The emotional core of the episode isn't a cartel shootout; it’s a shouting match on a parking garage roof. After Jimmy is denied his law license reinstatement for being "insincere," he lashes out at Kim.
This breakout is a turning point for Mike. He’s always tried to be the "middleman" who keeps things professional, but Werner’s flight forces Mike into a corner where he must choose between his burgeoning respect for the German engineer and his loyalty to Gus’s ruthless code. [S4E9] Wiedersehen
"Wiedersehen" is the episode where the "Saul Goodman" persona truly starts to feel like an inevitability rather than a choice. Jimmy’s inability to process his grief for Chuck—and his resentment toward the legal establishment—is pushing him toward the colorful suits and moral flexibility we know from Breaking Bad . The emotional core of the episode isn't a
A haunting, high-stakes hour that proves the most dangerous thing in Albuquerque isn't a gun—it's a broken relationship. TV Talkback – Better Call Saul S4E9: “Wiedersehen” He’s always tried to be the "middleman" who
"Wiedersehen"—German for "see you again"—is an episode defined by the exact opposite: permanent goodbyes and bridges burned beyond repair. As the penultimate episode of Season 4, it acts as a pressure cooker, finally blowing the lid off the simmering tensions between Jimmy and Kim while setting Mike on a tragic collision course with Werner Ziegler. Jimmy and Kim: The Rooftop Blowout
For seasons, Kim has been Jimmy’s rock, but here, the masks slip. Jimmy accuses her of "slumming it" with him, while Kim delivers a truth bomb that lands harder than any legal ruling: she’s the only one who actually believed in him, and his failure to show real emotion about Chuck is exactly why the board rejected him. It’s a masterclass in acting from Bob Odenkirk and Rhea Seehorn, marking the moment their partnership shifts from "partners in crime" to something far more fractured.