Airing in the UK on AMC Global, Mondays 9pm Writer: Kate Erickson Director: Michael Uppendahl
Essential Plot Points:
We see Nick, naked and towing his clothes in a waterproof bag, swimming ashore. He dodges at least one search vessel and a helicopter, dresses and heads up through a ruined refugee camp. There, he deliberately attracts the attention of a Walker, kills it and guts it, smearing himself in its remains.
Back on the Love Boat, Travis wants to confront Strand over the fate of the Flight 462 characters. We do too, but maybe for slightly different reasons. Madison talks him down as, at the stern, Chris and Ofelia bond.
Right up until a dinghy with a pregnant woman and two men aboard appears.
Chris repeatedly asks, “Should I shoot them?!” as they come aboard, proving that he’s still frequently awful.
That being said, they seize the boat proving Chris maybe had a point. But is still awful.
Strand escapes and they shoot his dinghy leaving him to die. As Felicia comes up from below decks, she confronts the pirates. One is Jack, who she talked to in episode one of this season. It is, to say the least, awkward.
FLASHBACK! BECAUSE THIS SHOW CAN DO THAT! We see Strand in Baton Rouge bemoaning the fact he’s just lost his entire fortune due to Hurricane Katrina. His drinking buddy, Thomas Abigail, sympathises although he did a little better.
Strand gets Gabriel drunk, steals his credit cards and starts over. Abigail sees him do it but passes out before he can do anything.
Back on the Love Boat, Reed, who’s awful, holds Chris, who is also awful, at gunpoint. Realising he’s killed the only man who can start the engine (See? AWFUL) Reed bullies Chris until Travis agrees to hotwire the ship. Whether that’s to save Chris’s life, get Reed to SHUT UP or a little of both is left ambiguous.
Meanwhile, back on land, Nick finds the address he was looking for. It’s a fortified house, damaged but still secure.
Back in the past, Abigail and his henchman Luis Flores track down Strand. He apologises for the theft and Abigail is remarkably cool about it, but points out Strand is obligated to him. Especially due to the $36,000 cash advance Strand took out on Abigail’s credit cards.
In the present, Strand loses the satphone, his only way of making contact with his colleagues.
On the Abigail, Travis plays for time in the engine room and Maddy bonds with and then completely messes with Vida. Nearby, Jack explains that Connor, their leader only takes people who can prove their worth…
Back on shore, Nick finds Luis! He’s alive! And pretty chilled about the whole end of the world thing. He’s less cool about the various people they’re bringing across the border and is adamant he only had the resources for passage for two. Nonetheless, he cleans Nick up and they prep to head out to the Abigail.
On the Abigail, Connor arrives and takes Travis and Felicia. The escape plan Maddy, Travis and Daniel have been working on pays off and a short, brutal fight ends with Reed impaled, two other pirates dead by Luis’s hand and the Abigail back under control.
In the past, Strand remembers spending time with Abigail at their true home, out in the country. He also remembers his boyfriend warning him not to leave for LA just before the outbreak accelerated. Strand didn’t listen and that’s how he ended up in the holding area with Nick.
As the episode finishes, Maddy rescues Strand and they regroup.
Review:
And now things are getting interesting. Four weeks into season two, at the exact point where the wheels fell off season one for an episode, Fear The Walking Dead has taken some big steps. Most of them work, brilliantly. One doesn’t.
Let’s look at that one first. The pirates, including Felicia’s not-quite boyfriend, from the season premiere, are rubbish. On one level that’s deliberate: the world has just ended after all and no one’s quite got to the silver spray paint and “WITNESS ME!”s yet. On the other though it’s a real problem because, well, they’re dull.
Really dull.
Jack – Felicia’s not-quite boyfriend and the one who has the best chance of being redeemed and joining Team Strand – is okay. And Vida’s spat with Madison is well written, nasty and gives both women stuff to do. But Reed is very dull. He’s a by-the-numbers preening jock jackass and there’s no real point to the character other than for him to be the designated needlessly violent death of the week. Hopefully next week the arrival of the actual pirate ship, will get this plot up and running. Especially as the opening seems to make very little spatial sense given what Nick sees when he swims in to shore.
So that stuff, not so good. The rest of the episode? Tip top post-apocalyptic fun that throws you in at the deep end and trusts you to swim to the edges. Or in Nick’s case, the shore.
Nick, at times one of the worst parts of season one whose name wasn’t “Chris”, is increasingly the show’s star. His plot here, swimming ashore past the armed barricades that seem to surround Strand’s home and rendezvousing with Luis, is immense fun. The “covered in zombie guts” trick being used twice in two weeks could have felt staid but here it feels like a character using a weapon they’ve only just realised they have. Plus, it’s an interesting character note for both Nick and Strand. As the show started, he was a panicking addict on the run. As season two moves into gear, he’s the right-hand man of the most prepared human left alive. Or at least on the Abigail.
And speaking of Strand, the other crime the pirates commit is leaving him to apathetically kind of drown off the stern of the Abigail. However, his flashback sequences are brilliant and teach us a lot about the man. Strand as a principled shark is a fascinating beat and the fact he clearly planned on repaying Thomas Abigail is oddly sweet. Plus, him losing everything in the wake of Hurricane Katrina is a subtly played piece of context. Strand is ruthless because he really has dragged himself up from nothing, twice. It doesn’t make him any less brutal, but it does make him less openly villainous. That’s a subtlety of writing the first season, on its best day, could only dream of.
Likewise his romance with Abigail, which is old fashioned and surprisingly poignant. Strand and Abigail are very similar men, and the conversation about their losses in Katrina’s wake makes that point. But it’s what happens next that really works. The evolution of their relationship feels formal but genuine and honest in a way neither man quite is with anyone else. In the space of one episode the show introduces us to Strand’s other half, makes us see how incomplete he is without Abigail and makes us invest utterly in their relationship. Smart, clever writing from a show that’s on the way to being something much more than a prequel and another strong episode.
The Good:
“Should I shoot him? Piece of advice: if you have to ask the question someone should already be dead.” Reed is awful but this is a decent line.
“You’re definitely not rubbing that stench on my leather interiors.” Luis, on the other hand, is delightful and can stay for as long as he wants.
“When’s the last time you felt her move?” OUCH. Maddy twisting the knife is just brutal. This is the show’s “Don’t you think she looks tired?” moment.
Absolutely no “For I am… GAY!” angst about Strand and Abigail. They’re a couple, deeply in love and very, very dangerous. Also adorable.
Action Nick!
Characters learning things. It’s such a relief to see Nick use what he learned last week.
Luis is wonderful and clearly a very bad man.
Thomas Abigail! Almost certainly some form of arms dealer! Also romantic, literate and Dougray Scott-shaped!
Vida! The single competent pirate.
The Bad:
The Flight 462 folks are officially dead it seems. Well that was a waste of time.
So where is the Abigail? Because if Nick swam in from the bay, which is clearly being patrolled, then surely the ship’s been spotted by now? While we’re at it, who’s patrolling the waters?
The pirates are very dull.
Chris is still a bit awful. Less so than recently though.
So they shot Strand’s raft which was maybe 300 metres off the Abigail at the time, didn’t bother checking to see if he was still alive and left him there? In the same waters that the opening shot establishes are patrolled? And in which the Abigail and Strand are very visible?
This show still hasn’t figured out endings. This episode doesn’t so much end as just kind of stop.
The Random:
Daniel Zovatto, who plays Jack, had a memorable turn as Seth in “Seeds”, an early episode of Agents of SHELD. He’s also in excellent contemporary horror movie, It Follows.
Jesse McCartney, who played Reed in this episode, played Tyler in the never-aired Locke & Key pilot. He also voiced Nightwing in Young Justice and has appeared in movies such as Chernobyl Diaries. Magnificently, he’s also the voice of Theodore in the Chipmunks movies.
Arturo Del Puerto is great fun this episode as Luis. He’s previously appeared on NCIS, Rizzoli & Isles and The Lottery as well as The Magicians and movies like Ride Along 2. Intriguingly, IMDB has him listed for 12 more appearances this season so it looks like Luis may be sticking around a while. Or IMDB has had too much sugar. Again.
Veronica Diaz-Carranza who does great work as Vida here has previously appeared on Criminal Minds, Walkout, Cold Case and many others. She’s also an active producer.
Dougray Scott is the character actor’s character actor. He’s one of the few high spots in the remarkably dismal Mission: Impossible 2, is excellent in The Wrong Mans and Hemlock Grove and is best known in geek circles for his excellent work as Alec Palmer in underrated Doctor Who episode “Hide” (it’s not underrated by me – it’s one of my top five new Who episodes – ed).
