Erik Kain Twd Season 8 Episode 9 Review

16th episode of the eighth season of The Walking Dead

"Wrath"
The Walking Dead episode
Episode no. Flavour 8
Episode 16
Directed by Greg Nicotero
Written by Scott Chiliad. Gimple
Angela Kang
Matthew Negrete
Original air date April xv, 2018 (2018-04-fifteen)
Running time 48 minutes
Guest appearances
  • Callan McAuliffe as Alden
  • Avi Nash every bit Siddiq
  • Cooper Andrews as Jerry
  • Sydney Park as Cyndie
  • Kenric Dark-green as Scott
  • Joshua Mikel as Jared
  • Kerry Cahill as Dianne
  • Lindsley Register as Laura
  • Macsen Lintz as Henry
  • Karen Ceesay equally Bertie
  • James Chen every bit Kal
  • Nadine Marissa equally Nabila
  • Peter Zimmerman every bit Eduardo
  • Anthony Lopez every bit Oscar
  • Mandi Christine Kerr as Barbara
  • Nicole BarrĂ© as Kathy
  • Mimi Kirkland as Rachel
  • Elyse Nicole DuFour as Frankie
  • Chloe Aktas equally Tanya
  • Autumn Dial as Amber
  • Traci Dinwiddie equally Regina
  • Aaron Farb as Norris
  • Matt Mangum every bit D.J.
  • Colin Dennard as Lance
  • Stephen Shelton as Duke
Episode chronology
Previous
"Worth"
Next →
"A New Showtime"
The Walking Dead (flavour 8)
List of episodes

"Wrath" is the sixteenth and final episode of the eighth flavour of the postal service-apocalyptic horror television series The Walking Dead, which aired on AMC on April 15, 2018. It was written by Scott M. Gimple, Angela Kang and Matthew Negrete, and directed by Greg Nicotero.

This episode marks the final regular appearance of primary cast member Lennie James as Morgan Jones, who start appeared in the first season premiere episode "Days Gone Cheerio".[1] The character was moved to the companion series Fear the Walking Dead starting time with its fourth season.[2] It likewise marks the final appearance of Austin Amelio, who played Dwight from the sixth flavor in the episode "Always Answerable" every bit a recurring member of the series and the following season was promoted to the regular bandage. The fate of Dwight also marked the aforementioned path of Morgan for the crossover of Fearfulness The Walking Expressionless as he fabricated his debut for the 5th flavour as part of the main cast.[iii]

Plot [edit]

At the Hilltop, Rick (Andrew Lincoln) and company set up to launch their offensive confronting the Saviors. In the midst of events, Rick has flashbacks to a day before the apocalypse that Carl alluded to in his concluding letter to him, in which a young Carl was leading him down a land road. Rick goes to tend to Gracie and encounters Siddiq (Avi Nash). Rick asks how Carl was bitten; Siddiq tells him information technology happened while honoring Siddiq's mother, someone Carl never knew. Later, Rick, Michonne (Danai Gurira), Daryl (Norman Reedus) and Maggie (Lauren Cohan) review and set to depart to investigate the Savior plans that had been previously delivered by Gregory on behalf of Dwight (Austin Amelio). However, they are unaware that Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) planted these as a ruse to entrap them. Meanwhile, Morgan (Lennie James), starts hallucinating again and nigh kills Henry (Macsen Lintz) earlier Carol (Melissa McBride) stops him. Morgan afterward kills a living Savior in cold blood; even so, Jesus (Tom Payne) suggests that he should not impale the living so willingly.

Back at the Sanctuary, Eugene (Josh McDermitt) delivers and demonstrates his bootleg ammo supply to Negan, and recommends that they utilise a firing line approach to fight Rick's regular army. Negan sends a decoy group of Saviors to ready upwards a roadblock as part of the ruse to entrap Rick, while he, Gabriel (Seth Gilliam), Eugene, and the rest of them set out on their real grade. As they drive, Negan confesses to Gabriel that he intentionally sacrificed the roadblock group, expecting Rick will kill all of them, but that this was a necessary cede as they were also armed with more imitation intel that would lead Rick'south group into his ambush while thinking the plans from Dwight were legitimate. Gabriel, on hearing this, tries to escape the moving vehicle to warn Rick, simply is defenseless by Eugene.

Following the map, Rick's group witnesses a massive walker horde in the distance and go on on. They end upwardly in a large field where Negan taunts them over a public address system. Negan reveals that he has Gabriel at gunpoint, that their traitor Dwight is a prisoner, and that his people are ready to burn down. He counts downwards from iii, as a firing line of Saviors appears on the ridge line of the hill, set to shoot downwards Rick'due south group. However, as they fire, their weapons all backlash due to Eugene'due south purposely faulty ammo, killing or injuring many – including Negan – and rendering the guns ineffective. As Rick'due south group engage in gun battle, Gabriel and Dwight overpower their captors and force Negan to flee with his baseball bat—"Lucille". In the ensuing shootout, many of the Saviors are killed while the balance willingly put down their weapons and surrender.

