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The Walking Dead 4.06 "Live Bait" Review: Cross My Heart

19 Nov 2013

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    This week’s episode of The Walking Dead, “Live Bait,” was written by Nichole Beattie and directed by Michael Uppendahl. Beattie wrote two episodes last season but this is the first episode for Uppendahl. Uppendahl’s credits, however, include Mad Men and American Horror Story, so the show was in good hands. Uppendahl did a great job creating atmospheric horror, such as the old age home, and character driven scenes. Beattie’s script is a finely crafted character journey.

     If you were waiting for that conversation between Rick (Andrew Lincoln) and Daryl (Norman Reedus), you were disappointed. If you were waiting to see what the Governor (David Morrissey) would do next... you were disappointed. But if you’ve been wondering where the Governor was all this time that Michonne (Danai Gurira) was looking for him and not able to find him, you did get at least the beginning of an answer. I think expectations may have prevented this episode from getting its due. If you are ever going to re-watch an episode, re-watch this one. Unlike the prison storyline, we pick up the Governor’s story exactly where it left off, with him slaughtering all of his own people in a fit of rage. However, that seems to have been the catalyst that he needed to jolt him out of his madness. The before voice over tells us he still deserves to be cut in two for what he did and that he’s a sick man.

    He’s not exactly sane when we first see him, however. We see him simply staring into the fire and fire is the theme of this episode - a chrysalis to transformation. Without his daughter or the town to look after, the Governor no longer has a purpose or an identity, and he retreats within himself. Seeing that he’s no longer capable of leading them or helping them, Caesar (Jose Pablo Cantillo) and Shumpert (Travis Love) simply take off on him during the night. The Governor has one final thing to do: burn down Woodbury. Morrissey commented after the show on The Talking Dead that the Governor burned down the town so no one else could live there, or at least not Rick and his followers. But I think he also wanted to make sure that Caesar and Shumpert couldn’t go back there either. It was also a way of letting go of his old life.

    The opening montage is beautifully crafted from the music to the voice over. We see him stop at a barn that is covered in messages for Brian Heriot, trying to guide help him from people who love him. They tell him not to go home – and this is the persona he adopts. The voice over as he wanders aimlessly is telling. It later becomes clear that he’s telling his story to Lily (Audrey Marie Anderson) and Tara (Alanna Masterson) and possibly Don (Danny Vinson). He tells them about Woodbury and how it was “safe and full of good people.” People who he was responsible for, many of whom he then gunned down in cold blood. He says the man in charge “just lost it” and that he “barely got out alive.” He clearly means this to refer to himself – he sees the Governor as a separate person; he is the man in charge of himself, and he recognizes that he lost control and barely managed to escape with either his sanity or his humanity.

    When he finally stumbles upon their apartment building, he’s on the verge of giving up, barely avoiding the walkers – or biters as he calls them. The only thing that motivates him to get up after he falls is the sight of Megan (Meyrick Murphy) in the window. He had such a connection with his own daughter it makes sense that he would reach out to her. Morrissey delivers another fantastic performance – something we’d come to expect last season. He shows us a man barely still alive. His answers are barely audible and barely above one syllable. He’s as deeply traumatized as Megan by what’s happened to him, and they end up healing each other and bringing each other back to life. The Governor is also able to help people again transforming him as the episode unfolds.

    I loved Morrissey’s eye roll when Tara goads him into helping put Don to bed. Don asks him if he has kids. The Governor – Brian – tells him no. Don tells him that’s what made him a real man as he protected and kept his girls safe – something the Governor was not able to do. His first step back towards finding himself is to go after the backgammon game for Megan when Don asks him to. He appeals to the fact that the Governor may not understand what it would mean to the little girl – and that’s exactly the right chord to touch with him. Morrissey is wonderful in the scene, registering the Governor’s pain at the conversation with just his eyes and elevated breathing. When her returns, he also tells Lily that Tara has to shoot the biters in the head. In many ways, he’s had to destroy his own brain, his own identity, or at least the man he had become as the head of Woodbury. He symbolically turns down his picture, taking himself out of the picture of his family, ashamed of what he became in their name. He refuses to take back his old gun – another tie to his former life.

