The Walking Dead Houseboat

2021年6月28日
Register here: http://gg.gg/v62xa
© TheWrap twd the walking dead michonne last episode cell phone rick clues
*The Walking Dead Houseboat Rental
*The Walking Dead Houseboat Tours
*The Walking Dead Houseboat Trailer
The Walking Dead Season 8 show reviews & Metacritic score: Based on a comic book series of the same name by Robert Kirkman, a small group of survivors, led by officer Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln), must fight a world ful. ’The Walking Dead’ The Same Boat (TV Episode 2016) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. In The Walking Dead, Ricks group of survivors is constantly looking for a new ’shelter’. However, they only ever look for cities on the mainland. Why don’t they just get on boat and go to an island. The Walking Dead is an American post-apocalyptic horror television series based on the comic book series of the same name by Robert Kirkman, Tony Moore, and Charlie Adlard.The series features a large ensemble cast as survivors of a zombie apocalypse, trying to stay alive under near-constant threat of attacks from zombies, colloquially known as ’walkers’.
Las Vegas What it means everywhere else: The City of Sin. The most scandalous city in the US. Whether it’s gambling, strippers or the booze, what happens there “stays” there. What it means in Nevada: A place that gets a ton of attention for its 4 mile Strip. But everyone from Nevada knows that Vegas is actually a giant area of land. Take a look at the top 5 slang words and expressions, and learn to speak like a local in Las Vegas, with Listen & Learn. The following pages may contain unorthodox or informal material. Any words or opinions presented in this section are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of Listen & Learn. Las Vegas has its own unique lingo, and understanding the difference between a Las Vegas dime and the dimes that collect in your wallet can save you a huge headache. Check out our Ultimate Guide for Visiting Las Vegas for more resources and tips for planning your trip. The Best Nevada Slang Words 1. Slot Zombie = Gambling addict A person so obsessed by gambling machines that they lose touch with reality. Vegas slang words.
(This article contains pretty much every spoiler for the March 22 episode of ’The Walking Dead’ on AMC)
We knew this day was coming, but we didn’t know when it would happen or how it would go down. But now we do, because we just watched Michonne’s final episode of ’The Walking Dead.’ But we may not have seen her for the last time in the greater ’Walking Dead’ universe.The Walking Dead Houseboat Rental
This was, in no way, a conclusive exit. Michonne (Danai Gurira) isn’t just still alive — she’s going on a quest to find Rick (Andrew Lincoln). Presumably this quest is taking her out of the TV series and into the theatrical films that will explore what happened to Rick last season after he almost blew himself up and was spirited away on a helicopter by an unknown party.
Michonne’s final episode picked up right where we last saw her — heading off with a guy named Virgil (Kevin Carroll) to some island in the Chesapeake Bay to find weapons to use against the Whisperers. It turned out there weren’t any weapons there after all, but Michonne found something much more surprising: evidence that Rick survived the bridge explosion.
Also read: ’Walking Dead’ Star Danai Gurira Talks Michonne’s ’Bittersweet’ Final Episode - and Her New QuestThe Walking Dead Houseboat Tours
This isn’t news to us, but it’s a major one for Michonne and everyone else. On her way back to the mainland, Michonne hits up Judith (Cailey Fleming) on the radio, and Judith basically demands that she go looking for him. And so she does, hooking up with a massive caravan of people as the episode ends.
But I wanna talk for a minute about one of the things Michonne found that she took as proof of Rick’s survival. Virgil showed her an old boat that had crashed there a while back, and on it he found Ricks boots — which he had brought back to his bunker. And when Michonne looked around in there herself she found an old cell phone with a chalk drawing of Michonne and Judith on it.
So this phone is perplexing on a number of levels. First, you should know that this phone is not something you forgot about from a past episode of ’The Walking Dead.’ It’s a totally new thing, and that’s why Michonne took it as solid evidence that Rick could still be out there. Rick either drew that picture after the explosion on the bridge, or it was just a thing he had kept from before that we just never knew about.
Also read: ’Walking Dead’: Everything You Need To Know About Eugene’s Friend on the Radio
