![]() ![]() Ideally, he should use the good character judgment he must’ve had in his days as a lawman and bring Tyrese’s gang into the group, too. Heck, even current group member Axel, who we’ve seen put the moves on teenage Beth, is deserving of wariness. In the early days, there were loose cannons in Rick’s group (think of Carol’s husband). ![]() I mean, even Andrea can see the value of Michonne, and when “The Walking Dead” started, Andrea was unstable compared to Rick’s stability.Īll 6 ‘Mission: Impossible’ films, ranked He wants to kick her out of the prison, too, but a simple conversation would probably be enough to tell him that not only is she trustworthy, she’d actually be an outstanding asset to their little community. Bad listenerĪlso, consider Rick’s relationship with Michonne. Basically, Tyrese’s group is seeking the same thing Rick’s group did in Season 2 when they came upon Hershel’s barn - an alliance of mutual benefit: We get the safety of a larger group, you get the benefit of more contributors. But this is arguably in reaction to the way he and his friends have been rejected and caged in one part of the building by Rick’s group. One of the other guys is a big question mark he proposes killing Carl and Carol. He and his wife are clearly worthy of joining the group, especially now that they’ve lost Daryl. Tyrese has none of the shiftiness of Randall he’s a rock-solid and genuine person who would obviously be a great ally, if only for his muscle. In Season 3, a foursome has found its way into the prison - Tyrese, his wife and a couple of other guys. (We never found out for sure if he was a good guy or bad guy, since Shane snapped and killed him.) Last season when Rick (admittedly, with the help of fellow alpha males Shane and Daryl) had Randall tied up in a barn, I kept yelling at my screen like C-3PO in “The Empire Strikes Back”: “Trust him! Trust him!” But at least Randall was at least sort of shifty. Stars: Andrew Lincoln, Norman Reedus, Melissa McBride On Sunday, he saw a vision of his dead wife, pulled out his gun and had everyone worried that he was going to snap and start shooting. Rick and the Governor - who put a bullet to the head of a walker-bitten Woodbury citizen in Sunday’s midseason premiere - have this in common: They do what they think needs to be done to maintain order.īut just as we (unlike the characters) saw that the Guvna had lost it - keeping walker heads in fish tanks and storing his zombie daughter in a closet - Rick is losing it, too. He often did things that needed to be done, but that the others couldn’t, such as killing Zombie Sophia when she emerges from the barn in Season 2. Now his time as a leader has gone to his head - in the sense that he’s losing it. When this group originally formed, they were just random people who intuitively clumped together in the face of an unknown disaster. You know what I’m getting tired of on “The Walking Dead?” Rick not trusting anyone outside of his group. ![]()
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