@@mahammad it's his deep voice, you could hear it when hank confronted him in the garace " tread llightly" whenever heiseberg is the one speaking, also in this scene the cloud to add some extra dark feeling to the scene. but imo it comes off really cheap.
My opinion is that Gus had a different way of showing desperation and frustration. He did it by turning violent. Even though he looked like he was still under control, he was scared crapless of losing it and he knew he was losing it.
Gus' facial expression combined with his delivery of the line "What do you say?" might be the only time we witness the character being visibly baffled in the entire series! Giancarlo has really done an outstanding job on his performance as a whole!
The entire landscape was beautiful but you can literally see hundreds of miles up there , perhaps a twilight meeting or a box canyon. Try to make it more of a challenge for his Brothet in law.
I love how he lowers his voice when he threatens his infant daughter, as he realises he is going a bit too far with what he is saying, but says it nonetheless. That's the human behind the monster
I don't think he was bluffing or ever considered what he was saying to be going too far. While it's probably true that killing Holly would have been an absolute last resort to keep Walt in line, he likely would have done so with zero remorse if he felt it was necessary.
@@fossfox I disagree. I don’t think Gus is a complete psychopath, he shows some sympathy towards his employees for example throughout bb and bcs. I think even Gus would feel bad about killing walts baby. Prolly not Todd tho, Jack maybe
@@Glaedr11 maybe. But I believe Gus has shown sympathy multiple times when not necessary, also look at how he committed his life to revenge on the salamancas after they killed his friend/boyfriend
0:38 That reaction from Gus is so unusual for him, especially after Better Call Saul. You can clearly see that Walt is the first big foil for Gus in a LONG time. Someone who doesn't give in out of fear like Nacho did (because of his life and his father). Someone who is not as level-headed as Mike is. Someone who pushes back. Someone who is dangerous.
only Walt and Lalo had Gus confused and abit upset for a second. Remember how Gus changed from smiley owner face to his serious face like multiple times quickly in few seconds when Lalo visited him? He got upset by Lalo when he was near him it was obvious. And Walt here answered Gus and got him genuinely surprised
I really love how Gus seems genuinely taken aback on the line, "What did you say?" We've definitely seen real emotion from him in various scenes, but this is like the first time he seems to be trying to intimidate someone and it doesn't work, so he's kind of baffled.
@@JustRememberWhoYoureWorkingFor That, and he also failed to kill Walt in the first place, like he and Mike were ordered to. Mike only survived because he was far too valuable to Gus. Victor, on the other hand, was expendable.
The entire scene from 0:50 to 1:45 The scene starts with the characters in the sun, but they quickly get covered in darkness as Walt explains how he's in control of the situation. During the entire time Walt is explaining how they can't kill him, they are all in shadow. But as soon as Gus starts explaining how he can kill Walt's entire family, the cloud above moves out of the way and the characters are in the sun again. Whenever Gus is in control in this scene, the characters are in the light and when Walt is in control, the characters are in the dark. Beautiful cinematography.
if you notice in the last season it's really obvious as more and more characters are shown with a light on them while Walter is in the background in the darkness
Gus would probably just have them all massacred when Hank comes over for dinner and make it look like someone wanted Hank dead so bad that they took them all out.
Gus is betting that it would be easier for Jesse to deal with Walt's loss than with the loss of Walt. It's human nature to care more about people with whom we have a personal relationship.
The end of Gus story is inconsistent. Why Gus warn Walt that he will kill Hank? How Walt could be left free to roam by Gus without any surveillance after that? How Gus men could haven’t seen the bomb on hector chair, hector was just seen getting out of the DEA office? It’s a shame because Gus character is great but his end is cumbersome.
this is Giancarlo Giuseppe Alessandro Esposit's (Gus) favorite scene. He loved how the cloud moved in and blocked the sun dimming the area, then moved out of the way. it was very natural.
I think it wasnt an accident, they were probably told to watch the shadow and Walter would need to come up with some lines until they were in the light again and then it was Gus turn to speak lines.
Actually Walt wanted to kill Gus before this, remember he said to Mike "get me in a room with Gus and I'll do the rest" just after Mike almost killed Walt.
@@JustRememberWhoYoureWorkingFor True but Gus threatening Walt’s family made him more motivated and motivation makes someone more dangerous. Walt was lucky Gus needed Jesse on his side otherwise he would’ve buried Walt without a second thought.
What killed Gus, was his absolute obsession with Hector Salamanca. He could have killed him many times, but was hung up on humiliating him. Of course that led to his last visit where he was blown to bits...
I really love how the light changes naturally in this scene. It's symbolic and perfect. When it goes dark Walter is talking about death. And light again when Gus threatens him.
Gus: "if you try to interfere, I will kill Skyler, Flynn, and Holly..." Heisenberg: "Pfft, whatever" Gus: "and, I will tell Lois on you" Heisenberg: *PANIC!*
Actually heisenberg will remain calm knowing Malcolm reese Dewey and Francis would somehow work out something to save his father not only from gus but also from lois
“What did you say?” Wow. The facial change, subtle but visible. Gus isn’t used to people not being swayed by fear tactics. When the villain sees he doesn’t have control.
Agreed. Gus had no morals whatsoever. If he did anything good, it was only to throw the DEA off his scent by making himself look like an upstanding citizen. It’s partially why people overlook how evil Walt is by this point.
Hold up, two questions since Gus fired Walter. 1. Does that mean he is also banned from Los pollos hermano's?, because if he were, then that would suck if someone wanted to eat there and Walter was with them and could not come up with an excuse or at least order to go, so would going in there mean a death sentence or would Gus still reluctantly serve him as long as he paid and left as soon as they were done eating? 2. Does that mean Walter can file for unemployment since he was fired, or does he offer a severance package as a consultant like with Mike in BCS. Can't turn down free money you know.
