What We
- El episodio se transmitió el 17 mar 2024
- TV-MA
- 49min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
8.2/10
8.2 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Rick y Michonne se encuentran en las ruinas de Greenwood. Michonne regresa a casa con ella, Rick está decidido a completar la misión de Okafor de reformar el Ejército de la República Cívica ... Leer todoRick y Michonne se encuentran en las ruinas de Greenwood. Michonne regresa a casa con ella, Rick está decidido a completar la misión de Okafor de reformar el Ejército de la República Cívica para convertirlo en algo mejor.Rick y Michonne se encuentran en las ruinas de Greenwood. Michonne regresa a casa con ella, Rick está decidido a completar la misión de Okafor de reformar el Ejército de la República Cívica para convertirlo en algo mejor.
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Opiniones destacadas
"What We" is the fourth episode which follows Rick and Michonne after she throws them off a helicopter into the ocean. With the episode's premise: Rick and Michonne try to find the love they had. You know this episode is all about these characters, it extends beyond the writing and acting, thanks to the visual storytelling which the director and cinematographer succeeds with in this episode, making it grounded and character driven. The screenplay and writing is excellent, realistic and just heartful. The first fifteen minutes or so is simply these two characters, talking, arguing and acting like three dimensional characters who have both changed a lot with Rick Grimes having changed the most. Then the episode goes into a more action driven route with some great sequences of suspenseful zombie scenes with tension through these two characters, before going back to a slower pacing. The pacing is perfect and it remains character driven from start to finish, about these two characters. Andrew Lincoln and Danai Gurira.
This week's episode of TWD: The Ones Who Live "What We" was directed by Michael Slovis and written by Danai Gurira, the direction and visual storytelling were excellent, and with the writing I had looked forward to Danai's script as it had been hyped for a long time. The screenplay for "What We" was incredible! Back to the direction and visual storytelling, Michael Slovis who has directed the previous episode, handles every scene with perfection and makes sure there are brilliant shots as well as the actors are doing their finest work, which they are. Andrew Lincoln pulls an award worthy performance in this episode, so raw and emotional. Danai Gurira is also terrific in this episode, if it wouldn't be how heavy the episode and the screenplay leans into making Rick more hopeful, I would say her performance would be as great! The screenplay, written by Danai herself, focuses on this duo and the amount of character development which came out of this episode just shows how talented she is at writing dialogue and set pieces. When dialogue is written by someone who knows these two characters, it can't be bad, it can only be good and in this case quite great.
The production design and art direction is terrific, so is the mise-en-scene and cinematography for the show. The musical score is something I haven't commented about but it's spectacular. The increased budget makes for better production design and visual effects, overall making a better show in every department along with the actors. The prior episodes were high budget with some terrific visuals to meet our expectations of the CRM, this episode has solely two characters whom have interacted but not as much as we would want, thus not breaking the immersion with the story the writers are trying to tell. It's in this episode which Michonne opens up to Rick, information which needed the right moment and I'm so glad they did it this way. Totally the right way. In the previous episode we got information from the art guy (who makes the pictures on the phone) how Rick had forgotten what Carl looked like and that is so realistic. With everything Rick had been through, all the trauma suffered, he had forgotten what his son looked like. That's heartbreaking to hear and in this episode he tells her that, it's brilliantly written and acted with perfection. Yet, it got a little bit repetitive because of the same sets, that's my small criticism. This episode contains some of the best acting and writing in the show, yet it's so small compared to other episodes, but it still has everything you love with The Walking Dead. It's hard to rate though, but for a show about these two beloved characters, this episode was done brilliantly.
This week's episode of TWD: The Ones Who Live "What We" was directed by Michael Slovis and written by Danai Gurira, the direction and visual storytelling were excellent, and with the writing I had looked forward to Danai's script as it had been hyped for a long time. The screenplay for "What We" was incredible! Back to the direction and visual storytelling, Michael Slovis who has directed the previous episode, handles every scene with perfection and makes sure there are brilliant shots as well as the actors are doing their finest work, which they are. Andrew Lincoln pulls an award worthy performance in this episode, so raw and emotional. Danai Gurira is also terrific in this episode, if it wouldn't be how heavy the episode and the screenplay leans into making Rick more hopeful, I would say her performance would be as great! The screenplay, written by Danai herself, focuses on this duo and the amount of character development which came out of this episode just shows how talented she is at writing dialogue and set pieces. When dialogue is written by someone who knows these two characters, it can't be bad, it can only be good and in this case quite great.