Shot of the week is this. The casual way Luis and Nick are strolling past the approaching herd is a lovely piece of visual shorthand for how quickly they’ve adapted.
Airing in the UK on AMC Global, Mondays 9pm Writer: Alan Page Director: Stefan Schwartz
Essential Plot Points:
Lovely tranquil waters aaaaaand… dead people! We see a group of survivors frantically swimming to a life raft where others are already waiting. One, Alex, is desperately trying to protect a horribly injured boy named Jake. The other two are convinced he’s dying and want to throw him over board. Alex stops one of them killing Jake with a spot of pre-emptive murder and we leave the survivors adrift in a spreading field of recently crashed plane debris…
Travis and Maddy wake up and don’t instantly argue. They are, in fact, about to have sex when the engines stop, which is pretty on the nose as a metaphor goes but we’ll run with it.
It turns out the filtration system, that uses sea water to cool the engines, is blocked. Someone has to go unblock it. Maddy argues that they wait till morning. Strand argues that he’d like to not be murdered by pirates. Travis suits up, goes under the boat to clear it and finds a Walker trapped by the arm in the intake. Suddenly the Walker attacks him and…!
…We cut back to the boat where Travis is totally fine. He helpfully explains to the audience, and Strand, that the entire filtration system is backed up and he’ll need a day to fix it. They don’t have a day and Strand gets in Travis’s face before leaving him to it.
Nearby, Ofelia’s wound is infected and they have no antibiotics. Daniel argues against her going to Maddy for help, insisting that they keep it in the family.
On deck, Felicia spots suitcases scattered over the coast. She argues that they need supplies and all three kids volunteer to go ashore. Their parents reluctantly agree and Daniel goes with them to supervise. As he does, he hints to Maddy that he knows something. She takes him to one side and he tells her about Mexico. He also asks her to approach Strand and be “diplomatic”. Maddy agrees but has doubts about the diplomacy.
The Away Team go ashore and Travis suits up to kill the Walker. Maddy follows his bubbles along the edge of the boat before seeing a spume of blood and the Walker float to the surface.
On shore, Grandpa Torture and his Kid Sidekicks find useful clothes and material. Chris, remembering he’s Chris, wanders off. He finds a section of fuselage, picks up a weapon and goes inside. He finds three Walkers. One is apparently dead, one is strapped in and the third has an oxygen mask on. Chris taunts it before killing it. Then the man next to it WAKES UP AND IS VERY MUCH NOT DEAD.
Brilliantly, back on the Abigail, Maddy walks straight up to Strand and basically starts shouting at him. What follows is the two cagiest characters on the show violently agreeing with one another. Strand admits there’s a fortified house in Rosarito just outside Baja he’s making for. He doesn’t NOT invite Maddy and the families but that’s about as far as he commits. He also doesn’t mention whoever he’s been talking to. Nonetheless they agree to work on trusting each other.
Onshore, Daniel retrieves a rosary and finds some meds. Nick, Super Addict, explains they aren’t helpful for Ofelia and gives Daniel some tips on what to look for.
Back at the wreck, Chris successfully frees the badly injured survivor. The man’s spine is visible through his back and he’s paralysed. He begs for death and Chris, clearly horrified, crushes his skull.
Nearby, Daniel figures out Chris is missing and he, Nick and Felicia go looking.
Back on the love boat, Travis is still trying to get the engines to take it, Cap’n. Maddy comes clean about where they’re going and she and Travis argue about whether or not they should trust Strand. Again they basically violently agree with one another but it’s not as fun this time.
On shore, Alex does her best Indiana Jones impression sprinting down a dune away from a lot of Walkers. Daniel draws his weapon and starts firing. Nearby, Nick finds the actual drugs Daniel was looking for and hears a Walker. It’s buried up to its chest in the sand and being eaten by crabs.
Nick patiently waits at the very edge of the edge of the gulley for it to inevitably give way. It does. He fights and kills the Walker just in time for another to land on top of him.
Nearby Felicia finds Chris and realises he’s been attacked. He reassures her and they hear Daniel’s gunshot. On the Abigail, Maddy sees Daniel and Alex run for it and the others converge on them. She yells for Strand.
Travis fixes the hyperdrive… sorry, filtration system in a manner so convenient that somewhere Montgomery Scott is beaming with pride.
On shore things are BAD. There’s no sign of Nick, the Walkers keep coming, Daniel is out of bullets and they’ve got nowhere to go. At the last second, a blood-soaked Nick appears, saves Felicia and leads them to the boat. In doing so he realises that the Walkers can’t sense him…
They make their escape, with Alex getting them to tow the raft, now just containing Jake. They arrive at the Abigail and Strand is beyond not okay with any of this. Felicia argues Strand and her mother down and they agree to tow the raft with Jake and Alex aboard it.
It is notable that we do not seem to see Nick hand over the drugs he found.
Felicia is disgusted by how they’re treating Alex and Jake. On the raft, Alex comforts her friend, claiming it will never be worse than this.
Then Strand cuts them loose.
Review:
While not as good as last week’s bottle (well, island) episode there’s some really fun stuff again this week. There’s also some very, very stupid things unfortunately.
But the good news first. The kids, who were consistently one of the weakest parts of the often very weak first season, are really picking up. And yes we include Chris as well. There’s a bunch of smart moments with all three of them this episode including Felicia stepping up to the plate as a decision maker, Nick continuing to be very useful indeed and Chris’ season in Hell taking a turn for the worse.
Let’s start with the world’s least successful YouTuber. His euthanising of a critically injured Flight 462 passenger is one of the episode’s smarter moments but what makes it work is his reaction when Felicia finds him. Chris is… okay with murder. He’s horrified when he’s doing it but he seems pretty at peace once he’s done. That’s a major, quiet turn for him and one we hope to see more of. He’s not Negan yet, not by a long way. But Chris is rapidly becoming the family member most comfortable with violence and that’s certainly a road Negan knows well.
Where Chris is learning how to survive, Felicia’s learning how little choice she has. Her objection to the way they treat Alex, and her bullish insistence on going ashore, is a nice contrast to the Pirate Boyfriend moment a couple of episodes ago. She’s still not being given a tremendous amount to do, and neither is Ofelia, but both of them get good moments this episode. Ofelia’s gentle humour is a welcome character beat and Felicia’s resolute morality is a logical way for her character to go well.
But it’s Nick who’s emerging as the breakout star of the show. He’s clever and principled and increasingly surviving on his own terms. The most interesting moment this episode sees him advise Daniel on the right drugs for Ofelia, find them and… keep them. Whether he hands them over in a later episode we can’t say. We can say that Nick is very at home in this newly ruthless world and now, he may be off the wagon too.
That’s all fun and there’s some welcome progression for Strand and Maddy too. But that’s pretty much where the good news stops.
The much-vaunted arrival of the Flight 462 characters is essentially a group cameo. Alex is fun, smart, switched-on and – the last time we see her – almost certainly dead. After the huge deal made of them coming aboard it’s short-changing of the worst sort if this is the last we see of them. The moment falls utterly flat too, and continues this season’s worrying reliance on choppy edits that don’t give scenes time to breathe.
Worse still, this episode has a couple of moments of open conflict between the show’s concept and the needs of weekly TV drama. This is rapidly becoming the same kind of mildly decompressed small-scale survival drama that the first half of season six of The Walking Dead was and that’s great. It actually works even better here, with a small fractious group trapped on a boat and under every kind of pressure.
But the slow burn accretion storytelling that model requires doesn’t have much room for jump scares and this episode has several. The reveal of the Walker trapped under the boat is ghost-train-level clunky and the instant cut away from it is unforgivably blunt. Likewise Nick’s arrival on the beach at the end drops the ball badly on the group’s first major piece of post-apocalyptic knowledge.
That conflict is going to be very difficult for the show to resolve but it needs to do so and soon. Otherwise the story and the demands of the format are going to shake this fragile group apart way faster than new arrivals, mysterious pirates or lack of supplies ever could. Here’s hoping the Abigail, and the show, stay on course.
The Good:
“I’ve upset you. Forgive me if I neglect certain niceties in light of our current predicament. You are a skilled technician and a viable member of this team now, pretty please, FIX THE GODDAMN BOAT.” Victor Strand, motivational speaker.
“I know you’re not running on my deck.”
“JESUS, Seriously?” Victor Strand, childcare expert.
“This is my family.”
“Exactly. Your Family.” Victor Strand, people person.
