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Episodes Better Call Saul May 2026

Pimento (S1E9 – the start of the Chuck fracture), Bagman (S5E8 – the survivalist nightmare), Fun and Games (S6E9 – the montage that shows Jimmy and Kim’s slow death).

After multiple rewatches, here are the episodes that define the series. 1. “Five-O” (S1E6) – The Moment It Became More Than a Prequel Before this, we liked Jimmy. After this, we understood Mike. Jonathan Banks delivers a masterclass in restrained grief. The line “I broke my boy” recontextualizes everything about Mike Ehrmantraut. This episode proved BCS would earn its tragedy, not just borrow it. 2. “Chicanery” (S3E5) – The Best Courtroom Scene in TV History Forget A Few Good Men . The Chuck vs. Jimmy tape tampering hearing is perfect television. Michael McKean’s breakdown ( “It’s never stopped me before!” ) is Shakespearean. But the true genius? Chuck is technically correct – and it destroys him. This episode is the show’s moral thesis. 3. “Winner” (S4E10) – The Birth of Saul Goodman Jimmy, freshly bereaved, gets his law license back by cynically playing the grief card. Then he delivers a spontaneous, genuine eulogy for Chuck… only to reveal in the final shot that he’s fully embraced the mask. The hallway walk, the suit, the “It’s showtime, folks!” – it’s a villain origin story that feels like a funeral for a good man who never existed. 4. “Bad Choice Road” (S5E9) – The Desert Walk of Despair Jimmy and Mike stumble through the desert after a cartel shootout. It’s 40 minutes of sun-scorched silence, exhaustion, and moral erosion. Then Kim’s confrontation with Lalo at the apartment? The way she matches his calm menace? That’s the episode where Kim Wexler became untouchable. 5. “Plan and Execution” (S6E7) – The Unthinkable Pivot The Howard Hamlin scheme comes together perfectly – too perfectly. The montage of the bowling balls, the fake judge, the photoshopped photos… it’s almost goofy. Then the candle flickers. And Howard is in the wrong place at the wrong time. Lalo’s “Show me again” is the most chilling line in either series. This episode broke the fandom. 6. “Saul Gone” (S6E13) – The Perfect Ending A finale that asks: What does redemption cost? Jimmy McGill, facing life in prison, confesses everything – not for a deal, but for Kim. The final scene with the cigarette in the prison yard, Kim’s hand on the chain-link fence, the silent nod… it’s not happy. But it’s true. And that’s better. episodes better call saul

And more importantly – is there a scene in Better Call Saul that hit you harder than anything in Breaking Bad ? Pimento (S1E9 – the start of the Chuck