I think calling this "Misery Porn" is a bit strong when we've had a number of fun, upbeat, episodes. (Remember the wacky hijinks with Rick, Daryl and the food truck?) But sometimes you have to inject misery and bleakness in order to have, you know, drama.
I'd be interested to know what the demographical divide is when it comes to split between how this episode was received. For me, it was an intense hour of TV that brought these characters, literally, to their knees. We've never seen them this low, this broken, and this defeated. Not when they lost the farm. Not when they lost the prison. Now when they had been on the road for several weeks with little food and water. The overcame the challenge and came out stronger, never letting the situation get them down.
But, here? Here we've seen them all defeated and broken. Rick had his head over a trough as men down the line cracked people on the head and then another man slit their throats and let them bleed out in preparation to use these people as food. Rick had no exit strategy here, yet his was stoic and confident he was going to win and get out of it. But the moment the Saviors ambushed him and The Group in the woods and he, in desperation, tried to talk out of it he's been in over his head. And now seeing one of the people he's closest to die and nearly being forced to Abraham his son Issac, he's the most defeated we've seen him since he entered his home at the beginning of all of this and couldn't find his wife and son.
I've seen plenty of posts and reviews on-line the last day with people thinking the show crossed lines and went too far with the visual brutality. I wonder, where the generational divide is there? It's easy to make fun of Millennials as being coddled and such but when we're talking about a generation of people who need "Safe Zones" on college campuses that edgy comedians won't speak at anymore because people are offended by harsh jokes it's hard to not wonder if Millennials aren't more disturbed by this because the show didn't coddle them, stroke their head, and tell them the apocalypse will be okay and all fun and bunnies.
With 005 above I can, sort-of, see his divide. His problems with it being just more for him the show "not being fun anymore" I guess makes sense. We already live in a fairly miserable world so watching more misery can be too much. But, I knowing somewhat where the show goes from here means that I know there's some hope down the road for our characters. Good drama means giving your characters obstacles and challenges to overcome. It's how a "story arc" is supposed to work. In movies we see this happen over the course of a couple hours, in episodic TV we see it happen inside of 45 minutes or so, in serialized TV we see it play out over a season or a franchise.
Having your characters on the top of the world able to overcome any challenge thrown at them isn't good drama. And that's where our characters were nearing the end of season 6. They took out, they thought, The Saviors at the cable station, they made their arrangements with The Hilltop, Glenn and Maggie were reunited and ready to start their family, Abraham had found the second win for continuing in this life and seeing, finally, things coming back to normal in his relationship with Sasha, where did these characters have any place to go but down?!
Were nearing the end of the First Act, folks. Our characters are at their lowest and defeated.
Life is sometimes brutal, it's even more brutal during an apocalypse. Watching Rick completely broken was powerful for me, watching Carl, stoicly, tell his dad to chop his arm off was powerful for me. (Carl, knowing Rick had no other choice.) JD Morgan was great as a villain and we truly saw how in a corner these characters are against a foe they apparently can't take on. Again, this is how drama works, our characters are supposed to be here for good story. In way over their heads.
Emotions stirred in this episode, but now I want to see how our characters overcome it.
If people are bothered by the violence, the emotions or whatever. Fine, I can get that to some degree. TV is meant for escapism and if that escapism isn't fun then, sure.
But to see complaints about the episode being too miserable, too graphic (when we've seen people's faces peeled off, babies ripped out of wombs, and pretty much every way to slaughter a dead-body imaginable) for me is a tad ridiculous. It's the apocalypse.
It's also interesting to see some other complaints out there about who Negan's second choice was. A FB friend said it was a racist choice which.... Okay.
Granted, racism against Asian people is, indeed, a thing and this show hardly has a good history with non-white characters but can you really claim racism played a factor in killing off a character who's been on the show as long as the main character, from the very beginning?
And you point out that killing Glenn followed the comics those people usually then pivot around by criticizing the show for only "now" following the comics.... Which... er.... You can't both be mad at the show for not following the comics and for following them at the same time. While the show has taken some diversions here and there it has more-or-less tracked with the comics, particularly so the last season or two.
Anyway, for me a good episode and I look forward to see our characters overcome.