Home Tips and Advice ‘Better Call Saul’s Jonathan Banks Reveals His Acting Technique

‘Better Call Saul’s Jonathan Banks Reveals His Acting Technique

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Better Call Saul | Project Casting
LOS ANGELES - JAN 29: M McKeon, Michael Mando, Rhea Seehorn, Bob Odenkirk, Jonathan Banks, Patrick Fabian at the "Better Call Saul" Series Premiere at Regal Theater on Jan 29, 2015 in Los Angeles, CA (Kathy Hutchins/Shutterstock)

When Jonathan Banks was cast to play the role of Mike in ‘Better Call Saul,’ he took inspiration from real-life people to help him create his character, “I borrowed from people that I saw.”

Emmy Award-nominated actor Jonathan Banks, who played Mike Ehrmantraut in Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul, had to explore some pretty dark territory. In an interview with the New York Times following the conclusion of Better Call Saul, Banks discusses getting into Mike’s mindset.

Banks drew on his own childhood experiences to portray Mike. He says, “I used, partially, people that I grew up with, people that I feared or respected. You know, it always sounds a little too dramatic to me when somebody says, ‘My neighborhood, I grew up this way; it was tough.”

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Banks says that he used many people’s experiences to help him create Mike’s character. He explains, “I got banged around quite a bit, got punched in the mouth a lot. It gives you a certain amount of, I don’t know, that it gives you toughness, but it leaves no surprises when all of a sudden you’re in a fight or you get beaten or whatever. As far as Vietnam, the sniper part of Mike’s life: I have several close friends that went. And one of my friends they just put into Arlington Cemetery about a month and a half ago. There are a lot of guys that came back that I know that were hurt badly by their experience in combat. That’s something I never experienced — I borrowed from people that I saw.”

 

“I used, partially, people that I grew up with, people that I feared or respected. You know, it always sounds a little too dramatic to me when somebody says, ‘My neighborhood, I grew up this way; it was tough.'” – Jonathan Banks

 

Not only does Banks feel ownership of the character, but he also believes that playing the character has changed his personality for the better. He continues, “Mike is mine. Mike is mine… And I think the honest thing to say is if I really think about it, maybe Mike has changed Johnny, too. I think Jonathan Banks, by playing Mike, became a little more silent, a little less rambunctious. And by silent, I mean, I think I listen a little more than I did 12, 13 years ago. I don’t like to use the word witness, but that’s what’s coming to mind. I think he possibly affected me in that I’m a little more patient. Maybe that comes with age anyway.”

 

There have been moments when Banks doubted the character’s direction, feeling a sense of ownership over the character. He explains:

“There have been moments that I went, ‘Oh, I think Mike wouldn’t do that.’ But I found, quite honestly, a lot of the times that what the writers were telling me if I deferred to them, it made sense.

 

“The first thing that comes to my mind is in Breaking Bad when Mike left his granddaughter in the park and had to escape. And I was going, ‘No, Mikey would never leave his granddaughter.’ And, of course, the reasoning is, the police department — they’re there in the park. They will take care of her. They will return her to her mother. I still have a tough time with Mike leaving his granddaughter in the park.”

 

Ultimately, Banks views Mike’s most defining moment as the death of his son. He reveals, “He lost his soul when he was responsible for his son’s death. What he tried to get back — and what I’ve also said is his Achilles’ heel — is that he doesn’t want to see people get involved and get hurt. He’ll see the good in somebody, and it usually costs him. Those lines that you well know: ‘If you’re in the game, you’re in the game.’ Mike has no compassion for that once you’re in it.”

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