The Walking Dead, the long-running post-apocalyptic horror series based on the comic books by Robert Kirkman, Tony Moore, and Charlie Adlard, has finally come to an end after 11 seasons and 177 episodes. The show, which premiered on AMC in 2010, followed a group of survivors led by former sheriff Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln) as they faced the threats of zombies, hostile humans, and their own inner demons in a world overrun by the undead.
The final season of The Walking Dead, which was split into three parts, adapted material from issues #175–193 of the comic book series and introduced two new factions: the Commonwealth, a large network of communities that had advanced equipment and over fifty thousand survivors living in their settlements; and the Reapers, a mysterious group of hostile survivors that attacked and took Meridian, the former home of Maggie (Lauren Cohan) and her new people, the Wardens.
The Walking Dead Trailer...
The final season of The Walking Dead, which was split into three parts, adapted material from issues #175–193 of the comic book series and introduced two new factions: the Commonwealth, a large network of communities that had advanced equipment and over fifty thousand survivors living in their settlements; and the Reapers, a mysterious group of hostile survivors that attacked and took Meridian, the former home of Maggie (Lauren Cohan) and her new people, the Wardens.
The Walking Dead Trailer...
- 10/2/2023
- by CineArticles Editorial Team
- https://thecinemanews.online/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/IMG_4649
As “The Walking Dead” fans anxiously await the series finale on Sunday, November 20, 2022, it’s the perfect time to look back at the show’s dozens of Rip moments. The characters on AMC’s zombie apocalypse drama live in perpetual fear of death. In fact, of the entire Season 1 cast only a precious few are still alive as of today. Grab the tissues and tour our photo gallery above (or click here for direct access) highlighting 36 of the most shocking “The Walking Dead” deaths in order. Did we leave anybody out?
The most recent additions to the death list are Sebastian Milton (Teo Rapp-Olsson) and Lance Hornsby (Josh Hamilton), two citizens of the Commonwealth who were both K.O.’ed in recent weeks. Sebastian met his maker when he was bitten by the walker that Eugene (Josh McDermitt) threw on him after a riot broke out. And Lance was shot...
The most recent additions to the death list are Sebastian Milton (Teo Rapp-Olsson) and Lance Hornsby (Josh Hamilton), two citizens of the Commonwealth who were both K.O.’ed in recent weeks. Sebastian met his maker when he was bitten by the walker that Eugene (Josh McDermitt) threw on him after a riot broke out. And Lance was shot...
- 11/20/2022
- by Marcus James Dixon
- Gold Derby
The end is almost here. The Walking Dead, the show that wanted to live forever, is now coming to a close…sort of. Though the series based on Robert Kirkman’s long-running zombie comic of the same name is airing its series finale on Nov. 20, the franchise itself will carry on in the form of numerous spinoffs.
Still, spinoffs or no, this is a fairly big moment in genre TV history. First premiering on Halloween night 2010, The Walking Dead was an instant ratings success for AMC and remained as such for much of its 11 seasons. It helped usher in a new era of fandom-friendly television for its network (which was coming off big prestige hits like Mad Men and Breaking Bad) and helped bring zombies back into the mainstream. With the 24th episode of its 11th season, The Walking Dead will finally be calling it quits.
It’s been quite...
Still, spinoffs or no, this is a fairly big moment in genre TV history. First premiering on Halloween night 2010, The Walking Dead was an instant ratings success for AMC and remained as such for much of its 11 seasons. It helped usher in a new era of fandom-friendly television for its network (which was coming off big prestige hits like Mad Men and Breaking Bad) and helped bring zombies back into the mainstream. With the 24th episode of its 11th season, The Walking Dead will finally be calling it quits.
It’s been quite...
