The Walking Dead and the High Cost of Safety
Tonight’s episode “Slabtown” opened with a sound and face foreign to The Walking Dead’s
season thus far—the ticking of a clock and ... Beth Greene (Emily
Kinney)! While Maggie’s younger sister has a reputation for little other
than her (lovely, if inappropriately timed) singing, it was a relief to
see Beth again for the first time since her bizarre kidnapping back in
season four. Much like Rick at the start of the series, she found
herself patched up in a quiet, unassuming hospital only to quickly
realize the horrors outside her door. Her strange new companions—the
slightly robotic leader Officer Dawn Lerner and Portlandia
extra/hipster dad Dr. Steven Edwards—told Beth she had been rescued
from “rotters” and must now repay the group’s charity by working at the
hospital.
With this new setting, the show again offers a variation on a familiar but fascinating theme: Collectives can offer safety, but only from the outside world.
With the hospital group come more concrete forms of order, however
tenuous—menacing clocks; uniformed police officers; a strict code of
fairness; rules about cleanliness; a miniature economy of goods and
services; and a post-apocalyptic indentured servitude system. Despite
the fact that Beth has never had to carry an entire episode on her own, I
found “Slabtown” immensely engrossing (her new friend Noah helped) and
found myself fully allied with Beth and admiring her toughness. David,
how did you feel about watching Beth navigate a creepy hospital for 45
minutes?
The show again offers a variation on a familiar but fascinating theme: Collectives can offer safety, but only from the outside world.
I really enjoyed
“Slabtown,” particularly as a more low-key respite from the intense
battle with Terminus that led off the season. The creeping, banal evil
of the hospital community was a nice counter to the immediate horror of
the people-eaters, and Beth (who’s always been a bit of a blank slate,
like you said) was a surprisingly fresh pair of eyes to take it in
through. I can’t say I missed her, exactly, but she’s saddled with less
story baggage and served as a nice, sympathetic lead. I like Beth now!
I’m really turning the corner on a lot of Walking Dead characters I never really cared for before. I can’t wait to see her team up with Carol, the other object of Daryl’s affection.
So Beth is in this secure hospital community,
and we pretty much immediately realize that something very nasty is
afoot. Again, I’m very happy with how smoothly this season is
progressing—there’s less audience
hand-holding, less expectation that we need to build the case against
new villains slowly. The hospital survives on a strict system of
cost-efficiency, concerning both supplies and the people administering
them. If you can offer the community something, then you’re valuable.
But the weaker or more troublesome you get, the more expendable you are.
It’s a subtler take on
the same behavior we witnessed at Terminus. There, when humans arrived
they were just knocked out and slaughtered to serve as meat. Here, they
can survive if they offer some skill, but the same depersonalization
applies. Everyone’s just being boiled down into commodities, and there’s
a leader at the top who benefits maybe a little too much. That’s Dawn
Lerner, played very effectively by Christine Woods, I thought. She
projects a steeliness that one might want in a leader, but there’s a
fragility to her tenuous system of survival that she’s obviously trying
to cover, from the first time she meets Beth.
This season, there’s less audience hand-holding, less expectation that we need to build the case against new villains slowly.
I’m with you on Noah, for sure. Along with his great work in Dear White People, Tyler
James Williams might be having a bit of a moment. His first scene felt a
little too clean, as he voiced all the concerns we might have about the
hospital from a first impression. But I was happy to see him get out of
there so we can hopefully see him again. Just to throw some speculation
around—is he the
person emerging from the woods with Daryl last week? I had figured it
was Carol, but Carol showed up in the hospital at the end of this
episode. Maybe Noah can serve as the link between the two storylines?
More Noah, please!
Since the chronology is a little
muddy, I think it’s entirely feasible to imagine that Noah somehow met
up with Daryl and will join the church group. That said, Daryl is hardly
the most trusting character, so I wonder how Noah would have convinced
Daryl to take him in. Daryl may find it suspicious that Noah managed to
escape with a bum leg, and while I don’t think Noah had planned to use
and ditch Beth, the whole story has a bit of a Shane and Otis feel to it.
Speaking of Beth and Noah’s escape, I found the
whole sequence gripping, starting from the moment Beth walked into
Dawn’s office to look for the key. Aside from muttering under my breath,
“Come on, hurry up!” I thought Beth’s escape was perfectly calculated—the
way she eyed Joan’s twitching corpse and coldly tolerated rapist
lollipop cop’s advances before smashing him over the head and leaving
him to die. The 15-second shot of her face when she encountered Dawn in
the hallway was among the most tense moments of the episode for me. The
show barely gave viewers time to process the developments from the
elevator shaft onward. How are the pair going to get out? What about the
rotters? Will Noah’s leg get him killed? How did Beth manage to make
those perfect headshots in the dark? How did Noah get away?
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