Tyrese and his sister/wife tell the Governor that with all due respect, they’d reconsidered their position on fighting (I knew someone had changed their minds about something!). The real reason, though, is that Carl is mad about not being allowed to fight the war with everyone else.īack at Woodbury, the Governor is rounding up his troops. I figured it was because Rick had changed his mind about forfeiting being their leader while losing a game of cement-floor chalk Scrabble the night before or something. Glenn says to Rick, “I’ve never seen him this mad.” I wrote down that I couldn’t remember why Carl was angry at Rick this time, but it turns out that we hadn’t been shown the reason yet. Outside, everyone is packing up their Hyundais. He throws his framed family photo, sheriff badge, and reams of metaphor-heavy poetry he wrote about Beth into a duffel bag. “In this life now you kill or you die,” he tells Milton as he locks him the room with Andrea, “Or you die and you kill.” The great zombie-Milton-versus-handcuffed-Andrea battle of slightly later in 2013 has begun!Īt the prison, Carl is pissed off and packing. Milton refuses and the Governor stabs him. Add “someone who knows the definition of blocking” to the list of job descriptions this show might want to consider filling next season. Milton walks to the door with the tray of tools, which the Governor then takes one of, hands it back to Milton, and tells him to walk back over to Andrea and kill her with it, in order to prove his loyalty. Milton drops the tools, intentionally leaving a set of pliers on the floor. In my memory, laying those tools out ate up about 35 minutes of that episode, but I could be wrong. The Governor sends Milton over to the table with his Dead Ringers Commemorative Pliers Collection and tells him to put them all back in the tray that we previously had watched the Governor take them out of. “Why are you guys looking at me like that?” He says he had to stretch the truth a little bit to his people, but now they’re onboard. “I’m going to really do it this time,” he mutters under his breath. The Governor also tells them that he’s going to storm the prison, kill all of her friends. I’m going to need her for something,” which doesn’t exactly makes sense considering what happens next. The Governor tells Milton, “See, she’s still alive. Milton sees Andrea handcuffed to the dentist chair. Truth be told, he probably should’ve stuck to his boring old fallback plan of successfully building a utopian community from scratch in the midst of a ruined world, filled with fertile women who worshipped him, but nobody wants to be told they should settle. Then again, he’s not all that great at that either. It is more the place where torture will one day happen, maybe after he retires from his true original passion, war-making. ![]() He instead takes him to his torture workshop, which is proving to be more of a fixer-upper than he originally thought. The Governor doesn’t kill Milton here, though. If there’s one thing this show has taught us, it’s that there is no shortage of conveniently placed zombies. “We lost eight men because of you,” he tells him, referring to the ones Merle took out back at the grain warehouse conference room but not going into specifics about how it was that no one stopped to pick up new walkers along the way. The Governor is punching Milton in the face, punishment for setting fire to those zombies in the pit a few episodes back.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |