The Walking Dead 8.09: Honor
Matthew Negrete and Channing Powell
Greg Nicotero
Knowing all of the behind-the-scenes drama that
surrounded the betrayal of Chandler Riggs by Scott Gimple and his cronies, it’s
hard to come at this episode with a great deal of objectivity. And make no mistake: Riggs (and the character
of Carl Grimes) has been used by Gimple as a sacrificial lamb to regain
audience investment with a series that has been woefully mismanaged for the
past season or so. Ever since the
emotional peak of Negan’s introduction, Gimple and his writing staff have been
flailing horribly to maintain any sense of creativity that might remain. Carl’s death is merely an attempt to bandage
a gaping wound.
As a result, the events of the episode fail to
connect in an organic fashion. It’s not
hard to feel horrible that Carl is dying and ultimately takes his own life to
spare his father the agony of the responsibility. Riggs leaves everything on the screen and
does everything possible to invest the audience in his character’s final
moments. But it is so blatantly
manipulative that it comes across as almost clinical in execution. We all knew it was coming, so this is simply
a slow march into the all-too-well known.
It also doesn’t help that the “official”
explanation for the need to kill off Carl makes no sense. Since the end of the episode foreshadows it,
there’s no reason not to mention how the source material handled the end of the
All-Out War arc: Rick ultimately chooses not to kill Negan in the name of
building a better future. While this
admittedly seems forced in the source material as well, there is more than
enough justification within Rick’s perspective to justify it. Gimple simply couldn’t wrap his head around
the audience for the adaptation accepting that outcome without a ham-fisted
Carl subplot that makes no sense, designed to deliver Rick’s moral decision on
a silver platter with little to no nuance or room for Rick to debate Negan’s
fate on his own. (Let’s leave aside that
his distaste for Daryl’s no-prisoners approach would have been foreshadowing
enough for eventual mercy.)
Carl’s sacrificial role also takes what is an
internal choice on Rick’s part, and thus a motivator for his post-war actions
and direction, and renders it largely external.
He didn’t come to the point of mercy on his own; he’s doing it because
Carl’s dying words compel him to do it.
Given the depth of Rick’s established obstinance in the face of
literally everyone else in his personal history, would he really be driven to adopt
a philosophy he wasn’t already following, even under these circumstances? (Let’s not overlook that Rick literally
reacted more to Glenn’s death at Negan’s hands than the death of his son. Even Lori’s death shook him worse.)
On the one hand, it’s easy to see why Gimple didn’t
have Carl die as part of the actual war, despite the fact that it would have
been a more organic and logical means.
If Carl dies as a result of the war, Rick would never be able to let
Negan live. Therefore this gambit only
works (at least in theory) if Carl dies due to something that has become
increasingly mundane. Rick is suddenly
reminded of the real purpose of his actions, supposedly: saving everyone
possible from the threat of Walkers. On
paper it’s not hard to see why this decision might have seemed compelling, but
given that Carl’s subplot was anemic and ridiculous from the start, it just
adds to the clinical nature of Gimple’s numbers-driven plotting decisions.
Perhaps the most irritating point is when Carl
is forced to pass the “hope for the future” baton to Judith. First of all, she has barely existed in the
narrative in recent seasons, so it is a fairly obvious attempt to give Carl’s
death and Judith’s presence meaning. But
that brings to mind the fact that Carl has always been (in both the source
material and the adaptation) the established, relatively well-developed face of
the future. He actually gave the story a
point in an increasingly-meandering narrative, because even Negan’s soft-spot
towards Carl only matters if Carl is around!
Passing that metaphorical role to Judith sounds great until one realizes
that she’s barely on-screen and could also be killed off just as easily once
Gimple or the new showrunner decides the ratings need another boost.
One would think that perhaps a parallel plot
thread with Morgan, Carol, and Ezekiel debating the finer points of killing and
mercy would elevate the narrative. Instead,
it seems like the writers couldn’t figure out that maybe killing off Carl might
engage the audience if more time was spent on the characters and how this is
affecting them. Other characters have
literally had entire episodes devoted to how people are handling their demise,
but Carl gets shuffled off pretty quickly between action scenes with other
characters. It just adds to the sense
that it’s all calculated and manipulative.
- Chandler Riggs gives one of his best performances, despite the circumstances
- The clinical nature of Carl’s removal from the series undercuts the impact
- Rick is less devastated by Carl’s passing than several other losses over the years
- It’s hard to see how this will do anything but contribute to the show’s hastening decline