The Walking Dead - Conquer - Review and Discussion
Mar 31, 2015
CD Reviews The Walking DeadThe fifth season of The Walking Dead wrapped up on Sunday night with the story getting “a return,” to loosely paraphrase Morgan, to its beginnings and with introducing a group that on first glance appears to be the most formidable enemy the group has faced since the Governor.
We start the episode with Morgan, the first person Rick met after walking up from a coma, waking up in a car alone, and showing a slight smile upon seeing the irony of a rabbit's foot hung over the crashed car's rear view mirror. Shortly after, we’re brought to the room where Rick spent the night, whom we also see walking up, looking around, and then letting out a small laugh. These two shots of the two waking up, combined with the iconic scene of Rick walking up in the pilot, serve to bookend the first phase in the series – one that has been mostly about adjustment for the characters to their changing circumstances, and one by one they all learned to accept, or decide that they couldn’t, the world for what it had become.
While the waking up scenes paralleled each other, they also served as a contrast to show how much has changed. When Rick first woke up in the pilot, we got what was the first glance of the new zombie-apocalyptic world. Rick’s eyes at the time reflected confusion. Now both Rick and Morgan have been through a lot and seem to be a place where they can appreciate just being “here.” They both now seem to be at peace with whom they’ve become.
Rick is no longer morally conflicted about killing people who pose a threat to his “family.” Morgan also seems to have found a peace, although he’s adopted a different philosophy - he’s self-reliant and firm in his values – he believes all life is precious doesn’t hesitate to step into danger to rescue others. He even stops short of killing two dangerous men who want to kill him. He knocks them unconscious and loads them inside the car to protect them, sounding the horn to alert their friends to where they are.
The two are reunited the end of the episode in a case of the worst timing ever. It appears that Morgan has been searching for Rick for a long time – and through running into Daryl and Aaron – finally finds Rick at Alexandria just in time to witness Rick executing Pete.
The Wolves
Daryl and Aaron’s tracking efforts lead them into a trap – not unlike those set that lead to Terminus. In fact there are traps throughout the episode – physical ones such as the poncho man serving as bait for Daryl and Aaron, and Nicholas setting one for Glenn by letting him see him jumping the fence – and emotional ones, such as Gabriel goading Sasha into killing him and Carol goading Pete to act and show his true face to the community.
The wolves, we learn, have lost all traces of civilization and humanity and steal and murder without restraint. One tells Morgan that some tribes in the area believed that the first people were wolves turned into men. They’ve now transformed back into wolves, fitting with Morgan’s philosophy that “everything gets a return.” They now brand “W” into their own foreheads to mark themselves as wolves, and probably their victims too, who I’m assuming make up most of the random W-branded walkers we’ve been seeing throughout the last few episodes.
Through Morgan’s help, Daryl and Aaron are able to escape the walker trap set for them and bring Morgan back to the camp, but we see that they've left behind pictures of Alexandria, including those of the walls, which the wolves find.
Alexandria
In Alexandria, two characters are seen working through their grief: Sasha, who turns to Gabriel because she doesn't know how to deal with what's in her head, and Gabriel who appears near a breaking point as he goes for a walk and kills a walker and man bitten by a walker who is near death - something he's been hesitant to do up until now. The two have a powerful scene as Gabriel tries to goad Sasha into killing him by blaming her for the deaths of Bob and Tyreese. She's stopped by Maggie, who while stopping short of excusing Gabriel, offers him the chance for redemption.
Deanna is also working through the grief of losing her son, as well as her fears from letting Rick into the community. She calls a community meeting for people to discuss what to do with Rick. Despite their differences, Rick's group are seen coming to his defense, with Maggie spearheading the effort to gain support for Rick within the community. Reg has a great scene as he tells Maggie that civilization begins when people stop running and sending people away. But like the others before him who have shown a more idealized view of humanity (such as Bob, Beth, and Tyreese), he's dead before the end of the episode.
Meanwhile, Rick's predictions comes true in that the outside danger finds its way in. In this case it was Gabriel in a daze failing to secure the gate behind him. A few walkers discover the opening but are hunted down by Rick. Early in the season, Rick had warned Carl to never let his guard down. His fears are shown to be warranted as the community becomes distracted, and as a result, vulnerable.
Overall Thoughts
This episode wasn’t what I expected for an hour-and-a-half finale, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing. I was expecting a bloodier confrontation – possibly an attack by the wolves that would cost more lives and unite the groups. They do seem united at the end, with the death of Reg and Deanna’s acceptance of Rick’s argument to kill Pete, but we didn't get much in the way of action outside of what is typical on a regular episode of this show.
