When I reviewed the first episode of season two, I proclaimed that I was not a fair-weather Walking Dead fan. But, after “Vouloir, C’est Pouvoir,” like Losang, my faith in the show is waning. With inconsistent and unforgivable, recycled plot choices, I don’t know if this episode was pointless, aimless, or just plain – less. Let me explain.
The show’s premise: Daryl Dixon goes missing. He ends up in France. He finds people, passion, and purpose in protecting Laurent. Laurent as the possibly immune savior was a novel storyline so well done. However, other than fulfilling a promise to fans, the showrunner has been ham-handed with making Carol part of Daryl’s mission to rescue Laurent. My hope was that Carol’s journey in season two would be an internal one toward healing. However, besides Carol repeatedly seeing Sophia stumble from the barn, it appears that her coming to terms with Sophia’s death has stalled. For example, she tries not to tell Daryl the truth about how she got Ash to fly her to France, saying: “I may have embellished the facts.” When she finally tells him that she used Sophia as her motivation, she tells Daryl… “I don’t even know where it came from.” Of course, she knew. A second later, she admits, “I made up something I wish were true. He had a son.” Daryl pushes Carol to tell Ash the truth, which I doubt she would have done otherwise. Daryl and Isabelle were doing fine protecting Laurent, so Carol’s presence in France in this regard seems aimless.
“Vouloir, C’est Pouvoir” – THE WALKING DEAD DARYL DIXON THE BOOK OF CAROL, Pictured: Melissa McBride as Carol Peletier. Photo: Emmanuel Guimier/AMC AMC @2024 AMC Inc. All Rights Reserved
“Vouloir, C’est Pouvoir” – THE WALKING DEAD DARYL DIXON THE BOOK OF CAROL, Pictured: Norman Reedus as Daryl Dixon, Melissa McBride as Carol Peletier, Eriq Ebouaney as Fallou – The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon. Photo: Emmanuel Guimier/AMC @2024 AMC Inc. All Rights Reserved
“Vouloir, C’est Pouvoir” – THE WALKING DEAD DARYL DIXON THE BOOK OF CAROL, Pictured: Eriq Ebouaney as Fallou. Photo: Emmanuel Guimier/AMC @2024 AMC Inc. All Rights Reserved
“Vouloir, C’est Pouvoir” – THE WALKING DEAD DARYL DIXON THE BOOK OF CAROL, Pictured: Norman Reedus as Daryl Dixon, Melissa McBride as Carol Peletier. Photo: Emmanuel Guimier/AMC @2024 AMC Inc. All Rights Reserved
Overall, the episode was, ‘meh.’ With the exceptions mentioned above, the episode felt a bit recycled and not in a good way. Specifically, Daryl hides Laurent and says, “stay here until I come back.” Who didn’t think of Rick and Sophia in this scene? Carol, Daryl, and Ash are in a car, surrounded by walkers. Did anyone fail to recall Aaron and Daryl falling into the Wolve’s trap in Season 6? Also, when Carol and Daryl go looking for Ash, they end up at a destroyed Maison de Mere. Who destroyed Maison de Mere and why? Why has Carol found Daryl’s tape and listened to it? Where is the scientist who created the tranquillizer? When Carol and Daryl locate Ash, why do they think they can overtake so many walkers without sufficient ammunition? These could be unanswered questions intentionally left by the writers to build suspense and add layers to the Daryl in France narrative. I am skeptical. For me, the unanswered questions seemed more accidental than planned. This outcome is unacceptable because it distracts from the story’s logical flow.
Since the plane carries only three people, who do you think stays behind? Who do you think might die in the finale? One week to fix things. Can The Book of Carol, do it? Fingers crossed because – “Vouloir, C’est Pouvoir” – where there’s a will, there’s a way! Let me know your thoughts in the comments.
Overall Rating:
6/10
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