Gilligan

    ‘Breaking Bad’ Movie in the Works From Creator Vince Gilligan

    AMC

    “Breaking Bad” is back. Vince Gilligan is working on a two-hour movie set in his acclaimed drama’s universe.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, Gilligan is writing the script, producing, and possibly directing the film. But many things remain unclear, including whether original stars Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul are involved and if the story is a prequel or sequel (or spinoff of a supporting character).

    It’s also unknown if the movie will be released theatrically or air on television or streaming.

    All we know is the movie is reportedly codenamed “Greenbrier” and it will “follow the escape of a kidnapped man and his quest for freedom. Production is expected to begin this month in New Mexico.

    The movie is Gilligan’s first project since signing a new three-year overall deal with Sony TV in July.

    “Breaking Bad” ran for five seasons from 2008 to 2013 and told the story of Walter White, a chemistry teacher who turns to making meth after a cancer diagnosis and enlists the help of a former student.

    The series is regarded as one of the best in television history and earned numerous awards, including 16 Emmys. The show generated a spinoff,  the highly acclaimed “Better Call Saul,” which will return for a fifth season next year.

  • 6 Reasons Why ‘Better Call Saul’ Is Just as Good as ‘Breaking Bad’

    Being a fan of “Better Call Saul,” AMC’s amazing “Breaking Bad” prequel/spin-off, can be occasionally frustrating, especially when trying to talk to people who don’t watch the show. I have had countless conversations that inevitably go something like this:

    “Did you watch this week’s episode of ‘Better Call Saul’”?

    “I don’t watch that.”

    “But you watched ‘Breaking Bad.’”

    “Yeah, but …”

    “It’s just as good!”

    This is immediately followed by a few seconds of uncomfortable silence and then, I don’t know, crickets.

    But here’s the thing — it really is just as good as “Breaking Bad”; sometimes I think it’s even better than “Breaking Bad,” because it’s not as stringently shackled to its crime genre roots. Instead, it’s something like a legal drama but also a crime thriller but also a story about family. In some ways it’s more ambitious, more interesting, and more esoteric than the series from which it sprang. But even if you’re not willing to go that far, you need to understand that this show is just as good as “Breaking Bad.”

    Here are six reasons why “Better Call Saul” (which just started its third season on AMC) is just as good as “Breaking Bad.”

    1. Bob Odenkirk Gives a Commanding Performance

    Nobody could shut up about how good Bryan Cranston was in “Breaking Bad.” That’s because Bryan Cranston was really good in “Breaking Bad.” But you know who is just as good? Bob Odenkirk in “Better Call Saul.” It’s a different kind of performance. In the main series, Saul Goodman, the trickster lawyer who advises science-teacher-turned-drug-kingpin Walter White and assists him in some of his more nefarious enterprises (like laundering money), was mostly used as comic relief. Like everything in the series, the character took on a grimmer pallor in later seasons, but for the most part he was there for zingy one-liners and was more of a caricature than character. Even his name, a phonetic approximation of “it’s all good, man,” had a cartoony dimension. But here, he’s fully realized. He’s Jimmy McGill, an Albuquerque lawyer who stands in the shadow of his superstar brother (played by the great Michael McKean) and who has the hots for a talented colleague (Rhea Seehorn). He hasn’t become the huckster we know and love from “Breaking Bad.” Instead he’s damaged, fragile, and volatile. You can see the man he’ll become in the man he is here now, and that is fascinating to see unfold, bit by bit, as the series progresses.

    2. The Cadence Is Different

    The rhythm of “Breaking Bad” was all its own. There would be action-packed hours followed by smaller, contained “bottle” episodes like “Fly,” which had the two main characters trapped in a lab and bickering for the entire duration. “Better Call Saul” is even odder. Sometimes entire cases can take up a season (or more), other times they’ll be over and done with even though they seem important. Bit players from the previous show will pop up and threads from earlier episodes will weave, unexpectedly, down the line. The season premiere, for example, was striking for how silent it was. There were large passages of the episode where nobody spoke at all, instead the visuals did all the talking. In a television landscape so cluttered that shows will do anything they can to stand out from the crowd, “Better Call Saul” is defiantly idiosyncratic. And that’s amazing.

