Originally Posted by
Taiso
I was especially frustrated, from a creative standpoint, with the governor's 'new daughter's' fate. Not specifically that it happened, but I felt how it was shot was just all wrong. I have a hard time believing that with the mother and daughter being the only ones by the river, that she wouldn't have pulled her closer to her the second she saw a walker on the other side of the river.
I understand the philosophical aspect of the scene-she desperately wants to believe in the governor, and she thinks that if the walker doesn't make it across, she can rest comfrotably knowing that his assurances were true. But I don't believe that her feelings in this would override her desire to protect her daughter, especially with her playing in the mud twenty feet away from a forest. Again, they're the only two people out there, and I can't see any mother that loves her daughter allowing the child to remain so far away from her as long as their proximity can be controlled. It's not like Carol and Sophia, where they just got separated and no one could control it.
I'm not going to argue about it because I don't believe any rationale justifies the plot point. I think they could pulled that scene off in the same amount of screen time with better writing that achieves the same end without costing them anything in narrative integrity.
Thematically, it feels wrong for the Governor to have the upper hand on Rick when they're rolling around in the mud and grass. I'd have rather seen the characters slotting into their natural roles, and the Governor needing to resort to trickery like a wrestling heel to gain the advantage.
I don't mind that Rick was almost choked out. But a clean victory for the Governor just makes Rick look a little weaker and incapable, and after his strong, commanding performance when he was negotiating and proving that, yes he is THE MAN, it kneecapped him just a bit.
I didn't even mind Michone saving him. I just wish it would have been written in a way that reinforces Rick's newfound strengths and direction, rather than portraying him as both strong and then weak. Weak and then strong would have been better and would have served the character better.