The Walking Dead 6.12: Not Tomorrow Yet
Seth Hoffman
Greg Nicotero
As far back as the third season, the writers
explored the idea of what it might take to turn a man with good intentions into
a monster. The Governor was the
anti-Rick, the kind of morally questionable leader that would rally the troops
to exterminate a potential threat with no quarter. The potential was there for Rick to go down
the same path; all it would take was a threat to their survival sufficient
enough to push him over the edge.
Starvation is a pretty compelling motivator.
For all intent purposes, the arrival of the
herd, the Wolves, and all the internal challenges to Rick’s growing leadership
of Alexandria has pushed everyone to the edge.
They can’t sustain themselves without making concessions and
negotiations. Even so, agreeing to
commit wholesale slaughter is far beyond anything that Team Grimes has done in
the past. It’s always been a matter of
not starting a fight but ending it. The
Saviors may have made themselves known now and then, but they haven’t come for
Alexandria at all. This is a very
different situation.
So I’m surprised folks like Tara didn’t say
something about how familiar the scenario feels. She heard the Governor make a speech a lot
like the one Rick makes at the start of this episode. At least on some level, the Governor was
willing to let Team Grimes walk away from the prison and survive. Rick’s plan is far less forgiving. Granted, it’s also “cleaner”, in terms of
wiping out A to get supplies B, but it is a very different kind of mission than
we’ve seen from Rick in the past.
It’s easy enough to point to the behavior we’ve
seen from the Saviors and conclude that there’s not much room for
misunderstanding. But the lack of good
intel prior to the slaughter means that Team Grimes has no idea how many people
are still left on the other side, and that includes Negan, who is not going to
be happy about this (and justifiably so).
Frankly, didn’t we all want Rick’s little army to wipe out the Wolves to
the last man for doing precisely the same thing in Alexandria?
All that said, it’s how the various team
members deal with the demands of pre-emptive warfare that makes this
interesting. Glenn kills his first
actual person and the pain of that decision is written all over his face. (Let’s hope that doesn’t become literal by
season’s end.) Father Gabriel did his
very best Samuel L. Jackson impression, and quite frankly, that might have
redeemed him entirely based on the line delivery alone. In between we have Rick, Michonne, and Daryl
acting as the best post-apocalyptic hit squad imaginable.
It might seem like I’m being critical of the
episode; I am most assuredly not. This
sort of moral ambiguity is precisely what this story is all about, and I can’t
wait to see how Rick’s plan ends up having unforeseen consequences. Right now, Carol and Maggie (who never should
have gone on the damn mission) are the ones likely to experience those
consequences first, but there’s not one chance that this will be over
soon. For all intent purposes,
Alexandria’s first steps into a bigger world told a very violent story, and if
hearts and minds were at all a consideration, couldn’t the Saviors themselves
portray themselves as the victims?
It’s also worth noting that the second half of this episode was some of the most intense material for the series to date. It’s astounding that Team Grimes came away with hardly a scratch. It more than made up for the plodding relationship-driven scenes in the first half. In particular, Abraham’s break-up dialogue made me hope that he was not long for this world, if only so we don’t have to endure more of that nonsense!
- One of the most harrowing action sequences of the entire series
- The moral questions at the heart of Rick’s decision-making
- Abraham, that’s two episodes in a row where we had to put up with your relationship antics. Enough!
Flaco_Jones
CONCURRING OPINION