    3. It’s Not a Connect-Every-Dot Show

    Some thought that this would be a very literal prequel to “Breaking Bad,” aligning perfectly like the end of “Rogue One” with the beginning of the very first “Star Wars.” But this isn’t that kind of show. It’s its own thing. So just know that going in. Yes, characters from the previous show will pop up here (this season is set to feature a certain drug titan and fast food chicken entrepreneur) but it doesn’t follow a linear path to “Breaking Bad.” Nor should it. Instead, this gets lost in the tangential narrative paths that occurred before Walter White started cooking that sweet blue crystal. The fact that it doesn’t adhere to what came before it makes it infinitely more enjoyable (especially if you know that going in; sometimes the shock of discovering this can weigh down the experience).

    4. It Takes Its Time

    One of the things that made this season’s premiere episode (co-written and directed by “Breaking Bad” creator Vince Gilligan) is how slow it unfolded. Not in a bad, check-your-watch way. But in a way that felt more novelistic than most things on television. A good half of the episode was Jonathan Banks‘s Mike Ehrmantraut, here a former police officer and parking attendant (not yet the No. 2 man in a vast criminal empire), looking for a tracking device and devising his own plan to figure out who planted it. Literally he dismantles his own car for ten minutes. And it’s amazing. This is just a micro example of the bigger thrill of the show taking its time in terms of catching up to “Breaking Bad.” “Better Call Saul” seems to be in no rush to actually align with that show. Its indifference is glorious and it’s easy to see this show lasting just as long as “Breaking Bad,” if not longer. Trust me when I say that you won’t want it to end (or to catch up) either.

    5. It’s Also Something of a Sequel

    While it’s not written about as much, “Better Call Saul” is bookended with sequences set after the events of “Breaking Bad.” Jimmy (nee Saul) is now Gene, a hardworking employee of a Cinnabon outpost in some godforsaken mall somewhere. Clearly he’s in hiding and is beaten down by the events of “Breaking Bad.” If he squirreled away any of his drug money from Walter White, it isn’t apparent now. He’s a hangdog, lonely and dejected. He makes the pastries, interacts with his younger coworkers, eats his lunch alone with a dog-eared paperback crime novel. In this latest episode, fascinatingly, he breaks his low profile for a moment. After ratting out a kid for stealing DVDs (or maybe video games), the kid is being hauled away by mall security. As he starts to shuffle away, Jimmy stands up and yells, “Get yourself a lawyer!” It’s a rare moment when his old self shines through and just as quickly as Jimmy (or Saul) appears, he’s back, hiding inside Gene. It’s my guess that in future episodes (and seasons), the specifics of Jimmy’s new life will be detailed. Until then it makes for an incredibly and deeply haunting juxtaposition to his early days in the legal profession.

    6. It’s Just As Exciting

    Just because “Better Call Saul” isn’t as straightforward a crime series as “Breaking Bad” doesn’t mean that it lacks that series’ requisite thrills. This is more of a quirky character drama, like a new Alexander Payne movie delivered to your home each week, but it can also be quite exciting. Some of the excitement comes from knowing where these characters are headed and how they’ll end up. (There’s also the underlying suspense of what happened to turn Jimmy into Saul; that question permeates the entire series like some eerie fog.) But there are also nifty suspense set pieces, mostly centered around Mike and his underworld dealings but also the incredibly tense relationship Jimmy has with his brother. It’s all very uncomfortable and unnerving, in a different way than “Breaking Bad,” but just as powerful.

  • ‘Better Call Saul’ Showrunners Reveal How Season 3 Connects to ‘Breaking Bad’

    Better Call Saul Season 3Viva Los Pollos Hermanos!

    As “Better Call Saul” enters into its third season having earned its reputation as one of the all-time great spinoff/prequel series to its high-bar-establishing predecessor “Breaking Bad,” the timelines of the two series are increasingly converging, meaning a new influx of some of the familiar faces from the precursor.

    This time, it’s fried chicken franchise king/meth kingpin Gus Fring, adroitly played once again by Giancarlo Esposito, whose orbit crosses over with Jimmy McGill’s (Bob Odenkirk) as Jimmy inches closer to his descent into full Saul Goodman-ness and contends with increasing conflicts within his own inner circle. “I think you can expect problems aplenty, in every aspect of every relationship in ‘Better Call Saul’ going forward,” says executive producer Vince Gilligan, “if for no other reason than that’s what makes for good story telling.”

