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Acheron (2)The Walking Dead : Season 11 Episode 2 WORK



"Acheron: Part II" is the second episode of the eleventh season of the post-apocalyptic horror television series The Walking Dead. The second of a two-part season premiere, the episode was written by showrunner Angela Kang and Jim Barnes, and directed by Kevin Dowling.[1] "Acheron: Part II" was released on the streaming platform AMC+ on August 22, 2021, before airing on AMC on August 29, 2021.[2] The first part aired on AMC one week earlier.[3]




Acheron (2)The Walking Dead : Season 11 Episode 2


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In the episode, continuing where the previous episode left off, the group led by Maggie (Lauren Cohan) is trapped inside an underground subway car surrounded by lurking walkers. With very little ammo and energy remaining, the group must ready themselves as the undead have found a way inside the subway train. Elsewhere, Yumiko (Eleanor Matsuura) challenges the process at the Commonwealth outpost, which threatens her future and that of Eugene (Josh McDermitt), Ezekiel (Khary Payton), and Princess (Paola Lázaro).


The episode features the deaths of Gage and Roy, played by Jackson Pace and C. Thomas Howell, respectively. Both had made appearances on the series as far back as the ninth season, first appearing together in the episode "Stradivarius".[4][5]


"Acheron: Part II" is the second episode of the eleventh season of AMC's The Walking Dead. It is the one-hundred and fifty-fifth episode of the series overall. It premiered on August 29, 2021. It was written by Angela Kang & Jim Barnes and directed by Kevin Dowling.[1]


The character's sudden appearance in a flashback episode can't have been for nothing. This being the final season, it's time to develop some of these relationships more to give the sense that the show is moving ahead.


In the final moments of the season premiere, our group was forced atop a wrecked train as zombies closed in on them. Everybody climbed onto its roof safely, except for Maggie (Lauren Cohan). After the episode built up tons of tension between them, Negan ultimately decided against helping Maggie reach safety and instead left her to be eaten by the horde of hungry walkers.


Titled Acheron (meaning "River of Woe" in Greek mythology) and split into two 50-minute episodes, the premiere takes place right after the events of the season ten finale Here's Negan. Maggie's back, having taken charge of the beaten down survivors of the Whisperer War, and Negan is still being shunned by the community he once terrorised.


Maggie (Lauren Cohan) picks up and uses a stainless Colt Commander from a dead military soldier until the pistol jams in Season 11's premiere "Acheron: Part I" (S11E01). An explanation of why the soldier had a Colt Commander over an issued Beretta M9 could be that the soldier himself salvaged this weaponfrom a civilian or retrieved it from a stockpile. Maggie points the pistol at Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) in the same episode. Maggie briefly uses the Commander at the beginning of "Acheron: Part II" (S11E02). She later gives Negan the Commander in the same episode, and he uses it to shoot walkers in the subway car. He later hands it back to Maggie.


The Walking Dead's season eleven premiere, "Acheron: Part I," isn't exactly cut from the same lackadaisical cloth as season ten's extra pandemic episodes, but it also doesn't feel like a vital, proper kickoff for what's to be the long-running show's final season. Often, season openers go big and deliver a certain amount of goods to get viewers primed and ready for the exciting storylines ahead, but this starter felt lackluster, small in scope, and too much a part of the post-Whisperer War malaise.


Most super long-in-the-tooth shows undergo a form of shrinking, in both audience and production, and it hits The Walking Dead universe, with its large ensembles, in some very specific ways. What we see in these later seasons (and Fear the Walking Dead is doing this too) is tighter-cropped shots, a sameness to the scenery (a ton of nebulous, nondescript woods that confuse our own mental geography), a rotating in and out of cast (either with character-focused episodes or just people vanishing for weeks), and waaaayy more interiors (and an increase in green screen). In each case, in a small way, it makes the show feel less epic and more disjointed.


The B-story here, which is the angle that is actively leading us toward something new, didn't exactly light any fires either. Eugene (Josh McDermitt), Ezekiel (Khary Payton), Princess (Juanita Sanchez), and Yumiko (Eleanor Matsuura) dealt with the Commonwealth's auditors for an exciting round of incessant questioning ("How many bowel movements do you have a day?"). No big or notable moves here. We learned the Commonwealth is hyper anxious, uber secure, and probably abusive and cruel, but we knew that already from season ten's "Splinter." It's a shame that those extra six episodes last season couldn't have positioned the series, story-wise, to have a better premiere. The Commonwealth arc, which is to be the show's final hurrah, is already a trudge. The Negan flashback episode was quite good, but his current drama with Maggie isn't enough nourishment for a show that needs a big kick in the pants for its final act.


The Walking Dead's season eleven premiere, \"Acheron: Part I,\" isn't exactly cut from the same lackadaisical cloth as season ten's extra pandemic episodes, but it also doesn't feel like a vital, proper kickoff for what's to be the long-running show's final season. Often, season openers go big and deliver a certain amount of goods to get viewers primed and ready for the exciting storylines ahead, but this starter felt lackluster, small in scope, and too much a part of the post-Whisperer War malaise.


The B-story here, which is the angle that is actively leading us toward something new, didn't exactly light any fires either. Eugene (Josh McDermitt), Ezekiel (Khary Payton), Princess (Juanita Sanchez), and Yumiko (Eleanor Matsuura) dealt with the Commonwealth's auditors for an exciting round of incessant questioning (\"How many bowel movements do you have a day?\"). No big or notable moves here. We learned the Commonwealth is hyper anxious, uber secure, and probably abusive and cruel, but we knew that already from season ten's \"Splinter.\" It's a shame that those extra six episodes last season couldn't have positioned the series, story-wise, to have a better premiere. The Commonwealth arc, which is to be the show's final hurrah, is already a trudge. The Negan flashback episode was quite good, but his current drama with Maggie isn't enough nourishment for a show that needs a big kick in the pants for its final act.


The Walking Dead season 11 kicks off on AMC tonight (August 22) and fans in the UK can catch up the following day via Star on Disney Plus. The final season is not holding back when it comes to twists and turns, and the premiere promises to leave fans on the edge of their seats. Express.co.uk has all you need to know about the schedule for the remaining episodes. 041b061a72


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