The night the Killer Brothers were defeated by Hank, Walter met Gus in public view at the hospital. Easy-going and humble, with a sense of justice, he cares about the American anti-drug cause, and is a favorite entrepreneur in the state.
Walter noticed something, and while thanking Gus, he eagerly asked his drug lord boss, "Will an incident like this attack on Hank hurt me and my family again?" Gus calmly told him that your brother-in-law was involved in drug trafficking. The group's attack is now safe and sound, and the dying killer upstairs will probably die soon. Your family will no longer have to worry about this.
"Now reach out and shake hands and say thank you." A smile spreads across Gus's face.
After the incident subsided, Heisenberg came to the drug lord's headquarters. The two "opened up" to talk again.
"My brother-in-law and I were involved in what happened the other day. The reason he survived was an anonymous phone call warning him that the killer was coming. Now I feel like it was all arranged, the reason we It is you who can survive. But you have used all these incidents to force the United States and Mexico to act jointly, crack down on drug gangs, strengthen border patrols, and cut off drug transportation lines. However, you have monopolized the production of drugs in the United States, so as to obtain Great rewards. I admire your courage and ability, and I do the same. Now I just want to ask if I still have a chance to live."
Gus didn't change his face: "I have reached a cooperation agreement with you, 3 million yuan for 3 months. If you want, we can extend it for another year, 12 million yuan, and a total of 15 million yuan. And our cooperation can also be decided by you whether to continue. "
The two sides no longer have conversations.
Walter is finally caught in the quagmire that he can't pull out, and he is at the mercy of the drug lord's pawn throughout the whole incident. Compared with the bomb threat to Tuco in the first season, and the desperation and entrepreneurship in the second season, Walter is humble and pitiful this season.
The road of drugs seems to be easy to make money, but it is actually more dangerous than the industry. It uses the whole family as collateral to earn a little profit.
Walter was number one himself, and ended up bowing his head in front of Gus, the bespectacled, gay-looking owner of a chain fried chicken restaurant (yes, I'm talking about that fried chicken restaurant). Does anyone else think it's cool?
This is one of the best anti-drug shows.
Let's look at the conversation between the two. In the hospital, Walter pretended to be asking if there would be a second attack, but was actually asking if the living man upstairs would give anything to expose him. Gus told him directly, don't worry, that thing won't survive. Sure enough, the killer died shortly after Gus left.
Walter seemed aggressive in the chicken farm, but he was just telling Gus that I am now your pawn, that you have earned so much from me, can you spare my life and spare my family? Gus ignored those empty words and told Walter directly that I only promise to guarantee you 3 months of making drugs for me, and if you want to be safe, you will do it to me to death.
This is one of the most thrilling negotiation scenes I have ever seen. The seemingly random talk hides the game about human life. Gus's performance is like a sinister and ruthless emperor living in the palace. The conversation and laughter are already bloody, Walter It was the servant who was so frightened that he slumped to the ground and had no power to resist.
This level of strategic struggle, this level of character interpretation has crushed a number of domestic court dramas, historical dramas and political dramas. Regardless of Tang Guoqiang, Chen Daoming, Zhang Guoli, Yu Xinwei, Liu Xiaoqing, Siqin Gaowa and Gui Yalei, they all turned into spring mud in front of Gus's joy and anger. Because the real conspirators never reveal the slightest bit of their deeds.
View more about No Más reviews