But while this wasn’t the most action-packed finale that we’ve seen, it was rich in character development and served to tie up the themes from this season while setting up the next. The highlight for me was the return of Morgan, an event I didn't even realize I wanted so much until it happened. On an emotional level, I had been hoping throughout the season that the group would stay put in Alexandria and find a peaceful way to make it work together. In the end, they mostly did that, although Deanna did need the murder of Reg to push her over to the other side. With the exception of Reg, we didn't get any major deaths. Personally I welcomed a reprieve as we've had a very bloody season so far.
Thank you for reading these reviews over the course of the season. At some time over the next few weeks, I plan to publish a look back over the season – the hits and misses – so please come back to visit.
Other Thoughts & Questions
- Carol again had some awesome scenes and lines. She was perfect in her performance at Pete’s home, where she baits him and threatens him with a knife. That scene was perfectly closed by Pete’s temper tantrum, heard from the other room: “This isn’t my house!”
- My favorite Carol line from the episode though was one to Rick: “You said you don’t want to take this place, and you don’t want to lie. Oh sunshine, you don’t get both.”
- I’ve been blown away by the acting from Andrew Lincoln (Rick) over the past few episodes, most notably in the scene after his fight with Pete and he turns his gun on the crowd. This week we were treated to another classic Rick moment, when he arrives at the meeting late and bloody and wordlessly throws a dead walker at their feet. Has anyone else noticed how Lincoln has adopted some of Shane’s season 2 mannerisms – specifically rocking a little back and forth – left to right – when he is being aggressive?
- We also had very strong performances from Seth Gilliam (Gabriel) and Sonequa Martin (Sasha).
- I loved the scenes between Rick and Michonne – how despite Carol’s warning about not telling the others about the guns, Rick decided that he didn’t want to lie to Michonne and came clean. The two reaffirmed their friendship, with Michonne telling Rick that the knocked him out for him, not for the people of Alexandria.
- How do you see Morgan and Rick’s friendship playing out into the future, given their very different philosophies about murder? Will Morgan step into the role of serving as the new spiritual influence over the group, a role Hershel once played? Do you see Rick and Morgan as being more different or similar?
- Who do you think is more right – Rick or Morgan? Or is there no right or wrong?
- Are you willing and able to forgive Nicholas and Gabriel? Do you think Nicholas was being sincere in begging for forgiveness?
Just wanted to say how much I've enjoyed reading your reviews this season. going to read this one now on my kindle. Loved the finale!
ReplyDeleteThank you!
ReplyDeleteNo "previously unreleased promotional and BTS photos" ? :(
ReplyDeleteI don't know what the status is on that. Andy (the site owner) generally posts them as soon as he gets any.
ReplyDeletegreat review, by the way :)
ReplyDeleteMelissa McBride deserves an Emmy for her performance this season.
ReplyDeleteAll together though the show reached new heights in quality and suspense this season, and the finale was amazing.
I can't wait for Season 6!
AMC have not released them yet to us. As soon as they do we'll be sure to post them :)
ReplyDeletethanks
ReplyDeleteAgreed. Over the last two seasons, really.
ReplyDeleteThe Finale was great.
ReplyDeleteSeason 4 did a good job picking up the pieces from the mixed bag known as season 3. I love that season 5 was able to hit the ground running (literally) and consistently give us some of the best episodes in the series.
ReplyDeleteFinale was great, especially the last 15 minutes. Seeing Morgan was awesome as usual. Loved the Jedi moves with the walking stick. Hopefully he sticks around more than one episode next season.
ReplyDeleteHe better be around for more than one episode! They've been teasing him for a whole season. Agreed on the walking stick. When I saw that, I was thinking that's the counterpart to Michonne's sword.
ReplyDeleteWow, a more restrained episode than I was expecting -- but I think maybe what I liked best was how the title, "Conquer," ended up referring to some different things than I'd guessed. Sure Rick's opinion prevails at the end, but we also see Morgan conquer his madness; Sasha/Maggie conquer any impulse to reward Gabriel's cowardice and kill him; and Glenn conquer his (understandable) urge to shoot Nicholas. I had thought we'd witness a hostile takeover of Alexandria, but in several ways we saw humanity conquer savagery instead.
ReplyDeleteI especially loved that visual standoff between Rick and Morgan at the very end -- I think these two will continue to be powerful foils for one another (as long as the writers keep their "insanity cycles" out of sync). And nice catch, Chris, on the Shane mannerisms! I also liked how we never actually SEE what happens to Glenn with those walkers. I mean, is he bitten? A subtle cliffhanger, maybe, that won't resolve until next season ...?
