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The Walking Dead 4.01 "30 Days Without an Accident" Review: What's Worse Than the Zombie Apocalypse?

Oct 20, 2013

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     The season premiere of The Walking Dead, “30 Days Without an Accident,” was written by new showrunner Scott M. Gimple and directed by Greg Nicotero. Gimple and Nicotero have been with the show since the second season, however. Gimple commented on The Talking Dead, which airs on AMC right after the show, that having been on the show for two seasons made it much easier to step into the showrunning position. Of course, it also gives him great insight into the characters and audience expectations. Gimple also commented that the main story arcs for the season were planted in this first episode.

    Some time has passed since the season finale, and many of the characters are in very different places. Rick (Andrew Lincoln) is in a much better place but has withdrawn himself from much of the day to day activity. The prison has been transformed in a number of ways. There are a lot more people living there, and Rick tells Clara (Kerry Condon) that “People are the best defense against Walkers.” Rick has retreated from the violence of their existence and Hershel (Scott Wilson) has to insist he take his gun with him when he goes out to check the traps. Rick is more interested in making the prison self-sustaining, nurturing crops and even a litter of pigs. Ominously, Violet the sow dies by the end of the episode. Rick has also become a better father to both Carl (Chandler Riggs) and Judith.

    Even though there are now other children in the prison, Carl remains apart from them. He shows greater respect for his father, but he still isn’t like the other kids. Carol (Melissa McBride) has taken the other children under her wing. Given that Carol was the most helpless at the beginning of the series and that she is still marked by the loss of Sophia, it makes sense that Carol would be the one to step up and insure that the kids can take care of themselves. When Carl catches her teaching the kids about knives when she was supposed to be having story-time with them, Carol begs him not to tell his father. It makes equal sense that Rick would try to preserve some of the kids’ innocence, encouraging story-time and condemning teaching them to fight.

    Most of the people are those that Rick and especially Darryl (Norman Reedus) have brought back to the prison with them from foraging runs. Darryl has become a bit of a celebrity, in fact, and has taken over a leadership role. The prison is run by a council, however, not one person. There is a rhythm to their daily routine. People have largely accepted that zombies are just a part of their lives.

    Michonne (Danai Gurira) has acquired a horse to get around. She has dedicated herself to tracking down the Governor (David Morrissey). While she has somewhat resumed her nomadic lifestyle, she has clearly established ties with Rick (whom she brings a razor) and Carl (whom she brings comics – ironically enough!). She even goes on the run with the others while she is at the prison re-grouping before going out again.

    The group that goes out on the run includes Sasha (Sonequa Martin-Green), Tyreese (Chad L Coleman), Zack (Kyle Gallner), and newcomer Bob (Lawrence Gilliard, Jr). Tyreese has been primarily helping to keep the walkers off the fence, but he tells Karen (Melissa Ponzio) that he wants a change. We also see that they are just starting a relationship. Tyreese still seems to be floundering in this new, violent world, but Sasha seems to be flourishing. Sasha and Darryl lead the group and have done everything right to insure maximum safety as they scavenge an abandoned store and army camp. Unfortunately, once Bob alerts the zombies to their presence by knocking over a liquor shelf, the rotting roof does the rest and it’s soon raining zombies on the group. The scene is a fantastic one, and it’s amazing that the show can still come up with ways to surprise and horrify us.

    Beth (Emily Kinney) and Maggie (Lauren Cohen) are both examples of how people have learned to cope. Beth refuses to say good bye to Zack before he goes on the run. When Darryl tells her that Zack was killed on the run, she tells him, “I don’t cry anymore. I’m just glad that I got to know him.” Her reaction is one of the most chilling moments of the series. Death is so much a part of their lives. She asks Darryl if he’s ok, and he says he’s “just tired of losing people.” Rick tells Carl not to name the pigs because it will make it harder to kill them to eat them, but Carl isn’t troubled by it, yet Carl tells the other kids not to name the walkers. Meanwhile, Maggie discovers that she isn’t pregnant as she had thought she might be. Glenn (Steven Yeun) is relieved. Maggie tells him that she would have been ok with being pregnant. She tells Glenn that she “doesn’t want to be afraid to be alive.” Glenn tells her that’s how they’ve kept alive, but she disagrees and says that’s “how we kept breathing.” Beth and Carl have accepted that death is commonplace, but Maggie reaffirms life.

