"Fear the Walking Dead" We All Fall Down (TV Episode 2016) Poster

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7/10
Family Stays Together
claudio_carvalho27 June 2016
Strand monitors the ship that is following Abigail and they decide to seek shelter at the Catrina Island. Madison sees a light in an isolated house and she goes with Travis, Nick, Alicia and Chris to investigate. They meet George Geary and asks to moor Abigail on the dock for that night. The group befriends George's wife Melissa and their children Harry and Willa, and Madison believes Melissa have showed the light on purpose with the intention of leaving the island. Meanwhile Nick finds poison in Harry's room and he believes George is planning to kill his family to stay together in the island. In the vessel, Daniel suspects of Strand and snoops around to find his true intention. What will they do?

"We All Fall Down" is one of the best episodes of the weak series. The plot is well developed and Madison and Nick finally have a pleasant attitude. The real intention of Strand is the intriguing part of this how. Why is he helping the group of survivors? My vote is seven.

Title (Brazil): "You We All Fall Down"
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8/10
Mature Audiences Only
inakablues18 April 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I was half way through the episode and was wondering where the story was going, but at the same time, there is a lot going on in this episode. The cues are there if you are mature and patient enough.The pace is slow but the story gets you wondering what is going to happen next.

I know FTWD catches a lot of flack for...well, not being the Walking Dead but after Season 6 of the latter, I don't care much for the show anymore.

The tense moments between Strand and Daniel got me giggling like a schoolgirl.

The whole episode goes a little in depth as to the relationships between characters. The ending was a bit predictable but I've seen worse as far as endings go.

I liked it a lot. It's not senseless violence and unlimited ammo as if it were a video game or characters running off by themselves constantly.I can't take it anymore.

I hope FTWD gets better with each episode. I can handle smarter story telling and plots a little more elaborate that the ones found on TWD.

If FTWD goes down the proverbial potty, I'll stop watching AMC zombie shows all together.
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7/10
A bit better but still room for improvement
ZegMaarJus15 May 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This episode was a little bit better then the first but still room for some improvement more action and horror.
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7/10
The Geary Family
panagiotis199315 December 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I like how Salazar doesn't trust Strand, their chemistry is interesting. Something seems to be off about this Geary family. Im curious about Nick though, what about his withdrawal symptoms? Its all gone? So Strand was talking to someone on the phone? I wonder who that was, interesting. The little girl taking the pill felt really random, like why do it? Did she think it was candy or something? I felt bad for the Geary family, they didn't deserve to lose two family members like that. But still I believe that Strand was right and it would be a bad idea to take the child with them. Good episode overall. My rating is 7/10.
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7/10
Bit of a disappointment
maarten_wieringa721 April 2016
Warning: Spoilers
First of all i liked episode 1 of season 2. We saw the group on board and it was good to see more character development. This episode was a bit boring in my opinion. They meet new survivors who we will never see again after the end of this episode. The gore was off-screen and the infected child wasn't that scary.

I'm looking forward to see new regular characters on the show. I like Travis, Madison and Alicia but the two sons, Ophelia, Daniel and Strand are not likable enough to care if they survive it or not. I wonder where the show is gonna go to further this season. It has it's ups and downs.
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7/10
good
rfgtdfgvdfg15 November 2023
Warning: Spoilers
2x2 Rating: 7.7/10

Storyline: An infected crawls out of the ocean and creeps toward a boy and girl playing on shore. A protective chain-link fence stops the infected from reaching them.

Strand monitors the unknown ship on the Abigail's radar.

Madison yells at Nick for endangering himself by jumping in the water after the wreckage of the sailboat. Travis shows up with the log book that Nick retrieved from the sailboat and says that they have a problem.

Travis informs Strand that, according to the log, the military has already burned San Diego to the ground. Strand proposes they hide from the fast-approaching ship by retreating to the coastline. Travis suggests Catrina Island, which has a ranger station that may offer supplies and a short-wave radio.

Travis assures Chris that they are going to a safe location. Chris asks how Travis knows it is safe. Travis has no answer.

As the Abigail approaches Catrina Island, Madison sees a light flash inside a house.

Madison, Travis, Nick, Alicia, and Chris get off the boat. Strand stays on board with Ofelia and Daniel, who wants to monitor Strand.

Madison's group approaches the house that she saw from the boat. A young boy - the one from the beach - runs out to greet them. Travis introduces himself to the boy's father, George Geary, and asks permission to dock for the night.

Inside the house, George tells Travis that based on his communication with other ranger stations, he believes the entire country west of the Continental Divide has fallen and the border to Mexico has been completely sealed off.

In the kitchen, George's wife, Melissa, probes Madison about her job as a guidance counselor and asks if she ever worked with younger children. Melissa introduces Madison to her teenage son, Seth.

Back at the Abigail, Daniel checks in with Ofelia. Ofelia says she is starting to understand the world better, which helps her understand him. "It's cruel," she says.

At the Geary house, Nick and Alicia play with the kids, Harry and Willa.

Harry brings Nick to his room and shows him action figures with red dots on their foreheads, representing gunshot wounds. Harry says that he won't get sick because his family has "power pills". "It's like a vitamin," he explains, "if I take it my family stays together." In the wheelhouse, Daniel accuses Strand of wanting to offload members of the group to conserve his resources. Strand deflects Daniel's accusations.

