The Walking Dead - Forget - Review and Discussion
Mar 14, 2015
CD Reviews The Walking DeadIt continues to amaze me how one episode can so fundamentally shift my perception of what I’m seeing. After “Forget,” I’m leaning toward Sasha currently being the most balanced of the group.
The episode starts with Sasha, waking up in her new surroundings and having some, uhmm, adjustment issues, shown when she brings the photos of the happy people who had lived in the house before the zombie outbreak outside for target practice. There seems to be an Italian cooking theme in this episode, and Sasha on her way out is asked by the well-meaning weapons guard, Olivia, to hunt up some boar’s legs so that she can make prosciutto. Later Sasha hears horror stories about how Mrs. Neidermeyer won’t shut up about wanting a pasta maker.
Sasha has a bit of an emotional break in what feel like a suburban neighborhood cocktail party and is the first to discover she can’t adjust to Alexandria. Surrounded at the cocktail party by overly friendly people who just want to steer her away from the dull conversations and cook her her favorite meal, Sasha freaks out, remembering Tyreese, Beth, and all the horrors beyond the wall. She had been hesitant about walking through the front door, and perhaps should have followed Daryl’s lead – who scoped it out and decided to pass.
This episode appears to be a turning point for Sasha, as she’s walked out the gates by Deanna – Sasha’s choice apparently, as she seems to have decided that she can’t stay in Alexandria because “it’s not real.”
She has a point. While I’m still unrealistically hoping that Daryl’s and Michonne’s attempts to try to make it work pay off, we get a glimpse into Sasha’s thoughts – flashes of the recent horrors and deaths – and her reaction feels like the appropriate response. There’s accepting the pain and trying to make a better future, and then there’s denial. The people of Alexandria are living in a fantasy world, and that never ends well.
And that brings up an interesting question, which response is more right: Carol’s continued caution to the point of terrifying a child to protect her group, or Michonne’s almost overly optimistic acceptance of their new home?
While at our friendly suburban cocktail party, we see Rick discreetly sneak a cheek-kiss to Jessie, who very motherly like, is returning baby Judith to him. Rick’s act is surprising since she’s married, but the “What the h***, Rick!” moment comes a little later, when he eyes her with her husband, and after friendly waving his brand their way (yes, apparently us vs. them branding is still a big part of this season’s theme), fingers his gun. Very primal! Very Shane!
The “What the h***, Carol!” moment comes as Carol is caught stealing weapons by Jessie’s son, who just wanted some more cookies. The woman who loves children transforms into every child’s nightmare, as she threatens the boy into not telling what he saw with the promise to bring him outside the gates and tie him to a tree so that the can be eaten by monsters. What did you all think of this? While I understand her reasoning, I think she was going too far.
Meanwhile Daryl, who is proving to be the most resilient of the group, like always is finding his niche. He’s bonds with Aaron and Eric in this episode over a spaghetti dinner (yes, the Italian food theme continues), and is recruited by Aaron to take Eric’s place a “recruiter” for the community, because as Aaron says, Daryl can tell the difference between good and bad people. I guess after being with Merle for all of those years, Daryl can handle everything and everyone. An interesting point that comes up in Daryl’s conversation with Aaron is that Aaron and Eric have faced some homophobia in the group. I’m not sure if the message here is that nothing ever changes, or that Sasha’s comments at the party are right on the nose: “That’s what you’re worried about?”
I thought this was an excellent episode that combined many smaller, character-based stories to paint a picture of this well-meaning community and how something is just not quite right. They seem to be honest, but as Deanna points out, they’ve all been affected by what’s happened. The fact that they appear to have forgotten and are living in a fantasy world is sure to end badly.
There’s a lot to think about from this episode.
The branding and the “Us and Them” theme was back, or never left. The “A” probably refers to Alexandria, but I couldn’t help think back the “A” car from when they were at Terminus. The “W” branded on the dead man reminded me of “walker” but I’m sure it we’ll find out it means something else. There was a wonderful aerial shot of Rick on one side of the wall with a walker on the other, representing that they’re two sides of the same coin, or despite the veneer of normalcy in Alexandria, just how little separates them.