    Gilligan and co-showrunner Peter Gould joined Moviefone and a select group of TV press to offer a glimpse at exactly how their writing team goes about weaving “Better Call Saul’s” storylines into the established “Breaking Bad” mythology — and the approach not as master planned as you might think.

    We know that Giancarlo Esposito’s coming back — or more accurately, making his chronological first appearance — as “Breaking Bad’s” Gus Fring. Why was this the time for Gus?

    Peter Gould: I think it’s all organic from the story. We started off in the first episode of the show with Tuco, which you go Tuco, you end up getting Hector, and once you get Hector, who knows? Who knows where you go from there?

    How much do you look at the timeline and say, “Well, they would have to have met at this point…”?

    Vince Gilligan: We look at the timeline a lot.

    Gould: We do. We have an office full of really smart people who are always reminding us when we’re about to violate something that we’ve already said. We do look at it, but mostly, the truth is, the show is really the story of Jimmy McGill and Mike Ehrmantraut, our characters, and now also of Gus Fring. So we think about those characters, and we think about what’s important to them, and we think about what their next move would be.

    It’s not so architectural. We don’t put up a pushpin and say, this is where this character comes in, and this character comes in. It’s really all about trying to tell the best story we know how.

    That being said, going back to when you conceived the show, did you have the idea that you’re like, “If we get three seasons, if we keep going, we are going to get to Gus Fring”? Was that always the plan, to one day hit that point in the story?

    Gilligan: Is it fair to say, we had ridiculously few plans going into Season 1 of “Better Call Saul”? There was a time there when “Better Call Saul” could have looked a fair bit like “Dr. Katz,” that TV show where it all takes place, it’s a half hour long — which by the way, was a fun show.

    Gould: It was a great, great show!

    Gilligan: The show could have been famous comedians come in and talk about their legal problems to Saul Goodman. We knew so little going into this. It’s embarrassing to admit that now.

    Once we figured out it was an hour-long show, then we thought, “It’s going to be a 75% comedy, 25% drama.” I think we famously offered that thought going into Season 1. Then we realized not even that was true. This has been a voyage of discovery since Episode 1, Season 1, and Season 3 is no different. We’re learning as we go. There’s no hard and fast plan for when people who up — or if they show up at all.

    Gould: That’s absolutely true. Looking back, it seems inevitable. Everything that we didn’t understand seems inevitable now. We think, “Mike Ehrmantraut is arriving in Albuquerque. He’s a cop. He has no connections to organized crime, that we know of, but we know on “Breaking Bad” he’s going to be working for Gus Fring. How the hell does that happen? How does a guy who is maybe a somewhat crooked cop — I don’t know, or a cop certainly who’s…

    Gilligan: Conflicted.

    Gould: …a conflicted police officer, go and become the right-hand man to a drug lord?

    Gilligan: And it’s so much harder to connect those dots than we ever thought it would be. To get from point A to point Z is hard.

    We’ve also seen Gus’s backstory before on “Breaking Bad.” Did you go back and watch that?

    Gould: Oh yeah. Especially, we had to because Giancarlo asked us! We spent a long phone conversation with Giancarlo talking about where Gus was. We had to go back and remember a lot of things that we talked about but never made it on to screen in “Breaking Bad.”

    Gilligan: We had to break out the Blu-ray set.

    How easily did the new season come together, story-wise? Was it an easy flow, or did you struggle with it?

    Gilligan: It’s never easy. It’s never easy.

    Gould: It’s never easy and it’s always different. We almost reset the show at the end of Season 1. So Season 2 we had to figure out, “Where is this guy going? What is important to him?” I don’t think we really understood that until we got into Season 2.

    We end Season 2 with two giant cliffhangers. We have what’s going on with Jimmy. We found out he’s recorded. He’s been recorded by his brother who hates electricity. What the hell is Chuck going to do with that? We know it’s going to be a problem for Jimmy.

    This all happened in that great episode that Vince directed. You had that wonderful scene where Mike was on the verge of pulling the trigger and killing Hector, and this mysterious force intervenes on behalf of Hector. So the great thing for us about a season like that is that we have a running start. So we had a running start to Season Three, but having said that, it’s still never easy.

