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.
"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 . [S4E9] Wiedersehen
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. For seasons, Kim has been Jimmy’s rock, but
While the lab drama unfolds, we get more of Tony Dalton’s charismatic, terrifying Lalo Salamanca. His presence brings a new level of "uncomfortable" energy to every scene, especially as he begins to poke holes in Gus’s operations. His interaction with Nacho reminds us that while Jimmy is fighting for his career, others are fighting just to stay alive in a world that’s getting smaller by the minute. "Wiedersehen" is the episode where the "Saul Goodman"
On the Mike Ehrmantraut side of the world, we see the danger of sentimentality. Werner, the lead engineer on Gus Fring’s superlab, is desperately homesick. Despite Mike’s warnings and the high-security nature of the job, Werner manages a clever—but suicidal—escape to see his wife.