If there is one persistent complaint regarding season one of
The Walking Dead, it is truncation. At only six episodes, the first season felt
incomplete. It does end on an interesting
cliffhanger, but it ends just as we are getting to know the characters.
The first two episodes of season one are the best: “Days
Gone By” and “Guts.” Perhaps it was because they were part supposed to be part
of one episode-the pilot- but later converted into two episodes to develop the
characters.
|
Glen and Rick Olfactory Camouflage |
“Days Gone By” is the title of the pilot and it starts off
familiarly, familiar to those who have seen the excellent zombie movie 28 Days Later. Rick Grimes, the main
character, awakens in a hospital room to a vastly different world than he knew
prior. The beginning echoes 28 Days
Later, as that is precisely how the story is introduced. However, this is not a distraction as the series quickly develops
its own world and plot.
What is effective about the pilot is that we are introduced
to this world as Rick is. He walks out of his room to a ransacked hospital with
a room chained shut at the end of the hallway. A pallid hand pokes through the
cracks between the chained doors with the words “Don’t Open. Dead Inside”
scrawled across it. Very ominous.
The sense of foreboding continues as Rick leaves the
hospital to find stacks of piled bodies.
He sees the half body of a zombie reaching toward him while lying on the
grass. The decay is advance so that it is difficult to determine its
gender.
Fans of the
Webisodes, which are
set during the same time, focus on just what happened to her. Titled “Torn
Apart” they show just how bleak and depressing this world is.
If you have not checked them out, you should.
The Webisodes are quite good.
Eventually, Rick finds a father, Morgan, and his son, Duane,
who essentially save his life by bringing him up to speed as to what has
occurred during Rick’s month-long hospital stay as he fought through coma. They hold up in their house.
The episode is often quiet as it allows the tension to
build. The series generally does not
rely on cheap gimmicks to generate suspense.
Typically, in horror fiction there are several ‘startling’ scenes. The scene begins quietly, and then a sudden shrieking
noise coupled with something jumping out from off-camera, something we have not
been privileged to see, into full screen. This is lazy horror fiction and The Walking Dead does not succumb to it.
So when Rick, still clinging to a world he used to know,
decides to travel to Atlanta finds his wife and son, Morgan’s words portend
terrible things: “They may not seem like much at one time, but in a group, all
riled up and hungry? Man, you watch your ass.” Rick lacks the complete
understanding of the threat. As he and we find out, going anywhere where large
populations of people lived is a bad idea.
The emptiness of a large metropolis, in this case Atlanta,
unsettles as he rides a horse into it. The
emptiness is eerie and leads to the pilot’s conclusion. Suddenly surrounded by a mob of “walkers,”
Rick barely escapes. Luckily, he scrambles under a tank and inside before the
mob consumes him.
The pilot ends with someone calling Rick inside the
tank. Someone calls him and asks if he’s
okay. We learn that a show regular, Glen, contacts him. He essentially reaches
out to assist. Whether one should do the “right” thing and help others is a
recurring theme in the series. The idea is repeatedly challenged as helping
others threatens the group.
But Rick is saved and in episode two “Guts” Rick becomes
part of the group that he eventually leads.
The group had gone into Atlanta to scavenge for supplies and see Rick.
They are held-up in a department store.
One of the first things Rick needed to do within the group
is assert his dominance. A fight between
two group members, between T-Dog and Merle, leads to Rick chaining Merle to a
pipe. The scene illustrates that not only can Rick take control over
situations, but also that the people who have survived languish in their own
stupidity—in this case exemplified by Merle’s racism.
It is hard to understand maintaining racist beliefs in a
world such as the group inhabits. Here
the notion that the threat is not just from the zombies but from surviving
humans filters into the series. Indeed, as hints of season three suggest and
comments from the producer indicate; it is the threat from humans that will
take center stage.
The escape from the department store, how they decided to
execute the plan, is one of the best scenes in the show. Taking a “terminated
walker” the group hacks him up to pieces.
They smear the walker’s guts, and body parts all over Glen and Rick.
This gruesome scene suggests just where the show’s producers are willing to go.
It has to be one of the most disgusting scenes on television. It is putrid, but
awesome too.
The “guts” covered men then slip out of the store and into
the streets where thousands of ‘walkers” mill about looking to eat anything.
The conceit here is that live humans smell differently than dead ones and the
“walkers” can smell the difference.
There are several problems with this, like if walkers can
smell, can they taste? So they must breath to get oxygen into the bloodstream?
So can they be smothered to death or drown? How do their olfactory senses
working exactly, if they are dead? But no matter because thinking about the
“mechanics” of a “walker” leads to dissonance.
Of course, the group makes it out, but forgets the chained
up racist Merle. Future episodes lead the group to attempt to retrieve him, but
he had already severed off his hand to escape the hoard of zombies that had
broken through the department store’s doors.
The episodes that lead to the finale serve to introduce
characters and solidify the world that the group find themselves in. Rick, in
an unbelievable bout of luck, becomes reunited with his wife, son and best
friend, Shane, who had been sleeping with his wife Lori. One can hardly blame
them, as they thought Rick was dead.
Episode four, Vatos, introduces another group of survivors,
but does not, at least, in season two, return to them. These survivors are protecting a nursing
home. The scene simply feels random, but perhaps that is the point. Perhaps, there will be random groups of
survivors that the group interfaces with and no more. Rick, still clinging to
the notion of helping others, leaves the group some guns.
The rest of the group, hidden in the woods, comes under
attack by the ‘walkers.’ Rick and his
posse return just in time, but not before several members are killed. Here we are introduced into how a person
turns into a zombie.
One of the show’s recurring characters, Andrea, faces the
reality of watching a family member “turn.” The show never loses focus of the
humanity and strain the characters are under and the scene with Andrea and his
sister, Amy, illustrate this.
Amy has been killed in the attack, and everyone knows that
she will “turn.” The only question is when. While other members want to shoot
her again in the head and burn here, Andrea wants to do ‘right’ by her
sister. The show often juxtaposes these
ideas.
For example, another group member, Jim, is bitten. His fate is sealed; he will turn into a
zombie and threaten the group. What should they do? Kill him? Live him? Tough decisions.
The finale is effective as Rick leads the group back,
incredulously, to Atlanta to the CDC.
Rick’s head is still clearly in the “old world” and believes there must
be something still functioning normally.
While Rick’s leadership here proves correct—one lone
scientist—allows them into the seemingly secure CDC facility. The group showers, gets drunk and eats: a
brief moment of pleasure in a series that has been relentlessly bleak. However, this respite is short lived.
The scientist eventually tells the group everything he knows
and the information is not in any way comforting. Indeed, he has decided to
commit suicide by allowing CDC facility to blow-up. He offers the group the
same opportunity. The blast will be painless and quick. Who wants to live in
this world? This is an interesting question and one not so easily
dismissed. Some stay and others don’t. We are invited to consider the same. Is living
the only thing or does how one lives and in what capacity factor into the
choice?