"I don't know what he's ever done that's quite as bad as that, and so I'm really delighted when he turns things around later in the episode." Jesse Could Have Ended Up Like Jimmy "To look into a widow's eyes and to say, 'well, I'm as much of a victim as you are,' I mean it just takes the air out of my lungs, to win every time he's such a horrible person, he's such an a*****e. Referencing the penultimate episode when Kim reveals to Cheryl how Howard died, Gould added: "Kim does, I think, the best she could possibly do and Jimmy, in that moment, or Saul, is maybe his worst possible self. "We wanted there to be the voice of the victims of what Saul did during the years he was Saul Goodman, and we felt like the most credible character. Cheryl certainly is a victim but she's a victim of everything that Jimmy and Kim did together. Gould admitted Marie's appearance in the episode was brought up "pretty late in the game," as he said: "I think we wanted very much someone to be the voice of the victims. ![]() Greg Lewis/AMC/Sony Pictures Televisionīreaking Bad fans were also given a nice surprise in the finale when Betsy Brandt returned to reprise her role as Hank Schrader's widow Marie, who confronted Saul about his support of Walter White ( Bryan Cranston). Peter Gould said at a press conference that he brought back Marie to represent the voices of Saul Goodman's victims. "It's such a perfectly written scene, that he tries to make her laugh a little bit even somehow letting her know it's okay because he can see that she's scared for him." Betsy Brandt Almost Didn't Appear in the Finaleīetsy Brandt as Marie Schrader in the "Better Call Saul" finale. "I was very struck coming into the scene the way Bob was playing his side was very, very caretaking, steadying her hand and even the way he's making the joke. "But they are without artifice, and without armour and sort of maskless to each other, which is the best part of their relationship, is that that they were able to be that for each other. but I totally agree with Bob as well, as far as the characters, if we understood that this is them at their best, horrible place. Seehorn concurred with her co-star, saying: "It was the last scene we shot, the very last scene we shot on the series. Odenkirk said his scene with Seehorn in the visitation room was "the easiest scene we ever shot," adding: "It's one of the few times that one of them isn't trying to manipulate the moment push some argument in some direction." Then ultimately, having watched them both, I felt like it was right, and it felt more honest to end with the two of them apart rather than the two of them together." He added: "There was a version that ended with the two of them smoking, and I went back and forth on that for a while.
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