"Better Call Saul" Wiedersehen (TV Episode 2018) Poster

(TV Series)

(2018)

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10/10
Time To Be Brutally Honest
CajunGentleman2 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Every time I check ratings on BCS episodes I find trolls who (all season) have been writing poor reviews and giving unreasonable ratings to BCS episodes... and today Jim Mullen Tate (TheFearmakers) is the first. He gave this episode 5 stars (better than the 4 and 1 star ratings he gave earlier episodes). But all inferior to his lofty 7-star rating he gave 'Daddy's Home 2'.

This is a penultimate episode, so it has a specific role. And it does everything you could ask for in that role. There's 3 primary story-lines going this season - the Cartel, the Germans/Mike, and Jimmy/Kim. And when in any other equivalent show has each different story-line been compelling all at the same time?? I can't think of one, especially to this degree. All 3 are beginning to pay off in unique ways, and we're still not through with the season. Some scenes are lighter, some are darker, some are more dramatic, some are more intense... which serve to balance and compliment each other in an incredible way. I have to say... Gilligan's directing and the unspoken motivations he can paint with the camera in any scene is always worth noting. This show has tons of depth - which I've always said. It doesn't ever tell you what's happening... the most important aspects of the story are shown without any dialogue. We already knew what was boiling in Jimmy & Kim's relationship before it all came to a head here. But it never spoils the aftermath. There's a fine line where the actors/writers/director can crank up the drama, just to the level that's appropriate for that character's circumstance. And it's so difficult to watch sometimes, because it looks so real. It feels like a situation I've been in before, which ultimately makes me root for the characters even more.

Lalo continues to prove to be an excellent addition and I think the key to the future of the BB and BCS universe. He's a type of character we haven't scene, and Tony Dalton does a killer job of showing Lalo's personality on the surface, while still projecting a lavish amount of evil subtext, which seems to be a giant wrench in both Nacho's and Gus's current plans. It appears to me that he may be the link between Jimmy's and Nacho's world, and may even play a part in the future Gene story-line. Time will tell.

I think to any objective standard that this show is unequivocally superb. But in my mind you have to have some level of real depth to fully appreciate the themes and the subtle, visual ways they're presented through the characters. Jim Mullen Tate's final analysis of the episode is that it's "mostly just filler, and hardly seems like the head-in to a season finale". Hah, well that's pretty comical. Jim, I don't know what you're looking for. "Daddy's Home 2" is always there if you can't find anything meaningful or real or compelling here. If you have depth, you'll love this show. It's as simple as that.
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10/10
Until We Meet Again
greggwager2 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
So Kim and Saul team up again in Lubbock, Texas: a scheme to replace duly filed blueprints for a Mesa Verde bank with plans Kevin would rather use there. Our heroes help Mesa Verde avoid a two-month delay. They have fun doing it.

On the other hand, they cheat by "going outside the dots," fooling innocent people. They weigh good against bad on their own terms. Kim even helps define "good" by quoting Justice Potter Stewart's always ridiculous but often cited definition of pornography: "you know it when you see it."

After all, Slippin' Jimmy sometimes swindled people just for the harmless fun of it, not because he needed the money. When the mark is obnoxious or a sucker, it enhances the fun. There's a raw justice to it. The caper with Bavarian Boy even had a Zen quality to it: if a Hummel falls into the hands of a thief but no one knows it's missing, was there a crime?

Whether for clever problem-solving or overcoming the evils of petty tyranny, Kim and Saul's schemes teeter back and forth on our own moral compasses. We should never forget they are taking justice into their own hands, but we must also be our own judge and jury as to who are the villains and heroes of the story.

The penultimate episode of season four uses the German word "Wiedersehen" as its title, which the construction workers write on the final boulder they must blast away. Kai finally respects Mike afterward, but Werner's nerves are frazzled after a scary moment of troubleshooting to repair faulty electrical connections to the explosives. The German word means farewell in different contexts: from Werner's point of view, he devises an elaborate escape from the compound; and from Mike's, he knows Werner now knows too much.

Meanwhile, Lalo has something in store for Gus, apparently not aware that his new sidekick, Nacho, is loyal to Gus. We even get a back story for the origin of Don Hector's bell.

But tensions boil over by the end of "Wiedersehen." Saul's hearing to be reinstated as a lawyer goes awry. A creepy question at the end designed to get Saul to mention his lost brother Chuck is answered incorrectly. Saul goes ballistic because he must once again face Chuck's hatred of him. He takes it out on Kim, reminding us of the underhanded way she opted out of their partnership. Will the next and final episode give us one last swindle of the system so that this hearing from hell will be appealed?

