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The Walking Dead - What Happened and What's Going On - Review and Discussion

10 Feb 2015

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The Walking Dead came back this week from a two-month winter hiatus with a reminder that if you’re in it for the happy ending, you’re watching the wrong show. After a punch in the gut with the death of Beth in the mid-season finale, the show barely took a pause to hit us again, this time with the death of another character who refused to compromise his character, even if the price was death.

In all fairness, the episode was set up from the very beginning to set expectations that this one was about death and loss. The opening scene, a close up of the digging of a grave, was continued at the end of the episode, after we’d learned that the grave was not for Beth, but for Tyreese. The opening grave scene is followed by a beautiful series of images and sounds, including Maggie and Noah sobbing, Father Gabriel delivering a eulogy, the sharp glare of the mid-day sun coming through dirty car windows, a skeleton lying in the woods, and an abandoned child’s drawing of a happy sun. Through this brief montage, we’re brought up to speed on the plot (Rick and a group are heading out to find Noah’s walled home) and our expectations are set that this is an episode about loss.

We then proceed to follow Rick, Tyreese, Noah, Michonne, and Glenn to the Virginia housing community where Noah last saw his mother and twin brothers. The refuge they hoped for had fallen though (there was no Noah’s ark to save them). Noah’s family were dead, and the group was left to debate what to do next. Michonne this time took the position herself on the side of hope – arguing that they needed to try to for Washington as it seemed to be their best chance for a more permanent refuge. Through their conversations, we see the emotional toll the deaths of Bob and Beth and the loss of Eugene’s Washington plan had taken on them. Glenn – who is usually more optimistic – was the first to assume that Noah’s community wouldn’t still be standing.

Meanwhile, while the group with Rick, Michonne, and Glenn debated what to do next, Tyreese took an emotional moment to look at pictures of the dead twins, and didn’t notice one of them sneaking up behind him until it was too late, and he was been bitten on the arm.

The Spiritual Side of Death

Probably the biggest character on The Walking Dead is death. It’s in every episode – if not in the form of the death of a character, then shown in the background: the walkers reaching out behind fences, strewn body pieces, or an odd scene telling a story of how some random person met his end. It’s more rare that the camera is turned directly at death itself, and that’s a big part of why I absolutely loved this episode.

An aspect that has felt lacking since the death of Hershel has been the spiritual side of the show. Hershel was religious and often connected what was happening in their world to the scriptures. While the addition of Father Gabriel would have seemed a natural fit to fill that void, up until this episode, and hearing his eulogy, we’ve been focused more on the human side of Gabriel and his weaknesses, rather than his religious side. In Gabriel’s defense, he was speaking to a very cynical audience who wasn’t receptive to hearing sermons. For example, Gabriel’s comment that they were in the House of God was met by a retort from Hershel’s daughter that it was only four walls and a roof.

On the one hand, I believe the show does well to not make religion too central to its story. On the other, the show can become very bleak with the absence of occasional references to a spiritual journey with the possibility of a somewhat positive end.

In a hallucinogenic state after being bitten by a walker and suffering blood loss, Tyreese’s mind manifests dead friends and adversaries to play different roles of a debate within his mind. Tyreese appears to be troubled by the belief that surviving means killing and compromising your ethics. He’s told by Terminus’s Martin, "You don’t want to be a part of it, but being part of it is being now." Tyreese is confronted by the Governor, who plays a devil figure, and reminds Tyreese that he made a deal with him. In exchange for refuge, Tyreese promised to do whatever it took, and "the bill has to be paid."

On the other side are Beth (playing the Jimmy Cliff song, “Struggling Man,”), Mika, Lizzie, and Bob, all telling him that it’s okay to move on, and that it’s "better now" (in death).

There’s a line Tyreese says at least a couple of times during the episode – that this is not the end, or that it’s not over. This message, combined with Gabriel’s eulogy about focusing on the unseen eternal, and the peaceful visions of Beth, Bob, Lizzie, and Mika, appear to hint at an afterlife. Tyreese’s comment, echoed later by Bob, “it went the way it had to, the way it was always going to,” suggests destiny.

Another theme woven in throughout the episode sprung from a lesson Tyreese had learned from his father – that listening to the news and keeping your eyes open to the horrors of world – is a person’s duty and “the high cost of living.” Through learning that Tyreese had this sense of duty, and this duty gave him the strength to continue on after his losses, we get a rare glimpse into his character. Although Tyreese was on the show for about two years, he has mostly played supporting roles up until week. This episode was a nice end to an underused character, whom we got to know better through death than through life.