- 11/18/2022
- by Alec Bojalad
- Den of Geek
[Warning: The following contains Major spoilers for The Walking Dead Season 11 Episode 19, “Variant.”] Remember way, way back in The Walking Dead’s first season, when those Atlanta walkers actually felt like a threat? They attempted to break department store windows, they climbed ladders, and, as the opening credits showed for several seasons, they turned doorknobs? Creepy…. After a gradual decline in walker intelligence over the years, “Variant” re-introduced that climbing, grabbing-things, door-opening version of the dead. Unfortunately, it’s a move that seems less a final obstacle for the survivors and more a tease for the inevitable spinoffs that have permeated these last episodes like a continual, ominous rumble of thunder. Jace Downs/AMC At the Commonwealth, Eugene’s (Josh McDermitt) whisked away to Gabriel’s (Seth Gilliam) church, the only safe place for him after his involvement in Sebastian’s (Teo Rapp-Olsson) death. But in a world where Eugene’s known love, “safe” just doesn’t cut it.
- 10/17/2022
- TV Insider
The Walking Dead deviated from the source material again, resulting in one of the most shocking episodes to date.
The Walking Dead Season 11 Episode 18 found Max (Margot Bingham) recording Sebastian (Teo Rapp-Olsson) revealing the corruption inside the Commonwealth.
Max enlisted Eugene (Josh McDermitt) to help her play the recording during Founder's Day as Sebastian's mother, Pamela (Laila Robins), was in damage control mode following recent events.
Sebastian realized what Max did and tried to kill her, but Eugene popped up in the nick of time and shoved Sebastian toward a walker.
Sebastian was killed, changing the trajectory of the Commonwealth arc for good.
Bingham tells TV Fanatic that Max is standing up for what's right.
"She's able to do that in a way that Mercer is not," the star shares.
"I think she's able to do all of the dirty work and really support her brother because she knows at the root of it,...
The Walking Dead Season 11 Episode 18 found Max (Margot Bingham) recording Sebastian (Teo Rapp-Olsson) revealing the corruption inside the Commonwealth.
Max enlisted Eugene (Josh McDermitt) to help her play the recording during Founder's Day as Sebastian's mother, Pamela (Laila Robins), was in damage control mode following recent events.
Sebastian realized what Max did and tried to kill her, but Eugene popped up in the nick of time and shoved Sebastian toward a walker.
Sebastian was killed, changing the trajectory of the Commonwealth arc for good.
Bingham tells TV Fanatic that Max is standing up for what's right.
"She's able to do that in a way that Mercer is not," the star shares.
"I think she's able to do all of the dirty work and really support her brother because she knows at the root of it,...
- 10/10/2022
- by Paul Dailly
- TVfanatic
The final eight-episode run of “The Walking Dead” continues with “A New Deal.” Things immediately pick up with the imprisonment of the reckless Hornsby (Josh Hamilton) and the desperate attempt for Pamela Minton to save her son Sebastian’s (Teo Rapp-Olsson) reputation. Meanwhile, Daryl bonds with Judith as they prepare to return home to Alexandria. It’s clear from these first two episodes that the back quarter of the show’s final season is not wasting any time.
Continuing the trend of opening the episode with classic footage, “A New Deal” shows a brief montage of Daryl Dixon’s journey in its opening minutes. Much like the Rick-centered footage from last week, this sequence is narrated by Judith Grimes. These montage spotlights on the legacy characters are not only emotional, but a fitting way to emphasize the importance of this final string of the narrative.
There’s a great moment...
Continuing the trend of opening the episode with classic footage, “A New Deal” shows a brief montage of Daryl Dixon’s journey in its opening minutes. Much like the Rick-centered footage from last week, this sequence is narrated by Judith Grimes. These montage spotlights on the legacy characters are not only emotional, but a fitting way to emphasize the importance of this final string of the narrative.
There’s a great moment...
- 10/10/2022
- by Noah Levine
- bloody-disgusting.com
[Warning: The following contains Major spoilers for The Walking Dead Season 11 episode 18, “A New Deal.”] All it took to throw The Walking Dead’s final minutes into question was a single walker bite. To be fair, no one’s quite sure how the show is going to make it to the finish. However, with spinoffs on the way for Daryl (Norman Reedus) as well as the duo of Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) and Maggie (Lauren Cohan), and Carol’s (Melissa McBride) survival heavily implied, it appears all the front-and-center characters will make it out alive. That wasn’t the case in the comics. Given the final few minutes of “A New Deal,” one of the biggest deaths in the source material won’t translate to television. It all boils down to Sebastian (Teo Rapp-Olsson), who bled out after a walker ripped open his neck on this week’s episode. Here’s why Twd’s most annoying character...
