This is one of the best episodes at TWD history.
I really thought he'd become a zombie. It was nice seeing Hershel and Sasha, but what the heck? No Glenn, T-Dog, Carl, Andrea, or Tyreese, among others? This is Rick's last episode, so why not have all the important people that helped him survive this long? Oh well, at least the helicopter finally got used.
Rick has his first version of himself back in the hospital when everything first started. He manages to pull himself up, get on the horse and ride away. He manages get himself somewhere safe and try to cover his wound. He passes out and dreams of Shane. (FEELS!!!) Maggie arrives at Alexandria and Michonne tries to stop her but she ends up giving Maggie the keys. Negan taunts Maggie but then begs her to kill him but she realizes he's worse than dead and doesn't kill him. Rick passed out again and dreams of Hershel. (FEELS AGAIN!!!) Rick sees himself back at the hospital again. Rick finds himself in a crowd of people dead; everyone he's ever known. He talks with Sasha about everyone's death. (MORE FEELS!!!) Rick ends up back at the camp where some of those killed end up as walkers but where is everyone else?!?! He gets to the bridge and believing everyone has come to the rescue, he wakes up again, cross the bridge and destroys it to cut off the herd from getting across. The others were so close go try and get to him but he took the ultimate sacrifice to save everyone. Jadis, in contact with someone in a helicopter, asks to save Rick's life and the two of them are flown away. A suggested time jump shows an older Juidth saving a group of people wearing Rick's cowboy hat and Michonne's katana! This is the end of Rick Grimes on The Walking Dead TV series but the spinoff movies announced for him are damn well going to be amazing! I'm obviously upset that he's no longer gonna be part of the show but I'm excited for the remaining part of 9A and the rest of the season. The preview looks stellar!
Thank you, Rick! Thank you, Andrew Lincoln!
I'm in a state of shock. This episode hit me right in the feels. And then, when my feels were already punched, Hershel appeared and it broke me. The scene with Shane was simply perfect. Good lord, do I miss him! And he even screwed with Rick saying Judith was his daughter and then the whole, naw, she doesn't have your nose. I burst out laughing. And then Sasha appeared. I was low key expecting Lori on my screen, tbh.
I knew it was the end but by heart was bouncing when he was at the bridge. I haven't been so glued go the screen in a very long time. Probably, the best episode of TWD in years.
The scene with Maggie and Negan was outstanding.Im digging these shadow shots. When he broke and begged for Maggie to kill him I was expecting a smirk on his face at he end. I thought he was playing Maggie so that he could live. When he described how he killed Glenn I realized I got PTSD from that episode.
Poor Michone. Watching her breaking when he saw Rick dead was heartbreaking. And don't get me started with Daryl. When he cries, I cry. No exceptions. It hit me like a train.
The real question I've never seen anyone asking, who the heck leaves a crate of dynamite on a wooden bridge in construction?
That Space Junk song at the end just hit me off guard. I was just listening to it and all I could think of was "Hey, you. Dumbass. You in the tank. You cozy in there?" I miss Glenn.
Did anyone else catch that voice saying "Where's your wound?" At first I thought it was Morgan mirroring season 1, but then the voice changed.
Now, after that time jump of like 7 years or so, they better give me a good damn reason for making me believe Rick would leave his family for so many years. Also, Judith freaking Grimes being a young badass and getting perfect headshots was far-fetched.
I saw the preview for next episodes and when I saw Carol with that hair, all I could think of was, she's Jamie Lee Curtis, and "What do your elf eyes see?"
In the words of a crazy bat man "Weeel, SH¡T! Rick".
This episode was really something. All the awesome cameos and the little jump scares. Just an episode for us, the fans.
• Andrew Lincoln's dying man acting was superb.
• Jon Barnathal returned just to show how cool he is for making fun of his ears.
• Dammit. Hershel got sliced onions withing his barn. Also CGI field.
• Jeffrey Dean Morgan's Negan. Incredible. He actually made me feel sorry for Negan, like "common Maggie, just kill the poor psycho". I think this was the moment I found out it was the best casting choice for the role. Like when Rick bit the guy's throat. Like Norman Reedus' Daryl always has been
• Someone should give that magnificent white horse a medal.
• They tried to cameo Beth's blond pony tail, but no Andrea cameo. Good job, I noticed it.
• Next time someone will try to wake me up saying "you need to WAKE UP!" most chance he'll be punched and I'll wake up looking for zombies
• Daryl cried for the third time on the show. F@CK..
• Carol the 'Ice-woman' Peletier. Not even a little shock.
• WTF is "I got a B not an A. I've never had an A" even means?
• Even Rick can't believe he's still alive. The dude is though, but you wanna tell me he managed to keep enough Blood.
• Was that Dan Fogler. Possible gags on the show.