And that invites a whole new set of questions for which we have no answers. This boat with Rick’s stuff, Virgil says, washed up on the shore during a storm, but he doesn’t say how long ago that was. With the six-year time jump that ’The Walking Dead’ did immediately after Rick’s disappearance, there’s no point in trying to use the storm to guess when that boat washed up because it almost certainly is just something we don’t know about.
The boat itself is another big mystery. Was Rick actually on it, and if so why would he leave his boots on it? It might be that the helicopter folks dropped him on the boat to treat his injuries and accidentally left the boots and phone behind whenever they dropped him off — Rick could have drawn the picture while he was being cared for on the boat.
You might have missed, or forgotten, only real clue we and Michonne have about Rick, since it came up for just a brief moment right before Michonne found the phone. That clue was the ship’s log, which recorded its last known destination as ’New Jersey, Bridgers Shipyard.’ That’s not a real place, so your guess is as good as mine about what that means or where it is. The New Jersey coastline is a lot of ground to cover on foot.
Also read: ’Walking Dead’: Are We Finally Going to See Maggie Again This Season?
GO TO www.sevenstepstoslotmachinesucess.com AND GET ONE OF THE #1 SLOT METHODS OUT THERE!!! 7 steps to winning slot machines.
And then we’ve got this mysterious large caravan of folks. We know nothing about them, which is pretty notable considering how massive a group it is. Unfortunately, we don’t know where they dropped Michonne off when she returned to the mainland. But if it’s on the west side of the bay at a spot relatively convenient for a return to Alexandria, then it would be pretty weird for there to be a group that large that we didn’t know about.
But it’s more likely that once Michonne decide to go after Rick, they dropped her off further north, closer to New Jersey. Either way, this group is a total wild card. It’s conceivable that they’re even a group from the civilization that the helicopter folks hailed from, just because it’s so many people. It doesn’t seem likely that a group that big would just be a random collection of vagabonds. It would make more sense for them to be a group of settlers from a big civilization who are heading out to establish a new town or something.
Wherever this story goes, I wouldn’t count on finding anything else out before, at the very earliest, the season 10 finale. And maybe we’ll be stuck in the dark until the theatrical movies that will tell the story of what happened with Rick. ’The Walking Dead’ has been playing a long game with these helicopter people, so we’ll have to continue to be patient.
Andrew Lincoln as Rick Grimes and Jeffrey Dean Morgan as Negan. Gene Page/AMC
“It isn’t just you,” Enid pleads with Sasha toward the beginning of this week’s mid-season finale. You’re not the only one who wants to kill Negan. You’re not the only one with ideas of how to do it. So why are you formulating your own revenge plan, here in secret? Everyone wants what you want, and we can all help each other.
Enid’s talking about Carl, whose stupid little stowaway act she can’t tell Sasha about. But what she’s saying is true of pretty much everyone in this episode: They’ve all got their individual plans, and they’re all dumb solo ventures with little chance of success.
It’s not often The Walking Dead reminds me of a sitcom, but now we’re in a sitcom-y situation: If everyone would have just talked to each other, a lot of bad stuff could have been avoided. They might even have the makings of a good plan on their hands here. Rosita and Eugene have the means to make ammunition. Michonne has the reconnaissance. Carl and Jesus have found a stealthy way to get close to Negan. Even squirrely asshole Spencer is strategically worming his way into the Saviors’ trust. Working together, they could have accomplished something at least.
Instead, all we get is half-formed ideas and half-cocked executions with terrible results. Carl, of course, ends up not only not killing Negan but bringing him home for dinner. Michonne has to just shoot her hostage and take the loss. Spencer overplays his hand and gets himself literally eviscerated. Rosita spends her one bullet on an (inexplicably) missed shot, ending up with Olivia dead and Eugene taken away.
And that seems to be the general point of the whole thing: Without the benefit of Rick’s leadership, they’re all just individual soldiers with poor aim. Its only when they come together under his guidance that things get done. As at the end of the episode, when Michonne finally convinces him it’s time to fight back, and the galvanized team rides out to start the revolution. But they need him at the head to get that going. Without him, they’re just all Rosita’s single bullet.