- 10/10/2022
- TV Insider
[Warning: The following contains Major spoilers for The Walking Dead Season 11, Episode 2, “A New Deal.”] Well, we’re definitely not getting The Walking Dead’s source material ending. That much is made clear by the surprising final minutes of “A New Deal,” which sees Sebastian Milton (Teo Rapp-Olsson) wind up as walker chow. Given the impact Sebastian has on that story’s final events in the comics, it’s a shock to those who expected something similar to happen on the show. But first, quite a bit happens in the episode before we get to his big death. Jace Downs/AMC Just as Team Daryl (Norman Reedus) and Hornsby (Josh Hamilton) are about to come to blows, Carol (Melissa McBride), Pamela Milton (Laila Robins) and Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) walk in. Pamela de-escalates the situation and takes Hornsby into custody for Sebastian’s crimes, but not without Daryl stabbing him ...
- 10/10/2022
- TV Insider
Warning: The following contains spoilers for Sunday’s episode of The Walking Dead. If you haven’t watched yet, you might want to before reading any further.
It couldn’t have happened to a nastier guy. In Sunday’s episode of The Walking Dead (recapped here), as all hell broke loose in the Commonwealth, mega-brat Sebastian was finally served his just desserts — and he himself was served to walkers.
More from TVLineThe Walking Dead Recap: Rest in Pieces, [Spoiler] -- Plus, Look Who's in LoveThe Walking Dead Sneak Peek: Watch Daryl Take a Stab at Vengeance -- Plus, Here's Lookin' at You,...
It couldn’t have happened to a nastier guy. In Sunday’s episode of The Walking Dead (recapped here), as all hell broke loose in the Commonwealth, mega-brat Sebastian was finally served his just desserts — and he himself was served to walkers.
More from TVLineThe Walking Dead Recap: Rest in Pieces, [Spoiler] -- Plus, Look Who's in LoveThe Walking Dead Sneak Peek: Watch Daryl Take a Stab at Vengeance -- Plus, Here's Lookin' at You,...
- 10/10/2022
- by Charlie Mason
- TVLine.com
This article contains spoilers for The Walking Dead season 11 episode 18.
People of the zombie apocalypse, rejoice! Sebastian Milton (Teo Rapp-Olsson), son of Pamela, nepotism baby of the Commonwealth and all-around monster, has officially been devoured by walkers as of season 11’s eighteenth episode, “A New Deal.” Though it would be disingenuous to say he will be missed, it is also true that the impact of his death is sure to affect the final episodes of the series. For instance, we now know beyond the shadow of a doubt that the show will not end the same way the comic did, where Sebastian played a markedly different role as the final antagonist of the series.
While it would have been clear to any fan of the comics that the show was not following the same blueprint as far back as the second season when characters like Carol Peletier (Melissa McBride) began to diverge from their counterparts,...
People of the zombie apocalypse, rejoice! Sebastian Milton (Teo Rapp-Olsson), son of Pamela, nepotism baby of the Commonwealth and all-around monster, has officially been devoured by walkers as of season 11’s eighteenth episode, “A New Deal.” Though it would be disingenuous to say he will be missed, it is also true that the impact of his death is sure to affect the final episodes of the series. For instance, we now know beyond the shadow of a doubt that the show will not end the same way the comic did, where Sebastian played a markedly different role as the final antagonist of the series.
While it would have been clear to any fan of the comics that the show was not following the same blueprint as far back as the second season when characters like Carol Peletier (Melissa McBride) began to diverge from their counterparts,...
- 10/10/2022
- by Alec Bojalad
- Den of Geek
This The Walking Dead review contains spoilers.
