5.2 Strangers With that mindset in place, you may be ready for Strangers, the first think-piece episode for this season of The Walking Dead. Indeed, that seems to be the way the audience should be thinking because that’s the way the characters are thinking. Carol has done a lot for Rick and company, and she’s done a lot to Rick and company too. However, this week is forgive and forget, or at least forget and move on. Fresh starts all around, according to Robert Kirkman’s script and the mouths of every other character who gets to speak. Yes, it’s very heavy-handed, and revisited a great deal as the characters pair off with one another to discuss the events of Terminus. Rick and Carol talk about their past, Carol and Daryl talk about their past, Tyreese and Carol discuss their past (everyone talks to Carol, mostly because she’s awesome), and the newest survivor they come stumbling across, Reverend Gabriel (Seth Gilliam, AKA Deaton from Teen Wolf). If you haven’t guessed that the good Episcopalian has a story to tell, you don’t know The Walking Dead, because from his screaming, panicking introduction, Gabriel is clearly hiding something more sinister than a bad sense of humour, and that’s obvious before they even reveal the attempted break-in at the church and the scrawled message. Still, the two big action moments are handled very well by David Boyd, and again we get the use of in-camera effects to simulate waking from unconsciousness to good effect. The shots of the stalker trailing them in the woods are also well done. Still, watery zombie fight or no, there’s not a ton of action to be put on display, and most of what Boyd does is pretty simple, standard stuff by TV standards. No real extreme angles or weird shooting styles, just straight coverage as befitting the material and some very pretty visuals. The only odd thing is the use of slow-motion in showing the crew walking down the road early in the episode, segmented by little individual conversations. Not sure what that was about, but perhaps it’ll pay off later (or maybe it was just a little flair). The episode is very talk-heavy, very moralistic, very… season 2-ish, but it’s only one episode back and after last week, they clearly need to hang onto a few dollars for future episodes. It’s at least relevant talk, and it’s Carol-heavy, so it’s not too bad. Rick’s palaver with Carol is one of the better talky scenes this week, and Caryl together is always money. There’s no terrible Lady MacBeth angle to drag things down; hearing characters talk to one another about events always works better when they’re not unlikable: Bob and Sasha are very cute. Read Ron’s review of the previous episode, No Sanctuary, here. US Correspondent Ron Hogan thinks that before long there will be more actors from The Wire than there were from the first season of The Walking Dead. He is far from the first person to notice that, and he won’t be the last. Find more by Ron daily at Shaktronics and PopFi. Follow our Twitter feed for faster news and bad jokes right here. And be our Facebook chum here.