George tells Travis that the apocalypse is all part of nature's plan. "The world couldn't sustain itself so it stood back and said enough. This is its course correction," he explains. He says he raised his family on the island and intends for them to stay on the island.

As they head back to the boat, Madison tells Travis that Melissa may have flashed the light on purpose. She speculates that Melissa wants to leave the island but is too scared of George to say so.

On the Abigail, Nick gazes at the stars. He muses to Alicia that being able to see the stars - without light pollution or smog to block them out - is an upside to the apocalypse. Changing topics, Nick tells her that he is concerned about Harry and Willa's future, or lack thereof.

The next day, Chris sees Seth walking toward the beach with a pickaxe. Seth brings Chris to the beach, where infected are pounding on the chain-link fence. Seth slams the pickaxe into an infected's head and invites Chris to take a swing.

Travis looks for Chris.

Chris kills an infected with the pickaxe. Seth praises his technique and explains that George taught him how to kill and survive. Travis finds them and tells Chris to return to the boat. He averts his eyes as Chris kills one more infected.

Travis finds George at the house and recalls the days when Chris was mowing lawns and taking out garbage, rather than killing infected. "This is how we manage now," George says.

George enlists Travis' help mending a fence. He tells Travis about a massive herd of infected on a nearby marina and predicts that it is only a matter of time before the herd finds them. Travis asks why George isn't fleeing. "We all die. It's a question of surrender or survival, acceptance or denial," George says.

Alicia visits the ranger station and draws her former boyfriend Matt's tattoo on a bulletin board.

Nick looks for drugs in the Geary house and finds a baggie of pills hidden in George's office.

Back on the Abigail, the unknown ship finally disappears from the radar. Strand announces that it is time to sail.

Madison tells Melissa that they are setting sail and asks if she had intentionally flashed the light to signal them. Melissa admits that she signaled them in the hopes that they would take Harry and Willa, since George and Seth are planning for the entire family to die together on the island.

Madison relays Melissa's request to Travis and insists they rescue Harry and Willa. "You're not taking them, Travis, you're saving them," she says. Travis reluctantly agrees to speak with George.

Daniel searches the wheelhouse while Strand is gone. He discovers a map of Baja California, Mexico together with a loaded MP5 sub-machine gun, inside a locked compartment.

Strand, alone, talks to someone on his satellite phone. "It's all clear now," he says. "Sundown. I'll be there." On the boat, Nick tells Madison and Travis that he found poison in George's office and predicts that George is planning on "Jonestown-ing" his family.

Travis, Madison, and Nick return to the Geary house to take Harry and Willa. Melissa is hurriedly explaining some of her children's quirks when George comes in. He angrily demands to know what is happening when the argument is interrupted by Harry. Something is wrong with Willa, he reports. Upstairs, Willa is found dead after ingesting the "power pills" from George's stash. Melissa cradles Willa, who opens her eyes, turns, and bites her. George agrees to let Travis take Harry but refuses to join them.

Travis' group sprints to the boat with Harry. Seth chases them down with his rifle and forces them to give Harry back. Melissa, who is now infected, walks toward them on the dock. Seth shoots Melissa while Harry's back is turned.
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6/10
The episode masterfully contrasts the peaceful facade of the island with the dark realities of the apocalypse, echoing the themes of false hope and fleeting safety
fernandoschiavi10 April 2024
The group decide to dock on Catrina Island to escape an unknown ship to find new options since San Diego is a bust. They come across George Geary and his family. Inside the house, George informs the group that every major city on the West Coast, including San Diego, has been burned down by the military. While the family is surviving, Nick stumbles upon pills meant for suicide. George's wife requests that they take her two youngest children with them since George and eldest son Seth are set in their way of thinking. George is not easily swayed until his wife is killed by a now infected child who ingested a pill too soon. The group attempt to fell, but Seth, at gunpoint forces them to return his little brother. They leave as Seth shoots his now infected mother in the head. Meanwhile, Daniel breaks into Strand's quarters and finds a submachine gun and a map leading to Strand's true destination: Mexico.

"Fear the Walking Dead" Season 2, Episode 2, "We All Fall Down," takes a harrowing turn as the group docks at a seemingly idyllic community on a remote island. The episode masterfully contrasts the peaceful facade of the island with the dark realities of the apocalypse, echoing the themes of false hope and fleeting safety that permeate the series. As the group interacts with the inhabitants, particularly the enigmatic family living there, tensions rise, and the cracks in the community's veneer begin to show. The episode skillfully explores the theme of isolation, both physical and emotional, as the characters grapple with their pasts and the harsh truths of their new reality.

One of the standout scenes in "We All Fall Down" is the chilling revelation of the family's tragic backstory, which serves as a stark reminder of the lengths people will go to survive and protect their loved ones in a world overrun by the undead. This revelation adds layers of depth to the episode, highlighting the complex moral dilemmas faced by the survivors and the sacrifices they must make to ensure their survival. The episode also delves into the theme of resilience, as the characters are forced to confront their vulnerabilities and adapt to their ever-changing circumstances.

In conclusion, "We All Fall Down" is a compelling and thought-provoking episode that further expands the world of "Fear the Walking Dead" while staying true to its core themes. The episode's exploration of the human condition in the face of unimaginable horror is both poignant and gripping, showcasing the series' ability to tell compelling stories within the zombie genre. As the survivors continue their journey, the episode sets the stage for further character development and exploration of the moral complexities of survival in a world where the rules of society no longer apply.
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