Gus Invites Jesse Over for Dinner | Breaking Bad (Giancarlo Esposito, Aaron Paul)
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 29 ก.ย. 2024
- Jesse (Aaron Paul) almost poisons Gus (Giancarlo Esposito) over dinner, but backs off and accuses him of trying to make him replace Walt; Gus says he just needs help with the Cartel war.
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From Season 4, Episode 09: "Bug"
Breaking Bad follows protagonist Walter White (Bryan Cranston), a chemistry teacher who lives in New Mexico with his wife (Anna Gunn) and teenage son (RJ Mitte) who has cerebral palsy. White is diagnosed with Stage III cancer and given a prognosis of two years left to live. With a new sense of fearlessness based on his medical prognosis, and a desire to secure his family's financial security, White chooses to enter a dangerous world of drugs and crime and ascends to power in the world. The series explores how a fatal diagnosis such as White's releases a typical man from the daily concerns and constraints of normal society and follows his transformation from mild family man to a kingpin of the drug trade.
#BreakingBad #BryanCranston #CrimeCity #WalterWhite #AaronPaul #JessePinkman #JonathanBanks
“How are you feeling Jesse? A little under the weather? That would be the ricin I put in my homemade chili” Gus
Goodbye Jesse.
@@aksHandler goodbye Gus!
Ding ding ding ding!
I like how Gus changed the decorations in his house when he had Jesse over for dinner compared to when he had Walter over.
He had baby toys and building blocks in the hall to appear relatable by making walter think he was also married with kids.
"Why does everyone I invite over act weird?" -Gus after inviting both Walt and Jesse
Well... The act of getting invited by an alone dude to have dinner with you weirds out anyone.
@@karlimo4034 I mean... he's their boss. They can't exactly have dinner in public and talk business...
Gus took "they dig a man that cooks" the wrong way
On one end, I believe Jesse that Gus never left the room, not leaving an opening for him to place ricin.
On the other, Walt is right, Jesse had no intention on poisoning Gus.
Based on Better Call Saul, I bet Gus had a team of security guards watching on cameras who would've spotted the poisoning.
I think Jesse thought it was too risky and that he could have been found out. He didn't have an opening because Jesse was going to eat from the same pot that Gus was preparing in the beginning. It's most likely that Jesse didn't have a safe opening to use the ricin.
"Jesse we need to cook' ~Gus
A man cooks the dinner to ask his employee to cook
The level of respect Jesse still has for Walt is incredible. After all the bullshit and manipulation Walt has inflicted on Jesse at this point, Jesse still calls him: "Mr White."
Good thing Jesse didn't try anything. After better call saul, that house must've had all eyes on him
This is the exact moment Gus asked Jesse if he could cook Mr. White's product
I love how in scenes with Gus in them, the characters will often be lit on one side of their face like at 3:48. It's used in so many scenes with Gus, and once you notice it once you won't stop noticing it.
What's the cinematographic meaning of it? LIke is there any reason?
@@NitinJoseph-India-ASMRit’s supposed to symbolize their morality (darkness being bad and light being good)
@@MaxSchmooze Just like two face dent from batman… badass!!!
@@NitinJoseph-India-ASMR also indicative of how Gus eventually dies… this show had some crazy foreshadow shit going on
Gus reminds me of the evil penguin from Wallace and Gromit.
"I love how he actually knocks Gus off his game for a split second." - Blasted2Oblivion
the most stressful dinner and interview ever
،ilekethis
Movie night❤❤😂🎉❤😂🎉❤😂🎉
Gus so wanted a piece of him lol
Jesse is badass in this scene
"Nice for Gus to invite us over for dinner, gay Jesse?"
I swear, gus has always this gayish vibe
He is gay lol
Because he’s literally gay lmfao
That might be due to the fact that he's gay.
“Gayish”
he's Bi in reallife tho