In light of how good and evil paint the American landscape, Better Call Saul is thankfully keeping us thinking and guessing. We know Saul finally goes bad without Kim in the picture. Keep your eye on when and why that moment in the story occurs.
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10/10
Best episode all season (so far)...
supercurio2 October 2018
This is about the 8th time I've said "best episode this season" as if keeps proving that this show rarely ever puts out an episode without furthering the story and adding extra intrigue into the characters. But my god.... the acting and directing this episode was mind blowing. Bob Odenkirk deserves an Emmy nod just for this episode. Rhea Seahorn was too good as well. Also, Lalo's character is adding so much to this universe, and since Chuck is gone he's definitely looking to fill a void and help link the numerous character story-lines which have yet to fully collide.

Vince Gilligan directed this, and he never disappoints. Simply put... this episode sets up the show for a killer season finale - which may be literally accurate?? We'll see next week. Excellent showing for the BCS team.
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10/10
The Highs and the Lows
leoncela2 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
The last episode I was considering one of the best episodes of the series. It puts you on such a high by the end it's beautiful. This episode brings everything crashing down in the best possible way.

Imagine describing to your friend this episode: "so after 4 seasons there's this huge moment where is Jimmy being rejected as a lawyer" Many people would scoff and tell you about the train heist in BB or the Red Wedding in GoT. But Vince Gilligan sets BCS on a small scale. When characters are punished you feel their punishment.

For example when Jimmy is unable to practise law for year it hits you. But instead of cutting to another year or having it pass after a few episodes. Vince makes you wait for what feels like an eternity. And then to be rejected you feel that same anger Jimmy does. And Odenkirk's acting really sells it too.

Fantastic episode all around, even if I did focus on the Jimmy plot through line.
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10/10
What More Can Be Said
Hitchcoc18 March 2020
To keep three plot lines balanced and have each of them shine is beyond belief in this entertainment frenzied time. All along we have been rooting for Jimmy to get his law license back. We endure the inquisition as he has to jump through the hoops with the evaluation committee. Then we have Lalo and Nacho plying their trade with frightful intensity. And finally, what is going on with the German's and the huge underground project? One more to go for the season. Some more answers on the way. I love it.
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10/10
Perfection
mihmichael15 February 2022
How Bob Odenkirk did not get an Emmy for this (and a buch more) stellar performances is beyond me. I mean, from an episode to an episode Bob absoltely great and so is Rhea and yet, no one in the "Emmy room" sees that. It is an absolute shame.
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10/10
Fantastic episode
davidhagerty19842 October 2018
This show just keeps getting better. I wish I could wait and binge on it but I'm waiting every week for the next one, I loved BB and didn't expect much from the spin off but I've been constantly surprised with just how well they've taken the characters and created something that I'm my optioning is just as good
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10/10
What a story. Unbelievable good..
JimmyBelfonte3 October 2018
I have no words for this episode or the whole season. I can only write that it is unbelievable good.. But i have to say something else:

There are not many TV shows that doesn't lay out for you what is happening at a certain scene or a certain detail they spoil to be sure that everybody does understand it.

Better Call Saul isn't doing that. You have to figure it out all by yourself. I don't want to involve any spoilers in my review, so you just have to figure it out by yourself. Again.

Top quality show, Top acting, Top cast, Top storyline!
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10/10
Exemplary penultimate Episode 👌🖤
keraghel_mehdi2 April 2022
This Episode delivered all we needed in a Satisfactory Combination of insightful Highlights , Shocking breakdowns , Decisive realizations , Climactic & Striking Confrontations , Characters shifting moments ... down to setting up the next Storylines 👌🖤
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9/10
Loved the setup, look and feel and story, but the show definitely needs more action.
jasonbourneagain4 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Better Call Saul is a well written, tightly scripted and innovative show and the Wiedersehen episode was probably the best show of season 4 next to Breathe and Coushatta. What was great was seeing what Kim was talking about when she said, "Let's do it again" in the cold open. Next, we saw Lalo and Nacho going to Casa Tranquilla nursing home to visit Hector and we hear the vengeful story of how Lalo and Hector tortured the proprietor of a hotel and burned it down to teach him not to disrespect their cartel. We find Lalo went back inside the rubble and found the hotel's front desk bell. He presents this to Hector as a gift which was prominently featured in Breaking Bad. Afterward, we hear Slippin' Jimmy discuss with Kim his idea to pull off scams together in order to get new clients out of a harsh sentence like they did with Huell. Kim disagrees and wants to use their services for good helping deserving people and not just criminals. Of course, what Slippin' Jimmy laid out was his idea for Saul Goodman. The following scene was the one I was waiting for in anticipating that someone like Kai or Werner was going to be blown to smitereens due to their rebellious attitude or indiscretion. The show was about good bye. It could've been good bye to Kim and Jimmy after Something Stupid, but Coushatta brought them back together again. Thus, we were expecting something to happen. Instead, we just got more storyline. I'm not complaining about advancing the story, but to get it in every scene and act, then it gets boring. There is too much being told at once or additional filler, so the show gets carried away with its plots. The plots go on too long as they're just filler. All this to say that Better Call Saul needs more action like Breaking Bad had. We still have four years to go before Breaking Bad and it has been painstakingly slow to develop the story to just this point. Perhaps we need more time jumps to just cut to the chase. If Better Call Saul were foods, then we are getting too much nutrition and not enough fatty, sinful, unhealthy pleasurable foods. For example, Lalo tossing trash out in the parking lot should not be the memorable part of a scene. Better Call Saul gets carried away with its own creativity and cinematography.
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7/10
Multiple layers
dierregi5 April 2020
Warning: Spoilers
For those who wonder what are Kim and Jim still doing together... we might be reaching breaking point, although from my point of view it should have already been reached.