The Walking Dead Season 11 Episode 18
The possible collapse of a community in real time has always been the tease that The Walking Dead and its various spinoff shows lean on. The main show might be a zombie movie that was supposed to never end, per Robert Kirkman’s original vision for the comic book, but the various spinoffs, in particular Fear The Walking Dead and the best episode of Tales of the Walking Dead, have been more about watching things fall apart. Given what the world has gone through and continues to go through, there’s a certain dark appeal to watching a fictional reality fall apart, rather than actual reality.
That’s part of the escapism that The Walking Dead provides. From the comfort of our homes, we can watch other people struggle to overcome insurmountable odds, armchair quarterbacking every decision made...
The Walking Dead Season 11 Episode 18
The possible collapse of a community in real time has always been the tease that The Walking Dead and its various spinoff shows lean on. The main show might be a zombie movie that was supposed to never end, per Robert Kirkman’s original vision for the comic book, but the various spinoffs, in particular Fear The Walking Dead and the best episode of Tales of the Walking Dead, have been more about watching things fall apart. Given what the world has gone through and continues to go through, there’s a certain dark appeal to watching a fictional reality fall apart, rather than actual reality.
That’s part of the escapism that The Walking Dead provides. From the comfort of our homes, we can watch other people struggle to overcome insurmountable odds, armchair quarterbacking every decision made...
- 10/10/2022
- by Ron Hogan
- Den of Geek
The time has finally come. The final eight-episode run of AMCs “The Walking Dead” has kicked off with the Greg Nicotero-directed “Lockdown.” Picking up directly after the events of Episode 16, our survivors are on the run from a tyrannical Hornsby (Josh Hamilton) and his vicious militia. Inside the walls of the Commonwealth, the rest of the gang witness the downfall of the Milton family’s power in light of allegations against Sebastian Milton (Teo Rapp-Olsson). With the series finale creeping up on the horizon, “Lockdown” pushes full throttle with its pacing as it sets its sights on the highly-anticipated conclusion.
“Lockdown” delivers a healthy-dosage of action sequences paired with proper character-centric scenes. Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) and Daryl (Norman Reedus) execute a pretty gnarly car-chase, featuring camera movement and stunt-work that feels exhilarating and intensive, on a scale that reminds you of the genre-dipping “The Walking Dead” is capable of.
“Lockdown” delivers a healthy-dosage of action sequences paired with proper character-centric scenes. Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) and Daryl (Norman Reedus) execute a pretty gnarly car-chase, featuring camera movement and stunt-work that feels exhilarating and intensive, on a scale that reminds you of the genre-dipping “The Walking Dead” is capable of.
- 10/4/2022
- by Noah Levine
- bloody-disgusting.com
This The Walking Dead review contains spoilers.
The Walking Dead Season 11 Episode 17
The opening moments of this week’s The Walking Dead premiere reach deeply into the show’s history, showing a selection of moments that go back to the very first moments of “Days Gone Bye” and carry forward to the current day, with Daryl clearing Walkers while attempting to hide from the show’s latest in a long line of smiling threats, Lance Hornsby (Josh Hamilton). One of the fun realizations from the cold opening is that the cavalcade of villains, from Shane Walsh through to Negan Smith, tend to be smiling more often than not, while our heroes look serious about the business of survival in a world dominated by the dead. There must be some sort of appeal to giving into the darkness that thrives in petty power-hungry wannabes like Hornsby and Sebastian Milton (Teo Rapp-Olsson...
The Walking Dead Season 11 Episode 17
The opening moments of this week’s The Walking Dead premiere reach deeply into the show’s history, showing a selection of moments that go back to the very first moments of “Days Gone Bye” and carry forward to the current day, with Daryl clearing Walkers while attempting to hide from the show’s latest in a long line of smiling threats, Lance Hornsby (Josh Hamilton). One of the fun realizations from the cold opening is that the cavalcade of villains, from Shane Walsh through to Negan Smith, tend to be smiling more often than not, while our heroes look serious about the business of survival in a world dominated by the dead. There must be some sort of appeal to giving into the darkness that thrives in petty power-hungry wannabes like Hornsby and Sebastian Milton (Teo Rapp-Olsson...
- 10/3/2022
- by Ron Hogan
- Den of Geek
This Walking Dead article contains major spoilers.
