The Walking Dead 5.07: Crossed
Seth Hoffman
Billy Gierhart
This episode underscores everything that I’ve
been saying about the first half of the fifth season: it’s meant to take all
the “lessons” since the destruction of the prison and crystallize them into a
single message. And that message is:
Trust No One. Whether it’s the promise
of sanctuary at Terminus, or the relative safety offered by Father Gabriel,
Eugene’s “mission”, or Dawn’s enclave in Atlanta, all of them are laced with
false promises of purpose and safety.
And ultimately, as the showdown with Dawn’s people looms in the
mid-season finale, Team Grimes is left to ponder if there is anything like
peace left in this world.
Ostensibly there is a point to all of it, not
just a way to continue piling on the hopelessness again and again. I would even argue that the encounter with
Dawn’s enclave is one iteration too far; there’s a reason why, in the source
material, the story took a decidedly different turn immediately after the fight
with the Hunters and the revelation that Eugene had been lying the whole
time. Team Grimes was at a complete loss
of direction at that point. What does
Dawn’s group really bring to the table?
What concerns me slightly is that Team Grimes
seems unlikely to be a united front by the time the next story arc comes along,
which would needlessly complicate the narrative. Granted, I’m assuming that The Community is
on the horizon, but for the sake of the series, it almost has to be. It’s as radical and necessary a shift as the
prison/Woodbury was, and it turns the entire story on its head. The alternative is some kind of mixed bag with
part of the group perhaps encountering The Community, and the rest still
dealing with variations on the same old theme.
I’m hoping that this is just the writers
getting the road trips out of their system, so that the shift to the next
anticipated story arc with The Community can get the attention it
deserves. There’s an argument to be made
that once this corner is turned, the show is on its slow march to its
endpoint. The Community kicks off a
series of solid story arcs that culminate in a definitive manner, followed by a
time jump that might give the showrunners a roadmap for the final few
seasons. It may be a bit early to start
looking at the show’s endpoint, given the popularity of the franchise, but
suffice to say that the material covered in the first 4.5 seasons is roughly
halfway to the possible endpoint I’m referencing. And eight or nine seasons is a solid run.
Some may ask: does the series have to adhere so closely to the source material at this point? The argument is valid, yet the central problem remains. The source material progresses in such a way that there are clear sets of dynamics that are explored over the course of the story. The television series is pointing towards that very direction, so if they veer off onto some other path, it’s going to have to be an equally strong conceptual shift. And right now, I’m not seeing that happening.
- Rick’s distrust is growing, and pointing towards a major turning point
- The story is getting a bit repetitive now
- When will the characters get back together to present a united front?
Flaco_Jones
CONCURRING OPINION