Welcome back to our weekly recaps of “The Walking Dead” with
your host, the inimitable Nikki Stafford, and her long-haired, true-bearded,
two-eyed sidekick Josh Winstead. Grab a pepperoni stick and settle in, folks.
This is a weird one.
Joshua: Let me say this right up front: Philip Blake
is not a nice guy. Not at all. Look, even horrid savage lunatics do nice
things sometimes. Saddam Hussein penned romance novels. Charles Manson writes
silly love songs on the guitar. Maybe Adolph Hitler baked awesome chocolate
chip cookies; I don't know. What I do know is that small acts of kindness do
not negate torture and mass murder. Playing on our sympathies is one thing, but
if the writers are attempting to redeem The Governor and his multifold
transgressions with this new take on the character, here's one guy who ain't
buying.
This week's episode temporarily abandons the prison
storyline to instead pick up right where we last left the aforementioned
patch-wearing sociopath in season three's finale, immediately following the
coldblooded slaughter of all but two of his own troops in a snarling frenzy
reminiscent of nothing more than a six-year-old's temper tantrum, provided you
replace the petulant screaming and stomping with a hail of bullets. We are then
treated to a lengthy montage of then-to-now, beginning with The Governor's
abandonment by those last two men (no surprise there) and progressing through
his destruction of Woodbury by fire and the subsequent months he spent
wandering alone through the apocalyptic landscape, sidestepping conflict and
cultivating the worst tv beard since Jack Shephard's season 4 special. As the
sequence plays, it is accompanied by voiceover of a conversation between Philip
and an unknown female as he selectively recounts his story, certain to gloss
over pertinent details like “...then I bit off several of his fingers and spat
them in his face...” or “...then I bound and tortured my girlfriend, stabbed my
most faithful assistant several times, and left them both to die...” and the
like, careful to make it all sound like such a terrible, typical tragedy.
Also accompanying the montage is Ben Nichols' song “The Last
Pale Light in the West,” a melancholy acoustic number inspired by Cormac
McCarthy's horror novel Blood Meridian. I call it a horror novel not
because it fits the typical description of the genre or because that's where
you'd find shelved it in your local library, but because it might be the single
most horrific thing I've ever read, a relentless catalog of brutality in which
every character is a vile, reprehensible beast and the primary antagonist is
basically a physical manifestation of mankind's tendency toward war.
I don't think the choice was incidental, particularly in
light of the later discussion between “Brian” and young Meghan as he prepares
to teach her to play chess. She picks up a pawn and inquires about its
function.
“They're your soldiers,” he says.
“Do they die?”
“Sometimes.”
“Do you lose if they die?”
“No, not necessarily,” he tells her. “You can lose a lot of
soldiers and still win the game.”
We as viewers are certainly not meant to forget what he's
done, and it's obvious that he hasn't forgotten either. But are we meant to
believe that he's penitent? Because nothing he said, and nothing I saw, would
seem to indicate remorsefulness to me. Simply moving on isn't the same as being
made new.
Nikki, what's your take on the strange and unexpected
trajectory of this year's Governor?
Nikki: Well, as we both know, the Governor dies in
the comic books in the great prison war we saw at the end of the previous
season, so at this point the writers can do whatever the hell they want with
the character. And I’m wondering if they’re going to use him to present someone
on the long, difficult road to redemption. I agree with you that horrible
people can do wonderful things, but it doesn’t make them good. But what if
someone has committed the worst atrocities possible (not enough room here to
list them all), has hit his lowest possible point (losing Penny), has lost his
will to live (he appeared to be wandering through the first 10 minutes of this
episode just walking until he dropped), and has given up? Is it possible for
him to have a revelation and begin the slow road to redemption?
The clues are subtle: he doesn’t speak for the longest time.
He hands over his gun rather than trying to come up with a cunning, sneaky way
to hide one so he can kill them all in their sleep, deprive the old man of his
oxygen tank and steal the little girl and name her Penny. This is Philip we’re
talking about, after all: he could do all of that with a patch over his other
eye. He shuffles into the room and helps with the washing, and lifting Grandpa
into bed, and when he’s had his fill of these people (and who wouldn’t… come
on, Phil, couldn’t we have had a tiny Guvnah moment while you took down Tara,
just to put all of us out of our misery?), he tries to get away, but they ask
him to do one more favour for them. And
he does. He doesn’t have any ties to them, he couldn’t give a rat’s if they
lived or died. We watched him kill people he did have ties to, without a moment’s hesitation, and yet here he’s
actually helping people where it doesn’t do anything for him in return. They’ve
stripped him of all his rights — Lily constantly just walks into his apartment
without so much as giving a brief knock first. Just throws open the door and
wanders right in, looking at his personal photos, invading his privacy, when
they’re squatting just as much as he is. They order him around. Tara keeps
holding a gun in his face. He ingratiates himself to Meghan but they still
treat him like dirt. They keep thanking him for doing things for them while
continuing to order them around, and even when they do something nice, like
give him something for the road, she throws it at him when he doesn’t want to
take it from her. (His plea for her to not throw the gun at him was very funny
in that moment.)