Nothing is as it seems as The Walking Dead season 11 heads into its final episodes. Our heroes have discovered something rotten at the heart of the initially benevolent Commonwealth, which has sparked several conflicts that won’t be solved with a pile of paperwork. War is about to erupt once again for Daryl, Maggie, Carol, and the rest of the survivors. Expect quite a few deaths before the show reaches its conclusion.
As we have in past seasons, we’ve made some predictions regarding who will bite the bullet in the final season of The Walking Dead. For the final time, here are the characters we think are on the chopping block.
Keep track of all The Walking Dead season 11 deaths below:
Dead Leah (Lynn Collins)
Prediction: Dies
Result: Dead
Leah was shot in the head by Daryl.
Alden (Callan McAuliffe)
Prediction: Dies...
Nothing is as it seems as The Walking Dead season 11 heads into its final episodes. Our heroes have discovered something rotten at the heart of the initially benevolent Commonwealth, which has sparked several conflicts that won’t be solved with a pile of paperwork. War is about to erupt once again for Daryl, Maggie, Carol, and the rest of the survivors. Expect quite a few deaths before the show reaches its conclusion.
As we have in past seasons, we’ve made some predictions regarding who will bite the bullet in the final season of The Walking Dead. For the final time, here are the characters we think are on the chopping block.
Keep track of all The Walking Dead season 11 deaths below:
Dead Leah (Lynn Collins)
Prediction: Dies
Result: Dead
Leah was shot in the head by Daryl.
Alden (Callan McAuliffe)
Prediction: Dies...
- 4/11/2022
- by jbindeck2015
- Den of Geek
This The Walking Dead review contains spoilers.
The Walking Dead Season 11 Episode 14
After The Walking Dead spent so much time building up The Commonwealth as a place where dreams can come true, it was only a matter of time for the truth behind the veneer to start showing. Nothing gold can stay, after all; when your community is built and maintained by fiction, eventually the fiction will start to fall apart. For The Commonwealth, that fiction has always been security. Armed guards in armor, high walls, and no walkers might be a pretty sweet deal, but that calm oasis of peace comes at a price, and the people of The Commonwealth have no idea what that price might be. If what we’ve seen from The Commonwealth’s soldiers in non-traditional missions is any indication, that hard-won peace might be both expensive and brittle.
At any point when The Commonwealth...
The Walking Dead Season 11 Episode 14
After The Walking Dead spent so much time building up The Commonwealth as a place where dreams can come true, it was only a matter of time for the truth behind the veneer to start showing. Nothing gold can stay, after all; when your community is built and maintained by fiction, eventually the fiction will start to fall apart. For The Commonwealth, that fiction has always been security. Armed guards in armor, high walls, and no walkers might be a pretty sweet deal, but that calm oasis of peace comes at a price, and the people of The Commonwealth have no idea what that price might be. If what we’ve seen from The Commonwealth’s soldiers in non-traditional missions is any indication, that hard-won peace might be both expensive and brittle.
At any point when The Commonwealth...
- 3/28/2022
- by Ron Hogan
- Den of Geek
In the Western pop culture canon, there’s a loathsome character archetype that could best be described as a “little shit.”
Sniveling mama’s boy and inbred King of Westeros Joffrey Baratheon (Jack Gleeson) on Game of Thrones is undoubtedly the most recent popular example. The archetype, however, goes even further back with Biff Tannen, Draco Malfoy, and Johnny Lawrence (pre-Cobra Kai) all making audiences’ skin crawl with their spoiled, privileged brand of banal evil.
Now, in its final season, The Walking Dead has officially introduced its own entrant into the little shit canon. Sebastian Milton is the pompous son of Commonwealth governor Pamela Milton and he’s just the absolute worst. First seen in the seventh episode of season 11, Sebastian reached new heights of awfulness in this week’s “New Haunts.” Sebastian uses his political connections to tie up valuable Commonwealth resources and sport-shoot some walkers in the woods,...
