Bryan Cranston has said that the quality of his British accent in his new film does not matter “because the people in the States don’t know any better”.
08.08.2020 - 21:55 / theplaylist.net
The moment it was announced that AMC would make a prequel show to “Breaking Bad,” people started speculating how long we’d have to wait before we saw familiar faces again. Among them, Aaron Paul and Bryan Cranston are easily the two actors who get asked the most about whether they’d reprise their roles in “Better Call Saul” and the answer has always been the same: sure, but they haven’t called yet.
Bryan Cranston has said that the quality of his British accent in his new film does not matter “because the people in the States don’t know any better”.
Better Call Saul co-creator Peter Gould has explained how season 6 will change how we see Breaking Bad forever.“I think by the time you finish watching Better Call Saul, you’re going to see Breaking Bad in a very different light,” Gould explained to The Hollywood Reporter.“I think we’re going to learn things about the characters in Breaking Bad that we didn’t know.
Matt Grobar Assistant Editor, AwardslineIn Legal Ethics With Kim Wexler, Better Call Saul EP Melissa Bernstein found a compelling, new opportunity to extend the universe created by Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould, examining with humor a character who’d found herself at a major moral crossroads.The critically acclaimed spin-off to Gilligan’s Breaking Bad, Better Call Saul centers on Jimmy McGill (Bob Odenkirk), a small-time lawyer and beaten down con man, on a downward spiral toward a life of
Earlier this month, “Breaking Bad” star Bryan Cranston revealed he and his wife both tested positive for COVID-19 in March. Now recovered and in good health, the actor tells ET Canada why he didn’t feel it was necessary to speak up when he was first diagnosed but feels it’s important to make his diagnosis public now.
Better Call Saul‘s co-creator has revealed it’s unlikely the show’s upcoming sixth and final season will start production this year.It was hoped that the Breaking Bad spin-off would begin filming towards the end of 2020, but Peter Gould has admitted those plans now seem off the cards.“We were hoping to go into production by the end of the year,” he said during Deadline’s Contenders Television: The Nominees event.
Anthony D'Alessandro Editorial Director/Box Office EditorEver since Jimmy McGill’s girlfriend Kim Wexler, played by Rhea Seehorn, was in a car accident a few seasons ago on AMC/Sony TV’s Better Call Saul, we’ve had the worst thoughts about her character, and that’s likely because she never shows up in the mothership series Breaking Bad. “It’s an interesting situation, because the show is a prequel to Breaking Bad and in some ways a sequel,” said the series’ Emmy-nominated co-creator/showrunner,
Bryan Cranston and his wife Taylor Dearden, who both contracted COVID-19, enjoyed a dinner date with Tom Hanks and his wife Rita Wilson after both couples recovered from the coronavirus.At the end of July, the Breaking Bad star revealed he had contracted and recovered from COVID-19 and, in a virtual interview segment on Live with Ryan and Kelly on Tuesday, he opened up about the experience, sharing he had spoken to Hanks, who was among the first stars to go public with his coronavirus diagnosis,
Breaking Bad is a prequel to Malcolm In The Middle.The actor, who portrayed drug kingpin Walter White in the former (from 2008-2013) and suburban dad Hal Wilkerson in the latter (from 2000-2006), said the idea that Walter actually survived the drug story and opted for a simpler family life in California was “fun”, but isn’t true.Talking to The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, Cranston joked in response to the theory: “I’m not at liberty to disclose that kind of information without security
Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson. “They came out with it right away, and I thought ‘That’s great,’” he told Fallon.
Bryan Cranston is well aware of the fan theory that ties his two most famous TV characters together — and he gets a kick out of it. While visiting The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon on Monday, the award-winning actor talked about the idea that Walter White from Breaking Bad actually survived his injuries and took on a new identity: Hal fromMalcolm in the Middle.
Also Read: James Corden and Stephen Colbert Finally Leave Their Homes and Return to the Studio (Videos)Anyway, if you’re following along at home, that would make the timeline look like this: “Better Call Saul” –> “Breaking Bad” –> “El Camino” –> “Malcolm in the Middle.”After initially entertaining the fun fan theory for Fallon’s TV audience, Cranston definitively stated (again) that Jesse Pinkman’s former high-school chemistry teacher died in the “Breaking Bad” series finale, “Felina.”“Walter
Bryan Cranston loves a good hat.
Bryan Cranston would clear his schedule to reprise his role as Walter White on Better Call Saul if show creator Vince Gilligan came knocking on his door.“I would be in it if Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould, who are co-executive producers on it, wanted me to be in it,” the actor, 64, told Collider on Thursday, August 6. “I would do it in a second.
Fans of “Breaking Bad” have been hoping to see Walter White make an appearance on prequel “Better Call Saul”, and although it hasn’t happened yet, don’t blame Bryan Cranston.
Breaking Bad‘s Walter White.The actor, who is promoting his new film The One and Only Ivan on Disney+, said in a new interview that he would be willing to portray drug kingpin Walter White in Better Call Saul, Breaking Bad‘s Emmy award-winning prequel spin-off series, which nears its final season.“I would be in [Better Call Saul] if Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould, who are co-executive producers on it, wanted me to be in it,” Cranston told Collider. “I’d do it in a second.
A common plot in films and TV series is the moral dilemma where a parent must bend/break their own moral code to help save a child. This happens time and time again.
Bryan Cranston is warning people about the coronavirus. He thinks it’s not something to play with.