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Jimmy tells Mike he is experiencing post-traumatic stress. Mike tells Jimmy it will pass with time. [c] When Jimmy questions the events that brought them to the desert, Mike says they both made choices, good and bad, and must live with the consequences. Lalo says goodbye to Hector Salamanca and has Nacho bring him to the desert pickup site.
Mike quickly pulls out his gun and listens as the gunmen pull the driver from the cab and shoot him in the head. He then takes cover as the gunmen shoot up the trailer. After firing two volleys, the gunmen break into the truck, and Mike immediately shoots them dead. After he steps out of the truck, he finds that a bullet has grazed his right ear.
In a flashback, Mike Ehrmantraut leaves a train in Albuquerque and re-bandages his wounded left shoulder, then meets his daughter-in-law Stacey [a] and granddaughter Kaylee. Stacey and Mike briefly discuss the death of Matt, Mike's son and Stacey's husband. Afterward, Mike's wounded shoulder is treated by Dr. Caldera, an Albuquerque veterinarian.
Mike's military service is implied in the Better Call Saul second-season episode "Gloves Off" when he mentions his familiarity with a black market sniper rifle he intends to buy. He subsequently became an officer on the Philadelphia Police Department. Mike was married for 22 years, as he mentions in season 4 of Better Call Saul. His former wife ...
Jonathan Ray Banks was born on January 31, 1947, in Washington, D.C., [2] and grew up in Chillum Heights, Maryland. [3] His father was a civil servant and his mother a professor at Indiana State University. [4]
The shootout scene between Mike and the gunmen was a challenge for Gilligan, and he considered it "the most complicated single scene I've ever directed". [1] He wanted to have Odenkirk visible in all shots, even while the stuntmen and practical effects were going off around him, as to show the shootout from Jimmy's point of view as much as ...
Pulsating music ends with a feedback screech and cut to black. The shot's framing mirrors that of Walt's final scene in the Breaking Bad finale "Felina". Hutchinson viewed it as black comedy, saying that Walt is realizing that he is not in control of the situation. Hutchinson saw the storyline as part of the "open-ended action" that often led ...
Walter White, Jesse Pinkman, and Mike Ehrmantraut meet with Declan, their Phoenix-based competitor.Instead of agreeing to Declan's offer to purchase the heisted methylamine for $15 million in exchange for removing Walt's blue meth from the drug market, Walt offers a counterproposal: to sell his superior product through Declan's distribution network in exchange for a substantial share of the ...