Daniel playing every side at once is really smart. He’s simultaneously open to working with Maddy and keeping distant from her. He’s clearly open to working with Strand but the two men are very similar and there’s a shared, recognised antagonism as a result. It’s a gutsy play for both the character and the writers and it shows just how far ahead Daniel’s thinking. Maddy wants to survive, Strand wants to get to the fortified house but so far only Daniel really wants to survive in the long term.
There are some lovely world-building moments here. Felicia stepping up is a nice callback to her understandable screw-up with the radio. Nick and Chris setting up fishing rods in the background is another. Likewise the “geriatric chic” gag is a welcome tension breaker.
The Bad:
Booooo to the crap cheap scare with Travis and the Walker trapped in the vent! BOOOOO!
Slightly less booo to the “Maddy watches Travis’s bubbles and briefly worries he’s dead” sequence!
How the hell does Strand – a man so prepared he built the Most Prepared Human trophy he’s won every year he’s been alive – not know how his own boat’s filtration system works? It’s obviously an exposition dump for the audience but it feels clumsy.
Travis gets that filtration fixed at the single most dramatically opportune moment we’ve ever seen. Seriously, it couldn’t have been more convenient if they were being chased by Star Destroyers through an asteroid belt.
Nick walking to the edge of the gully which then collapses is the only thing clunkier than the Travis/vent/Walker jump scare. Yes he’s a kid and an adrenalin junkie but when you can call a plot beat a good ten seconds before it hits? That’s not good.
Nick, Blood-Soaked Avenger is a great idea that’s absolutely flubbed. Where the hell does he come from? At first we thought he was in the Walker herd fighting his way forwards but no, he scrambles up a steep incline in an instant, rushes behind the Walker about to kill Felicia and takes it out.
Worse still, why the hell is he walking with the herd before he figures out they can’t sense him? It’s nice to see this piece of lore locked into place early but like we say, the delivery is badly fumbled.
The ending just falls flat. Is it a cliffhanger? Maybe have someone show some emotion. Is it not? Then the entire episode is basically a waste of time.
The Random:
Alex, Jake, Tom and Michael are all from the Fear The Walking Dead webisode series Flight 462. The timing on this is… odd. The final episode of the web series was set simultaneously to the final couple of episodes of season one. In fact, Nick sees Flight 462 start to go down. And yet, days (at least), later it looks like the plane has only just crashed. Last minute heroic piloting? Stretchy time? Who knows.
Shot of the week is this wonderful framing of Daniela and the first of many, MANY Walkers.
Airing in the UK on AMC Global
Writer: Dave Erickson
Director: Adam Davidson
Essential Plot Points:
We open on the beach. Maddy and Travis are frantically loading a boat. Nick drives it out to the Abigail leaving them, and Chris, to fend off a horde of Walkers. Chris grieves for his dead mother. Travis and Abby almost join her. Nick brings the boat back alone and they barely escape. As they do, they watch LA – which pretty clearly wasn’t this much on fire a few hours ago – being bombed by the Air Force.
Strand tells them he’s heading south to San Diego, confident that the Navy might have secured the city. The others settle in; Chris standing vigil over his mother and Travis unable to comfort him. As dawn breaks they spot an overcrowded boat that’s starting to sink. Alicia and Maddy are adamant they rescue the people aboard. Strand and, reluctantly, Travis, disagree and they move on.
To distract her, and because they need it, Travis gives Alicia the radio and tells her to search for anyone else. She finds the Coast Guard apologising, saying no help is coming and begging forgiveness. Then, she hears music… David Bowie to be precise and a smoot- voiced DJ with a sob story talking over it. Who is totally not a pirate. (What? No pirate radio gag? – ed.)
Chris takes a break from mourning to talk to Daniel about their recent losses as they both deep sea fish. It’s a surprisingly gentle, nice scene.
Maddy goes looking for Strand after hearing music. She finds the cabin deserted and Strand on the top deck. He says he’s talking to ghosts to keep awake. She tells him they trust him. Later, she talks to Daniel who reminds her of all the questions they still have about Strand. After all, he was ready to leave before the dead rose…
Having reached deep enough water, they bury Liza. Travis says a few words, Chris buries her, stomps off and when Travis confronts his son, Chris punches him.
Meanwhile, Alicia’s totally-not-a-pirate sort-of boyfriend says his boat’s sinking. She gives him some details on where they are and races off to ask the others to rescue him.
Strand cooks off, reminding them it’s his boat and no one on the water can be trusted. They’re not going to rescue him.
Later, he points out to Nick that everyone on the boat has to earn their place. Nick asks what he brings and Strand complements him on his fearlessness.
Madison sits with Chris and, gently, not only brings him down to Earth but implies heavily she had an abusive childhood. As the others sit down for a “family” meal to eat the fish Daniel caught, Chris jumps off the boat. When the others panic and Nick goes in after him, Chris says he just wanted to swim. All is well until Nick is attacked by a floating Walker and the nearby fog clears to reveal a ruined yacht. Travis goes to get his two sons as Nick hears something in the yacht and dives into it. He fends off another, equally rubbish Walker and retrieves the yacht’s log.
It escapes no one’s notice the boat is riddled with bullet holes.
Oh and Alicia’s totally-not-a-pirate’s last words are, “See you soon.”
They speed away but another boat is closing. And, as Strand notes, it’s faster than the Abigail…
Review:
So, Fear The Walking Dead has three problems. The good news is two of them are on screen and solvable. The bad news is, all of them are painfully apparent in this season two opener.
The first problem is that this isn’t so much season two as it is season one after a six episode season zero. When that season was at its best, it explored the gradual collapse of society in LA through the lens of Travis and Maddy’s families. When it was at its worst, it either ran in place for episodes at a time or got stupid amounts of stuff out of the way inside an hour.
This episode manages, somehow, to do both. Joining the action in the middle is a great idea but we have no context. It feels, for the first few minutes, like a flashforward. So when it turns out to be a few hours after the end of season one, it takes a little while to sink in. There’s no context, no set-up and no explanation for stuff going to hell. Suddenly LA’s on fire and it’s time to leave, because there are places to go, people to see and random slow-motion montages to endure.
That brings us to the next problem: the characters. Travis and Maddy’s extended family, not to mention Grandpa Torture, were the source of most of the problems last year. That’s unfortunately the case here too and, equally unfortunately, the burden of annoyance falls almost exclusively on Chris. We honestly don’t think its Lorenzo James Henrie’s fault either. He’s doing good work but Chris has been a one-note character for seven episodes now and that note is, “WHHYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY?!” As a result even though he has real, legitimate problems with his dad’s actions it merely comes across as whining. That devalues the character, the death of his mother and the episode as a whole.
Alicia comes dangerously to similar ground this episode as well. Her flirting with the hot sounding boy on the radio who is Totally Not A Pirate is actually a very clever piece of scripting but it’s one that does the episode no favours. We know awful things are coming but for her; it’s been a few days at most so she’s still looking for someone, anyone to reach out to. It’s still a very dumb move but it’s one that at least has context.
Unfortunately that context is the one problem the show can’t solve. The characters can, and already are, improving, with both Strand and Nick infinitely more fun than they were last season already. The pacing will improve too as the show finds its feet. But the one problem it can’t solve is this: the viewers will always know more than the characters do.
That’s a massive hurdle that the show isn’t going to jump any time soon. We know society collapses. We know Walkers are everywhere. We know no one should go anywhere without a knife at the very least and every encounter with someone new is as cautious as it is desperately hopeful. We’re all, whether we like it or not, Alexandrians. Used to this world, ready for what it throws at us.
Travis and Maddy’s family know nothing and that makes them victims and that makes this episode particularly hard to sit through. Worse still, after last week’s The Walking Dead season finale, the show’s in an even more difficult spot. Last week we frantically tried to guess which beloved character was killed. This week we watch as Nick pushes a more than slightly apathetic aqua walker away from him and swims away. There’s exasperation where there should be fear; annoyance where there should be jeopardy. Combined with the lumpen pace and the still mishandled family drama it means this episode stumbles where it should run.
There’s promising stuff here, certainly, but here’s hoping that life on the ocean wave solves the show’s problems as well as the character’s.
The Good:
“Strand, stop the boat.”
“That’s funny.” Strand feels a lot like a season six Walking Dead character. He’s ruthless and driven in a way the others aren’t. He’s also interesting and fun though, which is a big step up from last season.
“It’s a characteristic of the gifted.”
“And the crazy.” Maddy and Strand are an interesting double act. We’re looking forward to seeing how they build this relationship.
“Then how do I contribute?”
“You mean on this boat or here existentially?”
“…either?” Also much more of Nick and Strand’s pseudo-double-act, please.
“I remember the first time I hit my father. I was furious. I was 13… It didn’t end well.” The best, smartest line in the show. This sort of writing is where it needs to be and where it might just be heading.