    Gilligan: It bogged down later. It always bogs down.

    Gould: The first couple came pretty quickly. Then there’s always a lot of hair-tearing, a lot of banging our heads against the wall.

    Gilligan: Sometimes literally.

    So in creating “Breaking Bad” and creating the relationships between Saul, Mike, and Gus, did you already know then how those characters met, or did you have to determine that story now as you’re having their introductions and first meetings in “Better Call Saul”?

    Gilligan: I hate to admit how little we knew back then. When Saul Goodman came along …This is the beauty, by the way: I sound like I’m making it into a detriment, into a negative, but the wonderful thing about TV, the wonderful thing about writing for TV, is that it’s such an organic, free-throwing, creative process.

    For instance, when we created the character Saul Goodman, a great episode of “Breaking Bad,” we thought he might be a one-off. We didn’t know if the actor we would hire would be up to snuff. When it turned out we were going to hire Bob Odenkirk, that fear was allayed. But every now and then, you don’t know, when you’re going to hire an actor, are they going to be what you hope they will be? Are they going to be good? Then if they’re good, maybe they’ll go off and take some job and they’ll never be available to you again.

    TV is so free-throwing, I don’t think we knew ever at that point, let alone knowing how Saul Goodman, and Mike Ehrmantraut, and/or Gus Fring met, little did we even know this guy would ever be back in an episode.

    Gould: We don’t make big plans going forward, but I think there’s actually a writer’s trick that we use, which is that we look back. We look back at the show and we try to find, “What do we not understand about what’s already there?” And that’s when we know we’ve kind of hit a vein of gold, is when one of the writers says, “You know I always wondered how this or that happened … I always wondered why Walter White, a genius, was teaching chemistry in high school. I always wondered why Jimmy McGill became Saul Goodman. Why Saul Goodman had this or that. I always wondered why Saul Goodman had a pinky ring.”

    When you ask those little detail questions, sometimes the story grows from the details, rather than the big picture informing the small picture.

    You’ve got a handle on Jimmy’s evolution most recently. Tell us as much as you can, about that moment when you got it. When you’re like, “OK, we’re there…”

    Gilligan: It’s an organic, growing process. I always pictured on “Breaking Bad” — and it’s kind of the same with “Better Call Saul” — you’re kind of going through a tunnel with a tiny little pen light. You wish you had one of those big Maglites. You don’t have that. You’ve got a tiny little pen light, and you’re learning more and more, you’re revealing to yourself more and more the dimensions and shape of the tunnel that you’re in. You’re going inch by inch sometimes, and it’s the same.

    Obviously, it’s a metaphor in my head because it’s a similar process, even with a show about a character who you know where he’s going. Sometimes it’s even trickier. Why does he wear a pinky ring? So much of that stuff was just stuff we gave him, and you’re figuring it out, you’re reverse-engineering and you’re figuring it out, just baby step by baby step.

    Every now and then I hear a showrunner, like ourselves, talk about his or her show and say, “Yeah, I had the whole ending figuring out in advance. I had the whole thing figured out in advance.” I’m always so jealous of that, because it’s never been that way for us. It’s never the case. You’re kind of finding it as you go. But having said that, that’s kind of the thing that keeps the job interesting.

    Gould: When you have to keep using that little light to make sure, you have to look at every inch, because you never know, there might be a pit right in front of you. If you’re too busy shining the light, trying to shine this little light 50 feet down, you might miss the hole that you’re going to fall into.

    Were you kind of giddy when you turned the corner on it?

    Gould: Oh, giddy is a funny word. I think to be honest with you, sad, because I think that we love Jimmy McGill. I think Bob feels this way. I know Vince and I feel that. I think the whole writers’ room, we have such an affection for Jimmy McGill, for his energy, his good intentions, his humanity, his inability to resist his abilities, that I think we’re all a little bit sad that some day this guy’s going to turn into Saul Goodman. Now that I start understanding it, it’s a big word, but it really does feel like a tragedy.

    Gilligan: I think you’re right. The show’s a tragedy. That’s yet another thing we didn’t know going into it. We thought it was going to be fun. We thought it was going to be a lark. We thought it was going to be mostly comedy. And it took a good solid year, year and a half, to figure out it was a tragedy.

