
‘The Walking Dead’: It All Starts Tumbling Down as Glenn’s Fate Revealed (TV REVIEW)
We FINALLY found out what happened to Glenn as The Walking Dead inches towards the fall finale.
We FINALLY found out what happened to Glenn as The Walking Dead inches towards the fall finale.
While beter than the last several weeks, The Walking Dead keeps up it’s tradition of meandering slowly through the mid-season.
The Walking Dead may have come out of the gate with a bang, but it’s stumbled once more into the morass of mediocrity.
[rating=5.00] “He’s Not Here” For the first time since the sixth season premiered, we get a slowdown from the breakneck speed and the confined timeline of the first three episodes. With
[rating=7.00] “Thank You” It’s hard to muster the same enthusiasm for a program when it’s been spoiled multiple times over, not just by a cousin I’m no longer friends with
[rating=9.00] “J.S.S.” The most amazing thing about this week’s The Walking Dead, “J.S.S.,” is the fact that it’s not the show’s season premiere. As I remarked last week, following the
[rating=9.00] “First Time Again” “I know this sounds insane, but this is an insane world,” we hear against an all-black screen, before cutting to a shot of Rick overlooking a
[rating=5.00] “The Good Man” Well, that was… certainly a TV show. The final installment of the first season of a TV show, in fact. All the right pieces were moving, and
[rating=7.00] “Cobalt” Here’s the real problem with Fear The Walking Dead—you can package it with competent acting, camera work, and overall production values, but in not showing us anything new,
[rating=3.00] “Not Fade Away” I was glancing at Twitter while watching The Emmys last night and I ran across someone criticizing the use of Lou Reed’s “Perfect Day” in an ironic