The Guardian (USA)

Better Call Saul recap: season six, episode six – Kim’s fate now feels certain

- Paul MacInnes

Spoiler alert: this recap is for people watching Better Call Saul season six, which airs on Netflix in the UK. Do not read on unless you have watched episodes one to six.

Storming Omaha beach

“It happens today.” With those words, and a big screeching U-turn on the highway, Kim prepared to meet her fate. At least, it feels that way – as though we are finally about to get answers to all the questions that have hung over Jimmy’s partner for so many series.

The reason why I fear that the twist in Kim’s story is about to be played out is twofold. First, Peter Gould, the showrunner, teased that there would be a big cliffhange­r at the end of next week’s episode, the last of the first half of the final season.

There is something a little too reckless about Kim’s commitment to seeing through the Sandpiper scam, and not just because she thinks it’s cool to pull a U-ey across a central reservatio­n. In turning home for D-Day, Kim is presumably ditching her meeting with the Jackson Mercer Foundation in Santa Fe; she is rejecting the opportunit­y to secure a dream job, a combinatio­n of vocation and prestige she has always looked for in her work. Given how far that work has gone in defining who Kim Wexler is, it feels like a rejection of herself – all in one turn of a steering wheel.

Second, there was the cold open, in which we got a taste of the dynamic between childhood Kim and her dysfunctio­nal mother, something that has been shown only in small glimpses. Here we watched as the pair scammed a department store out of cheap jewellery. The sparkle in her mum’s eyes afterwards is surely significan­t.

Philip Larkin observed what parents tend to do to their children in This Be the Verse. The poem ends: “Man hands on misery to man. / It deepens like a coastal shelf. / Get out as early as you can, / And don’t have any kids yourself.” Kim appears to have observed Larkin’s instructio­ns, having fled

Nebraska and shown no inclinatio­n to become a mother. Quite how deep she has internalis­ed the lessons taken from her mother is hidden from us. But if Kim’s U-turn is inspired by something as deep-set as her relationsh­ip with her mother, this could end up anywhere.

(NB: this dramatic action was per

formed in the service of trying to help Jimmy solve the problem of not being able to properly impersonat­e someone because the guy has his arm in a cast. It is a sweet note of absurdity typical of Kim’s husband and the show as a whole.)

Salamanca im Walde

Cocktail-hour Lalo continues his odyssey through Germany. He is looking to pin down informatio­n on Gus Fring’s involvemen­t in the assassinat­ion attempt on him, and pin it down he does by way of an axe to the leg, as Lalo finds Werner Ziegler’s old protege, Casper, and brutalises him in the woods.

Lalo’s arrival is fitting for an unstoppabl­e villain. He parks far from Casper’s peaceful home and is detectable only at a distance, in silhouette. Casper has time to prepare for Lalo’s advance, but is clearly spooked by their brief exchange and dashes off to hide in a barn.

Classic shadowy hide-and-seek ensues, only to go off script when Casper whacks Lalo with the blunt side of his woodchoppe­r. Salamanca is down and, if we are to judge by his expression, perhaps fatefully so.

What a twist in the tale. To make it worse, Lalo effectivel­y starts begging Casper for help – for any info that can help him nail Fring. At this moment, I expected peace, a deal agreed between the two – after all, we had met a vulnerable Lalo the previous week in his encounter with Margarethe.

But just as that portrayal was a lie, so is this, with sick wickle Lalo playing rope-a-dope to lure Casper in. One slash of a concealed blade, one swipe of the axe and Lalo is offering the German a tourniquet and suggesting they have a chat.

Lalo back in Albuquerqu­e for the halfway finale? Won’t be ruling it out.

At home with the Hamlins

I have always struggled to see Howard Hamlin as a baddie, as there is something a bit too ridiculous about him to take seriously. After finally being allowed inside his domestic life, it is possible even to feel sympatheti­c towards him.

It appears that Howard, just like Gus, has a two-home situation. Except that he is living in the guest house attached to his main home, complete with a clothes rail stuffed with smart shirts and a shoe-polishing machine that looks as if it has been stolen from a hotel.

We had hints of Howard’s marital strife during his recent therapy session, and now we finally meet Mrs Hamlin. The couple share a brief moment over a rushed breakfast that shows how estranged they are. Howard makes his wife a coffee, foam art and all, which she pours unceremoni­ously into a vacuum flask. He suggests joining her at a social event, which she isn’t into, either. He is all ordered and buttoned up, she a bit frayed and chaotic. Both seem to be living the consequenc­es of putting work before their relationsh­ip.

The encounter ends with stiff good wishes for the day ahead; Howard is left alone with his burned-bean drink. Next up: a day of reckoning with Kim and Jimmy’s plot. What will happen to the square-jawed blond? Will he be heading for Best Quality Vacuum with the rest of them?

Albuquerqu­e incidental

The prepostero­uness of Saul Goodman’s office decor is explained – and it is all down to Francesca Liddy. Jimmy’s long-suffering secretary only agreed to work with his new alter ego on the condition that she had a say in doing up his offices. As Kim is forced to admit, she has good – if expensive – taste. The only problem is the juxtaposit­ion between her John Grisham-style sensibilit­ies and the quality of Saul’s clientele, who remain happy to urinate on the furniture. A more immediate illustrati­on of the disconnect between the image and reality of Jimmy’s world we could not hope to see and, for sure,

Francesca could do with another holding room to put all those punters in.

Mike is redistribu­ting Gus’s resources to take care of his own family, which is only fair and reasonable, even if Tyrus doesn’t think so. Watching from the safe house opposite, he gets to spend some precious stargazing time with his granddaugh­ter, Kaylee, and nobody appears from the shadows to kidnap her or fake an incident with a prostitute. That is as close to domestic bliss as people can hope for right now.

Another prestige appearance for Zefiro tequila. When Jimmy ends up fleeing the queue at the liquor store, he has to ditch a $500 bottle of the drink that has bound Kim and him together at key moments (their first scam, the death of Charles). Zefiro is also the brand that is served to Don Eladio when Gus finally poisons the cartel boss in Breaking Bad.

 ?? Sony Pictures Television ?? Heading for a cliffhange­r? Rhea Seehorn as Kim Wexler. Photograph: Greg Lewis/AMC/
Sony Pictures Television Heading for a cliffhange­r? Rhea Seehorn as Kim Wexler. Photograph: Greg Lewis/AMC/
 ?? Greg Lewis/AMC/ Sony Pictures Television ?? Rhea Seehorn as Kim Wexler, with Christophe­r Kelly as her client in episode six, season six. Photograph:
Greg Lewis/AMC/ Sony Pictures Television Rhea Seehorn as Kim Wexler, with Christophe­r Kelly as her client in episode six, season six. Photograph:

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