I loved this character. He was soooo good. I found myself becoming a fan of Gus. And then.... this scene. The reminder that he is an evil man and then I step back and question my own morals. Incredible scene. Well written and delivered.
Not even questioning his evil nature here (he’s a drug lord with body count in triple digits), what else was Gus supposed to say? The message was concise: “keep your money, Mr. White, stay away from the business, see you never”. Pulling off “or else?” was the opposite of smart in that situation. Walt allowed his ego to do the talking, Gus could not back off and… we got what we got. You don’t expect him to just smile it off with “you got me there, Walt, there’s nothing I can do, so have it your way” and go share an order of fried chicken, do you? I say, lots of men, good and bad, would have stayed alive if Walt could keep his mouth shut just for once.
I don't think Gus would ever kill Walt's chirdlen. He is not a psychotic monster, he is calculating buisnessman- he would kill only when it's necessary to protect his buisness. While threating was necessary to keep Walt in line, fufilling this threat would bring no profit other than blind revenge. He would kill only Walt and that's it.
@@gabrielbrzezinski4065 You don't think blind revenge is a motivating factor here? He literally massacres the Salamanca family. You could say it was to remove the threat of the cartel, fine, so why did he take time out of his purely business schedule to visit Hector and rub it in? Why did Hector know that Gus would come to personally kill him when he pretended to rat? Gus didn't forget, he didn't forgive, and he only spared people if killing them was a mercy. Even when taking their life had a cost to him, he wouldn't stop looking for a way so that it wasn't until he found it. He was hell-bent on getting revenge on Walt. Walt was a bigger monster in the end, but he knew about Gus from the start and his actions after saving Jesse made sense. He knew it was Gus or him, because neither of them could turn the other cheek for the sake of business like they claimed.
@@asytippyy352 No, I don't think Gus had a reason to seek revenge on Walt. Remember, Hector killed Gus'es boyfriend, so it's big trauma that Gus had to live with. Walt didn't harm Gus in any personal way, he was just a threat to his buisness.
It's a dry heat, sweat actually does its job in that case....never been there specifically but I know Florida it's hell....if you want to do cardio outside you better do it in the early morning right after sunset, especially in the Summer
Some might find that there's inconsistency with how Gus behaves here compared to how he is in previous episodes, but after watching Better Call Saul, it's apparent he has his own "Heisenberg", a dark persona that runs counter to his more mentoring nature. After wiping out the cartel and accomplishing a mission he had been waiting decades for, Gus seems more emboldened and willing to let that side of him show...not that dissimilar from how Walt changes after wiping out Gus's empire.
As I said in this comment ssection... the life corrupts you. It warps you and leaves you twisted and disgigured. It takes every last 'positive' bit of you out, grinds it to dust, and scatters it to the wind.
0:30 Walt's "Perfect Moment," right there. For that one brief moment, Walt had absolutely zero problems. Had he simply answered "Yes," he would have walked away and lived the rest of his life an unimaginably wealthy man, with all evidence of his criminal history being erased by Fring as it would still be in Fring's best interest to do so. It was at that moment that Walt signed his own death warrant.
Giancarlo Esposito said that this was his favorite scene of breaking bad and i almost have to agree becouse the level of acting and writting and everything is just on top in this Scene.
Walt wasn’t just asking a question. He was gathering information. When he threatened to kill his family, Walt knew what had to be done. Gus sealed his own fate.
When it came to displaying betrayal/loyalty in stories, breaking bad might be the undisputed greatest. Everyone is loyal to the other to some degree while also having underlying loyalty when it came to real blood family and just plain old being a real friend and also when it came down to money and death. I just love Walt's loyalty to Hank even though he and Gus have been through quite a lot up until this point of the show and Walt still won't budge, not to mention Jesse not budging for Gus either to give up Walt. Just brilliant
Walter was cool with hank dying in his place if the twins killed him, Walter is the most selfish person in the show, he is the biggest and worst monster, you gotta watch more than once to completely understand the story and dynamics
@@calvinhiggins271 you are absolutely spot on. This is what makes breaking bad such an interesting series, they managed to glamorize an extremely horrible human being who is also a massive egomaniac.
@@calvinhiggins271 What absolute bullshit. Walter wasn't cool with Hank dying at all. He offered his entire fortune to Jack to try to convince him to let him live. And he went to war with Gus after this scene because Gus was going to kill Hank and he wasn't willing to sacrifice any member of his family.
THIS is why Gus is the greatest villian in breaking bad, he's so calm and collected that seeing him show any emotion is downright terrifying. And it just goes to show how Walt really ruined Gus's game of chess with the cartel and he was just over Walts bullshit
I love Breaking Bad one of the most original and addictive shows I ever saw. I watch it one episode after another, it was like a drug , if you pardon the pun. And the villian Gus? He was so menacing, you never know what he was going to do next.
Been watching Better Call Saul, on the last season now, going back, man is it satisfying seeing someone actually talk back to Gus like that and the look of shock on his face that someone actually did.
They have like 8 locations, just don't go when Gus is there Also begs the question that Gus was always at the same location? Owner doesn't usually show up at places like that but who knows?
I like how awkward Walter was. You couldn't tell if he was scared or being a badass. Love the transition he goes from being a wimpy chemistry teacher to being a stone cold drug lord.
