Better Call Saul Recap: Nacho’s on the Move, and Kim’s Got Plans

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The post Better Call Saul Recap: Nacho’s on the Move, and Kim’s Got Plans appeared first on Consequence.

[Editor’s note: The following contains spoilers for Better Call Saul Season 6 Episode 2, “Carrot and Stick.” For our recap of Episode 1, click here.]

Case Summary

The title of Better Call Saul Season 6, Episode 2, refers to how Jimmy and Kim continue to develop their plan to sabotage Harold Hamlin’s career, this time bringing in the once-familiar faces of Betsy and Craig Kellerman.

You might remember this vindictive pair from Season 1, when Jimmy McGill represented them as Craig faced charges over his illicit bookkeeping for Bernalillo County — since then, Craig’s done some time, and he and Betsy are attempting to rebuild with a new business preparing tax returns for people who don’t spend enough time looking over the fine print to make sure that they’re not being ripped off (something we’ll get back to in a bit).

Meanwhile, the situation with Nacho has… escalated. Over the course of this episode, the following things happen:

• Gus has Mike swap out the safe in Nacho’s home with a new one, containing (nearly) everything the original safe did, plus a bank statement scrawled with the phone number for the hotel at which Nacho is currently hiding.
• Don Eladio and his own men, drilling open said safe, find the statement and thus have an idea of where Nacho is.
• Nacho, after waiting long enough, stops trusting Tyrus’s voice on the phone and sneaks out of his hotel room to discover that he’s being observed — by Gus’s people.
• Gus figures out that Lalo survived his planned attack, and that if Eladio’s men get to Nacho before him, Nacho might talk and reveal Gus’s involvement in trying to kill Lalo.

That’s… a lot, and that’s all before people start shooting guns.

The Least Legal Move

better call saul michael mando 1 Better Call Saul Recap: Nachos on the Move, and Kims Got Plans
better call saul michael mando 1 Better Call Saul Recap: Nachos on the Move, and Kims Got Plans

Better Call Saul (AMC)

So let’s focus in here on how Nacho just barely survived the invasion of Eladio’s guys at the Motel Cotillo, killing at least one man before finally escaping. (Murder = still usually the worst crime, even if this was technically self-defense.) Once again, Nacho proves that he has the brains to survive longer than most in this game, successfully figuring out that not only was he being watched, but who had hired the watching.

The opening sequence makes it clear that Gus wanted to set Nacho up as the key conspirator against Lalo, but with Nacho still on the run — and now looking directly to Gus for answers — the question becomes if Gus will be able to protect him, or if he even wants to do so.

Achievements in Cinematography

There are maybe fancier shots in the episode, but the early sequence of Jimmy rehearsing his latest scheme monologue pulls out so elegantly to reveal Kim in the foreground that it’s worth admiring. Especially because it gives us a truly rare treat — the sight of Kim dropping her perennially straight face to just flat-out enjoy Jimmy’s over-the-top Irish accent. Kim’s probably kissed Jimmy more times than she’s smiled at his jokes, a detente which seems to play into their overall vibe as a couple, but it’s still just too charming to see them enjoy each other’s company.

Familiar Faces

It’s always a treat when the Bad/Saul-iverse brings back some blasts from the past, and not only was it fun to see Julie Ann Emery and Jeremy Shamos return as the forever-shifty Kellermans, but Mythic Quest breakout Jessie Ennis returned to Albuquerque as Erin Brill, the junior lawyer at Cliff’s firm who the Kellermans call “a glorified intern.”

The Kellermans should just consider themselves lucky that it was Erin, and not Jo, who they were talking to.

Remembering What Hasn’t Happened Yet (The “Breaking Bad” Tie-In)

This is actually not a Breaking Bad tie-in officially, but if you’re wondering about the significance of Jimmy’s muttered line, “wolves and sheep,” well here’s a bit of backstory for you! In the Season 2 episode “Inflatable,” an unnamed con man told young Jimmy, working behind the counter at his father’s store, “There are wolves and sheep in this world, kid. Wolves and sheep. Figure out which one you’re gonna be.”

It was a message that stuck with him then and now, and the fact that Jimmy’s considering the world in those terms is something to be worried by.

On The Journey From Jimmy to Saul

If anyone truly crossed over the line in this episode, it was Kim and not Jimmy, as she calmly threatened to turn the Kellermans in for tax preparer fraud unless they agreed to work with them.

Yet Bob Odenkirk’s performance once again captured how not-great he’s feeling about Kim’s new attitude towards what might be hard to describe as anything other than extortion — these two are very good at always hiding the true depth of their feelings, no matter what their nature, from each other. (This is why we love them and this is also why they break our hearts.)

For the record, these recaps will still refer to Jimmy as Jimmy up until the point his chosen moniker really happens to feel like the character’s real name. That point is probably coming, when we least expect it. But right now, a few of Jimmy’s niggling bits of humanity still seem to be present. How much longer that stays true remains to be seen. But whatever happens, Kim’s probably going to be at the center of it.

better call saul jonathan banks Better Call Saul Recap: Nachos on the Move, and Kims Got Plans
better call saul jonathan banks Better Call Saul Recap: Nachos on the Move, and Kims Got Plans

Better Call Saul (AMC)

Best Quote

“No. You’re not doing that.”
— Mike Ehrmantraut

There are perhaps more eloquent moments from the episode, but there’s nothing like watching Jonathan Banks stare down the barrel of a gun because he knows it’s the right thing to do. For a man whose line between “yes” and “no” seems to have faded away over the past few seasons, he’s still got enough morality left to say no to hurting an innocent man for the crimes of his son. (Especially when his son’s crimes were committed on Gus’s behalf.)

In Conclusion, Your Honor

Man, that satisfying sensation of being able to watch the newest episode of Better Call Saul right after the previous one! Say farewell to that for a while, as the show returns to a once-a-week schedule for the next five weeks. The show’s two-part premiere altogether is a pretty complete showcase of the series’ greatest strengths, though, with “Carrot and Stick” so totally focused on the present that one might forget the dark future awaiting so many of these characters.

Much like the car lurking as Kim and Jimmy drive away from the Kettlemans’ tax offices, though, the future is real, and it’s waiting for everyone. Like it or not.

Better Call Saul airs Mondays at 10 p.m. on AMC.

Better Call Saul Recap: Nacho’s on the Move, and Kim’s Got Plans
Liz Shannon Miller

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