TV Review: The Walking Dead 2.2, "Bloodletting"
The pieces are beginning to fall into place and though the episode struggles with a few slow and a few over-sentimental moments, the pressure is on, and its bringing all of the characters to a new breaking point.
rating: 4
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Last week, The Walking Dead put into place seeds of discontent that set a whole new direction for the series. All it needed was a catalyst to set everything in motion, say, the sudden disappearance of one's child and the casualty of another. The pieces are beginning to fall into place and though the episode struggles with a few slow and a few over-sentimental moments, the pressure is on, and its bringing all of the characters to a new breaking point. This week, the series builds on many of the plot points that it set up in the series premiere. Rick and Shane bring Carl to a nearby ranch, home of last week's accidental assailant. They find a flicker of hope, and some much needed perspective, from a doctor (read: veterinarian) that resides there willing to help Carl in any way that he can. They form an uncommon, and certainly uneasy alliance to rally behind Carl and his waning condition. Dale and T-dog are left by the RV to talk things over, and T-dogs injury is only getting worse. His fever ridden mind lets out some harsh truths but Dale won't hear a word of it. The rest of the group continues their search for Sophia, warily optimistic about what they might find. Each of the characters has some serious time to let their situation stew for the first time, practically since they began. Their resources are becoming spread out too thin, and their loosing contact more and more. As for the situation at the ranch, it only reinforces what is at the heart of the series itself: the frailty of the human condition. The group only stopped to find a suitable way through the traffic and to pick up some supplies. A few days later, they're still there. The show did a wonderful job at leading us toward one savage truth. In the end, it will always be survival of the fittest and a family man ends up way too much like a weak link. Rick has certainly saved the lot of them more then once, but he's now at the center of the reason why they can't move forward. It's slowly coming down to a question of whether they're willing to do for him what he has always done for them. From the look of it, some of them may be unwilling to.