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Before Saul Goodman, he was Jimmy McGill. And if you're calling Jimmy, you're in real trouble. The prequel to 'Breaking Bad' follows small-time attorney Jimmy McGill as he transforms into Walter White's morally challenged lawyer, Saul Goodman.
As we prepare for the long wait for Season 4, we do so knowing that this time, the damage may truly be done. And it just speaks to the brilliance of the series, which keeps us hooked, tragedy after tragedy.
This was nonetheless a gripping cliff-hanger and a reminder that it's the family melodrama rather than the Breaking Bad-esque crime elements that makes Better Call Saul so quietly compelling.
With some hugely impactful moments that were both incredibly emotional and long-awaited by fans, "Lantern" proves that Better Call Saul is better than it's ever been with Season 3.
It's a difficult end to what was an excellent season of television -- perhaps even the series' best -- inching the show closer to its endpoint but doing so in inventive and unexpected ways.
Better Call Saul's music team was not kidding when they called the Season 3 finale "unbelievable", and we don't know how we're going to wait another year for a new season.
It's a stunning, bleak episode, with each thread hammering home the problem that's plagued the characters from the very beginning: It's not business. It's personal.
[Patrick Fabian's] completely convincing as a straight-and-narrow, buttoned-up guy who worked for years to protect a man he considered a friend, only for that friend to attack him when he dared suggest a different course of action.