    The two scenes in the episode that really stood out for me were the two between Morrissey and Murphy. Megan is fixated on Brian – as he now calls himself - as a replacement for her father and as a protector. She wants to make sure he’s ok after he goes for the oxygen at the old folks home. She asks what happened to his eye; she wants to know if he was born that way or something happened to him. The episode underscores that he wasn’t born this way as the Governor, but the walking dead came – and in his own way, he too became one of the walking dead – losing his humanity in the pursuit of trying to help someone he loved very much. At first he tells her he’s a pirate. She doesn’t believe him because the world she lives in doesn’t allow for such fantasies. We might have put a different spin on his explanation to Megan, saying that he lost his eye trying to kill Michonne, but this underscores that his motivation was always just saving his daughter. In the next scene, we see that Brian has shaved and cleaned himself up, and the music which is now classical, in contrast to the blues over the opening montage, sets a more tranquil tone.

    We also get a great bonding scene between Brian and Megan as he teaches her to play chess. She instinctively draws an eye patch on the king after he tells her she has to capture him to win. She has clearly captured his heart already. Tellingly, Brian also tells her that you can lose a lot of soldiers and still win the game. That is a nice parallel to the number of people he sacrificed to remain in charge.

    Ironically, after keeping his own daughter alive for so long, he is quick to jump in and bash Don’s skull in with an oxygen tank when he turns after dying of cancer and goes for Tara. As soon as Lily says she thinks Don had been dead awhile, you can see the look of panic on Brain’s face. He tries to remain calm and sympathetic even as he’s frantic to get the girls out of the room. I couldn’t understand what Lily was shouting – was she saying “He’s not dead” or “He’s not Dad”? The three girls are horrified and traumatized, not least of all because they didn’t realize until that moment that you turned when you died regardless of how you died. It’s a great moment when this time when Tara wants to fist bump, he doesn’t hesitate to bump her back. It was really interesting getting yet another different survival story. They’d survived to this point because they’d isolated themselves, living off the food in their father’s delivery truck – a plan some of us might have for the Zombie Apocalypse. But their food is running out when we meet them and it’s obvious they need a new plan.

    Brian tries to run away again to avoid having to be responsible for keeping anyone safe again. Lily tells him it’s too late – he’s already taken responsibility for them. I thought at first there might be a love triangle brewing, but Tara turns out to be conveniently gay. Both Masterson and Anderson do an excellent job in fleshing out their characters. Interestingly, Anderson started a storyline on Arrow last week too – she’ll be racking up the frequent flyer miles! Tara is all bluster and nervous energy. She is obviously scared but has been trying to protect her family. In many ways, Tara is still very naive. Lily is the quiet, but the imminently more competent one. She isn’t afraid of Brian, but she’s the one to take away his gun, ask him to get the oxygen, and ultimately to demand that he take them with him when he leaves. He’s clearly adopted them as his new family when he symbolically burns the picture of his old family – he’s let go of that part of his past. Lily quickly becomes his lover once they are on the road, displaying a hidden passion. It was great that we see her initiate the relationship and see him want to be sure it’s what she wants. Brian brings her back to life too, first by letting her be a nurse again and then by letting her be alive.

    It was a little on the nose when the truck breaks down and then Tara hurts her leg moments before they discover a pack of walkers. As they are walking down the road, Brian is symbolically carrying three times as many bags – his emotional and physical baggage has increased. There is the beautiful moment when we realize that Brian is not leaving without Megan even if it means he dies, and we see Megan realize it to, surrendering to letting him protect her. Having Brian fall into a zombie burning pit, exactly like the ones he used to use, felt a little like poetic justice – except for Megan. Once again, Brian commits severe violence to protect Megan. This time she isn’t nearly as freaked out at Brian’s actions. In a nice mirror back to the pinky swear for truth in the bathroom, Megan once again wants a serious, cross your heart promise that Brian will never let anything happen to her. And just at that moment Caesar’s head appears at the lip of the pit. Brian’s final cross my heart is a pledge to protect her from Caesar, what Caesar represents, and what he himself was as Caesar’s leader.