Being from Albuquerque New Mexico...it happens more often than you think. It's very beautiful but the weather is like a woman...it can't decide weather to be hot or cold, cloudy or sunny, rain or fog, snow or hail, blah blah blah 😂
This is one of the only times Gus lost his cool, the others are when lalo tricked him, when Hank asked if Gus was his real name and when Hector started to ring the bell
I honestly don't find it believable that Gus would handle this situation in this way. He literally just experienced Walt running over those drug dealers, the very incident that led to their falling out resulting in this scene in the first place. There's NO way he could ever believe Walt would just sit back and accept Hank getting murdered without doing everything in his power to stop it.
I've always found it interesting that Gus only threatens Walt's family at the very end. He begins the conversation by firing him, and asking him to stay away from Jesse. Only after Walt spits back at him, asking what he'll do- and then going on to describe why killing him would be ineffective that Gus mentions his family. It sounded like, if Walt had accepted it, the family threat may not have even come up. Which is particularly interesting to me, because whenever Walt talks to others about this scene, he brings that threat up first. As if the purpose of the conversation was for Gus to threaten his family, when in actual fact, he only mentioned it as a last resort. Otherwise, with Walt's big talk, how would he guarantee he'd stay out of the picture and not push limits. By threatening not him, but something else he couldn't bear to lose, chess style. He doesn't do anything else to hurt Walt, or rough him up for talking back (like Tuco does in BCS in that similar scene), in terms of what else we've seen the Cartel do, it's actually quite pilote. A strongly worded letter off dismissal, a show of force by taking him in the car. Threats didn't even come up until Walt started pushing it. "Or What". And Walt left inconvenienced but otherwise unscathed. The only thing hurt or otherwise damaged in this scene, was Walter's ego, and pride. The way he was taken, and Gus's threat to something he actually values that he couldn't negotiate or hassle or worm his way out of. A boundary that he couldn't cross. Don't talk to Jesse. Don't come back. Only if you break these, will you be made sorry. I think in the end, that's why he wanted to kill Gus. Not because he didn't understand that kind of negotiation. But that he couldn't handle someone else having power over him, in the same style he threatens other people.
It's funny that even the threats against Walt's family by Gus are sort of hollow. Like, if killing Walt would upset Jesse, and you kill Walt's baby... what if Walt jumps off a bridge afterwards? Jesse's going to think you killed them both. Now he _double_ hates you.
This is probably the single most haunting monologue in the entire series - when he goes on about Walt's actual family members. If Walt would've just kept his mouth shut, he could've been 'fired' like a bad Los Pollos Hermanos employee.
Well, temporarily until he finds a suitable replacement, then Jesse will “go missing”. He doesn’t like Jesse any more than Walt, but knows Jesse isn’t as big of a threat. A liability and loose cannon sure, but not as big of a threat.
0:37 the fastest verbal double take ever... And I'm pretty sure the only time we see Gus shook. Well, outside of when his buddy ate a bullet and 0.333 seconds after final bell.
1:53 damn these face expressions, small details like how his eyes glazed left to right from his responses. Such perfect acting. It could be what he said about his brother in law or he was getting a grasp on his impaired vision and damaged eyelid.
Gus' expression, pause and voice tone before saying _"I will kill your infant daughter"_ really hits. He knew that was insane pettiness even for him, but he knew he had to be done. His mistake was underestimating Walter.
Absolutely. I think IT IS Jonathan Banks. And it's an easter egg. Just like in "Salud", when the cartel members are dead and Mike tells Jesse "Make yourself useful, find a gun!", when he says "Make yourself useful" his voice sounds like Jesse himself, or completely different.
0:51 It wasn't in the script, but the cloud (actor which played a cloud) improvised and casted a shadow to make the scene darker and more intense. Vince liked it so much they keeped filming.
The foreshadowing in this is state of the art. The way the shadow falls upon the entire scene once Gus is angered symbolizing death, and the way the light overpowers the darkness once Walt exposes Gus's weakness symbolizing life carrying on was brilliant. The most emphatic stories are told without words.
This is very relatable. When I got fired from kfc I also got kidnapped and sent out to the desert, thank you breaking bad for normalizing this!
Yeah this is what the cartel did to me after I got fired from Taco Bell 🔔
Me too and they told me if I affiliated with the rival gang McDonald's they would kill me
POPEYES RULZ!
@@petebondurant58 You in the wrong turf foo'
@@nighttripper1432 I love that mutha f'n chicken!
Imagine if this was how every boss fired their employees
If you try to use your employee discount again...
@@adrianvegas371 💀💀😆😆😆😆👌🏾👌🏾!
Damn they really not do this? Ik when I got fired my former boss did this to me
Happens at Wallstreet all the time
Try working for a narcissist. They'll try to drive you to suicide or work you to death.
When he says "If you could kill me" he sounds like Mike. 0:55
I thought it was mike😂
That’s actually so weird lol it sounds just like mike
I legit thought Mike was in this scene for a second
Mike said the same in BCS after Nacho turned Hector into vegetable
I'm guessing his throat was dry. I thought it was Mike too.
0:55 This is the moment Walt turned into Mike for 3 seconds.
Lol he does sound like him
I legit thought it was Mike until I realised he's not even in this scene 😂
@@mahammad it's his deep voice, you could hear it when hank confronted him in the garace " tread llightly"
whenever heiseberg is the one speaking, also in this scene the cloud to add some extra dark feeling to the scene. but imo it comes off really cheap.
XD
LMAO 🤣
Gus in BCS: Yeah of course I’m different from those cartel douches
Gus in BB: Killing infants 😍
@@DamarcusChlorine “no more children” *child is killed*
Gus: I see this as an absolute win
My opinion is that Gus had a different way of showing desperation and frustration. He did it by turning violent. Even though he looked like he was still under control, he was scared crapless of losing it and he knew he was losing it.
