And if you listen closely, the walker on the rails was saying “Ah wuv u”.
That’s the way I heard it anyway.
And if you listen closely, the walker on the rails was saying “Ah wuv u”.
That’s the way I heard it anyway.
That zombie was Brother Love???
Hoping to see more of Rick, Michonne and Carl on the next episode. No more Daryl and Beth please.
I’ve been getting a Lenny vibe from Lizzie all along and felt she was heading toward a similar end. I was just hoping it would be her sister that would do it. Although, Lenny was a lot nicer and just hugged the rabbits too death.
A deer could have run past and led them away from the still smoldering fire. They do have rather short attention spans.
Yes, I would have done what Soylent Juicy said below.
So, I guess I’m fucked up, too.
I was hoping that right up to the confession.
That’s why they call it “crazy”.
And they did explain it. Lizzie simply didn’t “get” that the zombies weren’t people anymore. As far as she was concerned, they were just sick or “different”. If you were killed, it was just sort of temporary now, since you’ll come back as a walker (remember she felt sorry for shooting that woman in the head back at the prison). In her mind, everyone else was acting crazy by killing walkers for no reason.
The problem with this gloss is that she sometimes acted like walkers were dangerous monsters, and sometimes like they were pets or playmates. The practical reason is clear - if she had a consistent philosophy/delusion as you describe, she would have been zombie chow many times over, in situations where the show wanted her to survive. But that’s a pretty sad excuse for writing a character’s motivations in a totally inconsistent way (and in a way not reflective of actual mental illness, as far as I can tell), then cover all your sins with the excuse that she’s “crazy.”
How is that problematic? Sane people feel the same way about humans. Okay, maybe not pets, but the point stands. Also dogs.
Well this should be interesting. :dubious: TWD has been syndicated to MyNetworkTV & they’ll be editing to make it “family friendly” for broadcast network viewing.
So, five minute long episodes?
That actually would make it a dramatically better show.
Must leave room for more family oriented commercials.
Perhaps two and a half.
Wasn’t there supposed to be a spin-off series?
How so?
Hey, wait a second - this option looks familiar! Like something I posted a few weeks ago.
“Annoyed the ever-loving piss out of me with all their stupidity”
They were going to have a situation comedy involving a family of zombies, but the name Face Off was already being used by another show.
They mentioned that they’re thinking and maybe working on one, but nothing concrete.
Maybe they just need to flesh it out.
:rolleyes:
This smiley has it’s uses after all.
Likely the best episode of this season. I appreciate Gimple going all the way with Lizzie and Mika’s plot (instead of needlessly padding it into antoher episode). I still don’t buy Carol’s out-of-character murder of Karen (she was already quarantined from the rest of the group) , her lack of care about doing so, Tyreese’s instant forgiveness, and his complete willingness to have her travel with him afterwards. That’s just too big of a wall to get over in one conversation.
But otherwise, I must say this episode was pretty well written (by the show’s standards at least).
I understand Carol’s reasoning, but I don’t agree with it. They were quarantined, as you say. They would have recovered, in which case they were no danger; or they would have died, in which case they could have been dealt with then. But I understand her reasoning.
I don’t have a problem with Tyreese forgiving her. He’s a good egg. He did grab the gun, but the better angels of his nature stilled his hand. He loves Carol. Even though she killed Karen, killing Carol would take one more loved one from him and he would be alone. There’s still plenty of time for his emotions to work their way out, and for him to come to terms with his relationship with Carol.