avclub-65704fd17f06f34d16a669c703703501--disqus
americanslime
avclub-65704fd17f06f34d16a669c703703501--disqus

I mean, if we look at it from AMC's perspective, they definitely won't kill off Daryl. Which is fine; I think Norman Reedus is fucking delightful. Sasha and Carol I think are the most likely targets, maybe Maggie or Glenn. We're about to get a bunch of new characters, so the existing cast just became significantly

Honestly, if anything in that scene broke your suspension of disbelief, I'm not sure how you consume television at all.

I hope they skip that particular love interest. Though the way it ended kinda justified its whole existence.

I don't see why a dude wearing a zombie's face is any harder to do than anything else. I mean, if we're being honest, all the zombies on TWD are just normal people wearing zombie's faces.

Yeah, there's still like a year of comics before we get to Negan. Maybe more. People forget that because the comic was pretty forgettable around then.

What? That's not what happened at all.

I don't get why people watch scenes like that and say "bah, that doesn't completely comply with my speculation as to how this would play out in real life (where there are zombies), and thus it's terrible!" instead of just going "that was fucking awesome" and enjoying what's in front of them.

This episode was pretty damn good, mostly just because Andrew Lincoln is an awfully skilled actor. Anybody getting the sense they might be going a love interest route with Rick and Michonne? I kinda hope not, but it's starting to look like a pretty likely move, particularly with the PTSD-focused story angle they seem

Negan definitely wasn't exactly original, but he was genuinely terrifying. I'm certainly dreading his appearance and the inevitable brutal murder of a popular character.
The way things are going I think it'll be Carol, but the most logical choice is probably Daryl. I don't think they'll redo the comic exactly.

Her lesbianness seems to more revolve around not being attracted to men than it does being attracted to women.

Honestly, that sounds fairly realistic. It's incredibly hard to live off the land. The idea that a dozen people in the woods in 21st century Georgia could feed themselves while travelling and dealing with zombies is more than a little far-fetched. Perhaps if they had the time to catch big game and preserve the meat,

1) I'm 19. Hopefully an eventual survival/wilderness living skills instructor. Currently a sometime house-painter. About to do a year long apprenticeship with a primitive living skills school, though, so we'll see what happens.
2) Those types of filters work fine for getting rid of particulate matter in the water, but

Honestly, speaking as somebody who spends all his time studying survival, TWD is countless times more accurate then any actual survival show. And yes, they could be somewhat moreso (that water filter Tara made a few episodes ago doesn't actually work, for instance), but I get that they're there to tell a story, not to

Main takeaway from this episode is that every time Barrowman pulls off his mask dramatically the world becomes about 3% gayer.
And it is a wonderful thing.

Joker actually points out to him in Death of the Family that the whole "if I kill one, I won't be able to stop killing" excuse is obviously bullshit, and makes the case that he actually doesn't kill him because deep down he doesn't want to live in a world where nobody is skilled enough to really test him. Gah, what a

I did get a kick out of watching him being do some real damage to Brick. That outfit was disappointing, though. He didn't even have ears!

Right? I mean, this one event motivated him to kill 500+ people. A quick heart-to-heart isn't gonna fix that.
But that's plot contrivance for you, I guess.

Yeah, I'm a bit worried at how they've been handling Felicity lately. I hope her whole character doesn't get sucked into the vortex of being Ollie's love interest, because that would be a real shame. Rickards does better with that sort of material than Cassidy did, but it's still a bit of a buzzkill.

Actually one of the better things to come of the reboot. Francis Manapaul and Brian Buccellato did a very good opening run (mainly for Manapaul's art). I haven't been following the current team's run, but what I have read seemed decent. Robert Venditti is the writer, if I remember correctly.
Yeah, Kyle Rayner was

This was a very good guy Flash episode.
1) He starts out by saving people's lives in a scenario that doesn't require him to use violence, which is great and way too rare in superhero stories.
2) They don't go overboard in the scenes where he kinda sorta has to hit a woman.
3) They managed to find a way to get him to