All it takes is one bad employee to make you throw away your morals
SHE IS A DEAD INFANT ?! ZAMN😍
@@xkdjdnskdnscndjdj984 💀💀💀💀💀
Season 2 Gus : "You can never trust a drug addict."
Season 4 Gus : "StAy AwAY fROM pINkmaN"
To be fair. Jessie was clean at the time
kind of ignores the change in characters in favor of irony
Its called character development
@@RandomPerson-ui3xv no, Jesse had a character development by stopping drugs. You don't know what a character development is
@@grinne2975 character development
Gus' facial expression combined with his delivery of the line "What do you say?" might be the only time we witness the character being visibly baffled in the entire series!
Giancarlo has really done an outstanding job on his performance as a whole!
That's what I was thinking! Giancarlo said in an interview that this was his favorite scene in the series
Is this the moment where Gustavo Fring became Gus Fring?
@@randyjam9925 breaking bad is all about peeling back and showing deeper layers of character
The scene right before hector blows them up shows it too
@@randyjam9925 this is the momebt gus fring became a humble chicken restaurant manager with nothing to hide
The cloud was the real MVP of this scene
SAY it AGAIN🗣🗣🙌🏾🤣🤣👌🏾!
@@Paris__Michael *THE CLOUD WAS THE REAL MVP OF THIS SCENE*
(lol)
@@LightNight2 💀😆😆😆😆!!..... It’s a figure of SPEECH bud, but mad reSPECT TO you for the MOMENT thought 🤣🤣🤣🤣♥️🙌🏾💪🏾!
The entire landscape was beautiful but you can literally see hundreds of miles up there , perhaps a twilight meeting or a box canyon. Try to make it more of a challenge for his Brothet in law.
Beautiful big -Texas- New Mexico sky 👌
“I do not believe fear to be an effective motivator” - Gus Fring
He says nothing about fear as a deterrent
He never thought he had to use fear until he met walt, his match. Had no choice
Gus had a huge shift mentally after Walt and Jesse killed Gale so it's understandable why he's being a hypocrite here
@@rdvrlrn "you gotta do what you gotta do"
He threatened to
kill an
infant
Best thing is Gus got that line originally from Mike.
I love how he lowers his voice when he threatens his infant daughter, as he realises he is going a bit too far with what he is saying, but says it nonetheless. That's the human behind the monster
I disagree, it is emphasis. Gus reveals his true nature in this scene.
I don't think he was bluffing or ever considered what he was saying to be going too far. While it's probably true that killing Holly would have been an absolute last resort to keep Walt in line, he likely would have done so with zero remorse if he felt it was necessary.
@@fossfox I disagree. I don’t think Gus is a complete psychopath, he shows some sympathy towards his employees for example throughout bb and bcs. I think even Gus would feel bad about killing walts baby. Prolly not Todd tho, Jack maybe
@@Official2Shitty a psychopath would "show sympathy" to fit in
@@Glaedr11 maybe. But I believe Gus has shown sympathy multiple times when not necessary, also look at how he committed his life to revenge on the salamancas after they killed his friend/boyfriend
What if this is how Gus fires his Pollos Hermanos employees.
No Pollos Hermanos employees are citizens and treated as such. Unless they're disrespectful in grates like Walt
@@tonyfear707 nothing serious about my answer. was referring to a better call Saul episode
Like poor Lyle 😁
@@imaansharifi poor Lyle!! 😭
@@donutlivesmatter r/whoosh
0:38 That reaction from Gus is so unusual for him, especially after Better Call Saul. You can clearly see that Walt is the first big foil for Gus in a LONG time. Someone who doesn't give in out of fear like Nacho did (because of his life and his father). Someone who is not as level-headed as Mike is. Someone who pushes back. Someone who is dangerous.
- Someone who knocks.
only Walt and Lalo had Gus confused and abit upset for a second. Remember how Gus changed from smiley owner face to his serious face like multiple times quickly in few seconds when Lalo visited him? He got upset by Lalo when he was near him it was obvious. And Walt here answered Gus and got him genuinely surprised
@@zora_noamflannery2548 someonewho is willing to throw a perfectly good pizza on the roof
He didn't consider Walt to be dangerous, just arrogant, typical white middle class male, that is why Walt got to kill him
@@jancarlosmanon4556 Yep, pretty much all of them except Mike and Jesse underestimated Walt
Gus underestimated a nerd with nothing to lose
I mean technically he’s got his family that is being threatened to lose so there’s that
@@Ajthelizard1100 Walter has family, Heisenberg does not
@@davelospinoso9022 true. Or another way of saying it is that Walters goals are to help his family when Heisenbergs goals are to benefit himself
He had a lot to lose
Um, more like a nerd with EVERYTHING to lose. Wtf
I really love how Gus seems genuinely taken aback on the line, "What did you say?" We've definitely seen real emotion from him in various scenes, but this is like the first time he seems to be trying to intimidate someone and it doesn't work, so he's kind of baffled.
the fact that Gus expressed more anger and emotion here than he did when he so viciously killed Victor says a lot.
When he killed Víctor he didn't do it out of anger, he did it because Víctor was seen by witnesses and would get caught.
Gus has no real emotion, he puts it on.
@@JustRememberWhoYoureWorkingFor That, and he also failed to kill Walt in the first place, like he and Mike were ordered to. Mike only survived because he was far too valuable to Gus. Victor, on the other hand, was expendable.
