The Walking Dead Season 10 Episode 3 Recap and Seeing Things

The Walking Dead Season 10 Episode 3 Recap: As we all know that, zombies maybe a stud on the of the selected list. That too, when we think about the poses, one’s survival is the greatest threat in the wasteland that is a zombie.

And, while considering the second place, that will be a human being, they can be a most savage instinct or more over plain sick in the head.

The Walking Dead Season 10 Episode 3: The Missed Nuances in Sequence while opening

HOUR Big windmill, Carol’s alarm goes off, she downs the first of many, many uppers can be seen at 6:00 am, and Walkers are on the move in hour 2, Some dude with a spear and the tatted blonde ex-Savior kill zombies and goof around in hour 4, This walker business is getting serious in hour 6, A-A-Ron gets jumped by a crispy zombie in hour 11 and at last Wave after wave of undead swarm A-Town at hour 13. And another few, still more zombies. Michonne and Daryl look concerned etc.

Reviews:

Characters’ behavior is inconsistent. In one episode they display brutal survival instincts and take harsh decisions, but in the next, they go maudlin and talk ethics and morality.

The Walking Dead Season 10 Episode 3
The Walking Dead Season 10 Episode 3

It’s a fact that extreme misery and fear often bring out the worst behavior in people — survivalist, animalistic, and brutal. But characters here often seem more interested in building families than worrying about food and shelter for the next day. Unrealistic.

The storyline is taut but sometimes sags and meanders aimlessly. Some episodes could have been merged, thereby shortening the length of seasons and hastening the pace of events.

The production team seems to be in a perpetual self-congratulatory mode over designs and makeups of zombies. There are more than necessary depictions of zombie mutilations and pulping. True that we want to see the SFX but only when the sequence demands it, not every time a zombie is in the frame.

Actors are average at best. The only one that made any serious impact on me was Jon Bernthal (Shane) but he was dispensed away at the end of Season 2. What a shame!

It is possible to watch an entire season filmed around a specific area and still not be able to make sense of its geography. Can anyone draw me a map of Woodbury? I’ve seen an entire season shot around that area but I still don’t know how to imagine it. Why?

Because it was never filmed properly. What this means is that the DP has failed to use his camera to impart a feeling of the locales of the story to the viewers. In a TV show, with so much time on hands, that is a crime.

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