I think it's funny that Carol is the reason wolf boy was able to escape. Oh the irony.
Indeed. We can blame and criticize Morgan all we want on the naivety of believing he could "being the Wolf back" consider how he acted and the time/resources Morgan had. (Even if we accept that the Wolf was redeemable like Morgan was, how long did it take to bring Morgan back from his "I have to clear!" brink to even the level of sanity he had when Eastman was bitten? Because it seemed to take from around the time Rick and Morgan met in King County in S3 until "present" when Morgan was on the trail of the group headed for Alexandria. So we're talking about a period of many months. Was Morgan really going to hold Meth-Mouth Wolf down there for several months in secret? And then that Rick and the others would just accept him as part of the Alexandria community?
Shut-up, Sam!
Some minor kudos to Carol for feigning a concussion in order to access the basement room.
Really would have expected Daryl and co. to arrive with the RPG in order to help. Actually, as expecting a bit more of a battle between everyone and the walkers; not everyone hiding in their holes talking.
For as much as a dink he can be, on several occasions Eugene has proven himself to be capable, smart and with a variety of skills; even if he can't quite kill walkers.
I was expecting a "major" death tonight; it's a trope of this genre and virtually with this series. I knew it wasn't going to be an A-Team member, but was figuring the B-Team, namely people whose arks have played out or who had enough recent focus for their death to serve a purpose.
Tara was an early choice given her general optimism and general willingness to take unnecessary risks in the name of taking a more moral stance. She just doesn't have the A-Team clout, and recent arc, that Glenn does to buy her longevity. Her recent encounters with Rick made her a likely choice.
Eugene was my next choice, again his ark has played out and he's not much use as a character beyond some humor and some awesome hair. His confrontation with Rosita also meant his death would have impacted her some and played a purpose.
Beyond them, I figured on seeing some red-shirt Alexandrians getting killed and I don't even think we got that. Though, I was thinking Carol was going to succumb to her injuries following the brief battle or get killed during the fight with Morgan. (Either by him getting pushed too far, or the Wolf seizing an opening.)
--- Hey, when Carol rushed to the bunker the camera made it point to focus on the bullets she dropped. Did we ever get a pay-off to that? I was expecting those bullets to play some role later. Especially as the Wolf left, the gun turning out to be unloaded because Carol (or whoever) never got a chance to reloaded it the rush to recover the dropped shells and get into the shelter.
Would not have expected Madam Governor to be the one to get killed; but I suspect that's more in line with the comics though I'm not too brushed-up on this "era" in the comics beyond some key details here and there.
--- Hey, what happened to the other survivors who were with Michonne and Glenn? One of them the dreadlocks kids who, IIRC, was supposed to be a new character? Did they make it back and we just haven't seen them again yet? I'm pretty sure the dreadlocks kid survived to get out of there with everyone else. Didn't he make it out with Michonne, shouldn't we have seen him back in Alexandria once they made it back.
Wish we had something between Maggie and Glenn seeing each other at the same time over the distance and having something of a reunion there.
About time the "Walker Camo" thing came into use again. I was just wondering about it right when Rick suggested it. They need to come up with some in-show reason to not use it more often. Something like it carrying some risk of contamination that makes you succumb to the infection so it's not something you want to resort to that often. Another option would have been to use the notion of Michonne's familiars/pets.
Sort-of an eye-roll with presumably turned Madam Governor feeding on Judith in her crib. Not nearly enough time had passed for her to die from the "illness" and turn. (Even allowing for the rare instance of a minutes-long turn time.) The infection you die from is supposed to take the better part of a day to kill you. Hell, Jim almost lasted two days.
As for the sneak-peak during ITB (What's that even about? The few minutes of it tonight was the most I've seen) as soon as I saw the guys on the bikes I knew it was the Saviors and squeed silently to myself when Negan was mentioned.
It's hard to not want to compare finales to other show's finales. Naturally, finales like "Who Shot J.R.?" and "Mr. Worf... fire!" stand out for their cliffhangerness. The Walking Dead dances a little on how well they do finales, the best one -for me- being putting down Walker Sophia as she emerges from the barn. Not a cliffhanger, sure, but an emotional punch to the characters and the audience -even if they were expecting it- and played out greatly as Rick is the only one to step-up and put Walker Sophia down.
Last year's fall finale being the somewhat "token"-played death of Beth which just didn't seem to come naturally from the story and seemed more like playing that one card in your CCG deck that you just have to burn at some point so might as well do it now. Not to mention how it was analyzed to be fairly impractical from a ballistics standpoint on how Beth got taken out by Dawn. This year's death seemed to work much better story-wise, seemed to come naturally and sets Rick up to take on the mantle as the leader of Alexandria fully and getting reminded from Madam Governor that all the Alexandrians are "his people" and that the man Rick is, is still a good and strong one.
Countdown until ThinkGeek or some other on-line retailer stars selling a blood-looking baby bjorn a'la what was used here to get Judith out of the house.