• Badass Judith. Because, yeah if Rick is dead let's had kids running the woods with revolvers and katanas. Rumor has it she's about to adapt Coooorral's characteristics from the comics. Haven't read it, but they say he is a badass there. So, probably.
Really really enjoyed it.
P.S: why we haven't seen an 'in loving memory of Scott Wilson'. Is it so complicated to add it to the end credits? especially in this episode. It's really upsetting me every time since season premiere. Read my comments AMC.
This might just be the best TWD episode I have watched in years. In years.
Too drawn out.. geez, die and zombify already..
[4.4/10] I am a sucker for the trope of people seeing visions of their loved ones in an hour of need, even from works that aren’t that great. I bit when The Curious Case of Benjamin Button did it. I bit when House M.D. did it. And hell, I even bit when The Walking Dead did it with Tyrese. There is an inherent power to a more impressionistic approach, where the faces of people we’ve lost or grown estranged from come to comfort us when things look their darkest.
But I felt almost nothing during “What Comes After”.
That’s because The Walking Dead’s full-throated but half-hearted farewell to Rick Grimes is the ur-example of forty-five minutes of sound and fury signifying nothing. Say what you will about The Walking Dead, but it normally puts its best foot forward for these big moments. Sometimes they still leave me disappointed, but normally you can at least see the aspirations of something greater, a chance to be a cut above seized, even in the show’s more underwhelming premieres, finales, and goodbyes.
And to be fair, you can see the show attempting to pull out all the stops as it sends Rick off. “What Comes After” features return engagements from past players, a larger horde of extras giving chase than usual, and some ethereal scenes set in old locales, or with grim but spiritual tableaus of those who’ve passed and those who might still pass. It’s clear that The Walking Dead is aiming to say something with all of this, which makes the episode’s failure that much more miserable.
With the chance to put a period on the story of Rick Grimes, to sum-up his character and journey from beginning to end with some new insight or breakthrough, “What Comes After” instead offers the audience an ellipsis, and the same reheated themes the show has been chewing on for nine seasons now without anything new to say or show for it.
Rick spends ninety percent of the episode wandering around in his state of half-delirium, muttering to himself or the ghosts he envisions, that he needs to find his family. That could be a chance for some meaningful echoes of Rick’s original mission, the one that started his journey, which seems to be what The Walking Dead is trying to evoke here. Instead, Rick dreams up a rescue from his friends, and weakly but warmly declares that they’re his family, a point so hackneyed and tired that the show itself has already heavily underlined it at least twice by now.
That’s the biggest problem with “What Comes After.” The episode grasps at profundity, but only manages to circle around the same platitudes this show has been chasing for nine seasons now, and it does so with the series’ typical painful, overwritten dialogue. Rick’s exchange with Herschel loses any force when it falls headlong into the same “I could have done more or done different” territory that the show’s gone over umpteen times by now. Sasha’s return, and an unreal landscape of bodies can’t make up for yet another dose of the same “the people we’ve lost give us strength” pablum. There is nothing new here, and the old is delivered with the worst of the show’s tics and excesses.
Only the return of Shane creates a sequence with any real juice. In that scene, the show couches the same faux-meditative mumbo jumbo in the easy on-screen rapport between Andrew Lincoln and Jon Bernthal. It’s the only scene in the whole episode where the characters feel like real people, and not vessels to deliver well-worn, ponderous notions.
Shane’s advice to his old partner here isn’t new. Lord knows that The Walking Dead has endlessly ruminated on whether Rick should be vengeful or merciful to survive in this environment, an idea Shane was once his lethally pragmatic counterpart for. But that scene conveys that idea with a personal connection, with a conversational tone, that slips the magnitude and purgatorial import of what’s Shane’s imparting in a less blunt, more unassuming fashion, which ironically gives it more power than similar attempts in the episode.
But “What Comes After” wants you to know that Rick is dogged, that he will never give up, that he will put his life on the line over and over again to stay ahead of the horde and keep his people safe. The metaphor is, once again, not particularly subtle, as Rick’s efforts to outrun and redirect the walkers after him checks in as a representation of his path throughout the series. The show even plops him on a horse again, to create another set of bookends between this and his first appearance. But aside from some neat framing and imagery here and there, it comes off too hamfisted to do any real thematic work for the episode.
You get the sense that the folks behind The Walking Dead know this. There’s a liberal dose of silent reaction shots, of somber piano and mournful strings, in “What Comes After”. It’s as though the show knows that it’s not able to evoke a powerful emotional response on its own, and so has to strain through every image, sound, and trick in the book to try to convince the audience to feel something that the script alone can’t manage.
