The explosion kills him and Tyrus. Gus walks out of the room with his face half blown off, before dying.
He was clearly mortally wounded, but he didn't lose any limbs, and his muscles were still connected, which makes it possible for him to walk and move, until the damage and trauma shuts his body down completely.
Gus' death has numerous consequences. The continuing investigation into his death reaches his restaurant business and the destroyed superlab, which Walt and Jesse burned after Gus died.
AMC has released a new clip from the fifth-season opener of Breaking Bad, and it seems viewers were not the only ones shocked by the death of drug kingpin Gus Fring (Giancarlo Esposito) in last season's finale.
Gus gloats to Hector about the death of his nephews and associate, mentioning the cryptic phone call that Hank received before the Cousins attacked him that lead to their demise. He leaves Hector to seethe impotently with a few parting words: "Sangre por sangre", blood for blood.
Lalo died smiling as a nod to the maniacal personality he carried throughout life, but also to stress the satisfaction he derived from having been right about Gus. The familiar, creepy smirk was one final act of rebellion. Even in his most painful moment, he refused to let Gus see a glimmer of defeat on his face.
As they leave, Arturo brags about his success, but Gus ambushes them and suffocates Arturo with a plastic bag. He then tells Nacho that he knows Nacho switched Hector's medication but has not told the Salamancas, so Nacho is now under his control.
"Mandala" is the eleventh episode of the second season of the American television drama series Breaking Bad. It was written by George Mastras and directed by Adam Bernstein.
"Gus is holding onto his rage, his desire for revenge, and maybe he's holding onto this romance that he had, with his boyfriend Max," Gould said. The boyfriend Gould is referring to is Max Arciniega (James Martinez), who Breaking Bad fans will remember as Gus' friend and business partner.
Gus Fring
As the biggest cameos in El Camino proved, being dead didn't prevent a character from making an appearance, but we still didn't get a flashback from Gustavo Fring (Giancarlo Esposito).
Last chance to look at me, Hector. Gus Fring's last words before his death at Hector's hands.
Gus Falls Into Walt's Trap — S04E13: "Face Off"
Walt plants a bomb in Hector's wheelchair before one of Gus's visits to him in the hospital. Hector detonates the bomb, yet Gus somehow walks out of the room, making fans fear that he somehow survived.
Folks are like, “Did he see something?” No! Gus listens to his inside gut, and something is just off. He can feel a sense that someone is watching him. There's no glare off of Walt's glasses, he doesn't see a f—ing thing!
After the explosion, Gus would have been in shock, which is why he so calmly walked out of the room. His body wouldn't have recognized the pain, and the burst of adrenaline would have possibly given him enough time to walk a few steps before his body failed him.
Simple, complicated, it doesn't matter. Steps never change, and I know every step.
Don Eladio spared Gus' life when he killed Max Arciniega because he knew who Gus was. He recognized him as the man who had built his empire and was therefore not a threat that could be eliminated easily.
Floribama Shore's Gus Smyrnios Marries Samantha 'Sami' Carucci.
Hector's Disability Came From Gus Fring's Act Of Revenge
He emptied the pill capsules and refilled them with ibuprofen, which could increase the risk of a heart attack or stroke. The spiked pills finally worked during a drug cartel meeting. Hector suffered a stroke but Gus saved him by using CPR.
The Salamanca cousins don't speak due to Breaking Bad positioning them as a terrifying force of nature, but this, unfortunately, does not work. Throughout season 3, the audience is slowly given information about how the brothers are getting to New Mexico, and how they find out about Walter White and Hank Schrader.
His character, Gus, has autism spectrum disorder, which Marullo said was "what is so great about Tracy Beaker: it helps children understand that everyone is different".
The gift that Gus Fring gives to Eladio Vuente, Zafiro Añejo is a fictional brand of rare tequila. The writers of the show invented it when they were unable to secure a real product for the scene; no company wanted their product to be the one that poisoned Vuente and his men in the scene. Walt asks Walt Jr.
Zafiro Añejo, a fictitious brand of tequila created for Breaking Bad, is a distilled beverage made from the blue agave plant. Gustavo Fring notably poisoned a bottle of Zafiro Añejo, which was later drunk by Eladio Vuente and other high-ranking members of the Cartel, causing their deaths.
Walt pleads to Jack to spare Hank's life, offering his entire fortune to Jack. Hank refuses to beg for his life and asks Walt how such an intelligent man could be too naive to see that Jack had already made his decision. Hank then tells Jack to do what he has to do and Jack kills him with a shot to the head.
Throughout the five seasons of Breaking Bad, Walter White caused the death of almost 300 people, directly or indirectly. As the character descended into wickedness, Walt didn't necessarily seem to fall under the label of a psychotic murderer.