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“The Walking Dead: Dead City” Review – Slow Start for NYC Spinoff Shows Promise for an Intriguing Future

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 - The Walking Dead: Dead City _ Season 1 - Photo Credit: Peter Kramer/AMC

AMC’s “The Walking Dead” has crawled back out of its shallow grave following the series finale that aired back in November with “The Walking Dead: Dead City.The first of many spin-offs on the horizon, “Dead City” follows Maggie (Lauren Cohan) and Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) as they venture into a walker-infested New York City to rescue Maggie and Glenn’s son Hershel who has been kidnapped by a former-Savior. 

Set a few years after the flagship series’ strong finale, Maggie and Negan have gone their separate ways since their intensive conversation in the final episode. Maggie continues to float between Hilltop and other adjacent communities. Negan has taken a nomad approach to life, getting into all sorts of trouble around the post-apocalyptic wasteland. After a no-good group of baddies begins demanding resources monthly from one of Maggie’s communities, they take young Hershel as a collateral hostage. Meanwhile, Negan happens to be a “Wanted Man” and is on the run from the “New Babylon Federation,” which is an established network of various survivor settlements overseen by Marshall Perlie Armstrong (Gaius Charles). 

The episode starts with a lone Maggie observing the hordes of undead shambling around Manhattan. Strong cinematography showcases Maggie amongst the sunlit shores, alone and isolated from her son. The visuals immediately evoke a different aesthetic than that of the flagship series. Maggie is forced to deal with a particularly bloaty creature (once again showcasing the always amazing practical makeup effects the series is known for). After a brief tussle, Maggie brutally demolishes its face with a telescope. With each hit that Maggie swings down, blood splatters onto her face as she continues to react in an embattled rage. The violent imagery eerily calls back to that of Negan’s bat swinging in Season 7 of the series. It’s an interesting callback and certainly emphasizes how vicious Maggie can truly get when her son is in danger.

Lauren Cohan as Maggie Rhee – The Walking Dead: Dead City _ Season 1 – Photo Credit: Peter Kramer/AMC

While looking for Negan at a nearby motel, the residents accuse Maggie of being sent to snoop by one of their rivals. They try to violently remove her nose but an incredibly rad reveal of a knife hidden in the toe of Maggie’s boots (think “Assassin’s Creed” but out of the foot not the wrist) allows her to evade the situation, just as Negan walks into the chaos. After the situation settles, Maggie relays to Negan why she needs him, citing that when the raiders came for her son they whistled the same melody that Negan once did during that fateful line-up in the Season 6 finale. 

“That rings a bell doesn’t it? It did for me. That’s the last thing I heard before I met you,” she quips. 

Turns out, the man responsible for Hershel’s kidnapping was once in Negan’s Savior ranks. Negan is traveling with a young girl named Ginny (Mahina Napoleon) who hasn’t uttered a word since her father was brutally killed by the Marshalls. Once again representing Negan’s soft-spot for children (fans will remember he showed quite a lot of sympathy towards Judith and Carl in the main series), Maggie agrees to put up Ginny in one of her communities, as long as Negan tags along and helps rescue Hershel. And there we have our set-up for why Negan of all people would team up with Maggie on her quest. 

Cohan and Dean Morgan are still exceptionally skilled at bringing life into these characters. Much like Andrew Lincoln and Rick Grimes, these two have become so accustomed to playing these roles that it simply never comes off as artificial. While Negan and Maggie are at much different times in their life than we last saw them, their original personalities and performances continue to shine through despite the refreshed circumstances.

Lauren Cohan as Maggie Rhee, Jeffrey Dean Morgan as Negan – The Walking Dead: Dead City _ Season 1, Episode 1 – Photo Credit: Peter Kramer/AMC

In “The Walking Dead: Dead City,” Maggie comes across as more hard around the edges, locked in and determined to rescue her son and seek vengeance. Negan has been through Hell and back, consistently getting wrapped up in situations where someone is trying to kill him, and he’s weathered by the state of the undead world. The evolution and exploration of the Negan character is one of the most impressive things the flagship series pulled off and “Dead City” serves as an extension or even an epilogue of that character’s journey. 

One of the most surprising sequences in the episode comes from a nightmare that Maggie has while sleeping in her truck. The moment Negan brutally murdered her husband Glenn Rhee (Steven Yeun) is ghoulishly replayed over and over again – emphasizing the splash of blood that splatters from Negan’s bat and the final disfigured look that Glenn gives Maggie before he succumbs to the pain. For a show that received a fair share of flack from this sequence (and even admitted they would tone down the violence in light of it), it was quite shocking to see such focus on this specific moment that divided the fan base back in the day. 