"says a lot" -> proceeds to say nothing about it at all
The entire scene from 0:50 to 1:45
The scene starts with the characters in the sun, but they quickly get covered in darkness as Walt explains how he's in control of the situation. During the entire time Walt is explaining how they can't kill him, they are all in shadow. But as soon as Gus starts explaining how he can kill Walt's entire family, the cloud above moves out of the way and the characters are in the sun again.
Whenever Gus is in control in this scene, the characters are in the light and when Walt is in control, the characters are in the dark. Beautiful cinematography.
Even Gods knows their cinematography🙏
Pretty sure that's just happen so but I'd like to think that's intentional
if you notice in the last season it's really obvious as more and more characters are shown with a light on them while Walter is in the background in the darkness
@@hellshadow77 it wasn't intentional but gilligan loved it so much he kept it in
the cloud was accidental
So Jesse wouldn't work for Gus if he killed Walt but wouldn't mind working for Gus if he killed Walt's whole family?
Gus would probably just have them all massacred when Hank comes over for dinner and make it look like someone wanted Hank dead so bad that they took them all out.
If Walt interfered Gus would kill his fam.
Gus is betting that it would be easier for Jesse to deal with Walt's loss than with the loss of Walt. It's human nature to care more about people with whom we have a personal relationship.
Assuming Gus would announced he is the one that killed the family
Which is out of character
The end of Gus story is inconsistent. Why Gus warn Walt that he will kill Hank? How Walt could be left free to roam by Gus without any surveillance after that? How Gus men could haven’t seen the bomb on hector chair, hector was just seen getting out of the DEA office? It’s a shame because Gus character is great but his end is cumbersome.
this is Giancarlo Giuseppe Alessandro Esposit's (Gus) favorite scene. He loved how the cloud moved in and blocked the sun dimming the area, then moved out of the way. it was very natural.
He has a long name
I was thinking about the cloud. Perfect moment.
His name is so fun to say!
you done said his government name 😭😭😭😭😭
@@Kenexxa That ain't even all of it.
I like how the shadow from the cloud moves in perfect timing and accentuqtes the dialogue between Gus and Walt.
Q
That's CGI
I think it wasnt an accident, they were probably told to watch the shadow and Walter would need to come up with some lines until they were in the light again and then it was Gus turn to speak lines.
2:09 This is the very moment in the entire series that signed Gus's death warrant. This right here.
Actually Walt wanted to kill Gus before this, remember he said to Mike "get me in a room with Gus and I'll do the rest" just after Mike almost killed Walt.
@@JustRememberWhoYoureWorkingFor
True but Gus threatening Walt’s family made him more motivated and motivation makes someone more dangerous. Walt was lucky Gus needed Jesse on his side otherwise he would’ve buried Walt without a second thought.
Gus became too confident in his power and skills that he underestimated Walter. That lead to his downfall.
What killed Gus, was his absolute obsession with Hector Salamanca. He could have killed him many times, but was hung up on humiliating him.
Of course that led to his last visit where he was blown to bits...
@@Lionheart5977 He could have avoided that last meeting too. But he had to gloat over it.
No, Gus' desire for vengeance on Hector Salamanca was his undoing.
@@palmereldritch_6669 yeah that's what lead Walter to take advantage of that and end Gus.
All of the above .
"You are done"
"Don't I get a written warning first? Isn't that how it works?"
No progressive discipline? And doesn’t Walter have the right to union representation?
XD
There was a verbal warning when he ran over two coworkers 🤣
@@trousers2 👍👍👍
File a grievance!
Gus should've at least offered a Los Pollos Hermanos discount voucher.
Like when Michael Scott fires that random Devin guy in season 1 but gave him a Chili’s gift certificate so they could still be friends. 😂
A fair compensation package
This scene is a parallel to when Gus refilled Walt's Diet Coke in season two.
That part where the sun comes out when Walt says “And he still wouldn’t let you do it” is perfect cinema
Yeah, that wasn’t scripted
Explain?
I really love how the light changes naturally in this scene. It's symbolic and perfect. When it goes dark Walter is talking about death. And light again when Gus threatens him.
Gus: "if you try to interfere, I will kill Skyler, Flynn, and Holly..."
Heisenberg: "Pfft, whatever"
Gus: "and, I will tell Lois on you"
Heisenberg: *PANIC!*
Life is unfair
Actually heisenberg will remain calm knowing Malcolm reese Dewey and Francis would somehow work out something to save his father not only from gus but also from lois
🤣🤣🤣🤣
this is the moment walt became al
@@afeef8502 Malcolm and Stevie designed the bomb in Stevie's garage.
"I will kill your infant daughter", said Dumbledore ...calmly.
"I WILL KILL YOUR INFANT DAUGHTER!", screamed Gus.
imagine if gus played voldemort 💀
@@sijajlum1234 Netflix adaptation
Gus screamed to Walt at the top of his lungs
I think Voldemort would be impressed by such words coming from Dumbledore's mouth
2:23 this is the moment Gus decided to get blown up
“What did you say?” Wow. The facial change, subtle but visible. Gus isn’t used to people not being swayed by fear tactics. When the villain sees he doesn’t have control.
He totally had control, he just couldn't believe Walt's ego was so massive he would mouth off to three killers who had zero reason to keep him alive.
Gus claimed to be different than the Salamancas, but he was every bit as ruthless. He just hid it better.
Aye the only real difference is that he was more pragmatic at the end of the day.
Agreed. Gus had no morals whatsoever. If he did anything good, it was only to throw the DEA off his scent by making himself look like an upstanding citizen.
It’s partially why people overlook how evil Walt is by this point.
Hold up, two questions since Gus fired Walter.