This is Rick, for chrissake! Lord knows I’ve never been as fascinated with the character as the show seems to be, but he is the protagonist of The Walking Dead, even as it evolved into more of an ensemble show. Having his swan song evoke something in your views ought to be a layup, filled with the accumulated weight of nine years of stories with him largely at the center. I’d be lying if I said I expected Rick’s purported last episode on the show to be a homerun, but I also didn’t expect it to be such an unmitigated dud, so bereft of real feeling or anything meaningful to say that it wastes the exit of its most prominent character.
And then The Walking Dead doesn't even have the guts to actually kill Rick off! The show was already playing with schmuck bait when it left our hero impaled and surrounded by walkers at the end of the last episode, and nevertheless managed to free himself, hop back on his horse, and ramble on for hours more. But as if that weren’t enough, it gives us an already contrived sequence, where Rick aims to lure the walkers over the unstable bridge, so that his dying act can be to save his people from the horde.
Then, the bridge stays sturdy enough to support the zombies, and you know, I actually liked that choice. There’s a bitter irony to it that felt like the first time in “What Comes After” was getting at something deeper here. Instead, it’s just a setup for Rick to do one more stupid hero trick, and blow up the bridge with his trademark revolver, directed at some conveniently placed dynamite, while his friends are close enough to help but not close enough to save him. Insert slow motion shots of grief, and more sad music, and the untimely and unsatisfying but noble end of Rick Grimes.
Except it isn’t! Nevermind the shoehorned-in confrontation between Maggie and Negan. Nevermind the corny “My name’s Judith Grimes” tag the episode chooses to go out on (presumably in an attempt to hook viewers who might plan to exit the show at the same time Rick does). Nevermind the underwhelming path the episode takes to get to Rick’s big self-sacrifice. The fact that Rick miraculously survives, and that Anne is able to save him, three minutes after we’re supposed to be devastated by Rick’s death, is downright insulting.
It wipes away whatever meager emotional impact that explosion and aftermath at the bridge was able to muster. It’s a cop out for a show that crafted this episode to be its self-reflective, final take on Rick Grimes. It turns an already limping finale for the show’s main character into fingers-crossed, mealy-mouthed statement that ultimately says nothing.
This may very well be The Walking Dead’s worst episode. There have been duller episodes than this one. There have been episodes with even more unlikely or headscratch-inducing developments. But never before has the series swung so hard and struck out so miserably. Rick Grimes is gone, and the character died (or at least fake died) as he lived: in a story with oodles of potential, that never manages to get out of its own way, and wastes its audience’s time with weak-willed nonsense until the credits roll.
Was on the edge of my seat whole way through this episode. Been a while since there was so much suspense in an episode.
Did I seriously get traumatized to the point of getting a headache from crying only for him to make it in the end?
"WAKE UP!"
Call me crazy but I saw the whole helicopter scene as a metaphor for death. I think Rick's dead. It's left for interpretation, which is why they aren't showing him again in the show (but in movies and spinoff cash-grabs instead). I know a lot of people are saying he survived, but I refuse to believe this show has gone and done another stupid 'glenn under the dumpster' trick. This entire episode plays with fantasy and reality...and it makes the storytelling very ambiguous. Even in scenes such as Rick arriving at the raided camp, it was difficult to believe it (although I do think that actually happened given the warning Michonne and Maggie get at Alexandria).
We see Rick have visions of helicopters in the opening scene of the episode. The ending is him being driven away from the world and towards his family, because like Rick says before he blows himself up, he has found them.
Also, there is an amazing scene between Maggie and Negan. Maggie spares his life because of how damaged he already is. He wants to die, and the cold-blooded Maggie lets him live. Harsh, but he did kill Glenn, so.
I do think he was partly playing Maggie, although he definitely wasn't acting. In the episode before, we saw him tear up AFTER Michonne had left his sight and then he whacks his head on the wall repeatedly. He's clearly self-destructive in this point in time...but I do think Negan has an escape plan up his sleeve and that was partly done to save himself.
I certainly need to see this really artistic episode again because I am very mixed with this episode, which explains the lack of a rating.
I really enjoyed the hallucinations of old beloved characters, especially Shane's scene in the car ...but I'll just continue riding in my space junk for the time being.
Don't wake up, asshole.
Best episode in quite awhile but also the dumbest yet
I AM IN A STATE OF SHOCK! I have so much emotions okay WOW
1) RICK didn’t die! He just left or Jadis/Ann took him somewhere, whew! That was such a relief but I’m crying the entire time watching Rick bleeding to death with all the flashbacks wtf
2) The whisperers are coming holy shit and the insane time jump and everyone’s new look! Holy fuck I think Angela Kang, the new show runner might just saved this show and brought it out of the dumps.
3) THEERE ARE SERIES OF MOVIES COMING OUT BASED ON THE TWD SERIES and there’s a possibility that Rick is coming back! Praise JESUS HALLELUJAH!!!