    It seems almost shocking that anyone could survive outside of a group and Clara’s appearance is quite shocking. Gimple commented on Talking Dead that there had never been any intention of showing Eddie – and the horror of her carrying around her dead husband’s head and feeding it is complete even without seeing it. The three question test is also a powerful scene and is a good indication of how far Rick and the rest of the group have come in this new world. The first question is “How many walkers have you killed?” Clara answers that Eddie killed them all. It’s a measure of the worth a person might be to the group if they are a good fighter. It’s a miracle that Clara has managed to stay alive with no one to defend her. The second question is “How many people have you killed?” Clara answers “Just me.” Condon delivers a powerful performance and that one line is simply heartbreaking. The third question is “Why?” In this new age, murder may, in fact, be justifiable – something Rick would never have imagined possible when he was still a sheriff. Clara keeps chanting over and over that “you don’t get to come back.” But Hershel tells Rick that Rick has come back – from madness – and so has Carl. But in many ways, none of them will ever be the same, and in that sense, just like zombies, you can come back, but not completely as you were.

    The episode ends with the horrific death of Patrick (Vincent Martella). Once again, the show gives us an interesting character played to perfection by a great guest star, only to kill the character off. Just as the characters seem to be learning to deal with the zombies, they are now faced with another terror – what looks like some form of the ebola virus. How many of them are already infected? Is this what killed the pig? Is this why the zombies have been coming to the prison in herds? Did anyone else think the zombies were starting to look especially bad? And what about the one at the fence with the weird eyes? The last shot we see of Patrick is his weird eyes – zombie eyes to be sure, but also bloodier than normal.

    I thought this was a great episode, and just as Gimple promised, there were a lot of great potential storylines kicked off. Anybody else love it as much as I did when Carol called Darryl Pookey? What did you think of the season premiere? Will you be watching tonight? Any guesses as to who will survive this season? Let me know your thoughts in the comments below.

6 comments:

  1. I loved the season premiere. I was long wanting them to see them having some normality and loved seeing the acquainted to the prison life and how much the world and themselves have changed. We still got awesome action and the ending scene made for a very promising second episode, I can't wait! Great review by the way!

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  2. Thanks! And I agree - it was really interesting to see them adapting and not just reacting to this new world.

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  3. Good review of a good episode. There was lots of meat to this one (no pun intended), and I like how you draw attention to things that will probably be important going forward--not only the obvious ones, such as that disease, whatever it is, but the "coming back" idea and the naming thing, which I can't imagine isn't going to resonate going forward

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  4. I have to admit that I was pretty nervous with the show getting yet a new showrunner, but I guess that's no different than comics which often see changes in author/illustrators. Gimple has won me over so far...

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  5. True--though, ironically enough, the Walking Dead comis has had a single writer from the beginning and, I think, the same artistic team either from the beginning or from very early on (there was a different artist involved with the first issues, but I'm pretty sure the current team has been with the book for a hundred issues anyway). I agree that this season seems to be off on a good foot, despite the potential for unfortunate changes under a new show-runner--as has happened on other shows, at times. . . .

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  6. Amanda Randall BankerOctober 20, 2013 at 7:47 PM

    Glad to see you're reviewing another of my favorite shows! Gives me a place to talk about it in more than 140 characters ;)

    This group of survivors has had to re-acclimate so many times to a different normal - their only constant being death. I thought it was really telling that Carl admonished the other kids for naming the walkers -- showing that he had listened to his father: naming humanizes them. Makes them *more* than they are. But it's also sad to see such dichotomy inside one so young: accepting that loss is part of life while at the same time staying up late to read comics by flashlight.

    I liked seeing that our group had been bringing in other survivors -- shifting from the mindset of the previous season where more people = more responsibility and most likely more loss. It was encouraging to see that they had decided to embrace the concept that the living have to ban together. What was that saying from Lost? "Live together, die alone."

    They even made it a whole month without a death! A huge accomplishment in this latest version of normal.

    Rick's three questions shows so much about the group's values, too. How many walkers have you killed (do you know what it takes to survive), how many humans have you killed (how far are you willing to go to survive), and why (can you justify your survival to me before I take a risk on you)? I could see both Daryl and Rick asking those questions of those they pulled into the group.

    Rick smiling, Michonne finding a balance between be a loner and being part of the group, Daryl reluctantly accepting his status as a leader and being empathetic as he delivered the news to Beth that her latest boyfriend had died, Carol showing the strength many thought had been beaten out of her by life...it was all going so well. Which is why that ending, as shocking as it was, was inevitable. Laws of TWD say when things go well, that's when you duck.

    So what was all that blood -- a virus? A new strain of Walkers? The kid who died in the shower hadn't been with the group for long -- what did he say, a week? Could he have been infected with before he arrived? All I know is, I'm glad it's Sunday again. :)

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