I really don't think it was. It was built up as a dramatic moment. It was just poorly done.
Things started to go downhill and soon as that damn kid picked up the rifle and walked outside.
That's true, but the show has never been a stickler in that reality.
Did anyone else notice the awkward plot point where the kid leaves the house in the middle of the day and it dramatically cuts to commercials? Then it comes back and it's immediately Carol bringing the kid back into the house. It was so awkward and pointless.
Fear is a pretty good show at this point; the occasional "character makes stupid decision to create tension" issues arise, but the acting, writing, and characters at this point are much better than TWD. Season 1 kind of went to shit pretty fast but they got their stride back in the middle of Season 2 and have only improved since.I might have to catch myself up on Fear. That season 4 trailer looks ten times more fun to watch than anything I've seen of the original show in the last two seasons.
Season one of Fear was decent overall I thought. Season two was pretty bad the first few episodes, but it started picking up around the halfway point and got better (though not great, aside from a few moments). Season three is hands-down one of the best seasons of either show, and is leaps ahead of anything the main show has put out since season seven's first episode. That's all coming from someone who actually still enjoys the main show (though I absolutely see its flaws).I might have to catch myself up on Fear. That season 4 trailer looks ten times more fun to watch than anything I've seen of the original show in the last two seasons.
Hilarious how this episode was all about walker blood infecting people and how dangerous it is and here's Rick walking around with an open cut above his eye just wasting zombies left and right but nope he's fine....
I've seen it floated around that the zombie gunk needs to be delivered via a deep wound or gash.
I mean I think at this point you just have to leave the nit picky stuff at the door when it comes to this show because it's just how it is.. lol
It's not nitpicky, the issues pointed out are pretty glaring faults in the writing. You can't ignore it.I mean I think at this point you just have to leave the nit picky stuff at the door when it comes to this show because it's just how it is.. lol
I mean I think at this point you just have to leave the nit picky stuff at the door when it comes to this show because it's just how it is.. lol
I mean I think at this point you just have to leave the nit picky stuff at the door when it comes to this show because it's just how it is.. lol
I mean I think at this point you just have to leave the nit picky stuff at the door when it comes to this show because it's just how it is.. lol
It's not our fault the writers constantly create glaring plot contrivances and have characters make nonsensical decisions. Criticizing that isn't nitpickingI mean I think at this point you just have to leave the nit picky stuff at the door when it comes to this show because it's just how it is.. lol
What is the timeline of Fear the Walking Dead? We're getting Post-Crazy Morgan, but I thought the zombie outbreak was a good year or two (or three) before TWD started. Now, with Morgan in the mix, Fear, which is only on season four to TWD's eight, is halfway to the current time?
If you marked off the days [that have passed since Fear the Walking Dead debuted], I think right now, by the end of the first half [of Season 2], we're getting very close to Rick waking up in Georgia.
If the show would just faithfully follow the comic it would be 1000x better.
The sad part is they started to, for the most part, but some where something has gone seriously wrong.
I'd have to disagree, at least partially. I absolutely do not want comic Negan in all his "glory" to be on the show. And the show has proven in the past that its deviations from the comics don't necessarily mean bad things— for example, the show's changes to the cannibals / Terminus arc, as well as how the show introduced Negan (It being split into two episodes across two seasons is something I will never defend, but if you watch them back-to-back they are effective as all hell, and imo are better than the comic).If the show would just faithfully follow the comic it would be 1000x better.
There's no believable way that TWDs current Morgan will go to Fear. It has to be some past version of him.
I don't see it being anything other than a timeskip to bring it past the main show's current place in time... which seems really weird after how season three of Fear ended, but there's not really any other way for him to show up so far away from Georgia or Virginia that would make sense.There's no believable way that TWDs current Morgan will go to Fear. It has to be some past version of him.
You know what it is.Well shit, they are going to screw up Fear like they did TWD - aren't they
If the show would just faithfully follow the comic it would be 1000x better.
I'm still sort of thinking that Morgan is going to die on the main show and the Morgan we get in Fear will be from the past.
2+ years, I'd say. It'll take Morgan quite a while to get from Virginia to Texas even if he has a car.Well shit, they are going to screw up Fear like they did TWD - aren't they?
I'm now pretty sure it's present Morgan. So we're in for a.. what? 2 year timeskip?
Almost certainly not, based on all the information that AMC/the cast has made available.
What I'm saying is that I would't be surprised if that was just a deflection to keep the surprise of his death intact.
Of course, they are airing TWD finale and the Fear premiere back to back, which does lend credence to it being a straight S8 = S4 timeline crossover.
How did the kids even get the key to the prisoner's pen? Did I miss that or did they not even bother explaining?