Meantime, a smaller Savior convoy reaches the Hilltop. The residents all evacuate through a secret passage to the forest behind the community. Tara (Alanna Masterson) and Alden (Callan McAuliffe) stay backside to slow down the Saviors, when suddenly the Saviors are hit by molotov cocktails thrown by the Oceanside customs, led past Cyndie (Sydney Park) and Aaron (Ross Marquand).

Back at the field, Rick pursues Negan to a tree where two stained glass windows hang; one of Rick'southward shots fractures 1. Negan attacks Rick with Lucille; the two grapple until Negan gains the upper manus. He tells Rick that he wanted to kill him back when they first met, merely could non do it in front of Carl. Rick says there can be another style and convinces Negan to hear him out for Carl's sake, that at that place could exist a peaceful future for both of them. Negan seems to be listening and becomes bawling. With Negan's baby-sit down, Rick uses a shard of broken glass to slice Negan's throat while the combined groups sentinel from a distance. Rick tells Siddiq to save him, much to Maggie'southward anguish; she wanted to see Negan suffer for killing her husband, Glenn. Michonne restrains Maggie every bit Rick tells the gathered people that they will first a new world, living in peace, and that the walkers are the real enemies; stating that all the communities, including the Saviors, must work together in order to survive. As everyone departs, Rick falls against the tree and tearfully says to himself "My mercy prevails over my wrath" – a scene first shown in "Mercy".

Eventually, the survivors regroup back at their various communities. At the Hilltop, Alden tells Maggie he volition stay and aid build the inventions from the volume given to Maggie by Georgie. The Oceanside group reintegrate and revitalize the Sanctuary. In exchange, a large corporeality of food and other supplies are given to Tara for the Hilltop. Dwight, whom Daryl has driven deep into the woods, profusely apologizes for his quondam actions but acknowledges to Daryl he deserves to die. Instead, Daryl gives him the keys to the truck and tells him to leave, become arrive correct and find his married woman Sherry, but warns him to never return. Later, Dwight arrives at their one-time home and finds a recent note from Sherry. At the junkyard, Morgan stops to run across Jadis (Pollyanna McIntosh) and tells her that Rick has invited her to join their community and be part of a group again. Morgan says he volition stay backside in the junkyard to be alone as he has decided he cannot be effectually people now.

Back in her part at the Hilltop, Maggie has a private meeting with Jesus and Daryl. They believe Rick and Michonne made a fault past keeping Negan alive and the three allude to rectifying this once Hilltop has had time to regroup and fortify. In the infirmary, Rick and Michonne explicate to a recovering Negan that he volition spend the rest of his life in a cell while he watches their customs thrive. At Alexandria, Gabriel returns to the burnt-out remains of the church and thanks God for helping him past showing him the calorie-free. In the last scene, Rick reads his own letter back to Carl – saying he remembers that earlier mean solar day too and thanks him for leading him to this point.

Product [edit]

This episode features the departure of Morgan Jones, portrayed by Lennie James, while bringing him into the narrative of the prove'south companion serial, Fear the Walking Dead, where he became a regular grapheme starting with its quaternary season, which premiered immediately after the episode'southward broadcast.[1]

According to showrunner Scott M. Gimple, the idea of having Eugene exist critical to the terminate of the state of war by sabotaging the armament, which was non a narrative chemical element of the comic series, had been devised earlier Eugene was taken by the Saviors and had not informed Josh McDermitt about it until necessary equally to reflect the graphic symbol'southward own motivations every bit a terminal-infinitesimal alter of heart due to his humanity finally overcoming his instinct for self-preservation.[4]

It too marks the deviation of Dwight, played by Austin Amelio, who starting time appeared in season 6 "Always Accountable", became a recurring character and in flavor 7 was promoted to the regular bandage. There has been speculation that Dwight was going to appear in the center of flavor 9, with the death of Dwight in the arc of the comics, it is speculated that this character would continue his stage in Fear The Walking Dead already part of the chief bandage, according to Dustin Rowles of Uproxx reveals this: "Should characters from The Walking Expressionless and Fear the Walking Dead come upon The Republic around the same fourth dimension, it's quite possible that Dwight could step correct back into his The Walking Dead role, simply now as a representative of Fearfulness the Walking Expressionless. In this scenario, Daryl (filling the role of Rick) could exist the 1 to pull the trigger and kill Dwight in that meeting with Governor Milton (or Georgie). Withal, Daryl — the guy who exiled Dwight from Alexandria — would feel much less remorse about killing Dwight than Rick does in the comics."[five]

Reception [edit]

Critical reception [edit]

"Wrath" received by and large positive reviews. On Rotten Tomatoes, it holds a 75% with an average rating of half-dozen.95 out of 10, based on 28 reviews. The site's consensus reads: "Wrath" begins predictably and ends twistedly as it tidily closes out the "all-out-state of war" arc that's been creeping throughout TWD flavor 8, presenting a bewilderment that goes against the grain of several lead characters and the serial itself.[six]

