Love makes you do the wacky.

Willow ,'Beneath You'


Spoilers 3: First Mutant Enemy, Now the World

[NAFDA] Spoilers for any and all currently running TV shows. All hardcore spoilage, all the time. No white font.


§ ita § - Mar 05, 2012 5:57:09 am PST #3306 of 3486
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Here's how Shane's supposed to bite it:

If these reports are to be believed, this is the episode where Shane finally dies — which feels like it should hardly even qualify as a spoiler anymore, but moving on — and it's at Rick's hands. Specifically, Shane spends a while explaining how there's no way the two of them can both be around anymore, and he dares Rick to kill him in cold blood, which he feels sure Rick won't have the guts to do. Rick then puts down his gun and approaches him — only to stab Shane with a hidden knife. However, Shane comes back as a zombie, at which point Carl shows up and kills him.


le nubian - Mar 05, 2012 5:58:30 am PST #3307 of 3486
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

I was wondering how they were going to reveal the CDC shit. man.


§ ita § - Mar 05, 2012 6:10:05 am PST #3308 of 3486
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Apparently in the comics Carl kills Shane and Rick offs his zombie?

And this is the reveal that you don't have to be taken down by a zombie to be turned into one, I'm guessing?


le nubian - Mar 05, 2012 6:22:40 am PST #3309 of 3486
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

Carl killed Shane because Shane was getting ready to kill Rick. There was an imminent threat and Carl handled it. It was an important moment in the series and happened early.

Rick killed Shane's zombie after he had already discovered that the zombie virus was in all of them and if they died (no matter how), they would come back as zombies. It was pretty dramatic in the graphic novel when a person died in his sleep and came back as a zombie and killed 1 or 2 survivors. We all were like WTF? And then Rick figures out what this means in terms of Shane, drives miles and miles to dig Shane up from his grave and put a gun to his head.

I was hoping (for example) that the daughter with the high fever would have died in her sleep and come back as a zombie (without bites) and that would be how the reveal took place. To me, this was a really messed up development that no matter how you died, that was your future.


le nubian - Mar 05, 2012 6:27:18 am PST #3310 of 3486
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

And btw, if Rick has known all this time about this, and didn't share this with the others, that is even more irresponsible. Even if Sophia had evaded the walkers, if she broke her neck, drowned, what have you, this was her fate.

It made finding her alive and well FAR less likely to my mind. Not to mention they need to sleep in shifts to keep watch.

Finally, this would have been my way of conducting a test. I would have shot Randall in the head and asked Shane to watch him to see if he turns and about how long it takes. There is a malevolence with this asshole, so might as well put him to good use. Humanity be damned.


Matt the Bruins fan - Mar 05, 2012 6:29:41 am PST #3311 of 3486
"I remember when they eventually introduced that drug kingpin who murdered people and smuggled drugs inside snakes and I was like 'Finally. A normal person.'” —RahvinDragand

If Rick doesn't realize that someone he killed could come back as a zombie, why the double taps on the bandits from Philly in the bar?


le nubian - Mar 05, 2012 6:33:45 am PST #3312 of 3486
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

so you are saying that he has known, but didn't share this with others?

I think you are right. I agree.


§ ita § - Mar 05, 2012 6:59:56 am PST #3313 of 3486
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

So, wait, if you kill someone you have to then do a zombie killing thing to them right away, and that works? You don't have to wait for them to rise again and then do it?

Not to mention they need to sleep in shifts to keep watch.

I don't think so, any more than they need to protect themselves from other zombies, right? Unless there's a reason Sophia was coming home, and other zombies would walk on by.

There was an imminent threat and Carl handled it. I

I might not hate that Carl as much as I'm disliking the one we have right now.

If Rick has known this the whole time, he's pretty crap at leading people. He's pretty crap at being a husband, a friend, and a father. Jesus.


le nubian - Mar 05, 2012 7:11:36 am PST #3314 of 3486
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

I think Matt raises a compelling point. If you double tap and make sure the 2nd gets them in the head, you are probably done.

BTW, may I also say that the reveal about the zombie virus being in all of us was just so well done. The group had gone to 1 or 2 abandoned housing communities and I wondered why they were getting attacked by zombies in sealed up homes.

Then boom!

There is no fucking lead up to this revelation EXCEPT for the double-tapping. That's a bit too subtle. I would have preferred more hints dropped. I don't know if the Darabont shift impeded the writers' ability to do good storytelling or what, but the characterizations and the plotting are shit.


§ ita § - Mar 10, 2012 5:02:29 am PST #3315 of 3486
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Awake isn't a genre show: [link]

Which means we can't question anything, I guess, because dreams are non-linear, yadda yadda? So there can totally be scenes in the dream world where he isn't even present?