Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul share weakness in Spanish dialogue

Both Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul, acclaimed series in Vince Gilligan's universe, face criticism for their handling of Spanish language despite their overall praise. Set in Albuquerque, New Mexico, the shows feature key characters speaking Spanish, but the dialogue and accents often fall short, particularly from the perspective of fluent speakers. This issue highlights a common flaw in portraying Latin American characters.

The Breaking Bad universe, encompassing Breaking Bad and its prequel Better Call Saul, has earned widespread acclaim with a total of 125 episodes, plus the film El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie. Created by Vince Gilligan and primarily set in Albuquerque, New Mexico, these series delve into the world of drug cartels through characters like the Mexican Salamanca crime family and Gustavo "Gus" Fring, portrayed by Giancarlo Esposito, who is of Chilean American descent.

A central conflict spans both shows: Gus Fring's quest for revenge against Hector Salamanca, played by Mark Margolis, for the murder of Gus's partner and lover, Maximino "Max" Arciniega (James Martinez). This feud, which Gus has pursued for over 20 years, unfolds in Better Call Saul's early timeline and reaches its climax in Breaking Bad's fourth season, where both characters meet their end.

Criticism centers on the Spanish dialogue in these narrative-driven scenes, which include English subtitles. Viewers fluent in Spanish have pointed out inconsistencies in the writing and delivery. Actors like Margolis, of Jewish descent, and Esposito, of African American and Italian lineage, relied on dialect coaches but struggled with authentic accents for their characters' nationalities. Margolis's Hector is mostly nonverbal in Breaking Bad, communicating via a bell due to his wheelchair-bound state, though his Spanish in flashbacks and Better Call Saul draws scrutiny.

In contrast, Tony Dalton's portrayal of Eduardo "Lalo" Salamanca in Better Call Saul stands out for its authenticity. A Mexican American actor raised in Mexico City, Dalton is naturally bilingual, delivering a natural Mexican dialect. His debut in the Season 4 episode "Coushatta," alongside Ignacio "Nacho" Varga (Michael Mando), exemplifies this linguistic precision, even as other Spanish-speaking roles in the universe vary in accent accuracy, sometimes veering toward Cuban or Colombian inflections rather than Mexican.

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