I find it difficult to believe that Kim would continue putting up with Jim increasingly erratic (and dishonest) behaviour. She is a good-looking, smart professional woman who can do much better than Jim.

Their story has been dragging on for too long, but luckily the other two plots work so much better. Finally the Germans are hitting rock bottom, not only metaphorically but IRL, facing problems that have been building up in previous episodes and strangely enough, it's not Kai who will go down.

Nacho and Lalo are very uneasy together, but that part of the plot is also developing nicely (surely not for Nacho, who should have gone out of a business he is definitely not cut for).
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Such a blast
gedikreverdi30 October 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Kim and Jim's plot for Mesa verde files was amazing. Jim's reinstatement hearing didn't go well because he didn't mention his brother at all and he doesn't have any regret about that. Kim is still by his side even after they had a big argument at the roof. The German engineer escaped the excavation prison.
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5/10
Just Okay; Not Sure Why The Hype for This Episode
TheFearmakers2 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
I've never seen anything with a 9.9 rating until this episode, which is pretty good, has moments, but spends too long on Jimmy and Kim's pre-credit "cold open" scam that has little to no suspense and/or urgency for the viewer: They're having more fun than we are, as often happens when Kim teeters to the dark side: the two lovers sometimes seem like they're part of an actor's workshop...

Lalo is a good new character, and has the kind of askew, weasely charm needed to jumble things for Nacho and his new boss, Gus, but this just feels like a beginning of something, and not much more than that...

On the other side of the spectrum, the German worker subplot involving Mike comes to a head, and it's interesting, but not all that intense, and, for the most part, this is a pretty good episode, but mostly just filler, and hardly seems like the lead-in to a season finale...

It's more like they're loading the proverbial gun than even beginning to really take aim. So next week could be quite a cram session, folks. Almost seems as though they're gonna have to start from a different kind of scratch given the idyllic repose this week, and last.
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10/10
Best episode of the season so far....
krishu-781993 October 2018
Showed real saul there... the real reason why he became what he was this was surely is the containeder of best episode of the series...
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9/10
Can't wait
Leofwine_draca6 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Three separate plotlines are playing out here and each is as quietly gripping as the next. First off there's Nacho and the ever-imposing Gus, who never fails to impress; then there's Mike's story building to a real climax, and some devastating material for Jimmy and Kim. Can't wait for the next...
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8/10
I don't get why people love this episode so much
u-486292 October 2022
Warning: Spoilers
(Spoilers for just this episode)

I mean, let's face it, we all knew Jimmy wouldn't be approved in the second to last episode, that's the kind of thing you use for a finale, not the penultimate setup. I'm not saying it's a bad episode, I'm saying it gets way too much praise. I found the middle to be a little boring, the roof conversation was good, but other than that most of the episode was just okay. Lalo giving Hector his bell was cool, but it was just one moment. The Werner stuff kind of had you on edge, but for the most part this episode is a bit overrated in my opinion. I also checked the original score a bit ago, there was a point where this episode was rated as high as Lantern? And that's just strange to me.
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8/10
Finally something I can get behind
perlshop12 October 2018
After a disastrous season with every episode like 4 or 5, finally BCS is where it should have been all along.