    What did you think of the episode? Were you disappointed that we didn’t go back to the prison? Are you satisfied with this tale of redemption for the Governor? Do you think he’ll be able to remain as Brian or will being back with Caesar force him back to his brutal ways? Let me know your thoughts in the comments below!

18 comments:

  1. It was my personal favourite episode of the season :)

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  2. I was so disappointed at first that we didn't get to see the conversation between Daryl and Rick over Carol that I didn't fully appreciate it the first time I watched it - but you can tell by the review that I adored this episode. Wow. Such amazing writing and Morrissey is just so, so good!

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  3. I didn't need to see Daryl and Rick, but I felt antsy after last week's hectic episode. This was so slow in comparison, I just felt anxious for something to happen. This may have been by design, a hint I picked up when Lily -- or Lilly as I see it is spelled in the comics-- brought up how boring it is to live in isolation during an apocalypse. So, we got to experience that feeling right along with them. With those ugly boring beige walls! Once they got on the road I felt better. As to your question whether he'll be able to keep his "Brian" sanity, I think David was saying that this guy has a Jekyll and Hyde problem, so the answer is no. He's going to go insane again. Perhaps, Megan will die and that will be the trigger?

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  4. I think you are probably right that he will go darkside again and it will be Megan's death that causes it - but the journey he goes through here will make it actually heartbreaking to see him lose everything again. He's really not so different from Rick.
    I think you hit the nail on the head about the pacing! And the zombie apocalypse would likely shift back and forth between excrutiatingly boring and terrifying.
    I stupidly relied on the IMdB spelling of "Lily" - I should have checked the comics - I'll be sure to revise to Lilly in the future! Thanks!

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  5. Honestly, it made me mad at Rick; you know the Governor can't take another loss like Penny, yet he embraced the loss implicit with Meghan like Rick never embraced the implicit loss that comes with Carol.

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  6. I double-checked that so I'd be sure I wasn't leading you astray. This may not be the same as the comic character, but on AMC's Walking Dead site the credits list the girls as Lilly Chambler, Tara Chambler, and Meghan Chambler.

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  7. Tara and Lilly's father's name was David I think or that's what I'm reading. I know they was casting someone as Don but all the websites I've read bills him as David (IMDB, Wikipedia, The Walking Dead Wiki)

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  8. I would have been disappointed at leaving our regulars behind (and I WANT me that Rick/Daryl confrontation!), if this episode had not been so all-fired good, as your review ably demonstrates by teasing out its subtleties (insofar as a show in which someone rips a zombie's face open with a human bone can be subtle).
    I actually quite liked the deliberate, slow pace of the episode. Much as I like this show, I sometimes feel (and it's the same with the comics) that the necessity of there being some sort of big zombie fight every episode (or issue--or, at any rate, every story arc) is a bit of a limitation. You can get a complex and effective horror result just from the omnipresent threat, wihtout the violent pyrotechnics. Admittedly, we did have some (I was kind of hoping he'd be in and out of the old folks' home without incident, actually; that woud have been a welcome change), and I agree that the combo broken down vehicle/leg-injured female/zombie horde attack was maybe one cliche too many in short succession, but these were relatively minor blips in a very character-strong episode.

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  9. When I checked IMdB yesterday it was Don. I see they have changed it to David. I'm disappointed that I spent several hours writing this review and the only things people seem to want to comment on are the names I misspelled due to IMdB's original listing.

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  10. I think if there had been no danger it might have made "Brian's" transformation less than it was. We saw him challenged by the fight/flight instinct without losing his humanity. We got to see what drove him to face it. But I agree, no violence could have really driven home how uneventful - yet still harrowing a zombie apocalypse could be.

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  11. No need to be disappointed because it's a great great review and I enjoyed reading it.