Strand. Yeah, after his catastrophically misjudged introduction last yeah we never thought we’d be putting Strand in the “Good” section. However Colman Domingo’s Strand was a lot more promising in the final episode of season one. Here he’s starting to deliver already. Driven, very clever, endlessly calm and surprisingly at home in these situations he’s clearly not telling the others everything. Charismatic, ambiguous and funny he’s instantly the best part of the episode.
Nick. Yeah, we’re pleasantly surprised too. Last season’s second-most useless character is this season’s surprising go-getter. His scenes with Strand in particular are great and if any of those fools survive more than three seasons, I’m betting it’s that particular Pinky & the Brain-esque duo.
The setting. The pacing this episode is basically non-existent but the Abigail being the cast’s new, tiny safe haven is a really interesting idea. Hopefully the possibly imminent pirates will give the show a chance to explore that a bit.
The Bad:
The propeller fatality. Not only is it gratuitous it’s the most token, OTT Walkertality the show has done to date. Also, they don’t even commit. What if someone had been cut by a piece of infected skull? What if it had broken the blades on the propeller? That would have been interesting. What we get is just dull.
The pacing. The episode veers wildly from action-movie-fast to weirdly slow, subdued points and it fluffs every single one of them. Why is Strand’s house suddenly on fire when it wasn’t a few hours ago in the last episode? Why is there a slow-motion montage of everyone sitting down for fish dinner? Why is Chris tipping his mother’s body into the sea played as a weirdly disjointed shock moment? The script and direction are almost never in sync and it hurts an already, bluntly pretty dull, episode.
Chris. The only character in the world who could make legitimate, understandable grief and anger look annoying.
The Aqua Walkers. They’re great shock value for about five seconds and then become the least effective Walkers the show has ever featured. The one that attacks Nick in the plot yacht is especially rubbish, forgetting a live human is feet away because of a noise.
And The Random:
Alicia’s Totally-Not-A-Pirate boyfriend has good musical taste. The song he plays is “Five Years” by David Bowie. It’s from The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust and was released in 1971. Which is also a really clever choice on behalf of the producers. The show’s “present” remains difficult to tie down which helps keep it current.
No, seriously, why is the house on fire? We went back and checked the final scene of season one and while stuff isn’t, y’know, great, it’s also remarkably not on fire. This season, it looks like an early 1990s metal video.
Shot of the week is this, the family watching the city burn as they escape.
Airing in the UK on FOX, Mondays, 9pm Writers: Scott Gimple, Matt Negrete Director: Greg Nicotero
Essential Plot Points:
We cut between a terrified man running through the woods and Maggie being loaded onto the RV to be taken to Hilltop for medical attention.
Enid tries to persuade Carl to stay and, rightly, points out he’s looking for a fight. He tricks her, locks her in a closet and leaves along with his dad, Abe, Sasha, Eugene and Spencer. Alexandria is left under the command of Gabriel who is now frighteningly good at this.
The man running through the woods is brought down and dragged into the road.
Elsewhere, Morgan finds a horse. It is lovely and will be heretofore referred to as Morgan’s Lovely Horse. Not long after, he finds a badly injured Carol and takes her to shelter.
The RV runs into a barricade. Rick has a very tense conversation with one of the Saviours manning it which, it being Rick, he gets needlessly macho about. The Saviours ask for half their stuff, Rick turns them down and asks if they want this to be their last day on Earth. The Saviour leader replies that it may be for Rick or one of his people and he should be extra nice to them.
Back at Morgan and Carol, he treats her wounds and tells her that he’s come to take her back. She refuses, pulls a gun on him and finally begs him to leave her. Morgan simply refuses to leave.
In the RV, Abe and Sasha are talking about whether they want kids. Abe is all in favour of it, as is Sasha. This totally isn’t foreshadowing or a really bad thing to talk about unless there’s a second roadblock or the Saviours are herding them.
There’s a second roadblock.
The Saviours are herding them.
Back at Morgan and Carol, Morgan kills a Walker hanging from a noose and returns to find Carol gone. He grabs Morgan’s Lovely Horse and sets off tracking her.
The RV reaches a third barricade but this one is different. It’s a group of Walkers, chained across the road. They move forward to clear them and realise the Walkers are oddly familiar… One is peppered with crossbow bolts, another is wearing Daryl’s jacket.
Another has a pair of Michonne’s dreadlocks stapled to it.
As they realise this, the Saviours open up. The Alexandrians return fire and Rick opens the blockade before running back to the RV. They escape but realise that all they’ve done is go exactly where they were told.
The Saviours were firing at their feet. They want them to keep going. Almost immediately the RV encounters another heavily armed roadblock and they realise they’re being herded.
Morgan and Morgan’s Lovely Horse find Carol’s dropped rosary. Nearby Carol is jumped first by a Walker she barely kills and secondly by the Saviour she didn’t kill last week. He knows he’s dying but he plans on torturing her until she dies first. Carol laughs at him, finally at peace because her life is about to end. He shoots her in the arm and leg. She goads him into finishing her and just as he’s about to…
Morgan appears. With a gun. He begs the Saviour to let her live and when he tries to kill Carol anyway, Morgan empties the clip into him.
As he tends to Carol two other men appear. One is the previous owner of Morgan’s Lovely Horse. The other is a fellow Lovely Horse enthusiast. After a mildly tense stand off, they agree to help and take Morgan and Carol off to season seven.
Back at the RV, Maggie is getting much, much worse. Worse still there’s another barricade, this time made of wood. It’s huge, well built and not the only obstacle. As they approach, the survivor the Saviours captured earlier is hung from a nearby bridge. Aaron tries to save him but Rick tells him not to as the barricade is set on fire and they retreat once again. As they go, the Saviour leader reminds Rick about it being one of his people’s last day on Earth.
The Alexandrians regroup. Eugene points out the Saviours are looking for the RV and have no idea of how many people are actually inside it… He volunteers to drive the RV away as a distraction while Rick and the others load Maggie on a stretcher and make a run for Hilltop. Before they separate he gives Rick the breakdowns on how to make bullets and reconciles with Abe. This feels very like goodbye for at least one of them.
They run through the woods and hear the same whistling they’ve heard every time the Saviours have been nearby. Picking up the pace they sprint out into clearing to find…
The Saviours.
The RV.
A badly beaten Eugene.
The Saviour leader tells them all to get on their knees and, reluctantly, Rick does. Daryl, Michonne, Rosita and Glenn are unloaded from a nearby van and join them.
Then, stepping out of their own RV, Negan makes his appearance.
Speaking with a combination of good humour and rage, Negan tells them they work for him now and he doesn’t want to kill them. But, they killed a lot of his guys and that can’t stand. So, he’s going to beat one of them to death with his baseball bat, Lucille, and then let the others go.
Glenn panics, breaks ranks and tries to save Maggie but is brought down.
Negan walks up and down the line, toying with them all until finally he resorts to a game of Eenie Meenie. The camera shifts to the point of view of his victim as Negan raises Lucille and murders them as the others scream. Then, the camera fades to black…
Review:
“As long as it’s all of us, we can do anything.”
There’s an old stand-up comedy routine about how money only works because we all decide it does. Society, especially the post-apocalyptic society of The Walking Dead, is the same. When every life is sacred and every life is constantly in danger you have two choices, both of which the show has explored.
The first is to retreat in on yourself, just like Morgan did. The second is to align yourself with people who make you more than you are. That’s what all the characters have done and that dedication, and price paid for it, is what drives this season finale. It’s why Rick doesn’t have to ask for volunteers to go with Maggie to Hilltop. It’s why Carl locks Enid in the closet. These people are strong because they’re together. And that’s where Negan hits them.
“This isn’t it. This isn’t it. There’s gonna be more.”
Compare this to Rick’s speech to Carl after he was shot. There he was fervently certain that his son would live to see the new world. Here he’s begging Maggie to keep it together because if she does, he can and they can both believe that their lives will be more than being hunted to death by a group of psychopaths. You build your world one step at a time in The Walking Dead. You choose what to believe and who to believe in and you put your faith in them, hoping they’ll put their faith in you.
“We need the bullet.”
This is the moment Rick breaks. It’s visible in the final scene but this is the moment where it starts. The brutalist pragmatism of the prison years bubbles back to the surface as he realises they’re outnumbered, outgunned and outwitted. It’s not even that he’s done anything wrong. He did the only thing he could, investing the blood of the Saviours and the innocence of his people in the future of Alexandria.
And it’s failed. And now someone’s going to die. Which means they’re going to need every bullet they have.
