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On the Walking Dead, No Wrath Need Apply


This evening, THE WALKING DEAD capped yet another lackluster season with yet another breathtakingly unsatisfying finale. TWD's writers evince a strong preference for "Tell, Don't Show" over "Show, Don't Tell." They substitute ridiculous, melodramatic speechifying in place of naturalistic dialogue. As this writer has long noted, this is a show about survival in a zombie apocalypse that rigorously adheres to an anti-survivalist ideology. It's a stupid show. These and many other long-running TWD problems appeared with a vengeance in "Wrath," which was supposed to wrap up the war with the Saviors.

That storyline should have been essentially finished a few eps ago when our heroes liquidated most of the remaining Savior fighters but as has happened repeatedly this season, many, many more magically appeared to take the place of the fallen. In the previous ep, Negan decided to bait our heroes into a trap. Equipped with that Respawning Saviors cheat, he sacrifices even more of his men so that Rick can capture a map misdirecting the forces of the rebel communities to... well, you get the picture. Ultimately, Rick and the gang end up in a field surrounded by a large number of enemy fighters. When the Saviors reveal themselves, they just stand in the open, arranged like a firing-squad rather than firing from cover or a prone position. While this allows for a dramatic (if now well-worn) Kurosawa shot of the shoulder-to-shoulder enemy army cresting a hill, it guarantees that, in a fight, many of them will immediately be needlessly killed as well. Eugene suggested this arrangement and Negan went along with it.

In a turn like something from Monty Python, the Saviors open fire simultaneously only to have their own weapons explode in their faces, courtesy of Eugene sabotaging the ammo he's been manufacturing. There follows what's supposed to be a very dramatic final battle in which our heroes defeat the Saviors, leading many enemy fighters--too many--to surrender.

Rick chases down Negan--hey, it wouldn't be a season finale without a one-on-one between these two, right?--but just as always happens, the two find a way, in the middle of a fight to the death, to talk, talk, talk. Rick points out that Negan's forces are defeated. Negan is unconcerned. "I'll get out of it," he says, "I always do." And damned if, by the end, he does. Rick, after seriously wounding the villain, decides to spare his life. Maggie is quite upset by this,[1] as everyone else should be, but the writers try to paper over it by having Rick give one of TWD's patented speeches about how they all have to work together to build a new world. "We are life!", he declares. "The new world begins." And a lot of other things just as cringe-inducing...

The full article is here:
http://cinemarchaeologist.blogspot.com/2018/04/walking-dead-110.html

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Oh man I'm so shocked you didn't like it. No one could have predicted this one!

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Yeah, whenever you turn on an ep and it turns out to be really bad, you can pretty much guarantee I won't like it.

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You wouldn't like it even if it was good.

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I've praised them every time they've earned it.

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Then you should have praised the finale or even one of the the last 8 episodes.

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What are you smoking? Share?!

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Whatever it is, there are exceedingly few TWD viewers who are indulging these days; the season finale, which is usually one of the highest-rated eps of a season, finished with the lowest ratings since since season 1:
http://variety.com/2018/tv/news/walking-dead-season-8-finale-ratings-1202754602/

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"Cringe-inducing" is right. This "big finish" final to the Savior War was about as exciting as popping a zit. Hell, I was expecting some kind of near-epic battle to at least rival the Governor's 2nd attack on the prison, but what we got instead was about 10% action and 90% interpersonal talky-BS.

The quality of the writing on The Walking Dead now makes me think of that old story about how a frog will remain sitting in a pot of water over a flame as the heat slowly increases until the water is boiling and it's cooked. Well, it's been apparent now that the water has been boiling on TWD for about the past three seasons and, making the audience of this show the "frog" in this analogy, it's well-past time to jump out of the pot.

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Agreed.

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I really object to the fact that Rick lets the Saviors return home, lets Negan live and no one among all these people who have suffered under them so horribly and for so long so much as raises an objection. Instead of taking charge of the situation, Maggie just has her stupid breakdown.

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Yes, jr, so true. If Maggie wants him dead, JUST GO DO IT!

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She doesn't even need to do it--just have it done. "So-and-so, you and What's-her-name go over to that tree, kill that motherfucker and bring me his eyes."

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Indeed!!

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