    There’s tragedy to be mined from this. The very fact you know even what you know now watching the show, you know that Jimmy McGill is a good guy, he means well, he cuts corners, but pretty much every time so far he breaks the rules and breaks the law, it’s in aid of someone else, some underdog who be believes, rightly or wrongly, deserves some help.

    Then we know, if you watch “Breaking Bad,” this guy, Saul Goodman, he’s helping someone sell meth, he’s laundering money. Every now and then he floats the idea about killing someone, someone we like. He did that with Jesse along the way in “Breaking Bad.” That’s not the same guy as Jimmy McGill. How do you get from point A to point Z? It’s also a big central crest of the show, of the writers’ room.

    Gould: We make it sound like we never talk about the future. But we do. We absolutely do. We talk about where is the season going, but we don’t take the answers seriously until we actually have all the pieces leading up. We can always change things. It’s that flexibility.

    “Better Call Saul” Season 3 premieres Sunday, April 10th, on AMC.

  • The 10 Best ‘X-Files’ Episodes Ever

    %Slideshow-359190% For younger viewers wondering what the big deal is about the return of “The X-Files” to Fox (for a limited-series run beginning tonight, Jan. 24, 2016), it’s hard to grasp how large the original 1993-2002 sci-fi drama loomed over pop culture two decades ago.

    Not only did it give us TV’s greatest duo in credulous alien-hunting FBI agent Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and his skeptical but loyal partner Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson), but it also influenced everything from how serial TV shows interact with their fans to how they generate an over-arching “mythology” (a term “The X-Files” coined) to advance the show’s series-long plot arcs. Most of all, the “X-Files” atmosphere of paranoia, conspiracy-mongering, and existential dread became the dominant storytelling mode at the turn of the millennium.

    If you missed it, or if you want to go back and bone up before the reboot launches, you can stream the series on Netflix. But if you don’t have time to binge-watch 200 episodes, you could just stick with these 10 standouts.

  • Vince Gilligan Talks ‘Better Call Saul’ Season 2, ‘X-Files’ Reboot, and More

    Writer/producer Vince Gilligan has pulled off the seemingly impossible — twice!

    First, he managed to craft a “Breaking Bad” finale that somehow left every member of the show’s rabid fanbase completely satisfied. Then, he found an unorthodox way back into the world he created, scoring yet again with the prequel series “Better Call Saul.”

    As awards and nominations for the latter series begin to rack up in the walk-up to the The X-Files” (the series that gave him his big break), and his reaction to that other massive AMC series finale, “Mad Men.”

    Moviefone: Congratulations for all the nominations coming in for “Better Call Saul.” What has it meant to you that the audience has embraced the show and how different its left-of-center take on the “Breaking Bad” world is?

    Vince Gilligan: It’s wonderful because we didn’t know if it would succeed at all! We thought it might be something that people would say, “Ah, I’ve seen enough of this world.” Maybe it’s just me, but I always expect failure, not success — so the fact that people seem to be embracing the show and liking it, and certainly Bob Odenkirk‘s work and Jonathan Banks‘s work, all the wonderful actors we have, I think, merits that. But I’m too close to it. I’m biased. But I’m so happy to hear the people are loving it. I couldn’t be happier.

    Can you put anything out into the universe about what you’re thinking for the second season?

    Well, it continues to be Jimmy’s journey for Jimmy McGill to Saul Goodman. What to say about it? We have found Jimmy is just as interesting to us in the writers’ room as Saul ever was. And so I’ll say this: I’ll be a little coy here, but we’re in no particular hurry to get rid of Jimmy and go strictly to Saul. So maybe that’s a little handout.

    “The X-Files,” your old home base, is coming back. Are you just like the rest of us, waiting to see what they do with the revival, or do you have an inside track?

    I know nothing about what they’re doing. I would love to be a part of it. I was very generously offered to be a part of it by my wonderful former employer, Chris Carter, and it broke my heart to say I wasn’t able to do it because I’m so busy on “Better Call Saul.” I really can’t do more than one thing at once. I am very sorry I won’t be a part of it, but you better believe I’ll be watching it as a fan because I was a fan of the “X-Files” before I ever was a part of it! I was a huge fan. I watched it from the very first episode, in 1993. And I couldn’t be happier that they’re rebooting. I can’t wait to see it.

