‘Better Call Saul’ Review: ‘Axe and Grind’ Is a Solid Deep Breath Before a Dangerous Reckoning
Giancarlo Esposito directs this trajectory-setting hour.
Giancarlo Esposito directs this trajectory-setting hour.
AMC Theatres and Cinemark lost less money than they did this time last year, but analysts suggest profits will remain elusive.
It’s an hour of the central “Saul” players confronted with their darkest impulses. Watching who resists and who takes a swing makes for some big surprises.
The fourth episode of Season 6 needed balance, and not just the kind it takes to be in Kim Wexler’s mind and the director’s chair on the same day.
A far funnier episode than last week’s brush with tragedy, this hour still makes room for showing two men’s dangerous relationships to hubris.
Unpredictable weather, a medical emergency, and one heartfelt note helped make this episode-long tribute more than just its ending.
The series delivers on the inevitable, with this Gordon Smith-written-and-directed episode serving as both tribute and warning.
Cinematographer Marshall Adams unpacks other sequences from S6 opening episode, including falling ties, uncooperative ants, and one perfectly shadowy drain pipe.
With the season’s marquee villain on the sidelines, this episode takes a look at how other people might be filling that void, whether or not they realize it.
A country club sting, a motel refuge, and a violent storm on the horizon all swirl together in a season premiere where no one quite has the full picture yet.
Zahn McClarnon and Kiowa Gordon star as two Navajo police officers investigating a double homicide that might have spiritual ties.
Giancarlo Esposito and Patrick Fabian believe their characters can live on in future shows.