1. Does that mean he is also banned from Los pollos hermano's?, because if he were, then that would suck if someone wanted to eat there and Walter was with them and could not come up with an excuse or at least order to go, so would going in there mean a death sentence or would Gus still reluctantly serve him as long as he paid and left as soon as they were done eating?
2. Does that mean Walter can file for unemployment since he was fired, or does he offer a severance package as a consultant like with Mike in BCS. Can't turn down free money you know.
Very funny. In spite of the misspellings I got your point.
Brevity is the soul of wit. TLDR
Tf
1- Being at Los Pollos is just another "if you try to interfere"
2- No remuneration
This was a good laugh.
When he said “I will ratio your wife, I will ratio your son, I will ratio your infant daughter.” I felt that.
The vine booms really helped emphasize his threats. Bravo Vince.
You are done. Banned. Do not show your face at the server again. Stay away from the mods. Do not DM them. Ever. Are you listening to me?
“i will rizz your wife, i will ratio your son, i will skibidi your infant daughter” goosebumps
That’s not what he said
@@AsherSmith-h5t it's a deleted scene
Gus was upset because he found out that Walt went to a pizza place to make up with Skyler instead of getting Los Pollos Hermanos takeaway.
Imaging how annoying Walter must have been for Gus while he was dealing with the Cartel at the same time.
I love the nature aspect in this show, the wide open skies
Me too
0:55 Tell me that's not Mike's voice lol
Lmao
Mike's soul went inside of Walt for a few seconds
Walt’s voice sounds so sinister. I love it
Gus’s reaction to Walt’s “or what?” is the funniest thing to see lol
I loved this character. He was soooo good. I found myself becoming a fan of Gus.
And then.... this scene. The reminder that he is an evil man and then I step back and question my own morals.
Incredible scene. Well written and delivered.
thx Colby
Not even questioning his evil nature here (he’s a drug lord with body count in triple digits), what else was Gus supposed to say? The message was concise: “keep your money, Mr. White, stay away from the business, see you never”. Pulling off “or else?” was the opposite of smart in that situation. Walt allowed his ego to do the talking, Gus could not back off and… we got what we got. You don’t expect him to just smile it off with “you got me there, Walt, there’s nothing I can do, so have it your way” and go share an order of fried chicken, do you?
I say, lots of men, good and bad, would have stayed alive if Walt could keep his mouth shut just for once.
I don't think Gus would ever kill Walt's chirdlen. He is not a psychotic monster, he is calculating buisnessman- he would kill only when it's necessary to protect his buisness. While threating was necessary to keep Walt in line, fufilling this threat would bring no profit other than blind revenge. He would kill only Walt and that's it.
@@gabrielbrzezinski4065 You don't think blind revenge is a motivating factor here? He literally massacres the Salamanca family. You could say it was to remove the threat of the cartel, fine, so why did he take time out of his purely business schedule to visit Hector and rub it in? Why did Hector know that Gus would come to personally kill him when he pretended to rat?
Gus didn't forget, he didn't forgive, and he only spared people if killing them was a mercy. Even when taking their life had a cost to him, he wouldn't stop looking for a way so that it wasn't until he found it. He was hell-bent on getting revenge on Walt.
Walt was a bigger monster in the end, but he knew about Gus from the start and his actions after saving Jesse made sense. He knew it was Gus or him, because neither of them could turn the other cheek for the sake of business like they claimed.
@@asytippyy352 No, I don't think Gus had a reason to seek revenge on Walt. Remember, Hector killed Gus'es boyfriend, so it's big trauma that Gus had to live with. Walt didn't harm Gus in any personal way, he was just a threat to his buisness.
Gus is really wearing a full on dress shirt and tie with a coat in the middle of the New Mexico desert. Now that's a real Gus Fring move.
It can get pretty cold and windy in the dessert.
I'm hungry for some dessert myself 😋
He’s from Chile, he’s used to the heat.
It's a dry heat, sweat actually does its job in that case....never been there specifically but I know Florida it's hell....if you want to do cardio outside you better do it in the early morning right after sunset, especially in the Summer
New Mexico average elevation is 5700ft above sea level. It looks sunny but it ain’t hot.
Doctor: It's just a cold
Parents: It's just a cold
Friends: It's just a cold
Google: 0:09
Underrated comment
Bing
bruh.. LOL
Nice bro
I don't get it.
Gus hands down the best character
saul is the best charachter so good he got his own show. second is walt, third is heul. 4 Tuco, 5 Tio, 6 Ted.
Imo it would be :
1 - Walt
2- Jesse
3 - either Gus or Hank
4 - either Gus or Hank
5 - Saul
@UCU6xsXpslmjtIToIp1Ja-AQ Ted??? He was pathetic dumbass
@@smokelife6315 Saul was a great character but we have yet to know anything about him in breaking bad. I'd say he's the third best character.
Gus is best girl
*YOU ARE DONE*
Walt with Hank's voice: I dunno Gus(...)
………. you’ve been seeming a little SUS lately (…)
It's as if we have an imposter among us.
I saw that you-
No DON'T LIE TO ME GUS!
@@geckuchicken8355 you sussy hags
0:33 Walt : Ok but I can still order a chicken in your restaurant , can I?
Gus: *stares at Walter menacingly for a few sexonds* "Sure."
Some might find that there's inconsistency with how Gus behaves here compared to how he is in previous episodes, but after watching Better Call Saul, it's apparent he has his own "Heisenberg", a dark persona that runs counter to his more mentoring nature. After wiping out the cartel and accomplishing a mission he had been waiting decades for, Gus seems more emboldened and willing to let that side of him show...not that dissimilar from how Walt changes after wiping out Gus's empire.