So much of this episode’s double running time is a slowly closing vice. The repeated roadblocks, the moments of desparate hope as the Alexandrians relax a little only to have it snatched away. They’ve made the only choice they could and picked a fight with a vastly superior force who have them surrounded. The roadblocks are about them realising that. This moment is about them accepting it.
“I told you not to come.” “And I’m gonna start listening to you real soon.”
That’s why the Morgan/Carol stuff has to be in this episode, much as we’ve seen people complain about it killing the pace. Their discovery of The Kingdom, Morgan’s willingness to sacrifice his ideals for Carol’s life and the complex ethical knot they’re tied in has to be there as a counterpart to the RV ride to Hell. Rick’s right: there is going to be more. But accepting that means he has to accept that what’s next is just as likely to be forged by other people as it is by him. There is hope, but there’s none for him. At least not this time.
“…Sucks don’t it? The moment you realise you don’t know SHIT”
Because this is Negan’s world and Alexandria is sitting in the middle of it. Negan’s presence has been trailed for the entire season and when he does arrive, all eyes are drawn to him. That’s partially because he’s played by Jeffrey Dean Morgan who doesn’t know how to turn in bad work.
But it’s also because he’s in control. He’s got there by being what Rick tries to be; ruthless, brutal when needed and absolutely dedicated to his survival. The difference between them is Negan has crossed lines Rick won’t. Or didn’t until he made the deal with Hilltop.
That’s the cruellest thing in an episode full of cruelty. There was no other choice. This was always where they were going. That’s what brings Rick to his knees, that’s why Negan is so at peace and that’s why this season is both the most hopeful, and bleakest, the show has turned in to date.
Because the New World is here and in order to save it, Rick and his people will have to sacrifice their ability to live inside it. At least, those who survive will.
This is a measured, calm, bleak conclusion to a remarkable season of TV. It makes a couple of serious missteps as we’ll see below, but the show’s transition into a much larger scale, higher stakes story is all but complete. It’s rarely been better than this and has never been more interesting. Bring on season seven.
The Good:
Morgan’s smile when Carol complains about him saving her life is positively beatific.
“Enemy close.” Abe defaulting to military terminology under stress is a really subtle, clever bit of characterisation.
“You think you’ve suffered enough now?”
“No… probably not.” One of those perfect lines this show is so good at.
“She needs help.”
“Then let’s get you some help.” This too. It’s a tiny line but it says so much about The Kingdom in one sentence. They’re not Hilltop. They’re not Alexandria. They’re here to help.
“We’re lucky you’re here.”
“I won’t argue with that.” Never change, Eugene.
Eugene’s hero moment as he drives off is lovely, especially as it’s cut so short. That half smile, half terror reminds me of the last time we see Eli in Stargate: Universe and that’s high praise.
Some wonderful Walkers this week. The peeling one that almost kills Carol is fun but the impaled one that threatens Carl just takes it for horrific ambulatory corpse of the week.
The whistle that permeates the episode is one of the smartest directorial touches we’ve seen the show do. Not only does it suggest Negan’s presence everywhere but the final scene with the Saviours all whistling provides an answer to the, “We are ALL Negan” moment from a few episodes ago. The Saviours are all singing from his hymn sheet, or in this case whistling and in doing so sacrificing their identity for the protection of a large group.
Negan making his grand entrance from the RV that’s been on the show longer than a lot of the principle characters is a beautiful touch.
“Give me your shit, or I will kill you.” Negan’s charming, chatty and completely focused. This brutal philosophy is the only mission statement and justification he needs.
“I’m not growin’ a garden.” And that’s why he’s the bad guy. This entire season has been about trying to get Alexandria self-sufficient. Negan just takes other people’s stuff.
“Do NOT make me kill the little future serial killer. Don’t make it easy on me.” He’s also, although he wouldn’t admit it, having some fun.
Negan – Jeffrey Dean Morgan’s relaxed, charming take on the biggest monster in the comics is exactly how great we hoped he would be and then, somehow, better. The show finally has not just a genuinely threatening villain again but one with more presence than any of its leads.
The complete lack of fuss over the war party going out with Maggie. This is what the show excels at; people who stand by one another through love and necessity, getting on with the business of survival.
Eugene and Abraham hugging. Oh, you guys.
The gradually ratcheting sense of doom. This was a slow burn episode and that’s turned a lot of people off. We liked the dawning realisation the characters had of just how much trouble they were in.
The Walkers chained across the road, and the gradual realisation they were wearing items of the missing characters’ clothing. Chilling.
Rick. Andrew Lincoln does some brilliant, functionally invisible acting this episode. Compare Rick’s, “I’ve got a plan” bravado at the start to how he is at the end; pale, sweaty, terrified, powerless. This is Rick’s darkest hour and Lincoln makes us see that. The phrase “nothing will ever be the same” gets bandied around a lot but for Rick, now, that’s never been true.
The Bad:
The ending – because there isn’t one. Josh Friedman, one of the best showrunners and screenwriters in the business summed up the problem with it perfectly overnight, with mild profanity censorship on our part: “I get that TWD has earned the right to do whatever the f**k they want, I just wish they wouldn’t.” His Twitter stream is essential if you’re a writer and can be found here. He also has a point. This is cheap. This is a carnival barker routine on the same level as “Mr Worf… FIRE.” And we can only hope the payoff is so much better than that one turned out to be.
It’s also, and this is the worrying thing, a short-term solution and one the show has now done twice in one season. We know someone’s dead. We won’t know who for months and that’s being used as a hook to drag people back and get them talking until the show starts again.
Which we are.
But the thing about this kind of spectacle is that it can only be done three or four times. The Glenn bait and switch earlier this season worked really well, but was already showing the strain when it was resolved. This works, just, because of the sheer magnetism of Jeffrey Dean Morgan and the way the scene is shot.
But what happens next time?
And the time after that?
How do you row back from this? CAN you?
The Carol and Morgan plot is less a plot and more a trailer for season seven. It’s not a bad thing, and we love that the pair of them are clearly going to be working together a lot next year. We even love the way this plays out. It’s not that it’s bad, but it is a little clunky.
Whereas the Abe and Sasha conversation about having kids is very, very clunky indeed. Again the emotional progression is spot on but it puts a big old target on Abe’s forehead. We bet he’s worked out a cure for the virus, how to solve the Greenhouse Effect and who shot Kennedy too. And he’ll tell us all right after they’ve got Maggie to the Doctor…
No Jesus! AGAIN! WHAT THE HELL?!
The Random:
The Kingdom, where the hockey armour-wearing horsemen hail from, is the third corner of the Alexandria and Hilltop triangle. They’re a major force and a clear sign the show is following the comic into some brilliant stories about reconstructing the world instead of simply surviving it.
Yes, GTA V fans that is Steven Ogg, aka Trevor as the Saviour Rick verbally spars with.
Jeffrey Dean Morgan, who makes such a splash here as Negan, is the character actor’s character actor. He was fantastic as the deeply flawed John Winchester on Supernatural and has had memorable turns on Grey’s Anatomy, The Good Wife and Extant. He can be seen in cinemas right now as Thomas Wayne in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. Intriguingly, Martha Wayne is played by Lauren Cohan, Maggie on The Walking Dead…
Shot of the week is that long pull back from the group making a run for it, directly into the middle of the Saviours.
The Dead Pool – The “Who’s Carked It?” Odds:
Rick: A MASSIVE, series changing curveball but, amazingly, there’s circumstantial evidence that it could be him. Andrew Lincoln’s talked about how traumatic the finale was film, to the extent it kept him up the night before. Plus Rick is BROKEN in that final scene. He’s shutting down, unable to understand just how badly this has gone. He looks like a victim. And Negan loves victims. So, not likely at all but holy WOW if they went for this; it would get the show a ton of attention heading into year seven. Which, interestingly, is normally when contracts are up for renewal…
Carl: Almost as massive a curveball. A season ago we’d have said this was unlikely. After Sam being murdered on screen this pretty definitively is not off the table. It’s just not that on the table either. Especially as Chandler Riggs is one of two castmembers to publicly say he has no idea who died.
Daryl: If Daryl dies we riot. And we might need to break out the pitchforks and flaming torches. We don’t THINK he’s the victim. We also REALLY HOPE he isn’t the victim. But, Norman Reedus is booking more and more off-season projects. That being said, Daryl is both injured now and exactly the sort of person Negan likes having on team later. So we think he’s okay. Please be okay, Daryl.
Michonne: One of the very few characters on this list who is all but bullet (or bat) proof. If Daryl is the most iconic character of the TV show, Michonne is the most iconic character of the comics. She’s got a huge amount of story still to tell too and the fact she’s the star of a new Walking Dead computer game suggests she’s going to be okay. Please be okay, Michonne.
