

“Wren” was returning to PADRE - for her own good, they reasoned. Tough s-t, Morgan and Grace said, basically. She wanted to go forward with her folks and Madison.

Moved after seeing her parents in action - and what concept of “parents” would “Wren” even have gotten in PADRE? - Mo no longer wanted to go back. (Sure, Jan.) But at the last second, Grace came zooming up in a speedboat, guns a-blazing. It looked for a moment as if they might get her. This time, since Madison had chucked their only walkie-talkie, he and his daughter made their way through the water as best they could while “Lark” did her damnedest to draw walkers to the boathouse. As a tot, she had been afraid that walkers were going to pull the boathouse underwater - just like it appeared that they were about to now.īack then, Morgan had radioed PADRE to come get Mo in order to save her. At the boathouse, decorated with a callback to a more dramatically resonant era of the franchise (Duane and Jenny’s names painted on an inner wall), Mo found a cassette of Grace singing “In Dreams.” Suddenly, the youngster’s memory returned in full. Along the way, Morgan revealed that, last he knew, Madison’s old drinking buddy Strand had gone MIA. What’s more, he seemed ready to put a bullet in his old friend’s head because PADRE no longer had any use for “Lark.” “Seriously?” we exclaimed right along with her.ĭespite panting off and on like an obscene phone caller, Madison succeeded in disarming Morgan and coercing him into leading her and Mo into the swamp toward the site of the makeshift family’s fateful last stand seven years ago. Madison, not seeming to have noticed that characters on this show switch motivations at least twice an episode, was stunned that Morgan wanted to return Mo to PADRE. Er, “Nightingale.” (At what point would PADRE run out of cool-ish bird names and have to call someone “Ostrich” or “Whooping Crane”?) Until, that is, her getaway speedboat reached the shore, and she and Mo encountered Morgan. Being one of our leads, Madison pulled off this feat with relatively little difficulty. Again, Madison felt that she had a reason to live: to get Morgan’s daughter the hell outta there, whether she wanted to go or not. Once Mo stumbled upon a suicidal Madison’s cell, the telltale scar on the girl’s wrist tipped off Nick and Alicia’s mom to the child’s identity. With the show having taken its final bow ( and an exciting new era beginning for the TWD Universe with new spinoffs The Walking Dead: Dead City, The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon, and The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live), let’s take a look back at its equally legendary run, and rank all of its seasons from worst to best.TWD: Daryl Dixon Recap: Laurent’s Horrifying Backstory Revealed Thankfully, the good vastly outweighs the bad as the show successfully managed to entertain a generation (or two) throughout its run.
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Again, 11 seasons is a long time to be on the air, and TWD (along with its fans) has seen it all.Īs with all TV shows, some seasons are better than others, and The Walking Dead unfortunately wasn’t immune to a little rot every now and again.
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In a way, it still feels like we’re waiting on its next season to premiere.īut all good things must come to an end (even the already dead ones, it seems), and The Walking Dead is no different, as bowed out with its series finale in November 2022. It’s darn near impossible to remember a time when it wasn’t on our screens, and it still doesn’t feel right to think that it has ended. No amount of reiterating that can truly convey just how much of a TV veteran it became. The Walking Dead was a staple of television for over a decade.

The Walking Dead Rick Grimes season 1 The Walking Dead was an integral part of the TV landscape for 12 years but which of its 11 seasons are the best, and which ones fell a little bit short?