Sniveling mama’s boy and inbred King of Westeros Joffrey Baratheon (Jack Gleeson) on Game of Thrones is undoubtedly the most recent popular example. The archetype, however, goes even further back with Biff Tannen, Draco Malfoy, and Johnny Lawrence (pre-Cobra Kai) all making audiences’ skin crawl with their spoiled, privileged brand of banal evil.
Now, in its final season, The Walking Dead has officially introduced its own entrant into the little shit canon. Sebastian Milton is the pompous son of Commonwealth governor Pamela Milton and he’s just the absolute worst. First seen in the seventh episode of season 11, Sebastian reached new heights of awfulness in this week’s “New Haunts.” Sebastian uses his political connections to tie up valuable Commonwealth resources and sport-shoot some walkers in the woods,...
- 2/28/2022
- by Alec Bojalad
- Den of Geek
This The Walking Dead review contains spoilers.
The Walking Dead Season 11 Episode 10
If there was even a starker contrast between two places, it hits the very opening moments of “New Haunts,” the first episode of The Walking Dead to show what life is like in the Commonwealth for the hungry, bedraggled survivors from Alexandria. Sure, they’ve had 30 days to get adjusted, but that’s barely enough time to get used to not having to fight marauders for crumbs. By and large, Daryl (Norman Reedus) and company are still trying to adjust to the new world, which feels suspiciously like the old world in all the wrong ways.
The Commonwealth is so insulated from the world around them that something like a zombie-filled haunted house is just part of the community Halloween celebration, rather than the real world outside the community’s walls. It seems to be in poor taste,...
The Walking Dead Season 11 Episode 10
If there was even a starker contrast between two places, it hits the very opening moments of “New Haunts,” the first episode of The Walking Dead to show what life is like in the Commonwealth for the hungry, bedraggled survivors from Alexandria. Sure, they’ve had 30 days to get adjusted, but that’s barely enough time to get used to not having to fight marauders for crumbs. By and large, Daryl (Norman Reedus) and company are still trying to adjust to the new world, which feels suspiciously like the old world in all the wrong ways.
The Commonwealth is so insulated from the world around them that something like a zombie-filled haunted house is just part of the community Halloween celebration, rather than the real world outside the community’s walls. It seems to be in poor taste,...
- 2/28/2022
- by Ron Hogan
- Den of Geek
Alexandria is a distant memory on The Walking Dead Season 11 Episode 10, airing Sunday, February 27 on AMC.
The characters have spent years fighting zombies and battling to survive in the harshest conditions, but all of that changes thanks to the Commonwealth.
The storyline started with Eugene (Josh McDermitt) speaking to Stephanie on the radio. It was a risky endeavor, and McDermitt believes it was a big risk for Eugene to divulge the location to Lance (Josh Hamilton).
"I think that's something he didn't want to do," McDermitt shared with TV Fanatic earlier this month.
"But he found himself in a position where he definitely had to do that, but he's also trusting enough of the people he's now living with."
McDermitt believes Eugene thinks this new living situation will work out, and he thinks fans will see a more comfortable Eugene, who is "settling in" to life at this new location.
The characters have spent years fighting zombies and battling to survive in the harshest conditions, but all of that changes thanks to the Commonwealth.
The storyline started with Eugene (Josh McDermitt) speaking to Stephanie on the radio. It was a risky endeavor, and McDermitt believes it was a big risk for Eugene to divulge the location to Lance (Josh Hamilton).
"I think that's something he didn't want to do," McDermitt shared with TV Fanatic earlier this month.
"But he found himself in a position where he definitely had to do that, but he's also trusting enough of the people he's now living with."
McDermitt believes Eugene thinks this new living situation will work out, and he thinks fans will see a more comfortable Eugene, who is "settling in" to life at this new location.
- 2/26/2022
- by Paul Dailly
- TVfanatic
This The Walking Dead review contains spoilers.
The Walking Dead Season 11 Episode 7
There’s an importance to personal relationships in The Walking Dead that isn’t quite as prevalent in the real world. Sure, knowing the right people can get you pretty far in life in our reality. In the zombie apocalypse, knowing the right people can mean the difference between rotting in a jail cell or serving on a work crew, working in an office versus working in a field picking beans, and risking your life versus living a life of ease. Unfortunately for Eugene and company, there’s a limit to how many favors you can cash in at one time, and they might have hit that barrier.
