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Lennie James. Morgan Jones, portrayed by Lennie James, [29] is a survivor staying in Rick's hometown with his son, Duane. Initially, he suffers from the loss of his wife Jenny at the beginning of the outbreak, unwilling to move on while her reanimated body roamed the town.
Here's Not Here is the fourth episode of the sixth season of the post-apocalyptic horror television series The Walking Dead, which aired on AMC on November 1, 2015. The episode was written by Scott M. Gimple and directed by Stephen Williams.
The Walking Dead is an American zombie apocalypse media franchise centered on a number of television series based on the comic book of the same name. [1] [2] Set in one fictional shared universe, [3] the franchise has developed into seven live-action television series, eight web series that tie into the first two television series, novels, video games, and other media.
The episode focuses on Carol (Melissa McBride) and Morgan (Lennie James) finding refuge and being introduced to a new well-established community called the Kingdom. It marks the first appearances of King Ezekiel ( Khary Payton ), his pet Bengal tiger named Shiva, and his right-hand man Jerry ( Cooper Andrews ).
James Chen as Kal, a protector and guardian of the Hilltop. Anthony Lopez as Oscar, a resident of the Hilltop. Gustavo Gomez as Marco, a supply runner of the Hilltop. C. Thomas Howell as Roy, a resident of the Hilltop. [18] Kelley Mack as Adeline, a resident of the Hilltop who has feelings for Henry.
The site's consensus reads: "Moving performances by Lennie James and Melissa McBride as their characters get their mojo back move the season's arc forward in "Bury Me Here," though the pacing is slow and their journeys seem relatively implausible." [1] Many critics noted James' emotional performance, as well as McBride's as the episode's ...
[4] [5] Series creator Robert Kirkman described Morgan as "very different (and cooler) than his comics counterpart" and expressed excitement over James' involvement in the season, writing: "Having Lennie, who was such a huge part of season 1 and amazing every time we had him back, finally a regular part of this show is really going to energize ...
The site's consensus reads: "Time for After" improves on TWD's previous episode by focusing on Eugene's emotional struggle. [2] Many critics noted Josh McDermitt 's emotional performance, as well as the change of pace from the previous episode, as the episode's highlights.