Yes.
I'm digging the slant.
We'll have characters meet up in the future between the two shows. It's inevitable.
Last episode was great
I will say the mega horde was pretty sweet. I like how casual Salazar was, like it was no big deal.
"Hey guys, nice night."
"You're not supposed to be here! Leave now or we'll shoot."
"You may wanna save your bullets...." Casually points back at the mega horde following him, keeps walking. Peace out, military!
My biggest gripe with the season was for a zombie show there wasn't really a lot of zombie action in the first season. We saw a lot of zed action in the first season of the other show. In this one most of the conflict and tension seems to be between the survivors and the military. For a small rabble of military at that base I would have expected a lot more walkers in the streets of LA, no way they would have cleared those streets.
I agree that they probably could have showed more of how the infection spread quickly. I would have liked to have seen a scene of the gymnasium they locked everyone into and how everything went to shit. We basically saw the riots and then just this little gated community.
Been watching the season 2 recast all day.
Any guesses to where they're going on the boat?
I'd head to Vancouver. Lot's of hot chicks. Some had to survive.
I like how Chris Hardwick opened Talking Dead acknowledging how "passionate" tWD fans were about the ending last week. Hopefully AMC realized they goofed a bit there.
How did they goof up?
I didn't personally have any issues with the end of the episode, although the episode itself was kind of boring and repetitious until that end. There was quite a backlash by many fans regarding the ending. There were already a number of drawn out cliffhangers this season, one of which was the Glenn dumpster story arc. They needlessly dragged that conclusion out for several episodes, some say for ratings and to retain viewers. People are saying the same tactic is being used regarding Negan's victim. The show writers are sticking by their ending, saying where they stopped the episode was the natural end to one story, and the identity of the victim is going to start a new one...but the fact that they've had to discuss it several times since the episode aired kind of points to there being a negative public outcry.
The fact Chris Hardwick made it a point to start Talking Dead referencing it, even with the show focusing on FtWD, confirms there's been a lot of discussion about the controversial ending. He spent over 30 minutes last week after Talking Dead trying to justify the ending to a lot of pissed off fans on Facebook. I didn't realize there was a difference, but people are calling the whole thing a "stunt" as oppose to a true cliffhanger. Again, all the above is just what I've read online from other boards and in news articles regarding the backlash. I was going to watch the show next season regardless, I'm eager for the Negan stuff to get started.
Well shit a lot of people are talking about the Sopranos ending still. Its not like this was the end of the show. I think people need to relax a bit
I think it goes beyond that a bit in this circumstance. I think the writers are abusing the cliffhanger endings to try and keep viewership up. The Glenn dumpster story is just one example that's been thrown out. Season 6 saw viewer numbers decline, after they had steadily rose since Season 3 (And really increasing every year since the show began). From what I've seen a lot of people are getting fed up with the "bad writing" and they're abandoning ship. There's inconsistencies with plot devices and even "zombie rules" (They can run, then they can't. They're flimsy enough you can tear into flesh and muscle with your bare hands, but strong enough to be a match with humans in a grapple). The characters consistently flip flop for various reasons: Rick is weak, Rick becomes a strong survivor, Rick has a mental breakdown, Rick is tough again, Rick is crazy again. Carol is weak, Carol becomes badass, Carol becomes more badass, Carol is weak again. Morgan is a survivor but can't kill his walker wife, Morgan becomes crazy survivor, Morgan won't kill ever again, Morgan kills. Etc. It's one thing for a character to progress and evolve, but it seems characters in tWD often evolve, then de-evolve, then evolve again in a crazy kind of circle. More than anything a lot of the criticisms seem to come when the writers decide to stray from the comic formula and make up their own stories. They often defy logic making viewers question "Who would even DO that in a zombie apocalypse?"
Those are just some of the criticisms I've seen in other boards and in articles. I find personally that I don't give a shit about the writing or the cliffhangers. I just seem to enjoy zombie stuff, I'm going to watch regardless. I honestly don't watch much TV these days, so when I commit to a show I'm in it for the long haul...even if it's shitty like the end of Heroes.
PS: I love the fact we are going to meet the downed plane from the Flight462 next week.
Yeah that will be cool.
This episode was flawed but good. Any theories as to who Brand was talking to on the phone?
FTWD just not doing it for me, TWD just so much better. ill give it couple more episodes before giving up completely.
character mishmash just getting annoying, especially "faux johnny depp" and travis characters
Nick started out being one of the worst characters on the show for me but now he growing into one of the strongest. The 2 daughters are super hot too