But, like him, they’ve hit the end of their rope. Dad is
dying. The little girl has seen too much tragedy. They’re all alone, their
nerves are frayed, and they’ve probably been taken advantage of one too many
times to trust anyone, especially a homeless-looking guy who won’t speak.
And in the midst of their mistreatment of him, he never
fights back, never once loses it, never uses the gun he found on the guy
upstairs in the bathtub. He’s humbled, he’s weak, he’s subservient, and he’s
given up. He does what they tell him to do, nothing more, nothing less. When he
goes to the nursing home, he’s so destroyed by what he saw happen to Penny that
he can’t take out any of the walkers coming after him. He could have easily and
handily gotten rid of them in seconds, but instead he dodges them, shoots
randomly into the air, and runs like a scared child holding only two of the 10
oxygen tanks.
And then he has a conversation with Meghan, and for the
first time in months, he chuckles at something she says. He finds somewhere
deep inside himself, he’s still a father. And maybe he can help this little
girl. Penny’s gone, but this little girl is real, right in front of him. He
cleans up, begins hanging out with the sisters, and starts to become part of
the family.
And then Gramps dies. When he goes to town on Gramps’ head, it’s the final burden he sloughs off. He finally recognizes that the biters aren’t the people they once were. While Meghan is traumatized for life at the sight of the Gov flattening her Grandpa’s face into the bed, Philip has to do this. After that, he stops being passive, and begins taking charge, taking action. He’s intimate with Lily, has friendly conversations with Tara, and becomes a second father to Meghan.
Could he snap again? Absolutely. But I’m really intrigued at the prospect that
the writers might be trying to redeem this character, the maniacal serial
killer who was once the Governor. This episode unfurled very slowly, like a
play (I’d have to check it again, but other than the Nichols song, I don’t
recall any non-diegetic music, and instead just stage noise in every scene),
and they showed the very slow, subtle changes in this man. He’s back in action,
and has three females following him at this point. Is this a new beginning in a
new direction, or just starting over to build up the same group of loyal
followers so he can lead them to their doom?
Joshua: I think it's
impossible to tell just yet. With the abrupt way the episode ended, it felt
very much to me like the first installment of a two-part presentation. It's
clear that only in his imminent dealings with Martinez and whatever crew of
miscreants he's aligned with since abandoning Philip will we learn what's
really going on behind that eyepatch of his. And you're right – redemption
isn't unthinkable. Just highly unlikely, in my opinion. It's hard for me to
forget that The Governor didn't simply grow to become a lunatic over time,
after enduring terrible circumstances and suffering through. Our introduction
to the man involved the ambushed slaying of numerous National Guard members for
their gear and supplies, after which the one guy who survives is kept alive just
long enough to pump for information before being beheaded – BEHEADED – and his
severed head added to Phil's bubbling trophy case. The one he stares at while
kicked back in a lounger, leisurely drinking scotch. And then? He gets
progressively worse. Worse. Than beheading dudes and keeping the heads as
undead aquarium fish. That is not the kind of crazy that simply goes away.
That said, I believe the biggest problem I have is less
about the notion of his redemption itself and more with the cursory way it's
been handled so far. Perhaps I could more easily accept a radical shift in
gears like the one I assume they want us to swallow here if it were built up
over the course of several episodes. As it stands, everything's just much too
tidy for my taste. I can see plausibility in the concept that he would try to
be different, try to be better. And as you said, just the fact that he's trying
at all is intriguing, an obvious allusion to the idea that he wasn't always
nuts, back before the show's chronology intersected with his own. They
certainly hit the photo moments hard enough to telegraph such sentiment. But it
seems odd that he would fold himself out of the image if he were feeling
nostalgic for who he once was more so than what he once had. Meghan is a blatant
dead ringer (excuse the phrase) for Penny, and I got the impression that this
is all much more about her, and the promise of being a father again, than it is
about him, and the promise of being a good person.
There's a great moment during that final scene when he and
Meghan fall down into the pit. For the rest of the sequence, we never again see
what's going on outside, up above. It's a fascinating choice because it means
that when we begin to hear the sounds of automatic gunfire, it's impossible to
tell if it is actually happening (as Lily and Tara had no such weapons, and we
don't yet know that Martinez and his gang have arrived) or if instead The
Governor is merely hearing it in his head, flashing back to the butchery of his
troops as he goes full primitive on the biters threatening Meghan. And boy,
does he snap down there – ripping one's spine out through its throat, punching
through another's skull with his bare fist, and finally tearing the top of the
last one's head clean off, like he was popping the tab on a can of peanuts. I
don't know about you guys, but that sure looked like the same old Philip Blake
to me.
