3/09/2015

What’s Up with “The Walking Dead”: Recap of season five episode “Forget”


“That’s what you worry about?”

Poor Sasha. Who could have guessed that out of everyone, she’s adapting to Alexandria the least? As in, not at all? Even Daryl, the Great Unshowered One, is warming up to Aaron and Eric and their promise of motorcycle parts. But Sasha can’t handle being around other people, is taking her rage out on happy family portraits that she shoots into shards of glass and wooden frames, and flips out at the welcome party Deanna throws for our group of survivors, raging when a blandly nice neighbor asks Sasha what her favorite meal is because she’s “worried” she’ll make the wrong thing.

Given that this is seconds after Sasha is bombarded by memories of what happened to her brother Tyreese and her boyfriend Bob (rest in peace, The Wire alumni) … maybe not the best time.

What else is going on with Rick and Co.? Although this episode kind of felt like filler, it sets a few different characters along unexpected paths. So let’s get to it!

+ “Luckiest damn people I ever met … We’re here now.” For a few seasons now there has been the (obvious, I think) suggestion that Rick and Co. aren’t necessarily the good guys of this story, but the people who end up in already-setup societies or structures and smash them apart. That idea has never been more clear than here in Alexandria, I think, where it only took a day or so for Rick to decide that the group should take the town from Deanna and her followers, by force if necessary, and now it’s only been another day and Rick is having secret meetings with Carol and Daryl to discuss their takeover strategy. And Rick’s disgust at and resentment of the community is palpable, especially when he smugly exclaims “We’re here now” as a way to justify their feeling of superiority. It’s a long way down from up that high, Rick.

+ “Because they believe in this. Because I’m telling them to.” As much as Rick thinks that taking Alexandria will be a cakewalk, Deanna is putting up a very formidable front indeed. She’s authoritative and no-nonsense (and that power suit with those pearls!), and I’m intrigued by how she and Rick will continue to interact. It seems like he’s waiting and taking his cues from her – notice how he was the last one, behind Michonne and Maggie, to chime in during their meeting with Deanna – so I wonder if he’ll rear his egotistical, survivalist head sooner rather than later. (Also, his “People are the real threat now” is valid, but easy to brush off, I think; he needs something more concrete to shove in Deanna’s face than the general “the outside is evil” argument.)

+ “I’m not an expert,” Carol says of guns, continuing her pleasant-middle-aged-women-with-nothing-to-hide shtick. Oh, you can use applesauce instead of butter in cookies? Who knew! Well, maybe Carol shouldn’t have made those cookies so damn delicious, because she’s compromised when little boy Sam (younger son of the blonde Jessie), who wanted more baked goods, followed Carol when she slipped out of Deanna’s party and saw her raiding the armory for yes, chocolate packets, but more importantly, guns. I’ll just excerpt Carol’s entire rebuttal of Sam below when he says he’ll tell his mother what he saw her doing, because, never forget, she’s killed innocent people and she may not be above killing children. Just saying.

“If you do, one morning you’ll wake up and you won’t be in your bed; you’ll be outside the walls. Far, far away, tied to a tree, and you’ll scream and scream because you’ll be so afraid, but no one will come to help. Because no one will hear you. But something will hear you. The monsters will come, the ones out there, and you won’t be able to run away when they come for you. And they will tear you apart and eat you up, all while you’re still alive, all while you can still feel it. And then afterwards, no one will ever know what happened to you.

Or, you can promise not to ever tell anyone what you saw here, and then nothing will happen. And you’ll get cookies. Lots of cookies.

I know what I think you should do.”