    As someone who played a huge part in one of the most acclaimed and universally loved series finales of all time, what did you think of the last episode of “Mad Men”? Did you watch it?

    “Mad Men” was great! I definitely watched it. Matt Weiner just did a wonderful job. I love all those actors — I know pretty much all of them. They’re all great people. I know a lot of the crew on that show. And of course, I know Matt very well, and he really crushed it. I thought that ending was fantastic, going to the classic Coca Cola commercial that everybody knows and loves; I thought they really brought it. And it was a fitting and wonderful end to a history-making TV series.
    %Slideshow-289728%

  • Who Is Saul Goodman?: 5 Things to Know Before ‘Better Call Saul’ Premieres


    The “Breaking Bad” spinoff “Better Call Saul” has a two-night premiere this week, starting Sunday, February 8 right after the midseason premiere of “The Walking Dead” Season 5. It may sneak up on some viewers who were still expecting to see “Talking Dead” at that 10 p.m. ET time, and other folks may tune in just because AMC’s teasers have been funny and intriguing — even if they aren’t familiar with “Breaking Bad,” the lead character of Saul Goodman (Bob Odenkirk) or anything else in this world. No worries. The Powers That Be have emphasized that you don’t need to be a “Breaking Bad” fan to appreciate this show, and even hardcore BB fans will be surprised by the story. It’s not rocket science (or a tricky meth recipe) to catch up on the basics, and newbies should be ready to go once they know these five things.

    1. The show is a prequel set six years before “Breaking Bad”
    Saul first appears as the sketchy but hilarious lawyer of Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul) and Walter White (Bryan Cranston) in Season 2, Episode 8 of “Breaking Bad.” His first big episode was actually titled “Better Call Saul.” This spinoff show is set in 2002, which is six years before that point, so we see how he became that guy. However, we’re also meant to see some flashes from the “present” time, after the explosive BB finale sent Saul fleeing from New Mexico to Nebraska for the protection of a new life. So if you haven’t seen BB, but would still like to someday, just know that some scenes might function as future spoilers (but not in a way that should dissuade you from watching the entire amazing series).

    2. Saul isn’t even Saul’s real name
    Back in 2002, Saul wasn’t even Saul. He was just a struggling small-time lawyer still going by his real name, Jimmy McGill. He later goes by Saul Goodman because it sounds Jewish and it’s a play on “s’all good, man” to attract clients. As he explained to Walter White, “The Jew thing I just do for the homeboys. They all want a pipe-hitting member of the tribe, so to speak…” Yeah, he’s that kind of guy. Sleaze-fest all the way. But he’s good at what he does.

    3. He’s a criminal lawyer
    Jesse Pinkman, Walter White’s former chemistry student and meth-making partner in “Breaking Bad,” was the one who initially recommended that they go to Saul (better call Saul!) to be their lawyer, because, as Jesse put it, when the going gets tough, you don’t need a criminal lawyer, you need a CRIMINAL lawyer. Savvy? Saul is knee-deep in the criminal underworld and works to connect various players in that realm.

    4. He’s had multiple wives
    Saul is a character on every front, and he revealed that he’s had many wives — he caught one in flagrante delicto with his own stepfather — and he also had a relationship with his secretary. Hopefully we’ll see some of his personal life on “Saul,” since it seems like too much of a delicious mess to ignore.

    5. Mike will be a series regular
    Fans aren’t expecting “Better Call Saul” to feature too many “Breaking Bad” faces on a regular bases, but one you’ll get to know (and probably love) is Michael Ehrmantraut (Jonathan Banks). On “Breaking Bad,” Mike was Saul’s private investigator and “fixer.” He’s a former cop and a total badass. So it’s interesting that a “Better Call Saul” sneak peek shows an early interaction between Mike and Jimmy/Saul, from before they started working together, and Mike is … working as a parking attendant? Why is a guy like Mike working in a parking garage? We’ll find out.

    There are still a lot of things BB fans and non-fans will discover together, like the relationship between Jimmy/Saul and his older brother Chuck McGill, a new main character played by Michael McKean. Watch this AMC video for more on their dynamic and for more details on the new (and not-so-new) characters of “Better Call Saul”: