Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Odenkirk sees the good in his dark character

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of ‘Breaking Bad,’ where everyone else is dealing drugs and doing awful things, this wise-ass lawyer is fun because he’s not afraid he’s going to die any second. But taken all by himself? Saul’s a rat.

“So Vince and Peter dug down into his past and discovered this incredibly earnest Jimmy McGill character. Before he becomes Saul Goodman, Jimmy’s giving his all to be the best person he can be.”

By “Better Call Saul” Season 4, which garnered Odenkirk his fourth consecutiv­e lead-actor award nomination, sweet Jimmy McGill has turned sour. Rejected and disparaged by his role-model brother, disbarred for swindling an elderly woman, Jimmy turns down a chance to make an honest living as a photocopie­r salesman and steals the would-be employer’s precious Hummel figurine.

Before long, he’s selling cellphones from the trunk of his car to street thugs. Why not stick to the straight and narrow? Odenkirk blames it on the reptilian brain.

“Jimmy has a pretty very active amygdala that pops up every once in a while and makes him do something insane,” Odenkirk says with a laugh. “That’s not just random behavior. It’s part of his character.”

Playing Jimmy/Saul in crook mode comes easily to Odenkirk, who cites his unctuous agent Stevie Grant in “The Larry Sanders Show” as a precursor cut from the same prevaricat­ing cloth.

“When Saul’s putting on a show, ranting and raving or pontificat­ing, I just eat that up because those scenes come off to me like pure comedy,” Odenkirk says. “But for me, the meat of the show is a deeper character examinatio­n you find in these quiet moments. When the camera’s 12 inches away, you don’t have to push it the way you do in comedy.”

Odenkirk especially savors the stripped-down exchanges between Jimmy McGill and his formidable lawyer girlfriend, Kim Wexler, played by Rhea Seehorn.

“As someone who’s been married for 22 years, I love the naturalist­ic scenes that take place between Jimmy and Kim,” he says. “When Jimmy comes home late at night after getting beat up, they’re in the bathroom sitting next to each other on the lip of the toilet. Jimmy’s really lost and he says, ‘What the hell is wrong with me?’

“It’s a beautifull­y written moment that trusts me and Kim to just be human beings without any protective bravado.”

Jimmy exits Season 4 in a jubilant mood after persuading the legal review board to reinstate his license to practice law with what appears to be a genuine cri de coeur invoking his late brother’s memory. Of course, it’s just another performanc­e.

“Jimmy does have deep feelings inside of him, and he excavates those feelings to crank up the waterworks and manipulate people,” Odenkirk observes wryly. “That’s what actors do.”

“Better Call Saul” periodical­ly flashes forward to a bleak future in Omaha, where Jimmy/Saul, in hiding, manages the local Cinnabon under the fake name “Gene Takovic.”

“I’m curious about what’s going to happen to that guy,” Odenkirk says. “I hope Gene finds some degree of … equilibriu­m where he’s not falling short every day. Or maybe Saul’s just too angry inside and has to hurt other people.

“Hope against hope because Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould are probably not going to write characters who end up in a better place.”

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KIRK MCKOY/LOS ANGELES TIMES

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