Rosita: Rosita dying would neatly detonate a drama bomb under Sasha and Abe’s relationship. Unfortunately that would be about it. She’s been horribly underused this season and that invisibility may well keep her safe. And hopefully lead to more work next year.
Abraham: The MCM Buzz office favourite. Abe’s story is largely done. In fact, we’ve already kind of seen his death scene. When Doc is murdered with the crossbow bolt? That’s how Abe originally checks out. There are a couple of other compelling reasons for it to be Abe too. The conversation about kids he has with Sasha is sweet but triggers a big red warning light on the IMMINENT HORRIBLE DEATH Warning system. Likewise the moment he reconciles with Eugene which could be read as a goodbye scene for either man. Plus he stands up to Negan, which makes him more noticeable and a more “fun” prospect to beat down. Also Michael Cudlitz Tweeted, then deleted, the phrase “I had a blast working with you” at Josh McDermitt who plays Eugene.
Throw in the angst his death would cause for both Rosita and Sasha and we think the big guy’s toast. If so, happy trails sir.
Glenn: The other odds-on favourite because this is the exact way Glenn checks out in the comics. There’s a ton of circumstantial evidence too including reports Stephen Yuen’s contract runs out this year and some fan analysis of that closing set of screams. Some people are saying they can hear Maggie screaming Glenn’s name. Others have apparently picked out Glenn gurgling, “Maggie?”, his last word in the comics. But then again… His apparent death earlier in the season is a knot the show really needs to untie and there’s no good way to do it. If Glenn is dead here then that will feel like a cop out. If he lives, it’ll feel like even more of a copout. There’s no win here and that’s why Abe JUST edges Glenn on the pool, it makes more sense for it to be someone else. This time.
Maggie: The shock value of beating a pregnant woman to death is the exact sort of thing the show would run headlong at. However, we’re pretty sure Maggie’s okay. She has a huge amount of plot spinning out of this scene and that, coupled with how sickly she is, we think puts her over the top. Remember, Negan isn’t looking for easy meat, he’s looking for a victim who matters. Someone with status and authority. The fact they’re both hurt seems to the one thing that will save Daryl and Maggie. Please be okay, Daryl and Maggie.
Sasha: Much like Rosita, there’s an interesting, small amount of drama to be mined from Sasha’s death. Like Rosita, we don’t think that’s enough for her to be the victim.
Eugene: The case for him being the victim is surprisingly strong. There’s that Tweet from Cudlitz, the fact that Eugene hands Rick the bullet recipe and even more compelling, that he and Abe make their peace. Eugene’s a survivor, he’s made it to level two and being cut down here is exactly the sort of cruelty the show loves. But.
Eugene is also an easy choice, not to mention one that closes off a lot of future plot. We don’t think he’s fully safe, but we do think we’ll be seeing him next season.
Aaron: Like Sasha and Rosita there’s not been enough done with him this year for it be him. Plus there’s a ton of really fun stuff still to mine for Aaron in the plots the show is now barrelling towards. And, let’s not forget, Ross Marquand is a vocal chameleon who’s going to close this review out with some desperately needed light relief.
Coming Next Week…
So, that was season six of The Archers In Hell. Thanks for sticking with us. We’ll be back shortly with the first episode of season two of Fear The Walking Dead. Cliff Curtis! Colman Domingo! Kim Dickens! Hopefully a massively decreased amount of black characters dying! See you then!
Airing in the UK on FOX, Mondays, 9pm Writer: Scott M Gimple, Channing Powell Director: Michael E Strazemis
Essential Plot Points:
We see a car. We see blood. We see Carol’s rosary. We hear a scream. We go to opening credits.
The day before Carol leaves, Alexandria is quiet. She sews, quietly packs a backpack and carefully doesn’t tell Tobin what she’s planning when he comes home. That night, she sneaks out and takes one of the new cars they put on the barricade.
We see Alexandria wake up. Glenn and Maggie shower, Glenn examining the bruises Maggie’s carrying from her recent ordeal. Daryl squares his bike away. Rick and Michonne wake up and get ready for work. At the gate, Rosita, Abe and Sasha carefully keep their distance.
Then it all goes to Hell.
Daryl heads out to find and kill Dwight for murdering Denise. Rosita, Glenn and Michonne go after him. Tobin reports to Rick that Carol’s left and Rick and Morgan head out after her.
And outside, we see Carol driving away. She passes a pickup truck that shoots her tyres out. A stand-off ensues, with, again the Saviours mistaking Carol’s terror at what she has to do with terror at their presence. She kills them all aside from two, one of whom rushes her and possibly injures her. The other, hurt and knocked out, wakes up to find himself alone aside from his dying friend. He hides…
Back at Alexandria, Enid relieves Maggie from watch.
Out on the road, Rick and Morgan find the site of the battle. They kill the Walkers who’ve already turned and interpret the scene. Working out where Carol went, they set off after her across the fields.
The men Carol killed were carrying weapons made by the Hilltop blacksmith. The Saviours, again. Rick slowly realises the force he’s picked a fight with are much, much bigger than he thought.
After they leave, the last Saviour standing comes out of hiding and takes Carol’s rosary…
Back at the site where Denise died, Rosita, Glenn and Michonne find Daryl’s bike. They also find Daryl who admits that when Dwight captured him, he had the opportunity to kill him and didn’t.
Glenn passionately argues that he come home and almost sways him. In the end, he can’t and Daryl heads off. Rosita goes with him and, dejected, Michonne and Glenn head home.
They’re captured almost immediately.
Back with Rick and Morgan, the two men finally come clean with one another. Morgan uses the events at the prison to explain how Carol’s changed. The woman who murdered two victims of the sickness isn’t the same woman they’re looking for. People can come back and Rick, a man who lives by moral absolutes, is having real trouble with that.
“People can come back, Rick.”
They have a shouted conversation with a man hiding in a nearby farming house looking for his horse. As he makes a run for it from an oncoming Walker herd Rick fires at him but Morgan knocks his aim away. Rick also saves Morgan from one of the Walkers and, again, the debate kicks off. Morgan comes clean about the Wolf he rescued who, in turn, saved Denise who was in turn there to save Carl.
Rick is stunned by this news and Morgan gently, but firmly, sends him back to Alexandria. He vows to return with Carol but makes Rick promise not to look for him if he doesn’t.
Back at Alexandria, Rick and Abe talk about the terror of connecting with people again. Both men admit they’re frightened. Both men refuse to back down. Both men wait at the gate for Michonne and the others to come home.
Maggie calls Enid to her house to ask a favour. Her hair’s been getting in the way and she wants it cut. She’s pleased with the new look but suddenly doubles over in agony…
Out in the woods, Glenn and Michonne are tied up and under guard. Daryl and Michonne sneak up to them but they frantically try and warn them off. Before they can, Dwight ambushes them. Daryl turns to attack him and Dwight shoots him point blank in the shoulder.
Review:
“The world’s ours and we know how to take it.”
The Alexandrians were safe for the first time. It’s this episode where the sheer audacity of what they’ve been doing really strikes home. The town is barely put back together after the herd and the Wolf attacks and Rick has already jumped head first into war with an unknown quantity of foes.
There’s a lot to be said about him there, in particular that he’s actually pretty justified. Alexandria can’t sustain itself independently, neither can the Hilltop. So this awful blood-soaked compromise isn’t even the best answer: it’s the only one on the table. This isn’t post-apocalyptic fiction any more it’s post-post-apocalyptic. The New World is here and it’s being built on the backs of people brave enough, or desperate enough, to sacrifice their morality for the greater good. “She left because she can’t anymore. That’s what her letter said.” “She could because she had to.”
And that’s embodied here in the long overdue talk between our two favourite pragmatists. Rick and Morgan finally get a good chunk of screen time together and it’s as impressive as hoped. Rick is back in old habits; the cop turned soldier forced to make any sacrifice for his people. Morgan is questioning everything he’s been told, little realising that his example was one of the principle reasons why Carol left. The two men are brave enough to admit they might be wrong and braver still to keep going. This is the only road they have open to them and both are prepared to face the consequences for travelling down it.
“It’s gonna go WRONG out here.”
Glenn couldn’t be more correct. That’s where the real horror of the episode comes in as the vast majority of the principal cast leave Alexandria on a wide variety of foolhardy but essential missions. The attack on the Saviours has had the biggest ripple effect of anything on the show to date and this episode shows us Carol, Daryl, Rosita, Michonne, Glenn, Maggie and all the others caught up in in different ways.
They make horrible mistakes here. Those mistakes are the only things they can do. Not all of them will live to see the consequences play out. They do it anyway. Tragic and heroic and flawed and most of all human. “Everything gets a return.”