In terms of nitpicks, I'm feeling like the writers shifted Deanna over to Rick's way of thinking in an overly abrupt/contrived way (watching Pete accidentally half-decapitate Reg, I could really see the plot-movement gears straining -- and poor Deanna, two family members in like 36 hours). Also, the trailer trap set by the Wolves was cool, but seemed kinda complicated and implausible (Wouldn't zombies groaning and shuffling inside a trailer make noise?). But overall, I think this was the strongest TWD season yet. I'm really hoping this show starts getting some Emmy recognition for all the great acting, effects, and storylines it's been delivering. Thanks for all the awesome reviews!
Why would anyone doubt that what Michonne did was for Rick's own good? The acting between them always gets me saying "now kiss damn it." For some reason I don't buy Daryl and Aaron story line. Not sure what it is. Carol is just kick ass! Morgan well that was bad ass too! Love the whole Abe and Eugene talk and how Rosita decide to drop the pan. I laughed so damn hard. She was like "whoops" Sasha and Father G are both cra cra but loved how it played out. Did Maggie forget about the meeting and was like "screw it I'm going pray with these two?" And Glenn must of been wearing plot armor. Liked how we got to see forgiveness in the most trying times. And what can I say about he end? I was hoping for a bloodbath just to prove to the people of Safe Zone how unprepared they really are. I mean with the walkers that got in not human on human killing. And I have to say I loved how Rick did not hesitate in killing Pete. Even if that should/could come with some back blow given Pete was the ASZ only doctor. Looking forward to season six. And it should start off running given that the "Wolves Not Far."
ReplyDeleteI'm team Rick. What Morgan did by leaving those men still alive was very dangerous because now they will have to face them again. He should have let the zombies eat them. And Morgan is going to find that you can't show mercy like that anymore. Just like Glenn should have killed Nick.
ReplyDeleteThe one thing that is driving me crazy is that Gabriel is still alive. He so has to go.
Carol is still my favorite, and I'm really glad she's still around. Same with Daryl. I thought Daryl and Aaron made a great team, too.
Thanks Mary. I'm really, really glad we didn't get a hostile takeover and super excited to see Morgan back! I'm curious to see how they develop out the character and his time alone.
ReplyDeleteI thought the Glenn part was a little unrealistic. There were at least three walkers coming at him and he didn't seem to have a weapon. If they revealed later that Glenn was bitten, that would be too similar to Bob, and I don't think they'd do that yet. I hope anyway.
The Deanna part made me uneasy too but in a different way. My gut reaction was that an act of revenge, not protection, and that made me nervous that this might be the start for her down a dark path. We'll see. Good point about it being convenient though, and excellent point about the zombie noise!
The pan drop was great! I laughed out loud both the first, and second, time I saw it. I'm starting to really like Rosita as a character.
ReplyDeleteMaggie was at the meeting but left after she heard that Father Gabriel was missing. Glenn was also missing, so I'm assuming she left because she was getting nervous about Glenn.
I'd love to think that someday, someone showing a bad guy some mercy will inspire them to reform, but I think I'm watching the wrong show! I agree we're going to see two wolves again, and not in a good way.
ReplyDeleteDon't make that mistake in the real world in the future. It can get you killed. Those who are evil, they don't change.
ReplyDeleteSo funny Chris -- my friend was watching with me, and the second Deanna looked up with that scowl and said "do it Rick" he hollered, "... AAAND we've just met our future villain!" I'm not so sure she'll become a true villain, but I totally agree that this could be a dark point of departure for Deanna going forward. Yeah I think the writing was kinda clunky in getting there, but she basically lost half her family in one fell swoop. I'm a big "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" fan, and this almost makes me think of Willow's vengeful rampage when she lost Tara Maclay. Oops sorry, geeked out for a minute there. :)
ReplyDeleteHaha! I'm sure it's true. I guess I lead a sheltered life because I don't think I know any truly evil people right now. Dysfunctional, definitely, but evil, no.
ReplyDeleteI loved Buffy! I think I've rewatched that series more often than any other, ever. We'll have to remember this conversation next season when we see more of Deanna.
ReplyDeleteMy number one rule in the apocalypse would be: If you come across bad people KILL THEM! Because it will always come back to bite you in the a$$!!
ReplyDeleteThanks Chris for all the hard work you put into these reveiws...Hope to see you next season too..I have just one question who does Rick shoot in the last scene?
ReplyDeleteThe sad thing is that the end of the world will be something that those bad people will enjoy. No laws or consequences. I think they showed it best with those two guys who seemed to kill just because they could.
ReplyDeleteThanks. I plan to be around unless something changes. It was implied that Rick killed Pete.
ReplyDeleteDo you mind if I ask you why you're asking that question?
ReplyDelete