For music, we were treated to the Bee Gees, "Spicks and Specks," this week. This selection I thought hit the mark perfectly, with lyrics: "Where is the sun that shone on my head The sun in my life, it is dead it is dead."
Sorry for the later review this week. I should be back to my normal routine next week. But please let me know what you thought of the episode in the comments!
Loved the episodes. Really interesting to see how they are adjusting to their new surroundings.
ReplyDeleteThey have spent all this time looking for a place like this to live in, but now that they are there they seem almost to be longing to be back outside in some respects.
Glad Daryl has a job now !
Thanks Sharon! I'm really loving their arc so far in Alexandria. It's adding a freshness to the story, so I hope it lasts at least a little longer than this season.
ReplyDeleteI had a feeling they'd find something good for Daryl. Everyone eventually comes to appreciate Daryl!
I'm not sure who is supposed to be forgetting what. Sasha knows who's coming. Withholding that information from the group is wrong.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure I'm following. Sasha seemed to have the feeling like she was being watched, but I didn't get the sense that it was anything more specific than that. What do you think she's withholding?
ReplyDeleteShe said, "Come and get me." She's the only one I know that's seen someone who quickly disappears into the woods. It wasn't the cannibals. There was an appearance late in season 3. There was one in season 4, in episode 416. You have to look carefully. And her scenes with Tyreese indicate that whatever it was that he did, she also did, before coming to the prison. Remember the radio broadcast in his hallucinations? It was about the mass killing of people by raiding parties (as best as I can describe it). Could be why he forgave Carol so easily. As he said, "It ain't over."
ReplyDeleteI'm sure she has that feeling, but she indicated she knew who would be coming. Think back to why Carol killed Karen. She was ill, could infect everyone else, they die. She said, "when people die they become a threat." I think at least Tyreese participated in eliminating a threat because he thought he was doing the right thing. What Sasha said, told she participated to.
ReplyDeleteI thought there were other better ways for Carol to deal with the kid but I think the writers are just trying to show that even our heroes are human beings and are flawed in someway or the other...So Chris how long do you think before we meet Neegan?
ReplyDelete1. Thanks. I didn't even catch on to that: Italian cooking.
ReplyDelete2. I thought the name Niedermeyer was an amusing reference to Animal House.
3. Carol and the kid: For crying out loud, that kid has to know what's going just outside the gates, and no one on the inside will tell him. Remember how Carol was training the children in the prison?
4. I don't know what to make of the strange face Deanna made as Sasha departed.
5. I hope Sasha's okay by herself, but the theme of late seems to be that the dead are the least of their problems. They've learned the hard way to fear the living.
6. I don't really understand the title. At the end, it seemed like Rick was remembering life before the walkers, not forgetting.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts. On the title, I took it as, "This is what you turn into if you forget. You get weak." Deanna made a point of saying how everyone there had been touched by what happened, but you wouldn't get that from hearing their concerns about pasta makers. There's a fear among Rick's group of forgetting and becoming weak. I also thought the horse illustrated the point too. The horse always ran - its fear of the walkers kept it alive - but when Daryl and Aaron were nice to it, it forgot that it should be afraid and got killed.
ReplyDeleteHi, yeah, the Carol scene was understandable, and she might have even been right. It still bothered me though.
ReplyDeleteI'm the wrong person to ask about Neegan! I'm avoiding spoilers with this show and I'm not up on everything that happened in the comics.
That's interesting. I'd love it if we learn they had more of a backstory and it turns out to be relevant now somehow. That would be a twist.
ReplyDeleteI like that explanation. It totally makes sense. I hadn't thought of that regarding the horse.
ReplyDeleteDaryl never had a traditional family anyway, it would make sense than the role Aaron would find for him would be non-traditional too.
ReplyDeleteCarol would be the first one from Rick's group to jump to protect Sam should zombies, cannibals or anything else passes through those gates, so I forgive a little scare considering us viewers are the only ones that know she would never carry it out.
ReplyDelete