Holy Sh!t!
This was by far the best TWD episode in YEARS!
Even before seeing the episode I can't believe it's the name they gave it.
I guess sh¡t IS about to hut the fan.
Edit: they changed the name from "Aquí muere Rick". Possibly too of a spoiler.
Can't wait to see it.
9.8/10 - This episode was so incredibly emotional and gripping. This Jadis thing is super mysterious and I hope we learn about A and B etc.
Finally, a good episode we had in a while
This show is one of best TV shows I have ever watched
I love this EP’s the most because of Shane is it at is all. It was a cool EP for the flash backs where great and story had some bits to it but for the most part it was great.
John Bernthal's appearance was the highlight of the episode for me, really.
"WAKE UP, why don't you put on a little make-up."
"No, no, we don't die, yes we multiply"
Some of the scenes, the one where he's talking to himself, Shane and especially Hershell's were effective but it just took too long and was a bit too cheesy. The ending with that song made it all good though and offers possibilities I didn't want from the Rick Grimes Ive been with for the past 7 to 8 seasons.
Despite the cheese and longwinded scenes, the forced stern whispering and the other characters Ive come to loathe: For the first time in a while I'm actually interested in seeing what comes next.
Also, why do you have dynamite on a bridge CONSTRUCTION site.
I figured there would be some type of Rick Grimes flash backs/day dreams through out the episode which I could've done without.
Also, had a feeling that Maggie would confront Negan and find a reason NOT to kill him.
I'm going to be bluntly honest, what a lackluster way to send off the most popular star of the show.
This one was a Great episode!
Somehow this Show got a bit boring.
I simply don't care about what is happening to the characters.
They introduced so many new ones I simply can't be bothered even to remember the names.
The Negan-Story is plain boring and the Rick-Bridge Story had already been told in Fear the Walking dead (Basically how the Mother died...).
I hope they make a decent storyline out of the second to last scene.
Seeing Judith with a weapon sonner or later was a given.
And I don't know why ppl pretend Rick not surviving is a given. He looked quite concious in the last scene. I wonder what she traded for a helicopter exfil in a world with near to no fuel though (Gas and Diesel should have gone bad around season 3/4)
I Generally loved this episode, been one of the best ones in a while! I honestly didn’t know what to think would happen to Rick, especially with the huge explosion on the bridge. I Was so happy to see Scott Wilson in this episode along with Jon Bernthal too.
I’ve avoided spoilers for the future seasons and spinoffs, but thankyou Andrew Lincoln for playing one of my favourite ever actors. I can’t wait to watch you back in the series again!
I’ll always be happy seeing Shane again, even if just for a few minutes. Hershel was lovely to see too. (And Sasha kinda, though I don’t recall her having that great a connection to Rick. Carl or Lori would’ve made more sense.)
Judith with her little baby voice holding shit down and having her inherited hat was quite nice! I’m intrigued.
this was really just twd’s knockoff of the test dream episode of the sopranos but it was a a really good episode nonetheless. maggie’s interaction with negan was interesting. seeing daryl cry was :( wang chung song at the end was super cool. i wonder if they’ll say anymore about the jadis/helicopter thing.
i’m going to be surprised if there’s much more after what feels like the peak of the season.
don’t think that judith bit at the end was needed but i don’t really mind.
:sob::sob::sob::sob::sob::sob::sob::sob::sob: Long live Scott Wilson/Hershel, Long Live Emperor Rick Grimes. I really hope he’s in the finale :sob:, idc if it ruins the movies or they cancel them, show/story deserves to begin and end with him
HOLY S!#$, what an episode!
This might have been the worst episode so far. What a bunch of complete bullcrap. Despite the near-death trip down memory lane, which was a complete waste of screentime... how much litres of blood does Rick Grimes have in his body? And to top it all of he survives an explosion that should have blown him into pieces from that close distance.
And.... how the hell did he land INTO the water? The explosion would have blown him AWAY from the water because that was where said explosion took place. This is not how physics work.
So I do not know if rick really survived. Damn. That really punched me in the gut.
Yes! Good one. Five Words.
it's a good episode but he'd never abandoned his daughter if he's alive...
Wow I wasted 5 hours to get to this point. The writers need to be fired. This show has gotten really bad. Again...nonsense majority of the episode & few mins of action
Hated how they played the audience AGAIN with a fake out
You all know what happens by now. A total cop out by TWD writers (as usual). This show will eventually fade away as the ratings continue to fall. Such a shame as it was once a thrilling ride where everyone was expendable.
HYPE HYPE HYPE HYPE HYPE
Shout by Tasa24BlockedParentSpoilers2018-11-05T18:16:34Z
when Hershel appeared, I broke