Throughout “Promises Broken,” the importance of a personal connection is hammered home. The episode opens with Maggie and Negan having a long heart-to-heart about whether or not Maggie can be taken at her word,...
The Walking Dead Season 11 Episode 7
There’s an importance to personal relationships in The Walking Dead that isn’t quite as prevalent in the real world. Sure, knowing the right people can get you pretty far in life in our reality. In the zombie apocalypse, knowing the right people can mean the difference between rotting in a jail cell or serving on a work crew, working in an office versus working in a field picking beans, and risking your life versus living a life of ease. Unfortunately for Eugene and company, there’s a limit to how many favors you can cash in at one time, and they might have hit that barrier.
Throughout “Promises Broken,” the importance of a personal connection is hammered home. The episode opens with Maggie and Negan having a long heart-to-heart about whether or not Maggie can be taken at her word,...
- 10/4/2021
- by Ron Hogan
- Den of Geek
The Walking Dead has served up its share of infuriatingly repugnant characters over its 11 long years on AMC. Indeed, the show’s devoted audience is quite accustomed to seeing insufferable asshats torment and/or kill beloved characters, creating an empty, sour return on emotional investment.
But the show is saving the worst for last. Robert Kirkman and Charlie Adlard’s most infuriating creation of all, Sebastian Milton, is about to make his TV debut in this week’s episode. And the prospect of collectively raised blood pressure might prove to be a good thing for the series as it heads to its 2022 finish line.
Teo Rapp-Olsson has been unveiled as The Walking Dead’s on-screen rendition of Sebastian Milton, ending speculation about the character’s presence on the series—long expected as it may have been. The debut occurs in Season 11, Episode 7, titled “Promises Broken,” to which premium-paying AMC+ customers already have advance access.
But the show is saving the worst for last. Robert Kirkman and Charlie Adlard’s most infuriating creation of all, Sebastian Milton, is about to make his TV debut in this week’s episode. And the prospect of collectively raised blood pressure might prove to be a good thing for the series as it heads to its 2022 finish line.
Teo Rapp-Olsson has been unveiled as The Walking Dead’s on-screen rendition of Sebastian Milton, ending speculation about the character’s presence on the series—long expected as it may have been. The debut occurs in Season 11, Episode 7, titled “Promises Broken,” to which premium-paying AMC+ customers already have advance access.
- 10/1/2021
- by Joseph Baxter
- Den of Geek
Marvel is producing another fictional podcast in a partnership with Stitcher called Marvels. Marvel and Stitcher have already produced two podcasts called Wolverine: The Long Night and Wolverine: The Lost Trail. Both of those tell great stories and I’m looking forward to seeing how this new one turns out. It sounds like it’ll make for a great podcast series!
The series is part of the “celebration marking the 25th anniversary of Kurt Busiek and Alex Ross’ award-winning four-part comic book ‘Marvels,’ which was released to critical acclaim in 1994. Based on ‘Marvels,’ this podcast revisits the story of photojournalist, Phil Sheldon, as he navigates through the chaos caused by the Galactus invasion of New York City and explores what it means to be human in a universe inhabited by Super Heroes.”
The story for Marvels takes place in the aftermath of the Fantastic Four’s battle with Galactus, “high above New York City,...
The series is part of the “celebration marking the 25th anniversary of Kurt Busiek and Alex Ross’ award-winning four-part comic book ‘Marvels,’ which was released to critical acclaim in 1994. Based on ‘Marvels,’ this podcast revisits the story of photojournalist, Phil Sheldon, as he navigates through the chaos caused by the Galactus invasion of New York City and explores what it means to be human in a universe inhabited by Super Heroes.”
The story for Marvels takes place in the aftermath of the Fantastic Four’s battle with Galactus, “high above New York City,...
- 8/15/2019
- by Joey Paur
- GeekTyrant
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.