The Walking Dead
episode 7 Dead Weight opens with a pretty good microcosm of events to come.
We
see The Governor and Megan playing chess outside of an RV. Along with scenes of
Carlos Martinez, pulling Brian aka The Governor and Megan from out the biter
pit.
Martinez is surprise
to hear Lily refer to The Governor as Brian. Nevertheless, he invites him and
his family into his camp. He makes it clear that he is in charge and will not
accept any Dead Weight.
While hanging clothes
and playing chess with Megan we learned a few things, most notably (and
probably not surprisingly) that The Governor had a rough childhood and an
abusive father.
He tells Megan “He
used to beat me in chess, too; heck, he used to beat me in everything.” But the
chess game was the central metaphor: The Governor tells the child “You can’t
think forever, sooner or later you’ve got to make a move.”
Watching Brian with
Megan is so different from who he has been. You find yourself wanting him to do
the right thing. Megan tells him that “we are all good.” You see him struggle
with that notion.
On a supply run with
Martinez, Pete and Mitch, Brian stay in the back and follows Martinez lead.
They happen across a series of dead bodies without heads. Each body has a
different sign hung around its necks - Liar, Rapist and Murderer.
Once they reach a
cabin, Martinez orders Brian to lead the way inside where they find two zombies,
(a young girl, and the dead owner’s wife) and several still living severed
heads. Brian’s quick reaction basically controls the entire situation.
Back at the camp,
everybody’s drinking beers and relaxing. A drunken Martinez takes Brian up on
the roof of an RV to hit golf balls, something they used to do in Woodbury.
Martinez starts rambling about not wanting to have another family due to his
lack of confidence in keeping the camp safe.
He says, “now that
you’re here, maybe we can share the crown a little.” Brian instantly snaps into
a blind rage and turns into The Governor and quickly reacts with a single swing
to the back of the head with a golf club. Martinez is down and dazed.
The
Governor kicks him off the RV and drags him to the very walker pit he was
rescued from. “I don’t want it,” he screams, madly, as he feeds Martinez to the
Walkers. But it is obvious this is innate to him it is absolutely a part of
him.
Brian is guilt
ridden and convinced that the camp isn’t safe. He tells Lily they have to leave,
he says, “I can’t lose you again.” He’s not talking about Lily. He is referring
to his dead wife. Yikes! The Governor is slowly slipping back into his
consciousness. She tells him “We are home. I feel safe here”
After the discovery
of Martinez death, Pete takes over temporarily as the leader. Once Brian goes
on a supply run with Pete and Mitch he is convinced the family is not safe
under their guidance. He decides to flee the camp that night with his new
family (Lilly, Megan and Tara and Alicia, Tara’s new squeeze.)
They quietly slip
out under cover of darkness, none of the women quite understanding what’s going
on but trusting him all the same. They don’t get far. The road is blocked by a
couple dozen biters stuck waist-deep in mud. No escape. He watches the walkers and devises his plan. Brian is officially gone now.
The Governor does
what he does best. He kills Pete and throws him in the lake. In the mind of The
Governor, killing Martinez and Pete wasn’t about anything more than insuring
his and his new family’s survival.
The Governor
explains the new reality to Mitch. “I promise you,” he tells Mitch while offering
to make him a Lieutenant; “you’ll never have to worry about whether you’re
doing the right thing or the wrong thing, because we will do the only thing.”
Mitch agrees.
Quickly the Governor establishes the new regime, and has the camp
working like a well-oiled machine. He’s good at this. People immediately feel
safe with him in charge.
Tara and Megan are
comfortable enough to play tag – with Megan almost inevitably running right
into a Walker.
The Governor, true to his promise to the child, saves Megan with
one single shot to the Walker’s head.
The Governor drives
off alone ad visits Pete in the lake, He watches him struggle against the
chain shackled on his foot. He is a Walker now and is the true meaning of “Dead Weight." You can’t deny the eerie
reminder of last season with The Governor’s obsession with his aquarium tanks
full of Walker heads. The Governor is officially back!
Of course now he is ready to go over to the former West Georgia Correctional Facility. We finally linked back
to the end of “Internment”, with The Governor watching Rick and Carl from the
shadows outside the Prison. In the distance he sees, Michonne and Hershel standing
by the jeep – this is clearly right after the flu outbreak and the two are
burying the bodies.
The Governor raises
his gun, with his eye on Michonne. The woman who took his eye and
his daughter. This isn’t about survival. This is about revenge.
Fade to black.