That's what makes me think this Eugene arc is going nowhere, because he was introduced as a person who knows how it all began. They're never going to pinpoint the thing that closely. So, his current backstory is a red herring, & it will likely come out that he was just some sorry slob who knew he stood zero chance of surviving this thing without more competent survivors to protect him, and it sounds as though it hasn't always been lollipops & rosesIt's pretty much on record by the creators of the show that the word "zombie" will never be used in the show (along with us ever being told how society fell)
Though yes, I did find it somewhat glaring that Glenn didn't say "I spent a day at the CDC".
That said, Glenn has shown very little interest in Abraham and Eugene. He's been very single-minded on finding Maggie. I can actually picture him saying virtually nothing to the others on the journey back to Maggie. After all, conversations with them would just be an opportunity for them to try to talk him out of his wild Maggie chase.
And as for Maggie, she sure seems to care a lot more about Glenn than for Beth. Or is it a case of preparing for the worst with her sister, and Maggie just assuming that of the two, Glenn is stronger and more likely to survive, so she's placing her hope in Glenn instead of Beth? (Though with Glenn being sick with the prison flu, I'm not sure that would actually have been the proper assumption.)
From a writing/storytelling standpoint, if they intend to kill Beth off in the season finale (I have no clue, just a guess since she was kidnapped and it all seemed so nefarious and we're obviously supposed to be worried about her), you would think that they would want to maximize the emotional impact by having Maggie searching for Beth too in the final half of the season, not just Glenn.
So the question is, do these guys have a legitimate gripe against Rick when it comes down to it?
Yes, he killed one of their own. That doesn't make them good people.
It's a tribal thing. That's what life is like in the world now.
Imagine what it's like on Christmas Island or one of the Marshall Islands: "Diary, Day 700. Still no contact from the outside world. Fortunately no one has turned in the past 5 months, and while we all generally assume the worst has happened everywhere else, our hope lives on. We continue stocking up on fish and vegetables before the coming winter."
Is this set in an alternate universe with no zombie movies?
Have they used the word zombie ever?
It's pretty much on record by the creators of the show that the word "zombie" will never be used in the show (along with us ever being told how society fell) and that zombie movies never existed in TWD universe. Which makes sense when you think about it. If zombie movies existed in the TWD universe then people would immediately know how to deal with them rather than having to learn it.
Is this set in an alternate universe with no zombie movies?
Have they used the word zombie ever?
It's pretty much on record by the creators of the show that the word "zombie" will never be used in the show (along with us ever being told how society fell) and that zombie movies never existed in TWD universe. Which makes sense when you think about it. If zombie movies existed in the TWD universe then people would immediately know how to deal with them rather than having to learn it.
Like I said, it may be that Romero-zombie fiction exists in such a small niche in TWD that only uber-geeks have ever heard of it. Eugene, clearly being an uber-geek, could have run across it. If so, he'd think that qualified him to handle the disaster. Everything else we've seen would follow as mentioned in my post.
Whether he's correct is a totally different question.
"One of the things about this world is that people don't know how to shoot people in the head at first, and they're not familiar with zombies, per se," Kirkman said on "Talking Dead." "This isn't a world the (George) Romero movies exist, for instance … because we don't want to portray it that way, we felt like having them be saying 'zombie' all the time would harken back to all of the zombie films which we, in the real world, know about.
"So by calling them something different, we're kind of giving a nod to … these people don't understand the situation. They've never seen this in pop culture, this is a completely new thing for them."
Joe's an interesting nut to crack. There's a lot to be said for someone who can keep order amongst mercenaries, & that outdoor cat line revealed some powerful insight he has into people. I'm not saying he's a good person, but I'd trust him more than I'd ever trust the Governor.
He's like the other side of the bad guy coin, values honesty, a code of conduct. Don't get me wrong though. They're still a bunch of marauders. He's just savvy enough to be able to corral them. Heaven help the woman that comes across those guys
One thing to keep in mind is that these weren't just normal guys who chose a darker path to survive the ZA, they were already bad people. Len or Joe had some line this episode along the lines of "nasty pig cops planting evidence" or something like that, implying that they were bad guys long before the ZA came along. (Of course, so was Daryl apparently.)
I think as far as everyone is concerned with their missing/dead relatives or friends...they have compartmentalized their emotions. I think if Rick were to find out that Judith really was dead, he would lose it...maybe not to the extent he did with Lori, but he would still lose it. Same with Maggie and Beth. I don't think Maggie thinks Beth is dead, but she had to push that away, knowing that yes, Glenn was sick at the prison when she left, but he was alive, versus Beth whom she didn't know whether she was or not.
I also think that on the road, Rick and Carl dealt with their loss over Judith to an extent...everyone deals with grief differently, and since this world is completely different, we don't know when or how they will deal with it.
So, what do you say the going odds are that the special of the day on the Chez Terminus menu is or could soon be... barbequed Beth Greene?
So, what do you say the going odds are that the special of the day on the Chez Terminus menu is or could soon be... barbequed Beth Greene?
70/30 in favor of it, as much as I would hate that end for her character.
As mentioned in the WD/death thread, it would be too predictable/cheap shot to kill off the one person speaking of faith in the ZA world. She should be seen proving that she's more of a survivor than even she realized---but not to the point her values are completely compromised. All other characters are at varying stages of dark, and how appealing is that if it continues?
Beth dying would just mean the we can guess will just mean pouring on nihilistic behavior among the main cast, which is a producer's "do it just because we want to seem hard," not because it is necessary.
Maybe, but it isn't hitting home enough yet. Hershel had a way about him that made people immediately think about their inner goodness, & Beth sort of did that with Daryl recentlyIsn't Bob the new positive person?
So, what do you say the going odds are that the special of the day on the Chez Terminus menu is or could soon be... barbequed Beth Greene?
70/30 in favor of it, as much as I would hate that end for her character.
As mentioned in the WD/death thread, it would be too predictable/cheap shot to kill off the one person speaking of faith in the ZA world. She should be seen proving that she's more of a survivor than even she realized---but not to the point her values are completely compromised. All other characters are at varying stages of dark, and how appealing is that if it continues?
Beth dying would just mean the we can guess will just mean pouring on nihilistic behavior among the main cast, which is a producer's "do it just because we want to seem hard," not because it is necessary.
Is there the potential of a more positive character coming on? And/or an older person?
They kinda did that with Dale/Herschel.
Isn't Bob the new positive person?
Maybe, but it isn't hitting home enough yet. Hershel had a way about him that made people immediately think about their inner goodness, & Beth sort of did that with Daryl recentlyIsn't Bob the new positive person?
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