USA TODAY US Edition

‘SAUL’ WHEELS AND DEALS ON THE ROAD AHEAD W

The day of ‘Breaking Bad’ may be done, but for our lovable sleazy lawyer, it’s also his destiny

- Patrick Ryan

ith Breaking Bad in the rear-view mirror, Better Call

Saul is cruising into Season 2. In the final moments of the

Bad prequel’s first season, scrappy attorney Jimmy McGill (Bob Odenkirk) drove off into the New Mexico sunset. Still reeling from his brother Chuck’s betrayal, and allowing $1.6 million to slip through his fingers, he vowed to never let his moral compass steer him wrong again.

But when AMC’s comedic drama picks up Feb. 15 (10 p.m. ET/ PT), Jimmy hasn’t yet adopted his seedy alter ego Saul Goodman: an accomplice to drug lord Walter White (Bryan Cranston) for four seasons of the critically adored Bad.

Set six years before the events of Bad, Saul arrived last February on a wave of expectatio­ns ranging from cautious excitement to deep skepticism among those who loved the hit drama, which ended in 2013 with series-high ratings and a shelf full of Emmy Awards. But while Cranston’s cancerstri­cken teacher-turned-methkingpi­n was an instantly compelling antihero, Odenkirk’s smoothtalk­ing lawyer was less obviously so, and mostly served as Bad’s comic relief.

The challenge for co-creators Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould was to figure out how the wellintent­ioned Jimmy could convincing­ly transition into the corruptibl­e sleazebag viewers saw in Bad, all the while making him a tragic, sympatheti­c protagonis­t. It’s a gamble that ultimately paid off with strong ratings, Emmy Award nomination­s for best drama series and actor (Odenkirk) and a loyal fan base of Saul’s own.

“The only question we got before the premiere, and maybe even after the first episode, was: ‘When are we going to see Walt and Jesse (Aaron Paul)? Are we going to see Walt at the car wash?’ ” Gould says. “There was a lot of focus, understand­ably, on the two characters from Breaking

Bad, but after a few episodes, people started asking about characters that are new on this show. That’s when we felt the show was starting to stand on its own.”

But Jimmy’s slippery descent into Saul isn’t immediate in Season 2, although we do get another glimpse of his dire fate: managing a Cinnabon in Omaha with an assumed name, Gene.

Writing the new episodes, “we started out with that intention: ‘OK, now he’s going to go off and really break bad,’ to use a familiar expression,” Gilligan says. “But then we said to ourselves, ‘Is that too much, too soon?’ ”

Says Gould: “In Season 1, we really expected that by episode 10, he would be in that ridiculous office, wearing those suits and calling himself Saul Goodman. But what we found was the character wasn’t ready for any of those things. We’re not trying to slow things down necessaril­y, but we’re also not feeling this pressure that we hadn’t done our jobs if he hadn’t arrived at Saul Goodman by the end of the season.”

That said, “he takes some de- tours I wasn’t expecting,” Gould says. “Sometimes it seems he’s moving toward the light, when we know that eventually, the only light he’s moving toward is the light of one of those crazy ties.”

Tracking Jimmy’s evolution meant pinpointin­g who matters most to him, specifical­ly: Chuck (Michael McKean), his older brother, who prevented Jimmy from getting a lucrative job at his law firm; and Jimmy’s litigator girlfriend and cheerleade­r, Kim Wexler (Rhea Seehorn).

“The first season was so painful for this character and he got so deeply hurt,” Odenkirk says. But Season 2 finds Jimmy more confident and employed, although he still has plenty of baggage to unpack with Chuck. “These guys are still brothers, even after what happened last season. They’re connected, and those feelings are going to have to sort themselves out.”

His relationsh­ip with Kim also becomes more complicate­d, as she playfully carries out a scam with Jimmy in the season opener and, later, begrudging­ly ignores his shady dealings with Bad’s Mike Ehrmantrau­t (Jonathan Banks).

Kim inspires Jimmy to be his best self, but Seehorn doesn’t see her as his savior.

“She just wants to warn him of the consequenc­es of his actions,” she says. “A lot of people are like, ‘What’s her attraction to him?’ But I find them both to be loners and people who put on the right costume for the right environmen­t. And yet, with each other, there’s a bit of a mask-off thing.”

Overall, “I find Season 2 darker in a really fun way,” Seehorn adds. “From even darker comedy and humor, to darker criminal elements, to the internal and external character stuff, everything got racheted up. There are more plates spinning and more parallel trains running toward the wall.”

New-to- Saul characters, such as the fan-favorite Kettleman couple, may return in Season 2, Gould says, and so, potentiall­y, will some major players from the

Bad universe. “If you watch Season 2, you’re going to see a lot of faces you didn’t think you’d ever see again, except at a Breaking Bad reunion,” Odenkirk says. “In a weird way, it’s a bigger thrill than you’d expect when it happens, because you forgot.”

By season’s end, viewers may also see a more fully realized transforma­tion by Jimmy into Saul Goodman, though “I don’t feel it’s ultimately as incrementa­l as you might think,” Odenkirk says. “Every move is earned.” As for how much gas is left in

Saul’s tank, Gilligan says he has no end game in mind.

“It seemed like a no-brainer when we started,” Gilligan says. “We know the guy turns into Saul Goodman, but the exact path that he takes is still very much a mystery to us.”

If Saul is renewed for a third season (which it probably will be), he and Gould can then map out a clearer path for Jimmy.

“At this point, the headlights on this car only reach so far into the night,” Gould says. “I’m hoping if we go down the road a little further, we’ll get a sense of how much further the road goes.”

 ?? URSULA PHOTOS COYOTE, BY
SONY PICTURES
TELEVISION/AMC;
CINNABON GENE
COURTESY OF AMC ??
URSULA PHOTOS COYOTE, BY SONY PICTURES TELEVISION/AMC; CINNABON GENE COURTESY OF AMC

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