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  12. This was brilliant, absolutely brilliant even if it was a shock at first. And brave storytelling to give the entire episode over to The Governor's path to redemption story. It's also, by far the best episode of this season. The problem with The Walking Dead for a while (for me at least), has been its relentless march into misery and darkness. It had become monotonous in it's drudgery and relentless cycle of death, with no light or hope to add contrast. Its been like the show was wondering around in the dark waiting for everyone to die horribly. But I never once for a moment thought that the Governor of all people, would add that lightness and a sense of renewed humanity and renewed hope. We were all waiting for the big showdown, for the bad guy to wear his black hat and Rick to find his white one and have a good old fashioned showdown. That's not The Walking Dead though, everyone has blood on their hands and a conscience to bare. This new direction for 'Brian' hasn't redeemed him, I don't think it's possible to truly find redemption from being a mass murdering madman... or maybe it is in this new dystopia? If they put Rick and The Governor back on a collision course, its going to be one hell of a tricky path to to keep our established 'heroes' from not appearing like the bad guys, frankly Rick is constantly the biggest dick of them all, don't even get me started on his unjustifiable and cowardly exile of Carol. But when the Governor and the prison group meet again, its going to be some serious drama... I just hope the writing can cope without falling into the same old walker filled pit.

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  13. Oh no!! No one wanted that to happen, and I'm so sorry for my part in it. Do you think The Walking Dead fans might be, maybe just a little bit, obsessive? I mean, I can't stop myself from looking up trivia. Obviously we're so thankful for your wonderful review and for giving us a forum to express ourselves.

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  14. No worries! I'm always mad at myself when I get things like that wrong. I really need to check the comics when I research facts, but I'm used to relying on IMdB for almost every other show - it's usually the only place you can get the actors' names. I love that The Walking Dead fans are passionate about the show! I really don't mind being corrected - it's just that I was excited about the episode/review and it's actually gotten very little response - so I DO very much appreciate everyone who takes the time to leave a response. Maybe my reviews are too thorough?

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  15. Completely agree! I think this is the trickiest part of this series going on for a long time - the despair gets to be overwhelming. It's like any good horror show, it starts to get hard to top the last scare. I think it is very interesting to look at the characters as they are forced by circumstances to do things they would not ordinarily choose to do - slowly but surely they are turning from black and white to various shades of grey....

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  16. Your reviews are amazing and I look forward to them! As to the comics, it seems that they've changed the character of Lilly. The Lilly in the comics has a different last name and has a lover, whose name is Brian! As to our Lilly, I wonder if her relationship with the Governor will be long-lived. And I wondered if Tara was gay, but wasn't sure. Gosh, I love this show!

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  17. Hmmmm. I wonder how that will play out. I love how they toy with expectations based on the comics. I have the comics and I'm dying to read them, but I honestly just don't have time right now - I'm not reading anything that isn't for work :(
    I think Tara is sure she's gay - but that's got to be even harder in the zombie apocalypse...

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  18. This was an outstanding review of a very complex episode, Lisa. I personally feel that it was a near-brilliant move to backtrack and humanize the governor, the ideal way to show us that he is fundamentally no different from other key TWD characters (in particular Rick, Shane, Carl, Carol, Morgan, Hershel, and Tyreese). The zombie apocalypse was simply an extreme catalyst that brought out the "dark side" in each of these characters -- and that side, at one time or another over the course of the series, has overtaken each one to varying degrees.

    With this season -- easily the very best so far, in my opinion -- I feel that the writers are asking very pointedly "can anyone really ever come back?" -- and they are also asking us, as viewers, to decide whether each of these characters is worthy of sympathy and redemption. We are meant, I think, not to be totally put off by their actions, but to identify with them at a human level. Given the same circumstances, how would we cope? What would we abandon, and who would we become? I'll admit that Scott Gimpel & Co. certainly succeeded in making me feel sympathetic toward the Governor (who I strongly despised last season, not because he was evil but because he was drawn like a two-dimensional cartoon caricature). The fact that he's standing outside those gates in "prison time" could now mean literally anything at all, and I can't wait for the next episodes to unfold. That, in my opinion, is the hallmark of some pretty awesome storytelling.

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