However, despite my narrative problems with it and the
qualms I have with the idea of summarily excusing The Governor's previous
psychoses, I still thought it was a terrific episode. It was filled with great
images and nice touches, from that wide shot of Woodbury burning as walkers
shuffled down its streets, to the white barn with all the messages spraypainted
across its face like a big roadside dry erase board, to the pillow on the couch
of the apartment where Blake holes up, embroidered with the legend 'This Too
Shall Pass,' to Meghan adding the eye patch onto the chess king with magic
marker. It's hard to quibble too much when the end result is so entertaining.
What did you think of the episode overall, Nik?
Nikki: I LOVED the episode. I’ll pretty much watch
anything with David Morrissey in it (so I’ll admit in the longterm I’m happy
they diverged from the book with his character) and I’ll take him evil, good,
or in between. He’s a mesmerizing actor, and did a brilliant job in this
episode.
And you’re right; whether Philip can become Brian or will
revert to the Governor remains to be seen, and could be quite a tension builder
in episodes to come. I agree that this will definitely be a two-parter,
especially since episode 5 ended with him sitting just outside the prison. We
need Philip’s story to end at the prison (where, unfortunately, he appeared to
be alone). If something happens to the women and Meghan, then I could see him
turning into the Governor again. But if he can keep them safe and find a way to
be a good guy only with them, then maybe he’s at the prison not as a threat,
necessarily, but as penance. A stretch, but The
Walking Dead is full of them. I mean, back in season 1, who would have
foreseen Carol becoming a knife-wielding badass?
I thought it was interesting that Philip burned the photo of
Penny. Yes, she’s gone, and the monster that invaded her body is also gone,
care of Michonne, but why burn her picture? That’s a picture of his family when
he was a good guy, before he’d done terrible things. First he folds the photo
over so you can’t see him in the photo, as if he can’t bear to look at the
happy family man he once was. Then he burns the photo, saying goodbye once and
for all to any tangible evidence that he was once a part of a stable, happy
family unit, rather than the broken shell of a thing he is now, with
large-scale massacres in his background rather than Sunday dinners and birthday
parties.
I do think his goodness/badness will all rest on Meghan. If
he fails to keep her safe, he’ll turn into the Governor again. But until then,
he’ll do his best to be Brian.
What did you make of the characterization of Tara and Lily?
Joshua: Tara and Lily weren't incredibly distinctive
characters (and the actress who plays Lily looks so much like Lauren Cohan that
it drove me to distraction, as my eyes were constantly fooled into thinking
that Maggie had somehow entered the scene), but they were both very plausible,
and I think that's more important. Tara was textbook tomboy tough, all surly
posturing in an effort to mask her own fear, but she did it well, and her
attitude made for some fun exchanges (“...I have enough ammo in here to kill
you every day for the next ten years...” was a particular favorite). In fact,
when she hurt her ankle near episode's end, I found myself genuinely concerned
she might not make it, which is quite a feat in such a short amount of time,
and on a show where death is so ever-present that you come to assume any new
characters won't last long.
Lily is a bit more of a blank slate, with nothing
particularly unique about her and really no definition at all save a brief
clichéd backstory, but again, I think it was just right for the purpose she
serves. In both cases, their commonality allows for an easy realism in their
relationships, but with Lily in particular, that generic quality provides the
perfect empty onto which Philip can project his desires – for a family, for a
lover, for a fresh start, a new place to call home. Though I'm still unsure why
they chose to leave the apartment building that had kept them safely sheltered
for so long, I suppose it was necessary to get the plot moving in the right
direction, and I'm willing to concede such breaks in logic as the price of
sustaining a lengthy narrative, so long as they're infrequent, and provided the
payoff makes it all worthwhile.
Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed this left turn away from my
expectations. Despite my skepticism regarding the circumstances, I must admit
that I find myself much more engaged by the continuing saga of The Governor
than I ever could have predicted a few weeks ago. Now it's up to the writers to
bring it all home.
Nikki: I couldn’t
more on Lily looking so much like Maggie! I kept doing exactly the same thing.
