MovieChat Forums > Better Call Saul (2015) Discussion > The First Scene of the Premiere. (Future...

The First Scene of the Premiere. (Future Saul)


I look forward to the Future Saul scenes more than just about anything. We only get one per year, just a few minutes. It's like a shooting star. All that waiting, but if you look in the right spot, when it comes around, then you get to see something truly special, if only just for a precious few moments.

This one, Part 3, did not disappoint. It actually surprised me quite a bit, in two ways.

First, I was kind of expecting Saul to see himself in that young shoplifter, and then to do the kid a solid, by pointing the cop off in the wrong direction. Instead, he fingers the kid, like a snitch. Perhaps he did see himself in the kid after all - and this was an act of extreme self-loathing. Broken-down Saul -- or 'Gene', as he is now, on his 3rd name -- is worn down to just a nub, a bitter shell of who he once was, many iterations ago, and the only emotions he can seem to act out in these days are cowardice & spite, towards his younger self.

But then, something quells in him, the strong person he once was, the fighter he once was, still somewhere deep down inside there -- and it bursts out. And as all buried things do under intense suppression, it doesn't emerge in a proud roar, but with a sudden, awkward eruption, as he blurts out to the kid that he should tell the system to go fuck itself, rather than just be a little cog run through it. Again, talking more to himself, the kid being merely a reflection of the inner fire he once had.

Only problem is, now, he can't get it out of his head. He goes back to work, but the mundane banality of the Cinnabon is amplified now, untenable. This isn't who he is. The repeated caking of frosting spirals on little buns, are now like little omens to him -- taunting him, reminding him of the endless downward spiral loop he has permanently thrown himself into, with no real identity, day after day, to toil here forever in this circle of hell, appropriately set in a mall food court.

And in that moment... he snaps. The strain of the reality of his real self, matched against the fakeness of the life he's pretending to lead now, is just too much to bear - and the realization finally overwhelms him. His cup runneth over... and he collapses.

Which means ... Gene / Saul / Jimmy, is about to face his worst nightmare: The Light.

The 1st season opener was about the sheer sadness of his new identity, simply depicting his new, banal, miserable existence. The 2nd season opener, was about the fear of the past catching up with him; remember, when he accidentally locks himself in the trash room, he is too afraid to go out the emergency door, for fear of setting off the alarm - because that would lead to police, questions, showing of IDs, his face possibly popping up on a computer somewhere - so he would rather risk sitting in that trash room all night, like a scared rat. And now, here in this 3rd season opener, we see the fake life he has set up for himself to hide inside, finally come crashing down all at once. Literally, & figuratively. Collapsing at work? That means 911, that means ambulances, that means police... That means the one thing a person in hiding can't have happen: Being noticed.

Or, at least, that's the implication I took from it...

Like I said, I look forward to these Future Saul vignettes quite a lot; about as much as I look forward to the entire rest of the season, in fact. But this time, the show did the one thing I didn't even consider... Motherfuckers left us with a cliffhanger, one which won't be resolved for a whole 'nother year, in the very first scene of the first episode of the goddamn season. Now that's genius.


http://i.onionstatic.com/avclub/6279/08/16x9/1200.jpg

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It's not so much working at the mall that is the misery for him. Many people work menial jobs like that their whole life and still have enjoyment in life. I think the real hardship for Gene is that he can't really get close to anyone. He's a people person, he loves to talk and shoot the breeze, he's always made friends easily and always been popular. Now he has to stay isolated for the rest of his life. It's too big a risk to get close to someone. the loneliness is the worst part of his life in exile.

I am not sure the police will be involved if he goes to the ER. They don't get called for mundane things like someone collapsing, a stroke or heart attack or whatnot. there is no crime, no foul play. No reason to call the cops.

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If he's in the hospital unresponsive and without next of kin, or if he has no ID (or ID that raises a red flag), the hospital might choose to involve the police.

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Yes true, if he does not regain consciousness they might. That would have to be a pretty serious illness though.
In that case maybe he has some terminal illness anyway so it wouldn't even matter if he got caught.

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I wouldn't mind working in Cinnabon for the rest of my life... I love eating Cinnabons and I can never seem to find a location. As long as I didn't have to worry about paying bills that would be a very enjoyable existence for me! As is I'm in my late twenties and still stuck going to school and my entire family has abandoned me, so to me this is a very specific version of hell/purgatory and Gene's existence seems blissful to me. I'd love a no-stress, relaxing job instead of struggling all alone just so that I didn't waste ten years of my life going to school for nothing.

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Like the old saying goes:

One man's Hell, is another man's Cinnabon.

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Clever.

+1

Mub

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One man's Hell, is another man's Cinnabon.


LOL

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