A few weeks before the pandemic hit, TV Guide visited the Texas set of AMC’s horror drama Fear the Walking Dead, where cast and crew were hard at work on the second episode of Season 6, “Welcome to the Club,” which ultimately aired Sunday night. The special thing about the episode is that was the
Fear The Walking Dead
This week is another great week of TV. It’s pretty amazing how much stuff the streaming services had banked/were able to finish remotely so people would have stuff to watch as the year dragged on. And there’s also stuff like The Bachelorette, which was postponed, filmed in the summer as safely as possible, and is
It should come as no surprise that after 10 seasons of zombie apocalypse drama on The Walking Dead and five seasons following the same madness in a different location on its spinoff, Fear the Walking Dead, AMC further extended its doomed landscape into another era with The Walking Dead: The World Beyond. Is it necessary?
No still-living character has been worse served by Fear the Walking Dead‘s makeover than Daniel Salazar (Rubén Blades). Since Salazar returned in Season 5 after sitting out Season 4, he is unrecognizable as the character he was in the first three seasons — just like the show is unrecognizable. The Salazar-heavy “Today and Tomorrow” was
Is it just me, or was Fear the Walking Dead Season 5, Episode 13 kinda reminiscent of Breaking Bad? Fear‘s new “cook for us, or else” plot is similar to what Gus Fring (Giancarlo Esposito) and later the neo-Nazis did to Walter White (Bryan Cranston) and especially Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul) on that other AMC
Fear the Walking Dead had faith on its mind in Episode 12 of Season 5, “Ner Tamid.” It was surely intentional that the last two words spoken in the episode were “promised land,” because this episode was about lost characters wandering in the wilderness in search of something, whether that was a place to call
When you see that an episode other than a premiere or finale is written by the showrunner, you know it’s an important episode. And “210 Words Per Minute,” written by Fear the Walking Dead bosses Andrew Chambliss and Ian Goldberg, was the most important episode in terms of character development for Morgan (Lennie James) and