We got lucky with the weather and Atlanta took pity on us that day when I got thrown into the pit of hell and had to wrestle with my dear friend Gino, who played the spiky pinheaded monster there. And then we did the CGI with the blue screen for several scenes, and I haven't seen it, but you get this maze that just goes into the distance. And they kept building and building and building this crazy Mad Max landscape. We were still shooting other episodes while it went up and it happened within something like three days, they delivered this junkyard. Here's what the actor had to say about seeing this massive junkyard landscape, and going toe-to-toe with this spiked zombie, played by makeup special effects artist Gino Crognale. ![]() Entertainment Weekly caught up with Andrew Lincoln, who shed some light on filming that incredible junkyard scene, which was actually the same location as the old prison yard from Seasons 3 and 4. ![]() During Sunday night's New Best Friends, Rick tried to recruit this large group to join his fight against Negan and The Saviors, but before the group's leader Jadis ( Pollyanna McIntosh) gave Rick a seemingly impossible challenge: to defeat a zombie named Winslow, who was covered in armor with sharp wooden spikes sticking out of his body. They were the only people in the Governor’s camp to realize just how evil the bastard was.At the end of the mid-season premiere, Rick Grimes ( Andrew Lincoln) and his group were ambushed by a mysterious new group, which caused Rick to crack a huge smile. It’d be a shame to never see Tara (Alanna Masterson) and Lilly again. It’s unclear what ultimately becomes of his adopted family-except for Meghan (Meyrick Murphy), the little girl he treated as a surrogate daughter, who is bitten by a walker while spending way too much time reading a sign she found in the mud. Martinez) and plotting to take the prison. But even after adopting a new family, all of one episode elapsed before he was back to lying, murdering (R.I.P. The Governor, on the other hand, had led us to believe he wanted to put his bloodstained past behind him. During the outbreak in “Internment,” Hershel even proved himself a hero by saving Glenn (Steven Yeun) and Lizzie’s (Brighton Sharbino) lives. Rick relied heavily on his advice and his medical skills. Hershel was The Walking Dead’s Dale 2.0: wise, selfless and the show’s moral center. His death came at a moment when we couldn’t have hated him any more-besides making us suffer through two slow-paced, melodramatic episodes about his attempts to become a new man, he had just used Michonne’s sword to hack Hershel’s (Scott Wilson) head off in front of his two daughters. I was rooting for Michonne (Danai Gurira) to poke out his other eye then for him to get eaten alive by walkers-but being impaled then shot in the head by Lilly (Audrey Marie Anderson), the woman whose daughter died because of his insatiable need for power, works too. World’s Most Tedious Bad Guy got his just desserts, sort of. And there were four significant deaths, one of which got millions at home shrieking for joy: The Governor is finally dead! We finally got the bare-hands fight to the death between Rick (Andrew Lincoln) and The Governor that’s been overdue for half a season. ![]() ( Imagine the riots!) The prison walls were torn down and self-appointed child soldiers blew invaders’ heads off. There was a tank, there were grenades, and Daryl (Norman Reedus) came this close to becoming walker meat. After a year of buildup and fake-outs, the Governor (David Morrissey) finally engaged the prison in all-out war. The Walking Dead’s fourth midseason finale episode, “Too Far Gone,” could easily have been called “About F-king Time.” It was everything fans have been waiting for since Season 3’s snooze-worthy ending.
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