The Walking Dead – Welcome to the Tombs Review: Death and Mediocrity
The clash between Woodbury and the prison group ends in death for a major character, but there’s hope for a promising future when the dust settles.
The clash between Woodbury and the prison group ends in death for a major character, but there’s hope for a promising future when the dust settles.
While it wasn’t perfect, the second-to-last episode does provide crucial steps to ending the season with a bang.
The season 3 premiere for Game of Thrones makes all the right moves to keep the momentum going from its stellar second season and also looks like it might improve upon the few plotlines that didn’t deliver last year. With so many storylines going at once, it would be hard to expect all of them to be equal to each other.
Revolution returns with a twist-y midseason premiere as the gang fights off Monroe’s helicopters and a surprising turn of events affects the group significantly. The NBC drama comes back very much the same show it was in the fall, despite reports of re-tooling.
Merle takes things into his own hands with dire consequences. Meanwhile, Glenn and Maggie get engaged.
The latest episode is sweet and uncharacteristically realistic. So why does it still feel so unsatisfying?
Do yourself a favor and just skip to the last ten minutes of this episode. It’s the only part worth watching.
Archer pushes Lana’s buttons on a mission in Tangier. Their quest to extract an agent from Morocco is compromised, meanwhile Pam makes a plea for an important promotion.
The moral of the story is that if you can’t sell toys you can’t have another season. That, and don’t trust robots.
Andrea finally chooses to escape Woodbury in favor of going back to the prison, but not without incurring the wrath of the Governor.