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‘The Walking Dead’ recap: season 7, episode 4, ‘Service’
You don’t talk to him.
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The drill goes something like this: Open with a bang (and then some).
Negan is annoying. Intimidating? In many ways, she is the most important thing in the world to him, and she keeps him going. But more than anything, he’s annoying. “That’s by his own description, so yeah, I think we actually have our Negan and our Rick”.
Also returning in Episode 5 is Tom Payne’s portrayal of Jesus who, for the first time on the show, will be sporting a completely authentic beard after being given a prosthetic look in Season 6. But something happened in last week’s “The Cell”. She doesn’t tell him when she sneaks off to sit watch in a straw field with a rifle she keeps hidden in the fireplace, but he sees her anyway as she walks out of the house. Things only get worse when Negan begins asking about Maggie (Lauren Cohan). So, crazy, immature…annoying. Negan seems impressed by Carl’s courage, but still threatens to teach another lesson if he doesn’t back down.
While the survivors above lost some major cool points this week for giving in to a murderous tyrant, Father Gabriel upped his game.
Dwight stops Rosita and Spencer from leaving, takes their guns, and orders her to go get Daryl’s motorcycle.
Negan isn’t happy when Spencer questions who he is, and Rick’s attitude by his early arrival doesn’t help either.
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Makes ideal sense; Negan steals weapons so that people can be dependent on him for survival. Regardless, it’s pretty clear it’s a matter of when, not if, Rick will rise up in arms against Negan again. Michonne tells him they must fight back. But we’re certainly not scared.
Still reeling from Glenn (Steven Yeun) and Abraham’s (Michael Cudlitz) deaths, Rick (Andrew Lincoln) and the residents of Alexandria were forced to contend with an unexpected guest during Sunday’s The Walking Dead: Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan). While Rick is still sleeping in the morning, Michonne sneaks out to practice her sniper skills.
What we know about the Alexandrians’ grit and survival skills give even the grimmest scenes in “Service” an undertone of hope, like when one of the Saviors taunts Enid (Katelyn Nacon) in part by calling her “little girl”, clearly unaware of who he’s dealing with. But to what end? Man, this villain is a complete a**; I mean I can not recall a villain that I literally hated this much as long as I’ve watched TV. But he’s not very interesting. “I love them, right after their husbands go, they are empty inside”.
As that quote proves, the new Big Bad asserted his dominance over all of Alexandria. and Rick gave him free reign.
“I know Judith isn’t mine”, said Rick.
If there is a protracted battle between Rick and Negan, it’s not a given that Rick would come out on top. Or does he just like flirting with him? All the more reason to root for Rick’s diverse group to win their inevitable war with The Saviors-especially if they have the sense to entrust that inclusive, humanist, and surprisingly chill black guy (I mean Ezekiel, of course) with the day-to-day governing.
The show had been building toward to entrance of Negan for the entirety of last season, and his debut came with the brutal murders of two major characters. Or perhaps he’s just the craziest. It was like watching a remake of How the Grinch Stole Christmas, but Negan was the green monster and Christmas was each and every luxury item the citizens of Alexandria had left.
– “Maybe if Rick thought it through…”
Spencer is the loudest objector to what Rick is doing and has done. Many fans believed Judith wasn’t Rick’s.
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– Is Daryl reminding anyone else of Theon Greyjoy to Negan’s Ramsay Snow right now?