Well, I don’t know if I would say evolution or devolution in some ways of certain things that have happened. You know, the eight at the end of this episode are as deeply in the soup as they’ve been in a very, very difficult and different situation but in some ways literal. The final obstacles that might swallow up our people. Really this episode is all about the final intensities, the final emotional business. In this way, we kind of looked at this last piece, what it all means for these characters and where did they start and where are they ending. What did his journey mean up until then? There were proper flashbacks in that episode, there were characters from the past. GIMPLE: The way we talked about it, there’s a little bit of either a throwback in process in that when we were talking about this final season and the final part of the final season, the way that Angela and Matt Negrete and myself approached the last episode that Rick had in it, was we talked about what did it all mean. Michael James Shaw as Mercer Jace Downs/AMC So, there’s horror, scares, action and adventure, but also lots of heart, tears, and I think that that’s been sort of like what our audience has had fun watching for a long time and hopefully they’ll enjoy the ride in the finale. KANG: ( laughs) Sure, but I do also think that the story of the Commonwealth does sort of like lend itself to those kinds of stories that are so people-centered, but now that we’re at the penultimate and we’re going into the finale, the finale is going to have all the fun Walking Dead stuff. So, that really kind of does lend itself to just more character-driven, emotional storytelling, and also, you know, just on a practical level, we had to save some money to do like a really big finale, so there’s a practical reason for that as well.ĭEADLINE: Well, thank you for the honesty… KANG: I think that in this block of episodes there was a lot of work that we put into where these characters are, relationships that have conflict in them, all of them thinking about the past, and what their future might be. That finale is from a story by longtime TWD showrunner Angela Kang, with executive producer Greg Nicotero once again taking up his season ender directing duties. As Daryl carries the little girl out to mummers of “Daddy” from his closest friend’s daughter (who Dixon essentially raised in the absence of her father and stepmother Michonne, played by Danai Gurira), the fate of another Grimes looks grim heading towards next week’s series finale, titled “Rest In Peace.” In fact, with wall-climbing Walkers deep within the perimeter of the Commonwealth, things look bleak for everyone. As Daryl Dixon ( Norman Reedus), Maggie Greene (Lauren Cohan), Negan (Jeffery Dean Morgan), Carol Peletier (Melissa McBride) and other Survivors battle the now-collapsing Commonwealth and an incoming horde of Walkers, an ambush finds Judith shot and wounded. Penned by Magali Lozano & Erik Mountain & Kevin Deiboldt, and directed by Sharat Raju, tonight’s “Family,” the 176 th episode of the zombie apocalypse show based on Robert Kirkman’s now-concluded comics, shows TWD still knows how to deliver an annihilating gut punch. 'Legions': AMC's Shudder In Spain Among Buyers Of Fabian Forte Horror - EFM
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