The twisted nightmare is inter-cut with scenes of young Hershel Greene being kidnapped, showcasing that the same rage that fueled Maggie during that critical moment has now returned in her quest to rescue her son. As Maggie shoots up from her sleep in fear, it’s revealed that Negan is also sleeping in the back of the truck. Negan tells a story from his childhood about how his dad always promised him he’d show him the Statue of Liberty, but as per usual, “something came up.” This moment comes across as quite macabre considering Maggie was only just revisiting the painful memory of Negan killing the father of her son, only for him to now be chiming in with a story about his own father. 

The endless dynamic of Negan and Maggie being at each other’s toes since the brutal slaying in the Season 7 premiere continues to be an emotional narrative thread that rears its ugly head frequently amongst the dynamic of the two survivors. 

Trey Santiago-Hudson as Jano, Lauren Cohan as Maggie Rhee, Jeffrey Dean Morgan as Negan – The Walking Dead: Dead City _ Season 1, Episode 1 – Photo Credit: Peter Kramer/AMC

“What I don’t get is after all of these years you still think I’m the bad guy. I’m not. No one is. You know what Maggie? Maybe everyone is. Ask yourself one question, how many husbands and fathers have you killed?” Negan asks at one point in the episode. 

“What you did. You don’t ever put something like that to bed,” Maggie fires back.

Many fans have debated the ethics of both Rick and Negan’s groups throughout the “All Out War” story arc (adapted from the comic series) back in Seasons 7 and 8 of the main series. Both groups attacked and killed several survivors on both sides, yet Negan is consistently framed as the worse of two evils. With Negan’s line about everyone being the bad guy, he pushes that controversial perspective against Maggie’s continued judgment. In Maggie’s mind (and the audience’s), nothing Rick Grimes did to the Saviors will ever compare to how Negan murdered Maggie’s husband right before her eyes. 

While much of the survivor vs. survivor drama that follows Negan and Maggie as they evade the enforcers of the New Babylon Federation feels very much like tried and true “Walking Dead,” “Dead City” does have some exciting and ghoulish tricks up its sleeve. One sequence finds Maggie and Negan evading walkers that are tumbling down from New York City skyscrapers. It literally rains walkers as they fly in from off screen and splatter on the concrete right in front of the duo. The sequence is just as gnarly and macabre as one would expect. 

– The Walking Dead: Dead City _ Season 1 – Photo Credit: Peter Kramer/AMC

In another fun bit, one of the New Babylon characters is tackled to the ground by a walker, whose mouth then opens to reveal a classic New York City rat crawling out of its throat. Another instance finds Maggie and Negan covered in gross cockroaches as they attempt to take cover nearby a pile of trash bags. The boat-ride Maggie and Negan take into the city itself is filled with bloated walker corpses scattered in the water. All of these moments help make up the DNA of “Dead City,” using New York City’s classic elements and giving them a “Walking Dead” spin. 

It’s not until Negan and Maggie actually arrive in New York City itself when the potential of “Dead City” becomes clear. Much of the pre-NYC arrival feels like a retread of the same survivor vs. survivor shenanigans which plagued the flagship show in its later seasons. While Negan and Maggie are compelling characters, how much more of this dynamic is there left to explore? The real draw of the show seems to come from the setting itself – taking the rules and world of ‘The Walking Dead’ fans already know and applying it to the incredibly unique location of New York City. 

New episodes of “The Walking Dead: Dead City” air Sunday nights on AMC.

3 skulls out of 5

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‘Clue: A New Comedy’ Stage Play Is a Slapstick Slasher That Lovingly Adapts Hasbro’s Board Game

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Clue 2024 Play Cast

The national tour of ‘Clue: A New Comedy’ remixes the classic murder mystery with farcical physical comedy and impassioned old-fashioned sensibilities.

“It’s all part of the game.”

There’s a strong relationship between mischievous murder mysteries and the horror genre. Murder mysteries inherently hinge upon death – it’s baked into the name – so it’s not surprising that horror has embraced this secretive subgenre and really emphasized the murder in murder mysteries. Murder mysteries have been popular in pop culture for nearly a century. However, there’s been a recent renaissance on this front with playful films like Knives Out, A Haunting in Venice, Bodies Bodies Bodies, the Scream franchise, and the prominence of the true-crime genre and armchair detectives. That being said, an underrated and evergreen source of murder mystery hijinks that’s entertained audiences for 75 years is Hasbro and Parker Brothers’ Clue.  

