The Walking Dead--
"The Damned"
Pretty tense episode, with once-longtime Alexandrians going the redshirt way, most notably Eric (his prayer talk in the previous episode placed him in the "hope and you're dead" category the same as Hershel, T-Dog and Beth) Tobin and Francine.
Morgan saying "I don't die" is reminiscent of his ranting during his season 3 episode, as if he's back in "clear" mode of being on earth only to eliminate everything....which sort of turns out to be true, with Rick and Jesus' conflicting views only making him unsure in certain cases (Benjamin's killer).
The shaking guy's failure to fire / death was a "finally" moment to show that not everyone is some battle-hardened badass in that world. Morgan faking his death was a good move...only why any of the Saviors did not check to see if he was dead is a mystery.
The pants-wetting guy seemed like the set up he was, and I'm guessing Jesus letting him live will not go well
The doubt on Carol's face (about Ezekiel's "victory" speech) might be the unspoken message of the season.
The big takeaway is the schism in Rick's side in the form of Tara and Maggie's, with Jesus' non-killing policy. I guess this is the genesis of the camps coming to serious disagreements, even I the wake of Rick finding the baby...and Morales.
I guess this is how Rick is captured.
"The Damned"
Pretty tense episode, with once-longtime Alexandrians going the redshirt way, most notably Eric (his prayer talk in the previous episode placed him in the "hope and you're dead" category the same as Hershel, T-Dog and Beth) Tobin and Francine.
Morgan saying "I don't die" is reminiscent of his ranting during his season 3 episode, as if he's back in "clear" mode of being on earth only to eliminate everything....which sort of turns out to be true, with Rick and Jesus' conflicting views only making him unsure in certain cases (Benjamin's killer).
The shaking guy's failure to fire / death was a "finally" moment to show that not everyone is some battle-hardened badass in that world. Morgan faking his death was a good move...only why any of the Saviors did not check to see if he was dead is a mystery.
The pants-wetting guy seemed like the set up he was, and I'm guessing Jesus letting him live will not go well
The doubt on Carol's face (about Ezekiel's "victory" speech) might be the unspoken message of the season.
The big takeaway is the schism in Rick's side in the form of Tara and Maggie's, with Jesus' non-killing policy. I guess this is the genesis of the camps coming to serious disagreements, even I the wake of Rick finding the baby...and Morales.
I guess this is how Rick is captured.