The Walking Dead: What to Know for Season 6


Sure, the West Coast prequel Fear the Walking Dead was a fine summer diversion (and may one day develop into a must-see show), but lets be honest: Zombie-lovers have mostly been drumming their rotting fingers since March, waiting for the original to come back.

This Sunday night, Rick and Carol and Glenn and the rest of TWDs ragtag band of survivors finally return, for the first of 16 Season Six episodes (to be split, as always, into two eight-episode batches). And while the fifth season ended with most of the characters in one place for a change and relatively secure lets take a moment to recall exactly where we left off, and to prepare for whatever horrors may await the living in the weeks ahead.

The old Rick is back
The Walking Deads main, morally tortured protagonist Rick Grimes was forced into a leadership role early in the series, then backed away from the helm as soon as he felt like his little circle of friends and fellow travelers had stabilized. But last season, when his group was invited to join a mini-society of sophisticated suburbanites in the well-stocked, well-fortified Alexandria Safe Zone the old Rick reared his head again. Our hardened hero hatched a coup-plot, taking the job of constable so that he could gain access to an arsenal and work behind the scenes to save Alexandrias dangerously naive residents from themselves.

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The mutiny was eventually exposed, and a kangaroo court convened to decide what to do about Grimes. But in the finale, Rick proved his indispensability when he re-killed a walker that had wandered in through a breach in the perimeter, and then bumped off a sword-wielding, wife-beating surgeon named Pete for good measure. Everythings out in the open now: Rick has declared his intentions to teach this community how to survive, whether they want to follow him or not. And in Sundays premiere, he tries to get them to rally behind him for one of the boldest zombie-disposal plans these folks have ever attempted.

But not everybody likes the old Rick
Alexandria already has a leader in Deanna Monroe, a former U.S. Congresswoman whos been striving to turn her domain into a model for civility in a post-apocalyptic world. It was Deanna who wanted to exile Rick though she was also the one who urged him to exterminate Pete when the doctor lapsed into a murderous rage. Once the excitement over Rowdy Rick fades, the towns matriarch may want to revisit her original plan to keep him contained. She may also have an ally in Michonne, an expert zombie-slayer whos been softening lately, seduced by the idea of living a calmer life in the ASZ.

And then theres Morgan Jones, the cryptic figure who starts out the new season as a regular or at least as much of a regular as anyone can be on a show that routinely kills off its characters. Morgans just arrived in Alexandria, having developed a zen calm and some serious combat skills since Rick last saw him. It looks like he may act as a check against his old friends new tendency toward chilly ruthlessness.

And meanwhile, the rest of our heroes are making new friends
When our little makeshift family agreed to become part of the safe zone, they did so with a cocked eye, having been burned before by promises of a better, safer life. Over time, however, theyve started forming connections with the Alexandrians. Daryl has become one of the communitys recruiters, alongside the man who brought them to the area in the first place: the kindly, brave Aaron. And though Glenn had a brutal brawl with cowardly supply-runner Nicholas outside the walls, they ultimately decided to bury the hatchet (figuratively, for a change).

And then theres Carol, whos become a cookie-baking happy homemaker and chum to all although we the home viewers know that shes just putting on an act, and that shes really on her guard, ready to surprise her new neighbors with her ferocity whenever she must. As the new season begins, shes still maintaining her air of passivity. Knowing Carol and her deep dark streak, this masquerade cant go on much longer.

Get ready for zombie inflation
Season Five startedwith zombies overrunning the false sanctuary of Terminus, and ended with another horde at an abandoned cannery. But in the episodes in-between, the threat of flesh-eating monsters took a backseat to matters of politics and power-grabs among the humans. The Walking Deads co-executive producer/effects supervisor Gregory Nicotero has promised a lot more, well, walking dead in Season Six, taking advantage of digital effects and a fundamental shift in storytelling to fill the screen with reanimated corpses. Or to put in another way: Now that Ricks in proactive mode, expect less hunkering down and more hunting. As if to prove that point, Sundays season premiere opens with a wild, horrifying sequence involving a herd of hungry, rotting walkers.

Brace for other kinds of threats, outside the wall
Not long after arriving in Alexandria, Ricks group started noticing oddities while out on patrols like the flashing of strange lights off in the distance, and the occasional disabled walker with the letter W carved into its forehead. By the end of the season, wed met the source of these cryptic symbols: Theyre called Wolves, and theyre good at luring humans into zombie-filled traps for reasons as yet unknown. In the finale, theyd found photos of Alexandria, which means they may be closing in on the neighborhood, or may be taking what theyve learned back to their own home-base. Either way, as Rick keeps stressing, its going to be impossible for the ASZ to rebuild society properly until they reckon with whatever enemies may be organizing just beyond the packs of snarling creatures milling around nearby.

If the show sticks close to the comics, expect some lasting changes
Even though the writer of The Walking Dead comics, Robert Kirkman, is one of the shows main producers, he hasnt really demanded that the TV version copy his graphic novels beat-for-beat. Instead the series has been following the creators rough outline, with the first five seasons covering more or less his first 78 issues. If it stays on its current course, then like its print counterpart, the TV narrative is going to straighten out considerably, leaving behind the desperate wandering of the early stories in order to move toward well, something else. (For the non-readers, itd be wrong to spoil what might be coming.)

Not every Walking Dead fan likes the direction the comics have gone in. But even those who prefer the older stuff can admit that the books more recent arcs have dropped what had become a too-predictable ebb-and-flow where the survivors find a new location, stay there for a handful of issues, and then something or someone ruins everything and people die. If Kirkman keeps adapting his own source material, the show ought to start doing some actual world-building. Characters could stick around for a while, and locations get built up instead of destroyed.

Currently, the comic books are up to issue #146, which means that theres about four seasons worth of material that the television TWD could still use. A lot of it is bold, exciting stuff, too, and very different from whats come before. It should be pretty clear by the next mid-season break whether the TV show is slowly shambling to the same place and if were going to be making our weekly Sunday home in Alexandria for the next few years.