As I said in this comment ssection... the life corrupts you. It warps you and leaves you twisted and disgigured. It takes every last 'positive' bit of you out, grinds it to dust, and scatters it to the wind.
0:30 Walt's "Perfect Moment," right there. For that one brief moment, Walt had absolutely zero problems. Had he simply answered "Yes," he would have walked away and lived the rest of his life an unimaginably wealthy man, with all evidence of his criminal history being erased by Fring as it would still be in Fring's best interest to do so. It was at that moment that Walt signed his own death warrant.
Gus still wanted to kill Hank 😂
It wasnt about the money for walt.
this is the moment holly became rick grimes
COOOORAAAL
Lmao I love these jokes
How hard this scene is, and how puffy, and perfect the clouds are...
That’s the moment Gus became speechless
Giancarlo Esposito said that this was his favorite scene of breaking bad and i almost have to agree becouse the level of acting and writting and everything is just on top in this Scene.
Walt wasn’t just asking a question. He was gathering information. When he threatened to kill his family, Walt knew what had to be done. Gus sealed his own fate.
When it came to displaying betrayal/loyalty in stories, breaking bad might be the undisputed greatest. Everyone is loyal to the other to some degree while also having underlying loyalty when it came to real blood family and just plain old being a real friend and also when it came down to money and death. I just love Walt's loyalty to Hank even though he and Gus have been through quite a lot up until this point of the show and Walt still won't budge, not to mention Jesse not budging for Gus either to give up Walt. Just brilliant
Walter was cool with hank dying in his place if the twins killed him, Walter is the most selfish person in the show, he is the biggest and worst monster, you gotta watch more than once to completely understand the story and dynamics
@@calvinhiggins271 walt cares about hank
@@calvinhiggins271 you are absolutely spot on. This is what makes breaking bad such an interesting series, they managed to glamorize an extremely horrible human being who is also a massive egomaniac.
@@calvinhiggins271 What absolute bullshit. Walter wasn't cool with Hank dying at all. He offered his entire fortune to Jack to try to convince him to let him live. And he went to war with Gus after this scene because Gus was going to kill Hank and he wasn't willing to sacrifice any member of his family.
@@calvinhiggins271 are you an idiot?
Love how gus starts threatening walt's family seconds after mike is not present
THIS is why Gus is the greatest villian in breaking bad, he's so calm and collected that seeing him show any emotion is downright terrifying. And it just goes to show how Walt really ruined Gus's game of chess with the cartel and he was just over Walts bullshit
That tends to happen when you are Gus and you plan to kill Walt after Gale has learned your formula
Gus was always so calm and composed no matter what, yet Walter managed to get under his skin and really piss him off.
I love Breaking Bad one of the most original and addictive shows I ever saw. I watch it one episode after another, it was like a drug , if you pardon the pun. And the villian Gus?
He was so menacing, you never know what he was going to do next.
It’s an absolute masterpiece of a show.
@@chasehedges6775 It's a 8.5/10
@@pbluma 9.4/10 actually
Gus sounded almost shocked when Walt said "Or else you'll do...what?"
Been watching Better Call Saul, on the last season now, going back, man is it satisfying seeing someone actually talk back to Gus like that and the look of shock on his face that someone actually did.
People unsure if Gus ordered the killing of that one kid.
2:18
Oh ok this clears everything up.
0:33 the only times Walt challenged Gus
"May I still eat at Los Pollos Hermanos, please?"
They have like 8 locations, just don't go when Gus is there
Also begs the question that Gus was always at the same location? Owner doesn't usually show up at places like that but who knows?
I like how awkward Walter was. You couldn't tell if he was scared or being a badass. Love the transition he goes from being a wimpy chemistry teacher to being a stone cold drug lord.
Gus should probably have stopped while he was ahead. He was signing his own death warrant once he got to talking about killing Walt's family.
or maybe he could just kill walt right here but Walt has the plot armor
Did you not watch the show@@RazorunDayisi
thats how Jeff Bezos would love to fire everyone who gets fired at Amazon..
I see a fly omg
0:02
When you accidentally turn light mode on
I love that little smirk when Gus says: "for now"
I love how a cloud hovers over them as they’re talking. I don’t know if it was planned or it just happened while they were doing that shot
In interview with Giancarlo Esposito, he said it happened randomly, just out of nowhere 😂 what a coincidence
Apparently God wanted this scene to be perfect
bravo Vince controls the weather 🥺😳
Being from Albuquerque New Mexico...it happens more often than you think. It's very beautiful but the weather is like a woman...it can't decide weather to be hot or cold, cloudy or sunny, rain or fog, snow or hail, blah blah blah 😂
How would you plan could movement
I love how offended Gus looked when Walt, even in the predicament he was in, still went ahead to call his bluff.
Gus is dressed to be in a winter city in this hot desert, shows how much calm and collected he is
Deserts aren’t always hot
@@evilsimeon yes they are
@@ratedr7845 no, they are not.
Do you see anyone of them sweating ?. The weather was cool and dried.
@@evilsimeon Yeah. Ice cream is a dessert.
When Gus said “what did you say?” I was afraid for my own safety.
0:54 he sounds like mike
Thats what I was thinking
Yeah he kinda!
all old white men sound the same
Gus: "I do not believe fear to be an effective motivator."
Also Gus: constantly uses fear as a motivator
This is one of the only times Gus lost his cool, the others are when lalo tricked him, when Hank asked if Gus was his real name and when Hector started to ring the bell
I honestly don't find it believable that Gus would handle this situation in this way. He literally just experienced Walt running over those drug dealers, the very incident that led to their falling out resulting in this scene in the first place. There's NO way he could ever believe Walt would just sit back and accept Hank getting murdered without doing everything in his power to stop it.
