Now that Better Call Saul has run its six-season course, many loyal viewers are left wanting more. Fortunately, most of the main cast have had long careers not only on television but also on film. Here are eight of the most successful movies to tide you over until another possible spinoff.

Bob Odenkirk - Little Women (2019)

Bob Odenkirk in Little Women
Sony Pictures Releasing

With Better Call Saul, Bob Odenkirk was given the opportunity to fully develop Jimmy McGill (AKA Saul Goodman), a role that involved not just comedy, but also drama, and even romance. To see just how well-rounded the respected actor is, watch him in Greta Gerwig's 2019 adaptation of Little Women, where he plays the small but pivotal role of Father March. This character could not be more different from Saul, but Odenkirk conveys real warmth and honesty and even gets to deliver a key line incorporating the movie's title.

Jonathan Banks - Beverly Hills Cop (1984)

Jonathan Banks in Beverly Hills Cop
Paramount Pictures

Jonathan Banks has been in many high-profile movies dating back to the 1970s. In 1984, the future Mike Ehrmantraut proved he could play a tough guy in Beverly Hills Cop. Just as he would do decades later on Breaking Bad and then Better Call Saul, Banks can be seen using his trademark cold stare as his character Zack carefully considers Eddie Murphy's Detective Axel Foley. Banks played a detective himself when he appeared in Murphy's screen debut, 48 Hrs. two years earlier.

Related: Beverly Hills Cop 4 Starts Filming This Month, Producer Says

Patrick Fabian - The Last Exorcism (2010)

The Last Exorcism
Lionsgate

Patrick Fabian, who played Howard Hamlin, appeared in all but four episodes of Better Call Saul. Though it was his single longest role, Fabian had spent the bulk of his career on television, having featured in dozens of different shows for three decades. His most notable film role came in 2010, when he starred as Cotton Marcus in The Last Exorcism, a well-reviewed, if unexpected hit. Fabian's performance as the charismatic but flawed reverend earned him a Best Actor award at the popular Sitges Film Festival.

Giancarlo Esposito - Do the Right Thing (1989)

Giancarlo Esposito in Do The Right Thing
Universal Pictures

It's not hard to find Giancarlo Esposito on streaming services these days. After wrapping up his performance as Gus Fring, he continues to feature in both The Mandalorian on Disney+ and The Boys on Amazon Prime. But many forget his breakout role was Buggin' Out in Spike Lee's seminal Do the Right Thing in 1989. It was one of four films where Esposito collaborated with Lee.

Michael McKean - This Is Spinal Tap (1984)

A scene from This is Spinal Tap
Embassy Pictures

Michael McKean was best known as a comedic actor before his more dramatic turn as Saul's brother Chuck McGill. McKean made a series of improvised "mockumentary" comedies with longtime collaborator Christopher Guest, but none achieved the same cult following as 1984's This Is Spinal Tap. McKean plays David St. Hubbins, the lead singer and rhythm guitarist of the band, a role that made perfect sense. In addition to being an actor, McKean is also a successful composer, singer, and musician. Another frequent film collaborator with McKean and Guest was Ed Begley Jr., perhaps best known on television for St. Elsewhere, which earned him six consecutive Emmy nominations. Begley went on to appear frequently on Better Call Saul as attorney Clifford Main.

Related: Spinal Tap II in the Works with Rob Reiner and Original Cast

Mark Margolis - Scarface (1983)

Mark Margolis and Al Pacino in Scarface
Universal Pictures

Mark Margolis portrayed cartel Don Hector Salamanca, first on Breaking Bad and then returning for Better Call Saul. A longtime actor, Margolis is known for appearing in almost every Darren Aronofsky film, including Pi, Requiem for a Dream, The Fountain, The Wrestler, Black Swan, and Noah. But Margolis is also remembered for his earlier turn as hitman Alberto "The Shadow" in Scarface. And he wasn't the only actor from Breaking Bad that had also appeared in that 1983 movie. Season 4's Don Eladio was portrayed by Steven Bauer, who played Manny Ray, Tony Montana's best friend in Scarface. And Puerto Rican actress Míriam Colón, known for her role as Mama Montana in Scarface went on to play Abuelita, Tuco Salamanca's grandmother, in Better Call Saul's first season.

Kerry Condon - Avengers: Endgame (2019)

Robert Downey Jr. as Tony Stark in Avengers Endgame
Marvel Studios
 

First appearing in 2015's Avengers: Age of Ultron, the F.R.I.D.A.Y. artificial intelligence in Tony Stark's Iron Man armor is voiced by Irish actress Kerry Condon. That same year she first appeared on Better Call Saul as Stacey Ehrmantraut, widowed daughter-in-law to fixer Mike. Not only did she reprise the role in all six seasons, but she also continued to lend her voice to F.R.I.D.A.Y. in Captain America: Civil War, Spider-Man: Homecoming, Avengers: Infinity War, and ultimately Avengers: Endgame, one of the highest-grossing films of all time. And she isn't the only Saul alumnus in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Tony Dalton, though not appearing as Lalo Salamanca until Season 4, quickly became a fan favorite. That performance brought him to the attention of a producer who cast him as Jack Duquesne opposite Hailee Steinfeld and Jeremy Renner in Hawkeye.

Bob Odenkirk & Jonathan Banks - Incredibles 2 (2018)

Bob Odenkirk in Incredibles 2
Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures

As an animated movie, none of the actors from Better Call Saul actually appear on-screen in Incredibles 2, but both Bob Odenkirk and Jonathan Banks lend their voices to major characters in the film. Odenkirk plays Winston Deavor, a fan working to legalize superheroes, while Banks takes over as Rick Dicker, a government agent trying to protect the Parr family. Incredibles 2 was hugely successful, eventually becoming the highest-grossing Pixar film.