Nick Romano of Entertainment Weekly gave the episode a "B-" and said: "In the end, the hour comes down to only a few things: remembrance of Carl, the walk-up to the finale, the twist, and the backwash — with the latter being saved for next season."[7] Noel Murray of Rolling Rock commented on the episode: "The twist gets the story where it needs to go."[viii] Alex McLevy of The A.V. Club gave the episode a "B" and said: "The ending of this story means the series has a chance to do some house rebooting next season."[nine] Matt Fowler of IGN rated the episode 7.six out of 10 and commented: "There were a couple twists in the third act - one from the comics, that the show's been not shy nearly telegraphing, and the other one taking three character and having them act extremely opposite to how we know them to be."[10]

Bill Keveney of USA Today commented on the episode: "The war, which dragged on longer than many viewers liked, turned on a surprising, satisfying plot twist."[11] Steven Johnson of the Chicago Tribune commented on the episode: "All of Sunday'southward wrap-upward cloth — Rick under the tree with the art drinking glass windows hanging from it; Rick, cherry-red- and teary-eyed, intoning, "My mercy prevailed over my wrath" — packed a surprising emotional wallop."[12] Dustin Rowles of Uproxx commented on the episode: "The season eight finale of The Walking Dead threw us all for a loop when Maggie teased her part in the future of the serial."[xiii] James White of Empire gave the episode 4 out of 5 stars and commented: "A different type of finale for the testify, and in a way a welcome 1. It certainly feels like the closing of one chapter and the start of another and could almost take served every bit a serial finale."[14] Erik Kain of Forbes commented on the episode: "Probably the all-time matter about the episode was the setup for Flavour 9."[fifteen]

Ratings [edit]

The flavour finale received a total viewership of 7.92 meg with a three.4 rating in adults aged 18–49, which was an increase from the previous calendar week which had 6.67 meg viewers, and was the highest-rated episode since the mid-flavor premiere, "Honor", which had 8.28 million viewers.[16] Notwithstanding, information technology was besides the show's lowest rated flavour finale since flavor one.

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b Wigler, Josh (April xv, 2018). "'Fear the Walking Dead' Star Lennie James on Morgan's New Journeying: "It Won't Be Easy"". The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved Apr 15, 2018.
  2. ^ MarĂ­a, Ana (April 15, 2018). "'Fear the Walking Expressionless': Morgan Finds Niggling Peace in Motion to Texas". Variety . Retrieved Apr fifteen, 2018.
  3. ^ Lee, Jess (Jan eight, 2019). "The Walking Dead star Austin Amelio reacts to Fear the Walking Dead crossover". Digital Spy . Retrieved January viii, 2019.
  4. ^ Ross, Dalton (April fifteen, 2018). "The Walking Expressionless stars and showrunner accost season finale fate". Amusement Weekly . Retrieved April 15, 2018.
  5. ^ Rowles, Dustin (January 9, 2018). "Dwight May Be The Fundamental To A The Walking Dead Merger With Fearfulness The Walking Expressionless". Uproxx . Retrieved January x, 2018.
  6. ^ "Wrath". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved April 17, 2018.
  7. ^ Romano, Nick (April 15, 2018). "The Walking Dead finale recap: 'Wrath'". Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved April fifteen, 2018.
  8. ^ Murray, Noel (April 15, 2018). "'The Walking Dead' Season Finale Recap: Boss Boxing". Rolling Stone . Retrieved April xv, 2018.
  9. ^ McLevy, Alex (April 15, 2018). "The Walking Dead 's eighth flavour ends in big, bloodthirsty war". The A.V. Club . Retrieved April fifteen, 2018.
  10. ^ Fowler, Matt (April 15, 2018). "The Walking Expressionless: "Wrath" Review". IGN. Retrieved April 15, 2018.
  11. ^ Keveney, Bill (April 15, 2018). "'The Walking Dead' recap: 'All-Out War' ends with Rick-Negan showdown". The states Today . Retrieved April 15, 2018.
  12. ^ Johnson, Steve (April xvi, 2018). "'The Walking Expressionless' Season 8 finale recap: An emotional end and a mode forrard". Chicago Tribune . Retrieved April 16, 2018.
  13. ^ Rowles, Dustin (April 15, 2018). "At present We Know Why Maggie Is So Important To Side by side Flavor's 'The Walking Dead'". Uproxx. Retrieved April xv, 2018.
  14. ^ White, James (Apr 15, 2018). "The Walking Dead – Season eight, Episode 16 – Wrath Review". Empire . Retrieved April 15, 2018.
  15. ^ Kain, Erik (April 15, 2018). "'The Walking Dead' Season 8, Episode 16 Review: 'Wrath'". Forbes . Retrieved April fifteen, 2018.
  16. ^ Porter, Rick (April 17, 2018). "Sun cable ratings: 'Fright the Walking Dead' opens higher". Boob tube by the Numbers. Archived from the original on April 18, 2018. Retrieved April 17, 2018.

External links [edit]

  • "Wrath" at AMC
  • "Wrath" at IMDb

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wrath_%28The_Walking_Dead%29

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