It was uncanny. I didn’t like Tara at all, though, and have to say that in the
dark, in the back of the truck, at first I thought that was Tara turning to
Philip and that Lily was the one curled up with Meghan in the corner, and I
thought, “No, no, no…” before realizing it was Lily. (But, um… awkward next to
sister and child? Hm…) And when Tara twisted her ankle I was rather hoping that
would make her quicker zombie bait. So I guess you and I diverge a wee bit
there. ;)
But yes, I love the Governor side story, and hope we stick
with it for at least one more week before returning to the prison. Although I
have to mention one major nitpick in the episode: they lecture Grandpa about
smoking around his oxygen tanks, yet they have kerosene lamps everywhere in the
apartment, including one RIGHT next to the tank! You can’t have a kerosene lamp
within about five or 10 feet of an oxygen tank, so that struck me as mighty
strange, especially after the words in the script that talk about the dangers
of flames next to the tanks. But we’ll just let that one go.
On to next week, where good ol’ One Eye continues his saga
all the way to the prison.
7 comments:
Thank you as always for the recap.
Isn't TWD supposed to be in real time? If so they've probably been in that apartment for at least two years and now that "Brian" has I'm sure told them the National Guard isn't coming they'd probably rather risk it on the road rather than stay there and wait for the food to run out.
He couldn't possibly try and bring this new group to the prison hoping for admittance could he?
-Tim Alan
Speaking of the "great prison war", Comics Governor attacks the prison multiple times so I've assumed the same thing could happen on the tv show. It certainly seemed more like an earlier skirmish than the all-out battle royale. Although killing all his soldiers and now wandering for 40 years in the desert may put a kink on that.
Since it's not clear how much time has passed, I wonder if we'll see any more of Clara, the woman who tried to feed Rick to her zombified husband's head in the S4 premiere. Her final statement, "You don't get to come back from things" was taken as a strugle for Rick. It could be the main question for the season and tie in to the Governor's turn as Brian. Can you come back?
For a while there, I thought the Governor would kill grandpa and the two women to keep Meghan for himself.
In a way that would have been better.
I know I'm always all "Dale was right, humanity, civilisation" etc., but I want the Governor as a bad guy. I can't trust him, I don't think the characters I love can trust him (considering my favourites are Glenn and Michonne... yeah...), and I don't want to watch a show where a lot of time is spent on good guys mistrusting another "good guy".
Anyway, next week: Enver Gjokaj :)
Victor! That's awesome; I hadn't heard.
Yeah - as I said, I just don't trust the idea of The Governor as a reformed individual. Likewise, I think the odds of forgiveness from any members of the core group are astronomical, no matter how many women and children he has in tow. And almost everyone else at the prison is a former Woodbury resident. How are they gonna trust the guy? The writers are bound to take it in a different direction; there's just too much resistance to overcome in pushing an elephant that size toward a room that small.
[An aside on Nikki's mention of non-diegetic music: there was a lovely classical-style piano piece that played during the chess scene, but it wasn't one I recognized. I'd be willing to bet it was a Bear McCreary original, as it did share certain similarities to the more traditional piano work he composed for Battlestar Galactica, but I'm not sure. Readers, please sound off here in the comments if you have any insight.]
This is my favourite episode. And hey, cut the Guv some slack. ;) I think he was once an ordinary guy. And then the world went mad, and he went mad too. And I think he was telling the truth when he said he was trying to help. He was really crap at it.
Is he still mad? Probably. Every single scene with the girls, I expected him to snap and do something terrible. The tension was delicious.
We've seen him at his worst. I think we've now had a glimpse of the man he used to be.
Full disclosure, I have a soft spot for redeemed bad boys (Spike, Crais...)
Is this going to last? Naw. But I'm enjoying the softer side of Mr. Morrisey for the moment.
Colleen! Yay, someone who is helping me not sound like a Governor apologist. I agree that he's someone who snapped when his wife was killed, and then snapped again when his zombie daughter was done away with. He's had too much, and we saw what happened with Rick. Now we're seeing someone who's gone far overboard, and I love the idea of trying to redeem THAT guy. Someone who clamped Andrea to a chair in a room with a guy who was going to rip her throat out. I can't wait to see how Morrissey handles this transition.
I guess I'm the odd duck out in that I found this episode incredibly boring. It was so slowly paced that it was almost painful at times for me. But I think a big part of it goes to the fact that I do not, for one moment, think the Governor can ever be "David." I don't think you can come back, and especially not this quickly, from the horrific things that he did last season.
I might even have thought there was a tiny chance except for the fact that we saw him outside the prison last episode. If you really have changed, you don't come back to the one place where you tried to kill EVERYONE. You just don't.
I love having the Governor back, but I just can't buy into any kind of redemption story.
One thing I have been contemplating since last week, which I would hate because I don't want her character to go this way, but love because it would be fascinating to watch - would be to see Carol and the Governor team up and come after Rick. They both lost Walker daughters because of Rick/his people - they both then lost their surrogate families because of Rick/his people. I think it would horribly fascinating to see that.
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