


Grief and trauma have reshaped her into someone far more ruthless than the woman who lost Glenn to Negan's bat at the end of season six. If her story made anything clear, it's that Maggie is no longer the person she once was. Before they can process what's happening, The Reapers casually stroll up with a terrifying amount of weapons which sets up an absolute bloodbath in episode three.īecause of this, Maggie's hatred for Negan is temporarily sidelined, but don't expect this to disappear anytime soon. That is, until the survivors eventually reach their destination and spot all the bodies hanging upside down on the side of the road. Lauren Cohan's commitment to this scene makes it the most chilling moment that season eleven has given us yet. That depressing development is then compounded even further by a flashback story Maggie delivers in soul-crushing real time. In the end, it's Maggie who forces the group to let this kid die, because she knows that helping him could kill them all. And then, in a surprise turn of events, Negan actually ends up being the group's moral compass when he tries to save someone at great risk to himself. "She was just talking about murdering me, sooner rather than later, and you’re annoyed at me?"īefore the pair can continue to bicker, the danger of the situation they're all in forces them to put the conversation on hold. He just didn't help her, and to be fair, it's easy to see why he made that choice, as reprehensible as it might be. Negan tries to correct Maggie by saying that he didn't technically kill her. And lo and behold, it's Maggie, and she's wearing some pretty hefty plot armour from the look of it! Did you really think they were going to kill off one of the show's biggest characters in episode one?Īs soon as Maggie pulls herself up into the carriage, she does what we would all do in that situation, which is punch Negan in the face, and then tell the group what he did. The survivors press on through each carriage, Train To Busan-style, until suddenly they hear someone banging on a trapdoor from underneath. Negan doesn't sink his claws in quite like Scar, but instead, he gives her a sharp glare and turns away, leaving Maggie to fall into the crowd of wildebeest walkers that await below. Justo cuando se cumplen tres aos de la desaparicin de Rick Grimes en The Walking Dead, la tercera serie dentro del universo zombi de AMC, The Walking Dead: World Beyond, ha ofrecido. In what we can only describe as a horror-fuelled homage to The Lion King, Maggie then looks up at Negan and asks for help as she hangs off the edge. Negan makes it, but Maggie starts having trouble with walkers pulling at her ankles. Not only are there silent walkers stashed in bags with their vocal chords slashed, but there's also a lot more of the regular kind too.Īt the end, everyone climbs up onto a train carriage to escape, leaving behind just Negan and Maggie. It's no wonder that this episode is named 'Acheron' (after a river in Hades) because this sure does feel like hell.
#RICK THE WALKING DEAD MUERE FULL#
Maggie proposes taking back locations overrun by The Reapers, and that's exactly what they set off to do, but first, the group must travel through a tunnel full of walkers. But there's no time for revenge, because supplies are low and our survivors need all the help they can get.
#RICK THE WALKING DEAD MUERE SERIES#
With this question answered by series creator Robert Kirkman, The Walking Dead fans can now rest assured that Rick wasn’t some secret trigger-happy ‘badass’ looking for an excuse to cut loose, he was a good man who did what he could to maintain his humanity in a world that had quite literally gone to hell.Early on in the premiere, this tension comes to the fore when Maggie and Negan briefly face off against each other. It isn’t about how horrible people are once they’re given the chance, it’s about how even the best people are forced to do horrible things to protect themselves and the ones they love, yet even in the face of possibly unforgivable actions, they still don’t lose themselves or give up hope. Sure, there are people like the Governor or Negan who were clearly internalizing some pent-up aggression that they were happy to unleash when society collapsed, but that’s not what the series is about. At its core, The Walking Dead is about who people are and what they’re forced to become in a time of crisis. This definitive answer to a burning fan question is incredibly interesting, as it not only answers the question itself, but also speaks to the entire point of the series. The Walking Dead: Rick & Michonne will fill the gap between Ricks final episode in Season 5 and the thirteenth episode of Season 10, which was the final episode for Michonne (Danai Gurira). The potential was obviously there, but I don’t think it existed until it needed to. Do you think Rick ever had that no mad hardened version in himself hidden away even before the apocalypse ready to be triggered?