And on that I call bullshit. It’s dumb and inconsistent, for so many reasons. These are (mostly) extremely capable and smart people. They’ve made plans before, together, and followed through on them, when Rick was (for various reasons) out of commission. Yes, Rick’s the leader, but he’s not the smartest among them, or the best tactician, and he doesn’t have a monopoly on getting people to work together.
But instead, without Rick, everyone decides it is their solo duty to murder Negan. Which brings us to the other impossible-to-swallow aspect of this episode: How the hell is Negan still alive? We know that Alexandria isn’t the first community he’s ground under the heel of his boot. And sure, the leaders of those communities may have been like Rick: weighing the possibility of effective resistance against the lives of their people, and deciding it isn’t worth the risk. This is rational leadership when faced with an army the size of Negan’s.
But these last few episodes have been all about how nobody else is thinking rationally here. They’re all bucking under the saddle, desperate to rebel, to exact revenge, not thinking about the consequences to anyone else. Carl could easily have shot Negan last week, or slashed him with his own straight razor this week. Rosita only missed her shot because Lucille apparently has magic bullet-deflecting powers. Hell, even Olivia could have poisoned his lemonade. You mean to tell me that out of all of the other communities Negan has tortured, not a single rebellious citizen has taken a shot that actually connected with the big bad guy? Is he invulnerable somehow? How is he still strutting around in the open like this?
Anyway. Rick is gone for most of this, since he’s been off with Aaron finding their way across Lake Zombie to get supplies from a houseboat. (And being watched by a mysterious stranger in boots.) Among the goods they find a note: “Congrats for Winning, but You Still Lose,” with a crude drawing of a middle finger. You’d think this would give them pause—wouldn’t it seem to imply there’s a booby trap, or a bomb, or the food is poisoned?—but instead they just load everything into their truck including, inexplicably, the note. Which the Saviors find among their tribute and assume was written by them, using it as an excuse to beat the living hell out of Aaron.
This, combined with the murder of Spencer and innocent Olivia, and especially after Negan characteristically suggests that Rick should thank him for his trouble, puts Rick in a particularly receptive mood when Michonne returns from her own abortive revenge mission and tells him it’s time to fight. She’s discovered there are even more Saviors than they imagined. But it doesn’t matter; they’re warriors and they will find a way to make war.
So they ride off for the Hilltop, where Maggie has all but taken control by sheer force of her capable attitude. Seems the people there love her for her midnight tractor exploits, and even more for doing it all while pregnant. So Gregory’s dismissiveness only makes him less and less popular as Maggie’s star rises. And Rick & co. are greeted at the Hilltop gates by an even more welcome surprise: Daryl, who used the key slipped under his door to escape from Sanctuary, stopping on the way to steal some of Dwight’s clothes and trash his room a bit. On his way out of town, he runs into both Jesus and Negan’s soldier Fat Joey, who he kills and relieves of his gun, which just happens to be Rick’s beloved Colt Python.
So it’s reunions all around, including man and his trusty pistol, and they stride off to make a real plan. Finally.
The only ingredient that is missing now is the Kingdom, which Rick and friends don’t yet know about. Neither Morgan or Carol is eager to make the necessary introductions, though. Morgan because his Buddhism-lite recommends an uneasy peace over all-out war, and Carol because she’s still doing her best Greta Garbo impression, despite the fact that everyone including the king keeps on dropping by. The latest is Ezekiel’s soldier Richard, who is convinced their détente with the Saviors is going to end any day now, and wants to make a preemptive strike.The Walking Dead Houseboat Trailer
He gets no support from Carol/Morgan. But clearly the other Alexandrians will feel differently, and we’ll likely see a three-way alliance form when we come back from the break. Until February then, my bloodthirsty friends!
Register here: http://gg.gg/v62xa

https://diarynote.indered.space

コメント

最新の日記 一覧

<<  2025年7月  >>
293012345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
272829303112

お気に入り日記の更新

テーマ別日記一覧

まだテーマがありません

この日記について

日記内を検索