After a long wait the pace finally picked up and there were a lot of interesting moments in this episode. I have now new hopes for this TV serial again.
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10/10
how does people actually like jimmy more than chuck?
ansharuluchiha10 July 2022
This episode shows how irritating James McGill is, Jimmy is the real a**hole, i mean Charles too but jimmy is more than just a lonely younger sibling who has several issues, he's a total jackass. He's so childish and like he said he's a little bit corny.
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10/10
jimmy you are always down
omrankabbara-4332420 March 2023
This line shocked when kim said that and then when i knew that i have more in common whith jimmy than i thought it hits really diffrent when you hear it from your closest people and i just wanna say that writers did great job writing kim and jimmy one of the best charecter in tv no doubt.

This line shocked when kim said that and then when i knew that i have more in common whith jimmy than i thought it hits really diffrent when you hear it from your closest people and i just wanna say that writers did great job writing kim and jimmy one of the best charecter in tv no doubt.

His line shocked when kim said that and then when i knew that i have more in common whith jimmy than i thought it hits really diffrent when you hear it from your closest people and i just wanna say that writers did great job writing kim and jimmy one of the best charecter in tv no doubt.
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10/10
Wiedersehen
lassegalsgaard7 October 2023
Warning: Spoilers
For a penultimate episode, this has the burden of being the last stop before all (or most of) the questions have to be answered. There's a dilemma there, because it somewhat limits that episode's ability to really throw big curveballs and change the trajectory of a season. However, with "Better Call Saul," it has never been about staying on the course up until the very end and they have shown in the past that they are willing to throw some big and decisive curveballs into the mix. However, looking at this episode specifically, it's very clear that they went into this fully knowing that they were not going to simply give fans what they wanted, despite the fact that we were thinking we knew what was going to happen. A lot of questions are still on the air, but to introduce a major character in a penultimate episode isn't something that a show can just do, unless they do it with a lot of fire to back it up. "Better Call Saul" is ready to lead us into the finale of what has been yet another great season of television, but before they do that, they need to send us on with a great penultimate. And this is just that as it ups the ante for the finale and, possibly, for the rest of the show to come. The characters are all in tight spots and the walls are caving in, but the writing is so masterful that we're just anticipating the chaos to reign.

The big thing that has been driving this show for the first three seasons was the relationship between Jimmy and Chuck. The writers are so brilliant and they know that this is the driving force for everything that Jimmy does, so they have not let Chuck fade away, but kept him in the consciousness of all the characters and the viewers. It's clear that he's here to stay and he's still interfering with Jimmy's career. It's a great way of continuing that legacy and maintaining the thing that made this show such an intellectual drama from the very first episode.

This episode is also the real test for Jimmy and Kim. It's clear that they've been on rocky ground lately, and with Kim slowly starting to veer more towards Jimmy's line of getting out of a situation, there's going to be some drama there. And we get that through a heartbreaking argument that ends in one of the most somber scenes we've ever had between the two, but also the most honest in a lot of ways. It's the perfect display of their relationship: Jimmy needs her help and she's there for him 100%! Great writing all the way through.

That was the first big thing they gave us in this episode that'll go into the next. The second one was the escape of Werner Ziegler from the facility. The relationship between him and Mike has been wonderfully portrayed this entire season, and it's clear that Mike sees a lot of himself in Werner. His longing for his wife is very similar to his longing of being with his son again, so Mike wants to help him as much as he can. It ends up being too much for Werner, and now, we'll have to wait and see what happens.

At the same time, things are going great for Gus as there is a new Salamanca in town in the form of Lalo. His introduction was great, but this episode really serves as his introduction to the show, and Tony Dalton just eats up every single scene that he is in. He seems to have great chemistry with everyone and he adds that fun, nonchalant nature to the villains that we haven't seen so far. He's going to be formidable, and if even Gus knows that, then it's clear that there'll be a lot to handle when it comes to him.

"Wiedersehen" wonderfully sets the stage for the finale with a lot of curveballs that doesn't change the entire trajectory, but certainly the show's current direction. A lot of things are not as good as they could or should be, but all of that is in the service of the writing which is greater than ever.
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7/10
Episode 409
bobcobb3014 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
There was a good scene near the end with Kim and Jimmy (that for some reason was not the final moment of the episode) that really showcased how odd their relationship is. That was one of the few highlights, along with Jimmy's performance in his awkward reinstatement hearing.

Overall, the episode was lacking a bit. Mike is being wasted just overseeing this whole project instead of interacting more with the other cast.
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3/10
Finally, a watchable episode
youfg21 November 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This whole season has been a complete disaster and utterly boring, things are finally starting to get going with the introduction of a new interesting character, jimmy's story-line doesn't seems to have changed much since season 1.
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