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'Better Call Saul': Rhea Seehorn on Season 6 Ending: "I Don't Think It's Set In Stone"

Over the past 48 hours, fans of Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould's Breaking Bad prequel/sequel/parallel series Better Call Saul have gone from from impatiently waiting for season 5 to return to wondering if season 5 would be the series' penultimate season after recent comments from Giancarlo Esposito (Gus Fring, Breaking BadBetter Call Saul) implied that season 6 would be the final bridge to Walt and Jesse.

Now it looks like that prediction might be a tad premature, at least according to series star Rhea Seehorn (Kim Wexler). Speaking with TV Guide, Seehorn said that she was informed that that have been "no concrete decisions" about when Better Call Saul will shuffle off AMC's coil for good.

better call saul
AMC

Referencing Esposito's comments about Gilligan and Gould looking to end the series with the same number of seasons as Breaking Bad, Seehorn continued,

"Peter and Vince have said things like, 'Wouldn't it be fun if this had the same number of episodes as Breaking Bad?'. But they said that with a grin, because I think sentimentally it's sweet to them to bookend [the shows] that way."

As far as Seehorn sees it, Gilligan and Gould will wrap the series when they know they've told their story:

"They know, generally, the story. They obviously know the ending because it's Breaking Bad. I don't think they're set on: 'How many episodes does it take to tell that story?' I don't think it's set in stone. I think they like the idea of, 'What if it was the same amount?' but they'll do whatever they have to do for the story. I know that to be true."

AMC's Better Call Saul is currently in production on its fifth season, expected to premiere early 2020.

During a wide-ranging interview with Vulture earlier this month, Sarah Barnett, president of the entertainment networks group at AMC Networks (AMC, IFC, SundanceTV, and BBC America) was asked about the Breaking Bad spinoff's fifth season return – and that's when she revealed the wait: "We said on our most recent earnings call that the series would come back for season five next year."

Which would mean the earliest the series would return would be early 2020 – and the reason? To make sure the creative team has the time they need to craft the vision they want: Yes. It's driven by talent needs, which we would not override if it would result in a worse show.

Barnett also confirmed that Better Call Saul was getting close to the point where it would hand-off to Breaking Bad storyline-wise – something the writers have been planning for all along, and something that would fit with Esposito's comments above:

"Well, we know clearly the end was already written before the beginning began. [Laughs.] The writers, they have a very particular, very clear sense of the arc of their show."

As for where the upcoming fifth season places towards reaching the end of the Better Call Saul story: "We're certainly getting closer to it."

happy season 2

So what can viewers expect when the Better Call Saul returns? Series co-creator Gould offered EW some insight during a December 2018 interview:

'Better Call Saul': Rhea Seehorn on Season 6 Ending: "I Don't Think It's Set In Stone"

● Now that Jimmy's enjoying wearing the Saul mask longer and longer (or Saul's hating wearing the Jimmy mask any longer than he has to), what's the next stage in Saul's "evolution"?

"It seems like Jimmy's first move is to try to leverage all the contacts he has in the world of selling drop phones. But don't forget, he also knows the vet [Caldera, played by Joe DeRosa], and the vet is sort of Craig's List for the underworld in Albuquerque. So he can get quite far. The question is: how does he establish a reputation as not just a criminal lawyer but a criminal lawyer? And what does that mean to him at this point? Because situations may require him to do things and turn a blind eye to things that Jimmy McGill would not be able to stomach."

better call saul
AMC

● While it's easy to get lost in the Jimmy/Saul dynamic, let's not forget about the third "character" in play here: post-Breaking Bad Jimmy alter-ego/Cinnabon manager Gene Takovic. Sounds like "Gene" has a fan in Gould…

"I am very, very interested in Gene Takovic. In some ways, Gene is very enigmatic. In some ways, he's the opposite of Saul Goodman because he speaks so very little, he's so afraid. But I'm fascinated by that situation and by the question of: is there still any chance of redemption or ray of light in this guy's life after all the terrible things that he's done, now that he's run away and hidden himself in Omaha?"

● With talk of Walter White (Bryan Cranston) and Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul) appearing on the series soon and confirmed-then-unconfirmed reports of a Breaking Bad movie set after the series finale, Gould would be interested in revisiting the Breaking Bad era again as they did during season 4 – as long as it works for the story:

"The question for us is always: are we telling the story of Jimmy McGill and Mike Ehrmantraut and Kim Wexler? And if showing scenes during the course of Breaking Bad add to that story or are important to that story or turn that story, then I think we should do them. But I don't want to dip in to Breaking Bad just because we can."

● Finally, Gould shared a question that fans should be asking themselves during the off-season – a question that season 5 hopes to answer: "We know who Saul Goodman is, but who is Saul Goodman to Kim Wexler?"

TV Guide


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Ray FlookAbout Ray Flook

Serving as Television Editor since 2018, Ray began five years earlier as a contributing writer/photographer before being brought onto the core BC team in 2017.
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