I've always found it interesting that Gus only threatens Walt's family at the very end. He begins the conversation by firing him, and asking him to stay away from Jesse. Only after Walt spits back at him, asking what he'll do- and then going on to describe why killing him would be ineffective that Gus mentions his family. It sounded like, if Walt had accepted it, the family threat may not have even come up.
Which is particularly interesting to me, because whenever Walt talks to others about this scene, he brings that threat up first. As if the purpose of the conversation was for Gus to threaten his family, when in actual fact, he only mentioned it as a last resort. Otherwise, with Walt's big talk, how would he guarantee he'd stay out of the picture and not push limits. By threatening not him, but something else he couldn't bear to lose, chess style.
He doesn't do anything else to hurt Walt, or rough him up for talking back (like Tuco does in BCS in that similar scene), in terms of what else we've seen the Cartel do, it's actually quite pilote.
A strongly worded letter off dismissal, a show of force by taking him in the car. Threats didn't even come up until Walt started pushing it. "Or What". And Walt left inconvenienced but otherwise unscathed.
The only thing hurt or otherwise damaged in this scene, was Walter's ego, and pride. The way he was taken, and Gus's threat to something he actually values that he couldn't negotiate or hassle or worm his way out of. A boundary that he couldn't cross. Don't talk to Jesse. Don't come back. Only if you break these, will you be made sorry.
I think in the end, that's why he wanted to kill Gus. Not because he didn't understand that kind of negotiation. But that he couldn't handle someone else having power over him, in the same style he threatens other people.
It's funny that even the threats against Walt's family by Gus are sort of hollow.
Like, if killing Walt would upset Jesse, and you kill Walt's baby... what if Walt jumps off a bridge afterwards? Jesse's going to think you killed them both. Now he _double_ hates you.
- Worst your boss can do is to fire you
-
This level of acting from Giancarlo.... Priceless
This is probably the single most haunting monologue in the entire series - when he goes on about Walt's actual family members. If Walt would've just kept his mouth shut, he could've been 'fired' like a bad Los Pollos Hermanos employee.
"But you're supposed to give me 2 weeks while I train my replacement."
I love how Gus wants Jesse dead at first, but realizes training him to run the lab is actually better than putting up with Walt's antics.
He was controllable...walt wasn't
@@aakarshverma5793 exactly Jessie has low self worth so u pump his head up n he will listen
Walt is so toxic that drug lords have to distance themselves from him for their own mental health
Well, temporarily until he finds a suitable replacement, then Jesse will “go missing”. He doesn’t like Jesse any more than Walt, but knows Jesse isn’t as big of a threat. A liability and loose cannon sure, but not as big of a threat.
Giancarlo said this was his favourite scene in the show
0:09 Ubisoft upper management when a dev comes up with a good idea
0:37 the fastest verbal double take ever... And I'm pretty sure the only time we see Gus shook. Well, outside of when his buddy ate a bullet and 0.333 seconds after final bell.
This was the last time that Walt and Gus see face to face
Hes so cold inside, he has to wear a coat when hes in a desert.
It's amazing how we still don't know if Gus was just Bluffing to scare Walt or he actually would've done it.
I love how the clouds just went in to hear Walt speak and then left immediately once Gus started speaking
I love how when Walt goes through his whole dialogue, the cloud casts a dark shadow over him. Soon as he’s done talking, the sun comes back out.
Gus was truly insane for wearing a woolen overcoat in the sunny desert and not even breaking a sweat.
2:15 When the villager’s price goes up cuz you accidentally hit him
1:53 damn these face expressions, small details like how his eyes glazed left to right from his responses. Such perfect acting. It could be what he said about his brother in law or he was getting a grasp on his impaired vision and damaged eyelid.
I hate how Walter did so much for Jesse and in the process he lost Gus’s respect. And Jesse turns around and goes against him
This was Gus’ biggest mistake, should’ve never said those words to that man, he didn’t realize who he was talking to
Gus' expression, pause and voice tone before saying _"I will kill your infant daughter"_ really hits.
He knew that was insane pettiness even for him, but he knew he had to be done.
His mistake was underestimating Walter.
When he threatened to kill Holly, that’s when I started to hate Gus
At that point it's just another body.
@@robertthomas5906 Killing someone is one thing, but killing a bad/child is horrible
Hence why I hated Todd so much
Lol, you started to hate Gus then? Double digits...
@@codyhiginbotham6616 so how did you feel when Gus ordered Tomas’ death?
@@aOrtega. Hated that too. Still hated when he was gonna kill Holly, because she was an infant
0:55 did anyone else notice how much Walt sounded like Mike there
Absolutely. I think IT IS Jonathan Banks. And it's an easter egg.
Just like in "Salud", when the cartel members are dead and Mike tells Jesse "Make yourself useful, find a gun!", when he says "Make yourself useful" his voice sounds like Jesse himself, or completely different.
0:51 It wasn't in the script, but the cloud (actor which played a cloud) improvised and casted a shadow to make the scene darker and more intense. Vince liked it so much they keeped filming.
The foreshadowing in this is state of the art. The way the shadow falls upon the entire scene once Gus is angered symbolizing death, and the way the light overpowers the darkness once Walt exposes Gus's weakness symbolizing life carrying on was brilliant. The most emphatic stories are told without words.
0:55 Walt sounds like Mike for a sec
Yeah I was like "what?"
The dark clouds cover them at the exact same moment that Heisenberg starts speaking.