Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Dante is a guard in the Hilltop Colony who appears to have a crush on Maggie and is one of her right-hand men. [volume & issue needed] He looked for missing survivor Ken, but was captured, [volume & issue needed] and later released alongside Ken by Alpha and The Whisperers.
It is revealed that Dante is the one who painted the "Silence the Whispers" graffiti, sabotaged the water supply, and suffocated Cheryl to death. In the present, Rosita goes to visit Siddiq, but finds Dante who attacks her. Rosita is able to stab Dante in the shoulder with a knife and is forced to put down a reanimated Siddiq, before beating ...
The scene was written by Scott M. Gimple, who is the showrunner on their spin-off series, The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live, and was shot over two days in Georgia. [3] The final moments of the episode features a montage of scenes from every prior season of the series that includes past cast members while a voice-over orbits around a single ...
Hogan praised Nicotero's direction, the writing, and the themes of horror, calling it "the most jaw-clenching, teeth grinding episodes of straight-out horror that The Walking Dead has done." [5] Alex McLevy for The A.V. Club rated the episode a B+, calling it "one of the scariest installments of the AMC series in years." [6]
"Bury Me Here" is the thirteenth episode of the seventh season of the post-apocalyptic horror television series The Walking Dead, which aired on AMC on March 12, 2017. The episode was written by Scott M. Gimple and directed by Alrick Riley. The episode focuses on The Kingdom delivering goods to the Saviors during a routine supply drop-off, but ...
"The First Day of the Rest of Your Life" is the sixteenth and final episode of the seventh season of the post-apocalyptic horror television series The Walking Dead, which aired in the United States on AMC on April 2, 2017. The episode was written by Scott M. Gimple, Angela Kang, and Matthew Negrete, and directed by Greg Nicotero.
The last image we have of Patrick Cagey is of his first moments as a free man. He has just walked out of a 30-day drug treatment center in Georgetown, Kentucky, dressed in gym clothes and carrying a Nike duffel bag.
[4] Since writer Robert Kirkman felt that Dale epitomized a character of morality and humanity, much of "Judge, Jury, Executioner" explores themes related to the declining morality of individuals during a catastrophic event. [2] Kirkman proclaimed that Dale's death was a momentous occasion, ultimately marking a turning point for future ...