Clue has experienced many permutations over the years, including Jonathan Lynn’s 1985 cult classic film and several stage adaptations. In a new dawn where board game and toy IP are at an all-time high, a new stage adaptation of Clue has been put together by Sandy Rustin, with additional material by Hunter Foster and Eric Price, and directed by Casey Hushion. Hushion’s Clue: A New Comedy, which is in the middle of a national tour, effortlessly harkens back to vaudevillian silliness and broad laughs, while it simultaneously explores darker genre impulses and intrigue. It’s the perfect way to nostalgically celebrate the ’80s movie, but also remind audiences why Hasbro’s upcoming cinematic remake is long overdue.

Hushion’s Clue is an adaptation of Lynn’s ‘85 film, but it still brings many original ideas and revisions to the table so that this doesn’t just feel like a stripped down version of the movie. Clue: A New Comedy finds immense pleasure in how it translates the game’s rules so that it functions as a faithful adaptation of the game and the feature film, while it also becomes a fun, fresh entity that’s a living hybrid of both. In Clue: A New Comedy, blackmail functions as the story’s central mystery, just as it does in the board game and cinematic adaptation. Each color-coded houseguest has terrible secrets that they don’t want getting out, which becomes the impetus for the growing body count.

Clue is a comedic character study and this stage play presents well-defined individuals who are easy to identify and connect with, despite their one-dimensional nature. Mr. Green (John Shartzer) is the cast’s real standout, but there’s not a single weak link among Clue’s eight central players. Clue’s best moments are the ones when the whole cast gets to bounce off of each other and revel in the group’s chaotic energy. The play’s ‘50s McCarthyism setting also adds an extra layer of mistrust, paranoia, and subterfuge to the equation that still feels timely in its own way. Farcical, broad wordplay – especially from John Treacy Egan’s Colonel Mustard – are a delight and reminiscent of an old-fashioned radio play when it comes to Clue’s jokes, timing, and dialogue. 

Beyond Clue’s script lies some exceptional physical comedy, particularly from Shartzer’s Mr. Green. There are broad group reactions that play out in unison for mass comic effect, as well as lighting cues that brilliantly accentuate punchlines and become a solid running gag throughout the 90-minute show. There are playful movement exercises that are expertly choreographed and verge on interpretative dance. Clue adopts a real Scooby-Doo energy to the production, especially when it comes to its scene transitions. Clue even indulges in a “multiple door chase sequence” that taps into the right energy for this degree of slapstick. To this point, there’s an absolutely brilliant slow motion sequence that’s a highlight of the show and adeptly incorporated. 

Clue’s characters are its secret weapon, but stellar production elements help elevate the stage play to something truly special. There’s really powerful set design by Lee Savage that evokes a creepy, cozy Haunted Mansion aesthetic that’s the right atmosphere for this murder mystery tale. Clever design decisions result in rotating walls and rooms that economically get the most out of the stage’s environment. Clumsy execution of these elements would quickly sink Clue and ruin its crescendoing quality. They’re seamlessly handled, as are Ryan O’Gara’s evocative lighting design and Michael Holland’s jauntily creepy musical cues. All these elements work together to make sure that Clue is as visually entertaining as it is well-acted and written.

Clue: A New Comedy goes all-in on its laughs. That being said, the play’s death scenes are actually creepy and immaculately orchestrated with all the finesse of peak genre cinema. There are genuine slasher vibes present that pulse through the show’s pervasive slapstick silliness. It’s a testament to the sheer artistry of craft in Clue that both of these extremes work as well as they do. Clue also shrewdly embraces the infamous multiple ending angle that helped give Lynn’s feature film a smart extra meta layer to its storytelling. It’s fun, different, and takes advantage of the medium of theater to great effect. It’s also the satisfying culmination of a story that gets progressively manic, unhinged, and verges on collapsing in on itself by the end – but in the best way possible. Clue pushes boundaries with tone and control like an expert puppet master.

Clue: A New Comedy hits all the right notes and succeeds as a breezy piece of theater that celebrates whodunit hijinks, broad buffoonery, and wicked wit. It’s Agatha Christie meets Frasier. Clue is a show that definitely prioritizes comedy over horror and suspense, but there’s enough style in this production to properly sell the production’s more evil impulses. It’s unlikely that anyone will be genuinely frightened, yet the play will still keep audiences on the edge of their seats and eagerly anticipate who’s responsible for Boddy Mansion’s copious corpses. Clue: A New Comedy is the best way to experience the Hasbro and Parker Brothers classic before its next cinematic adaptation proves that murder and mayhem aren’t just a game anymore. 

Go to Broadway.org to see if ‘Clue: A New Comedy’ will be coming to your area.

3.5 out of 5

Clue Play Mr. Green On Floor

Photo by Evan Zimmerman for MurphyMade

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