wonder how the portrayals of mike and saul in BB will feel different going into it after seeing BCS. Learning about Mike's personal sense of ethics and the way he treats his job as just that, a job in a larger enterprise and world--this makes his later distrust and dislike for Walt all the more understandable. His relationship with Nacho also makes his later relationship with Jesse a lot more understandable.
And of course Chuck's relationship with Jimmy. Chuck comes to represent everyone who has held him back or mocked his abilities as a lawyer. What's great, he's probably a better lawyer than Chuck. Or at least it comes more naturally. Chuck is like a virtuoso who has trained on an instrument since the age of 4. He certainly has some raw talent, but he has honed it and much of his success is simply due to hard work. Here comes his younger sibling, who isn't as practiced in music, yet he is able to pick up an instrument and learn it with relative ease and speed. He may not be quite as technically proficient as Chuck, and on top of that he doesn't always follow traditional technique, but who wouldn't feel threatened and jealous of someone with possibly greater potential and talent--I see a bit of a Mozart Salieri dynamic with these two. Chuck sees Jimmy rising in a fraction of the time he took. He assumed shortcuts, and while this is partly true of Jimmy, a lot of his early success in the series can simply be attributed to hard work and a natural ability to smooth talk with clients and authority figure types. Fuck Chuck
Jimmy and Chuck are both good lawyers, just suitable for different kinds of work. Jimmy is not a pristine by the book anal-retentive corporate lawyer; you are basically getting rigidly conscientious approach vs a fly-by-seat-of-pants flexible/pragmatic approach. Chuck ironically is the one who doesn't have room for Jimmy in his definition of lawyer, his rigid E1 moralistic and judgmental attitudes only allow for lawyers that prescribe to his own personal rules.
Jimmy is more inventive, innovative, and creative. Yes, I agree Chuck is threatened on SOME level by Jimmy, which he rationalizes by labeling Jimmy as dangerous, uncontrolled, and unpredictable, liable to tarnish the pristine goodness of justice as an abstraction. Not all of this is Chuck, though; he is driven by his own memories of Jimmy as cutting corners and even potentially scamming their parents -- it's a classic case of "eldest doing the right thing and adhering to the rules, while the younger child gets away with murder and is more beloved" syndrome, exemplified in the Prodigal Son parable. I mean, obviously my sympathies are more with Jimmy and I never got to a place where I loved Chuck, but I would waver between hating him and feeling sorry for him, if you can make it through the first three seasons and then also the opening to "Winner" the Season 4 finale, which is just a heartbreaking opening and recollection of better times past.
But basically where Jimmy ends up on Breaking Bad is boiling down to two personal arcs: His relationship with Chuck, and his relationship with Kim. We know what happens between him and Chuck now, while we're still waiting for the ominous resolution with Kim that leaves him so jaded and resigned to his sketchy nature in BB. Even into Season 6, despite some traumatic experiences, Jimmy still cares about things and seems happy on some level, but that will soon all be gone.
I watched the first episode and I did find it very amusing. I think the more comedic tone is more my style. I also thought it was interesting that even though he's a con artist he seems to have genuine affection and concern for his uncle/cousin who founded that law firm.
Just like with Breaking Bad, the show quickly gets more nuanced and stabilizes. Not that it isn't funny -- i think it's a funnier show than BB and there's some really great, humorous montage work -- but it really beautifully balances humor, zaniness, and seriousness. It's a show that typically makes you laugh one minute and want to cry the next. In fact, sometimes I've wanted to both laugh and cry at once.
I think the parking attendant at the courthouse where he worked as a public defender is a character from Breaking Bad, right? The actor was also in season 5 of Community ( which I thought was way better than Season 4 if not as good as season 3).
Uh, yes -- Mike is the other main character from Breaking Bad who we see his entire pre-BB arc develop, and it all tracks with how Mike ended up working for Gus and seems satisfied/resigned to that role in life. If you felt like Mike got short-shifted in BB, this series will satisfy that itch and help you understand Mike about as deeply as you ever could. He is basically a damned soul who has found peace in accepting his fate, using what resources he gains from that to help the people he owes and the people he loves.
Jonathan Banks is simply amazing, he can do so much with so little. It's funny how he and Bob Odenkirk have almost completely opposite characters to play, yet their two stories all dovetail quite nicely.