+ “We all lost things, but we all got something back,” says Jessie to Rick at Deanna’s party, a mentality that apparently warms him so much that he gives her an awkward kiss on the cheek when she hands Judith back to him. WHAT ARE YOU DOING, RICK? Thankfully, Jessie’s husband wasn’t around to see it (this is the same guy who I think growled at Rick last week; I can’t remember if that scene was reality or a dream, but let’s just go with it), but he is there the next day when Jessie calls out a greeting to Rick. It’s his hand on Jessie’s back that seems to spark something in Rick, and his entire face changes from one of cautious warmth to one of determined anger – and notice that as he watches them walk away, his hand goes to his waistband to finger his contraband gun (one of the ones Carol stole from the armory after threatening Jessie’s son Sam), the one most like his old revolver. Coveting a woman hasn’t been Rick’s style until this point, but there’s something very off-putting about the way he’s been interacting with Jessie lately … something worrisome.

+ “You do know the difference between a good person and a bad person,” says Aaron to Daryl, becoming his first friend – or, at least minimally, ally – in Alexandria. Everyone in Alexandria seems to be using different tactics to befriend/indoctrinate Rick’s group – Deanna by extending a hand to Maggie, Jessie by being so praising of Rick, all those soccer moms by gabbing with Carol about recipes – and for Aaron, he’s spinning his own otherness as a gay man to Daryl, joining him (following him?) outside the wall and then inviting him over for spaghetti at his and Eric’s house.

Admittedly, the death of Buttons the horse was undeniably upsetting (“You used to be somebody’s, huh? Now you’re just yours,” Daryl says to Buttons, recognizing a kindred spirit), and it’s probably what further pushes Aaron and Daryl together, a closeness that’s sealed when Aaron shows Daryl a bunch of motorcycle parts in his garage and asks if he can put a bike together and go be a recruiter for Alexandria in Eric’s stead. “You’re good out there. You don’t belong out there,” Aaron tells Daryl, perhaps in response to Daryl’s earlier assertion, regarding Buttons but of course also himself, that “the longer they’re out there, the more they become what they really are.”

We’ve known for a while now that Daryl’s weakness is a need for inclusion and acknowledgment (which is why his relationship with Carol seems so strong, since she’s part friend, part mother figure), and Aaron is giving it to him in droves .. so much so that Daryl refuses to take one of the guns Carol steals from the armory. If even Daryl is comfortable in Alexandria, what does this mean for the power structure Rick set up of himself, Carol, and Daryl? Is Rick’s plan for takeover already unraveling before it begins?

And finally, some other thoughts:

+ What’s the deal with the “W” carved in that dead walker’s head, the two laying side by side out near the cabin where Rick, Daryl, and Carol were having their secret meeting? Those deaths looked execution-style to me, not necessarily like a typical zombie kill. Perhaps something Deanna’s crappy bro son Aiden did?

+ “Smart for then or smart for now?” was Rick’s question about Deanna, and I liked Michonne’s answer of “This is now.” There is no going back; as much as staying alive is a goal of the group, there will be no hard reset of this world. Not ever.

+ Did everybody recognize Maggie at the table with Deanna? It took me a second glance to understand it was her, with her hair not only washed but also brushed and tied-back. Straight substitute-teacher style right there. (I’ve gotten used to Carol’s wardrobe of Ann Taylor originals, but et tu, Maggie!?)

+ Another note about Sasha: That role she volunteers for, of being the sniper guard on the watchtower, is a role occupied in the comics by Andrea, who is unequivocally tied with Michonne for the best female character in that format. I’m still salty about how they treated/ruined her on the show.

+ I loved everything about Rosita and Abraham’s appearance at Deanna’s party, from her deadpan “They have beer” to Abraham’s drunken talk with Michonne, culminating in his “I am a large man and I have had many beers to make up for that.” Don’t drink through their whole stock, dude!

+ Some people thought last week that Deanna spoke like she doesn’t have a family anymore, but this week we met her husband Redge, who designed the wall around Alexandria, and another son, Spencer, played by FORMER ONE TREE HILL CAST MEMBER AUSTIN NICHOLS. I refuse to be embarrassed by how excited I am about this.

+ What was more upsetting for you, Michonne hanging up her katana or Rick almost caressing the wall as he listened to the walker on the other side of it? Oof to both of those storytelling choices.