Actor Chad Coleman (Tyreese) did a fantastic job in conveying the character’s struggles as he tried to come to terms with his choice whether to live or die.

In some ways, this episode reminded me of the season 3 episode, "Clear," which was also written by showrunner Scott Gimple. In that episode, Rick, Michonne and Carl went on a run for guns and happened upon Morgan, who was spouting nonsensical jibberish that had spiritual tones mixed in with the insanity.  Both of these episodes seem to hint at a longer-term spiritual storyline that transcends the daily struggle to just get by.

Finally, I want to draw attention to Executive Producer Greg Nicotero’s directing. The episode combined montages of haunting images, harsh lighting effects, mournful sounds such as a baby wailing, and a manipulation of time by seamlessly inserting flashbacks and slowing down events as the group fends off an attack by walkers to give this episode the sense of being not quite in this world. The addition of the radio newscast, sounding eerily familiar yet mirroring the events of their world – with descriptions of raids on villages, atrocities to women and children, and the burning of prisons – was the perfect touch to an already moving episode.

RIP Tyreese.

About the Author - Chris684
Chris684
Chris is a New Englander with a background in print and digital media, who currently earns a living by making web and technology products easier to use. She has a weakness for TV characters who are 'dark and twisty' (to quote Meredith Grey) and reviews The Walking Dead, Legends, Halt and Catch Fire, and Dig for SpoilerTV.
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12 comments:

  1. Apologies for the late review. This was a tough one. Very emotional.

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  2. Great review!


    Two words - fucking Noah!

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  3. I wonder when there going to Washington. Michone still had faith and then Rick agreed to go then sadly Tyrese got bit. Hope they go soon but it might not be next episode because I think that's the one where theres a huge storm

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  4. Great review, thank you. I re-watched the episode and liked it much better the 2nd time around. I think I have a problem watching it live. The commercials just seem overly long and it makes the hour drag for me. I enjoy the episodes much better when I watch them on the DVR. On my re-watch, I caught little cinematic moments that made the scenes much more bittersweet, even sad. That's what I watch for.

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  5. Thanks for the comment. There are a lot of details to this show that come out in a second or third watch, so I can relate.

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  6. I loved the episode. After season 4 and the first half of this season I was getting upset with Gimple. I mean they got rid of the last show runner because he wanted to do stand alone episode and then that is all we get from Gimple. But they way this episode was written is what I hope the rest of the season is like. Yes, we didn't see everybody but the story was moving forward. They didn't waste time showing them travel the 500 miles. They were there and then they are let down by what they find. Rick and Michonne are at odds of staying or going. I really loved the talking between the two of them and Glenn talking with Rick. They are showing us some development of characters and showing us just how tough it has been on the group. Michonne is tried of running but Rick points out the location is not a safe location. Loved how they had the characters there with Tyreese that he felt responsible for their deaths. And Martin and the Gov. are there to torment him. All around a good episode. Love how they are heading back towards the comics.

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  7. Thanks for the comments. I know this isn't what you meant, but I hope the rest of the season isn't about killing people off. ;)


    Personally, I'm with Michonne and think we need a break from "being out there." I would like to see a respite so that we could get a different kind of growth and introspection started - the way that dynamic started at the prison. I can't wait to find out what Gimple has planned, though.

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  8. It's not his fault.

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  9. Where did you hear that they got rid of the last showrunner because he wanted to do standalone episodes? I can guarantee you that isn't the reason they got rid of him.

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  10. I have come across it a few times. It is not the only reason they got rid of Mazzara as show runner but it was also said about him that he had a lack of material and production was halted a few times because of it. And that there was a difference of opinion one of which was making stand alone episodes. And then of course Kirkman needs to maintain control of the work and writing. Either way I'm like the start to the second half of season 5.

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  11. Yeah, didn't mean killing more people off. LoL But given were they are going we might see a few more. I read somewhere that by the end of the season the should be something like 24 cast members. Yikes! Speaking of growth yeah were they are going we should see that. And it will be fun to see if our group will adjust or not.

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  12. Not sure if anyone mentioned this but the person speaking on the radio newscasts was our very own Andrew Lincoln!! I always watch "The Talking Dead" after each new episode and they revealed that it was Andy doing the voice on the radio.

    My thoughts after this episode is that Michonne will become the groups new "common sense/spiritual" leader after we have lost Hershel and now Tyresse. She seems to have come to that place that she is starting to be able to feel more compassion and less of her old, violent self from before.

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