Esquire was full of praise: "I'll just say it: The first few episodes that I saw are better than Breaking Bad. They are smarter. They are sharper. I have never seen a prequel handled so cleverly.
The Hollywood Reporter said the series was a huge risk since recent landmark dramas like The Sopranos and The Wire had not attempted a sequel. "But there's no question that Gilligan and Gould have earned the right to attempt this. So going along for the ride, no matter how it unspools, seems absolutely essential," the showbusiness title said.
Variety offered a cautious welcome. "Unlike Breaking Bad, the show won't have the luxury of sneaking up on anybody," the entertainment industry magazine said. "For now, Saul contains some attractive elements, fine moments and a fabulous pedigree, but even Jimmy/Saul (the character's real name is James) might be forced to concede the jury's still out in terms of proving it has the right formula."
Indie Wire said: "What's most exciting about Better Call Saul is actually how well-mired in the world that is the reality of the legal system - how tedious and unglamorous and un-"Law and Order"-ish it is, to be processed by the courts. Even after Saul/Jimmy starts to dig into a case that might be his making, the polyester and linoleum of local courtrooms proves to be a key undercurrent. And it helps the series feel like its genuinely own self."
Better Call Saul, which reprises another Breaking Bad character in Mike Ehrmantraut, Saul's private investigator, will air exclusively in New Zealand on on-demand service Lightbox
However the television graveyard is littered with ill-conceived spin-offs. Joey, the hugely-hyped Friends spin-off starring Matt LeBlanc, was cancelled after two disappointing series.
Supernatural series The X-Files spawned a spin-off, The Lone Gunmen in 2001, revolving around characters who ran a conspiracy theory magazine, but it was axed after 13 episodes.
- Independent