This is a grim episode heading towards a grimmer one but even here there’s hope. Morgan’s revelation is both the thing Rick needs to get some distance and, perhaps, the last thing Morgan needs to do. The two men certainly make their peace when they separate but whether or not we see Morgan again is open to debate. Like so many of the characters he’s heading off to do something almost impossible that may end him. Like all of them, he’s not hesitating for a momenyt.
But that line in particular has a dark underside to it. Dwight returns. The Saviour Carol doesn’t kill returns. The consequences of their attack return. No one and nothing in this world gets off easy and now, at last, the characters are going to meet the embodiment of that. Next week, Negan takes the spotlight. And the war truly begins.
The Good:
Mad Max hatchback! Carol’s car was great. (It actually reminded me of cult ’70 Australian movie The Cars That Ate Paris – ed.)
“Michonne did steal that protein bar.” All the Rick and Morgan stuff this episode is great but this is the standout. These two men have finally cleared the air. I’d love for their relationship to evolve next season but if, as seems possible, this is the last time they see each other it’s a hell of a sign off.
Morgan hasn’t read the script. We’ve talked about this elsewhere before but it’s hugely important to praise every time it comes up. Any TV show brave enough to have its characters make valid, but wrong, calls based on evidence is always a cut above its competitors. The fact Morgan is convinced Carol is hurt due to the blood on the stake is subtle, clever writing. It becomes even more impressive when you realise she might actually be hurt too.
The ongoing conflict between Carol who wants to live and Carol who knows how to kill is brilliant TV. That entire opening sequence, especially the aftermath of the fight, is untidy, brutal and tragic. There’s no romance to these deaths, no redemptive action, just people trying very hard to not die and in most cases failing.
Morgan on a horse next week! Maybe!
That ending! Dwight has gone from being a weird, creepy dude to the Anti-Daryl and he’s suddenly both a very credible threat and clearly a bad guy in the way the comics version wasn’t quite. Also, while Daryl will be okay, that’s not a good place to be shot. I mean nowhere is, but he was turning as Dwight fired. That bullet is either lodged somewhere in the complex meat and bone of his shoulder or has punched through the front of his chest. Neither is going to be fun to deal with.
The Bad:
So many people leave and wander around the wilderness putting themselves in danger that it almost feels like there should be a queue at the gate. It’s not that any of them are being dumb either, but the sudden exodus of three quarters of the main cast feels a little forced this close to the season finale.
That ending! The COPOUT! It’s almost impossible not to hear Dwight’s dubbed-in, “You’ll be alright,” as a sop to viewers after the great Glenn non-death from earlier this season. It’s understandable but man is it clunky, and that’s something this show has not been at all this season. He may as well as say “He’ll be fine so you can be worried about him next week, see you then viewers!”
No Jesus! Again! Again with the booing!
The PT Barnum:
Not so much a criticism more an observation. The Walking Dead is trying out new ways to engage its audience and a lot of them are based on twists and showmanship. We saw that specifically with Glenn’s “death” earlier this season and the fallout was as bad as it was good.
That’s continued here with the way the episode ends, which, as you see, is definitely a Bad thing.
However it also ties into the rumoured ending of next week’s episode which we can’t talk about yet. If what we’ve heard pans out, then this is a show fully prepared to torture its audience almost as much as its characters. If it doesn’t, then we’ll tell you what we heard and compare it to what we see. Or perhaps don’t see… Regardless, the show’s to be commended for trying new stuff but it’ll be interesting to see how much of it is successful.
The Random:
The song playing in the early scenes is, appropriately, “It’s All Over” by Johnny Cash.
Pretty much the entire central cast is in jeopardy next week from what we see here and what’s rumoured. So, instead of baseless speculation on who dies, we’re going to speculate on who lives.
• Eugene! The redneck genius has hit level two and he’s in Alexandria. We think he’s good to go.
• Everyone else, though, is on their way to meet Lucille…
The new trailer for Fear The Walking Dead also serves as a teaser trailer for the season finale of The Walking Dead, though don’t expect it to give away much about the events in the latter. Since here in the UK the shows are on separate channels there’s slim chance of seeing anything like this UK TV screens.
Fear The Walking Dead season two premieres on 11 April on AMC exclusive to BT.
BUZZ’s reviewer for The Walking Dead is calling this season possibly the best yet (see his review of this week’s episode here). Will next week’s episode continue the strong run? Here’s our first chance to get an idea with the trailer for episode 6.14, “Twice As Far”. Looks like Carol is still having some issues…
The Walking Dead airs in the UK on FOX, Mondays at 9pm.
Airing in the UK on: FOX, Mondays, 9pm Writer: Angela Kang Director: Billy Gierhart
Essential Plot Points:
We flashback to the confrontation between Maggie and Carol last week. Carol draws her gun and fires, injuring a man holding a gun on Maggie. They’re jumped by Paula, Donny, Michelle and Molly who hold them hostage.
We see the other side of last week’s closing scene with Paula negotiating for her fellow Saviour, Primo’s, release in return for Maggie and Carol. The pair have their heads covered and are driven to an unknown location. As they go, Carol overhears Paula talking to someone on the radio. They have back-up, staged fall back points, code words and military experience. The Saviours are far bigger than they’ve been led to believe.
They arrive at a not-especially-secure safe house and are tied up. Immediately they’re interrogated and Paula makes it clear the pair of women are going to die, soon. Carol begins to hyperventilate, panicking and gasping for air until her gag is removed. She begs them to leave Maggie, who’s pregnant alone and their captors mock her for getting pregnant “at a time like this”. They also reveal that every Saviour is Negan, implying that he’s a boogeyman used to terrify people into subservience rather than an individual.
The pair are left alone and immediately try to escape. Their captors are panicky and overtaxed, Molly dying of lung cancer, Donny bleeding badly from the wound in his arm and only Paula holding it together. Things come to a head and Donny tries to kill Carol, believing she’s mortally wounded him. The two women hold their own against him, even though they’re tied up and Donny is eventually knocked out by Paula.
Rick and Paula negotiate, badly, while fellow Saviour Michelle talks to Maggie. What becomes apparent is just how alike the groups are. Michelle loved her dad like Maggie loved Hershel and the pair bond over their shared brutal practicality. Meanwhile, Paula reveals to Carol that she was a quiet, put-upon woman who worked in DC. She was trapped with her boss when the officials were evacuated and, realising he’d slow her down, killed him. She was, in many ways, Carol.
Carol tearfully tells them that the Saviours attacked her people first and explains about what happened to Sasha, Daryl and Abe. Paula and Molly concede that the man Daryl killed was almost certainly overreacting. Finally, Paula hears from her back-up and makes the call to Rick, arranging a handover. She figures out Rick and co are very close due to how good the radio signal is and prepares an ambush. Carol. Left alone, breaks free and retrieves Maggie.
They return to the cell, find Donny has died and is in the process of changing and form a plan. They tie him up and when Molly comes in, the newly turned Donny bites her. She kills him and Maggie beats her to death.
The pair escape and make it to the chained walkers Paula has used as security. She appears, holds Maggie hostage and Carol injures her. Carol tries to reason with her, all but begging Paula not to make Carol kill her. A walker breaks free, distracts Carol and she fires, injuring Paula. Maggie takes the walker down. Paula disappears and Maggie goes after her and finds Michelle. The two women fight, Michelle pulling a knife and swiping at Maggie. Maggie panics, convinced she’s been stabbed. Carol steps around the corner and shoots Michelle in the head.
They find Paula nearby. Badly injured she confronts Carol and asks what she was so afraid of. Carol replies, “I was afraid of this,” and Paula laughs and attacks her. The two women fight and Paula is impaled on a metal railing. She screams in agony as the walkers swarm and eat her. Paula’s back-up calls in and a visibly traumatised Carol impersonates her, ordering them to the Kill Floor nearby.
While they wait to spring their trap Carol admits to Maggie that she’s killed 20 people. Maggie tells her they’ve done what they have to do and the pair lure the Saviours into a locked room and burn them alive.
Carol is too traumatised to see the imminent threat of Walkers as they make their way out and Maggie defends them both. Glen and Maggie, and Daryl and Carol, are reunited. Rick demands to know if Negan was there. Primo, the Saviour they captured smiles and says he’s Negan.
Rick shoots him in the face, apologising as he does so. Nearby, Carol clutches her rosary so tight her hand bleeds.
Review:
“We are ALL Negan.”
Just about a season ago, Andrew Lincoln managed to deliver one of the most iconic – and clumsiest – lines of dialogue from the comic: “WE ARE THE WALKING DEAD!”
