[S2E9] Death And The Dead
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One of the scariest parts of this episode had nothing to do with the bar or Herschel. Instead, it was Lori flipping a car and the undead closing in on her that made the situation so intense. Still a bit disoriented from the crash, she stabbed one walker in the head and shoved another to the ground, smashing it with a hubcap. Even just after regaining consciousness, Lori is a fighter.
Jadis finally lets it be known that the reason the CRM attacked Omaha was to make the inevitable deaths somehow quick and painless. The CR figured out that there would not be enough supplies to keep every community alive in the long run.
Leaving a note for Nick, they press on and eventually come to an abandoned hotel. It appears to be empty, but we learn soon after that various rooms have been marked as safe or housing the infected. Somebody living must still be here; plenty of the dead are.
While all this is going down, Nick is learning about his new community. One fun thing he learns When someone is infected, they're sent out to be killed by the zombies and become part of the town's defenses. They use a perimeter of undead to keep away the living, it appears, which is not a terrible idea. It is pretty weird that they don't have a more humane way to send their marked-for-death out into the wall. I think I'd rather bleed out or overdose than be chewed up by zombies.
The town folk are also deeply cruel and callous, we discover. Nobody thinks to take the condemned man's daughter away from the spectacle. Other than Nick, she's utterly alone as her father is gobbled up by the walking dead. Nobody thinks to go play with her or make up some excuse about her dad, or even just give her a hug. That's just bizarre levels of cold and merciless, to the point where it feels utterly contrived, as so many things do in this show. Surely someone would have thought to look after the little girl.
He tells his people that \"the great migration of the dead has begun.\" But the survivors are \"the chosen ones\" who will survive the end times. It's all very biblical and dramatic, and in keeping with the sort of over-the-top end-times biblical stuff we've already seen this season, just from other characters. Honestly, it's a bit tiring and repetitive at this point. I would have been okay with the town doctor being a man of science, whose cool rationality would have made him and the more fiery Luciana at odds with one another, pitting Nick between two opposing visions of how best to look after the community.
Titled Death and The Dead, Episode 9 of The Walking Dead: World Beyond also marks the death of Percy (Ted Sutherland). He dies in an escape attempt from the CRM facility. It would have been interesting to see the long-term ramifications of his death on Iris (his love interest, Aliyah Royale) and the rest of the group, but there's just one episode remaining in the series!
On the other hand, Jennifer or Huck is reunited with Dennis (Maximilian Osinski), who may not be as dead as we assumed in our previous review (oops). And she has found the location of the poison gas that is likely to be blown up in the final episode.
The most terrifying aspect of The Walking Dead: World Beyond Season 2 Episode 9 has to be just how justified Jadis believes the actions of the CRM are. Because their projections predicted that The Campus Colony and Omaha were headed for disaster, their death was \"sped up,\" so to speak!
Last week, we saw Ryan and his group preparing for another heist but it seems that idea has turned into a rescue mission to get one of their own back. A few episodes ago, you will remember Tommy was tagged by the NFFA for committing a crime once the Purge was finished for the year, thus being given a death sentence to be carried out on the next night of mayhem.
As Skye and Esme are on their way to her former workplace, they are ambushed by a Purger in the street who takes out their van. Skye appears to be dead while Esme attempts to break out of the back of the vehicle as the man realizes she is the woman with the bounty on her. She manages to get into the building, using her device to jam the systems and fend off the Purger all at the same time. Vivian warns Esme she needs to work quickly before the systems are back up and someone realizes she is there.
Natalie: No. I was (possibly still am) expecting another death or two, but this really threw me for a loop. And to think that up until those final moments, I had, if you can believe it, actually been feeling kind of sorry for Russell Tan!
There was something ominous about the way the elder McGill brother (Michael McKean) banged his head on the side of that photocopier. Spying from across the street, Jimmy (Bob Odenkirk) immediately understood the severity of the situation. Should he rush to Chuck's aid, thus blowing his cover and Kim's chances of retaining the juicy Mesa Verde contract Or ought he stay in the shadows and leave his sibling unconscious or worse Better Call Saul has not yet killed off a main character and while death by photocopier would be a strange way to go, the manner in which Chuck crashed earthwards suggested his injuries went significantly beyond a bruised forehead and blunted dignity.
In taking revenge against the Salamancas, Mike had caused the death of an innocent bystander. This was the first significant reversal since his part in the downfall of his son at the hands of corrupt cops back in Philadelphia. A haunted expression flickered across his face as Nacho (Michael Mando) delivered this newest bombshell. Better Call Saul is billed as chronicling the decline of Jimmy McGill. This season Mike is the one with blood on his hands.
#Jadis says, \\\"It's about life, doctor,\\\" two episodes ago, but her semi-quoting #ThomasMann to him early on in the episode (all that's out there is \\\"Death and the dead\\\") is all we need to know, narratively, the seat from which all their motivations derive: Fear. Our protagonists show, in action, all the ways in which Thomas Mann \\\"Wakes up\\\": by living life as if death doesn't exist.
#Jadis says, \"It's about life, doctor,\" two episodes ago, but her semi-quoting #ThomasMann to him early on in the episode (all that's out there is \"Death and the dead\") is all we need to know, narratively, the seat from which all their motivations derive: Fear. Our protagonists show, in action, all the ways in which Thomas Mann \"Wakes up\": by living life as if death doesn't exist.
Becky wants to go on the run. Unbelievably, Huck agrees to go with her. He loves her, but eventually has a change of heart. He calls Harrison to have him plant the gun in Becky's apartment. He waits outside the home of the family he watches. That's where he's to meet Becky, but she's a no-show. Huck senses something is wrong. He steps inside the house to find the entire family has been shot dead. A looped recording of Huck's conversation with Harrison plays on a recorder. Becky knew she was going to be betrayed. Huck is devastated.
In this special end of the year episode of Play Dead, Gabby asks several game developers about their most memorable video game deaths, from NPC deaths, to game glitches, to digital reminders of deceased loved ones. 59ce067264
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