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TV: ‘The Walking Dead’ S02E02 Recap and Review

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I sat here for a good few hours thinking about exactly what to write about this week’s installment of “The Walking Dead”, constantly drawing a blank. It took me awhile to realize that my reasons for this were because that is how I reflected upon the episode. Completely blank. This was the first episode written by the new team, and unfortunately, it was largely a transition episode with very little substance and a lot of redundant feelings being tossed around.

This episode starts with a flashback paralleling Carl’s shooting with the shot that landed Rick in the hospital that he awakens from in episode 1. We are brought to a time when zombies didn’t run the earth, and marital problems were among the chief of the Grimes family concerns. While Lori’s side of the shooting certainly provided a previously unseen narrative, nothing was learned that we didn’t already know. The Grimes family is made up of good people who are plagued by a sea of ugly circumstance.The flashback ends, and cuts to Rick racing to the home of the apologetic hunter who accidentally shot his son. Luckily, there is a doctor living there who stabilizes the boy, saving his life. Shane and the hunter soon follow. leading to a heartfelt bromantic moment between Shane and Rick. Shane comforts Rick, who is in a state of shock, and convinces him to stay with his son while the house residence find Lori. The boy is in a horrible state, and needs several blood transfusions, as well as several surgeries. He is bleeding internally, and the items required to save him are unavailable to the doctor. Shane and Otis, the man who shot Carl, volunteer to obtain these parts at a school overrun with zombies. The men say their goodbyes, leaving on a virtual suicide mission.

Back at the camp, Dale and Theodore begin to worry about their fellow survivors, and the status of Theodore’s infected wound. Despite being in a massive traffic jam, the men are unable to find any medicine or medical supplies to treat the wound. It becomes a very real possibility that it could be fatal. As the idealization that he may die slowly sets in, Theodore’s search for supplies become a struggle, and seeing the death and destruction left in the wake of the outbreak rapidly begins to unhinge him. The two men take a break after several hours, and in a state of fever, Theodore tells Dale that he believes that the two were left behind because the group views them as weak, and incoherently rambles about being discriminated against by the “cowboys and hicks” that run the group. He expresses interest in driving off and leave the rest of them to their fates.

The rest of the group finds their way back before Theodore does anything rash, but his fever is getting so strong that he is in need of immediate medical attention. Glenn is sent to take Theodore to meet up with the Grimes family and the doctor, while the rest vow to stay behind long enough to give Sophie one more chance to find her way home.

Meanwhile, Lori is taken back to Rick and Carl, where she breaks down at the sight of her son’s injuries. As the two parents grieve, their faith was shaken when they find out that the good doctor is actually only a vet, and that his experience in this surgery had been on animals only. He is also the only doctor in the area, leaving them with no choice but to trust his medical abilities.

At the school, Shane and Otis realize that they are biting off more than they can chew as two men with shotguns against easily over 100 zombies. The pair wait until nightfall and shoot flares to the other side of the parking lot, giving them the time they need to ransack the medical trailer parked outside. In a messy escape, the zombies catch onto them and chase them into a small enclosed area with nothing but a fence gate protecting them.

At this point (right when the action finally picks up) we are left wondering their fate. Of all of the episodes of “The Walking Dead” so far, this one was probably the weakest for this reason. Nothing really happened until the later 10 minutes, when we are left with an unsatisfying cliffhanger. Most of the episode was spent watching the Grimes family grieve over Carl, and while that grief was justified, it didn’t make for terribly exciting television. 2×2 was mainly an episode focused on setting up the plot arcs for the next few episodes, and putting the gears into motion to reunify the group and build trust within it. The function of the episode makes sense, but the entertainment value was not at it’s highest. I am usually a huge stickler for character development and emotional scenes, but characters have never been a prime attraction in “The Walking Dead”, so all of the tears flying around in this episode did very little but make me wish that somebody would get eaten already.

So how did this episode fare compared to the pilot? Are you happy so far with the changes brought on by the new writing team, or can you even tell the difference? Do you think that the shift in focus that this episode took was a positive thing, or are you looking forward to more zombie action?

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Mike Flanagan in Talks to Direct the Next ‘Exorcist’ Movie

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Mike Flanagan Exorcist

Recent comments from producer Jason Blum suggested that a retool was in order when last year’s The Exorcist: Believer wasn’t as successful as Blumhouse and Universal hoped. That certainly seems to be the case, as Deadline reports tonight that Mike Flanagan is in talks to direct the next Exorcist movie.

Director David Gordon Green was initially on board to direct an entire trilogy of new movies in the franchise, with The Exorcist: Believer intended to be only the first film in that three-film sequel series. Originally set to hit theaters on April 18, 2025, sequel The Exorcist: Deceiver was delayed when Green left the project.

If talks come to fruition, Flanagan will take over, likely steering the franchise in a new direction.

The first film in the trilogy was released theatrically on October 13, 2023, with Leslie Odom Jr. starring alongside a returning Ellen Burstyn from the original classic.

In Believer, “Since the death of his pregnant wife in a Haitian earthquake 12 years ago, Victor Fielding (Leslie Odom, Jr.) has raised their daughter Angela (Lidya Jewett) on his own.

“But when Angela and her friend Katherine (Olivia Marcum) disappear in the woods, only to return three days later with no memory of what happened to them, it unleashes a chain of events that will force Victor to confront the nadir of evil and, in his terror and desperation, seek out the only person alive who has witnessed anything like it before.”

The final moments of The Exorcist: Believer brought Linda Blair’s Regan MacNeil back into the fold, seeming to suggest that the legacy character could return in future installments.

As for Flanagan, the horror filmmaker has Life of Chuck on the way. Flanagan previously helmed Stephen King adaptations Doctor Sleep and Gerald’s Game, and he’s also known for titles including Ouija: Origin of Evil and Oculus, along with the Netflix horror shows The Haunting of Hill HouseThe Haunting of Bly Manor, and The Fall of the House of Usher.

Stay tuned for more as we learn it.

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