The line itself may be clunky but the point is a good one. It’s also one that, a season or so into Alexandria, is being proved wrong. The characters aren’t just surviving any more, they’re living.
But they’re also all Negan. Or all could be.
The show isn’t going to pull some blood-soaked version of Anonymous with Negan. We will get the monstrous individual and we’ll get some variation on the awful things he does. But this moment has real resonance for every character. It’s an admission of guilt for the Saviours; we’re all Negan, we’re all killers and it’s a reminder of guilt for the Alexandrians. Carol has killed 20 people now, every character has been complicit in the slaughter of unarmed men and women and they’re all, Saviour and Alexandrian, united in one cause:
Survival.
The difference, as this episode shows, is in what they leave behind in order to do it.
“I stopped counting when I hit double digits that’s right around the time i stopped feeling bad about it.”
Carol never stopped counting. In fact, it’s implied that settling down in Alexandria gave Carol the time to count for the first time. That realisation and the horror that comes with it brings us to arguably the most interesting Carol episode the show has done to date. We genuinely don’t know how much of the fearful act she’s putting on is an act.
Neither does Carol.
This is her long dark night of the soul, confronted both with the inevitability of violence and the consequences of what happens when she turns from it. She’s an endlessly ruthless, competent killer but she’s also the quiet, traumatised woman she was when we first met her. For the first time, the signal to noise ratio in her life is low enough for the two to meet and they do NOT get on.
That’s why this episode is so gripping. We see Carol at war not just with the people who’ve held them hostage but with herself. Look at the closing scenes, where she executes a woman without a second’s thought but then shuts down so badly that Maggie has to keep them both alive on the way out. There are two women here, two versions of Carol warring for control of her. Those two sides are going to have to find common ground and her final line this episode shows just how aware of that she is. It also suggests her next conversation with Morgan is going to be very interesting and probably far less violent.
“You were her, but not now right? Me too.”
Paula, and the brutal, cold bravado with which Alicia Witt plays her steals the show this week. Paula is the perfect embodiment of the Negan Ideal. Her origin story, which sounds much more interesting than a lot of what we got on Fear The Walking Dead’s first season, is delivered with a mix of self-deprecation and cold-eyed joy. It’s as though Joan from Mad Men got mad as Hell, took advantage of the apocalypse and went off to make a name for herself.
The fascinating thing about it that Paula is right, she and Carol are the same but they’re at different stages in their lives. She’s Carol when she led the rescue mission at Terminus, endless calm and planning and ruthlessness. Had she lived, it would have been brilliant to see if she’d find herself at the same spot Carol now does further down the line.
“Hey? You good?” “No.”
That’s why that final scene and the line Carol in particular delivers carries so much weight. The characters are survivors and soldiers but now they’re killers and family too. Maggie and Carol, faced with their own dark reflections, embraced those reflections to survive rather than live. They’ve been show just how thin the veneer of civilisation is and shown how many people have chosen to be the Walking Dead to survive. And the only thing that terrifies them more than how outnumbered they are is how easily they and their friends could fall into the same behaviour. Bleak, deeply philosophical and utterly character driven this is an hour of powerhouse performances, tense direction and fiercely, brutally well-written character drama anchored by the single best cast this season. Yet another bravura gear change, yet another brilliant episode, yet more evidence this show has never, ever been better than it is this year.
The Good:
“Oh. You’re one of THOSE.” In an episode full of subtle touches this, and the clear disgust at anyone who still has faith when the dead walk the Earth, is one of the best.
“Those things’ll kill you.”
“They already have.” Likewise this – everything you need to know in two lines.
“You’re NOT the good guys. You should know that.” No one is. It’s just a matter of perspective and blind luck.
“Are you going to kill me?”
“Hope not.” So much of this episode is perception. On the one hand this is a threat. On the other? Genuine sentiment.
“Are you okay?”
“I have to be.” This goes by so quietly you almost miss it. Carol choking her own emotions down to protect everyone around her. Again. Only this time she pays the price for it.
“I can’t anymore.” And this is Maggie at the end of the path she started two episodes ago. She can’t be in the front line anymore, she can’t get her hands dirty. Because she’s too good at it and because now she can’t risk the other life she’s guarding.
Excellent direction this week. I especially liked seeing the other side of the closing scene from last week and the POV of Carol with the sheet over her head.
Phenomenal scripting too. Angela Kang is becoming the powerhouse of the Walking Dead writer’s room and she clearly revels the chance to do such a locked-down episode.
HOLY CRAP the acting this week is amazing. This entire episode is basically an excuse to lock the camera off and watch four amazingly talented actresses work. Every single one brings their A-game too, with Melissa McBride getting the most to do and doing the most with it. You genuinely don’t know what’s fake and what’s genuine with Carol and the genius of the episode is that neither does she.
Likewise, Lauren Cohan’s Maggie goes from dead-eyed relentless killer to traumatised, delayed-panic-riddled mess in the space of the time it takes to open one door. Then there’s Jeananne Goossen’s Michelle and the horror and grief she buries beneath rage at all the people she’s lost, as well as Jill Jane Clements’ cheerfully fatalistic Molly.
But Alicia Witt’s Paula steals the show. She’s Carol and Rick, a good person in a bad way who has done everything they needed to survive. Paula is a simmering tower of rage in the episode, completely fine with surviving and glorying in the end of her old life. She’s a monster and a victim, a heroine and a villainess. She’s Carol with one extra bad day and is one of the most captivating guest stars this show has ever had.
Little touches that impress abound. The difference between Paula’s tight, controlled voice on the radio and the panic in her group is a nice touch. Likewise the offhand way they’re dealing with the walkers throughout the episode. This show really is about people now, with the walkers as window dressing. Also interesting that Paula refers to them as “cold bloods”.
The entire episode is built around the idea of the people holding Carol and Maggie being one bad day away from BEING Carol and Maggie. The endless circularity of that and the subtle echoes between the two groups are really smartly done. This is Carol and Maggie confronted by their own worst natures and its electric, tense, horrible viewing.
Some great world building this episode too. The coded exchanges on the radio between Paula and their support team tells you far more about the size of the Saviours than a speech ever could.
Not every character has read the entire script. We cannot stress how much of a relief this is because TV in particular is rife with characters acting like they’ve got knowledge of scenes they weren’t in. Carol knows the Saviours are taught to all say they’re Negan. Rick doesn’t. Rick’s justification for killing Primo is, for Rick, rock solid. For Carol it’s everything Paula and her team accused them of.
The Daryl/Carol hug. So adorable.
The Bad:
Carol’s turn feels a little sudden, although I trust the show to back fill context on it in future episodes.
It feels a little weird saying this a few weeks after Sam basically gets eaten on screen but the violence this episode was a bit much. Donny’s bloated, gooey arm was unpleasant but Paula’s insanely violent death either crossed the line or got very close. Carol and Maggie burning the Saviours to death set fire to that line and watched it scream as it died. That being said, given the episode was about Carol’s hyper awareness of her own violent tendencies, it’s understandable.
That’s three Saviours who are tropey Hispanic thugs in two weeks. On the one hand we also get three female Saviours and the hugely whiny Donny. On the other, that’s still a bad trend.
The Random:
A couple of veteran, and welcome, faces in this week’s supporting cast. Alicia Witt is best known for her role on ’90s sitcom Sybil. She’s also recently had a brilliantly nasty turn as Morgan Le Fay on The Librarians and had a memorable nine-episode turn on Friday Night Lights.
Meanwhile, Jeananne Goossen has done excellent work in The Following, Alcatraz, Suits and others including Debug, which starred Jason Momoa as an evil Artificial Intelligence and was directed by the splendid David Hewlett.
Shot of the week is Carol’s bleeding rosary. A little on the nose but as visual shorthand for her arc this episode goes, it’s pretty much perfect.
AMC has just released a massive bunch of new character portraits and episodic still for Fear The Walking Dead season two, and they certainly ram home that there’s going to be an sea-faring flavour to the series for the next set of episodes. What we really want to see now are some walkers in water wings.
“I think we’ll quickly realise that the ocean is no safer than land and that there’s a very different level of adversity and threat on the water,” says exec producer Dave Erickson in this interview. “It forces the characters to set their sights on a destination. But where will that be? North to Vancouver or south to Cabo? This is a boat that has a really incredible range and a full tank of gas so, feasibly, they could head out across the Pacific for 3,000 miles or more and make it to Hawaii. We could even end up doing zombies in paradise!”
Fear The Walking Dead season two premieres on 11 April on AMC exclusive to BT.
All portrait by Frank Ockenfels. Click on all images for larger versions.