The production design and art direction is terrific, so is the mise-en-scene and cinematography for the show. The musical score is something I haven't commented about but it's spectacular. The increased budget makes for better production design and visual effects, overall making a better show in every department along with the actors. The prior episodes were high budget with some terrific visuals to meet our expectations of the CRM, this episode has solely two characters whom have interacted but not as much as we would want, thus not breaking the immersion with the story the writers are trying to tell. It's in this episode which Michonne opens up to Rick, information which needed the right moment and I'm so glad they did it this way. Totally the right way. In the previous episode we got information from the art guy (who makes the pictures on the phone) how Rick had forgotten what Carl looked like and that is so realistic. With everything Rick had been through, all the trauma suffered, he had forgotten what his son looked like. That's heartbreaking to hear and in this episode he tells her that, it's brilliantly written and acted with perfection. Yet, it got a little bit repetitive because of the same sets, that's my small criticism. This episode contains some of the best acting and writing in the show, yet it's so small compared to other episodes, but it still has everything you love with The Walking Dead. It's hard to rate though, but for a show about these two beloved characters, this episode was done brilliantly.
This may not be the general's favorite episode but so far it is mine. Danai Gurira brought back what the other walking dead shows was missing. It was the heart and soul of the characters and this episode was purely dialogue and I LOVED every single moment of it. Andrew Lincoln and Danai Gurira gave us a powerful performance that this franchise has ever seen.
It is genuinely one of the deepest and best written episodes of The Walking Dead. Rick is not the man he used to be and that creates such an intriguing conflict between the characters. The actors are able to bring the emotions and make you really feel them in every single scene. You can feel Michonne's frustration and also understand Rick's state it really was a rollercoaster of emotions.
Not only Danai can perform she can also produce, write, and be one of the creators one of the show. I'm glad she and Andrew took control of how they're going to take these characters who they've known and understand for years into a different level that we haven't seen before.
It is genuinely one of the deepest and best written episodes of The Walking Dead. Rick is not the man he used to be and that creates such an intriguing conflict between the characters. The actors are able to bring the emotions and make you really feel them in every single scene. You can feel Michonne's frustration and also understand Rick's state it really was a rollercoaster of emotions.
Not only Danai can perform she can also produce, write, and be one of the creators one of the show. I'm glad she and Andrew took control of how they're going to take these characters who they've known and understand for years into a different level that we haven't seen before.
Wow, I am at loss for words. Danai did an amazing job with the writing, she really dug deep into the emotion arcs of Rick and Michonne, I can understand both of their perspectives and it just left me torn and had me on this emotional rollercoaster, some parts were funny too. Danai is an accomplished writer she can balance humor and seriousness well after seeing this episode I am looking forward to more of the projects she writes and produces. Give her and Andy all the awards, these two deserve them and more especially Danai because wow. One of the best episodes in Walking Dead History, Awesome job👏
10fakram17
Remember those peak old days when Walking Dead use to be a literal emotion for all of us. Oh boy this was ×10 of that. It made me cry, just like Sophia coming out of that barn made me cry. Just like Hershel dying made my cry. Just like Negan smashing Glenn's head made me cry. And yes of course Just like every time Daryl cries, it makes us cry too. This was peak #TWD.
Oh Rick & Michonne (Andy Lincoln & Danai Gurira) you're crazy crazy actor's. You both are just so much powerful together that it makes me say hell yeah.
This is the best episode of an already great season. My God this was epic....
I don't write reviews neither do i know how to write one so yes this is for my favourite show on the planet. Thank you The Walking Dead....
Oh Rick & Michonne (Andy Lincoln & Danai Gurira) you're crazy crazy actor's. You both are just so much powerful together that it makes me say hell yeah.
This is the best episode of an already great season. My God this was epic....
I don't write reviews neither do i know how to write one so yes this is for my favourite show on the planet. Thank you The Walking Dead....
Both Andrew Lincoln as Rick and Danai Gurira as Michonne stood on their heads to give us some of the best, if not their best acting of any episode of not only The Ones Who Live itself, but The Walking Dead as a whole.
This touching episode gave the main characters the depth that this series needed. For the first time in a long time, I don't care that an episode from the TWD universe had a slow pace, because they used it to their advantage.
I'm glad that the focus was only on Rick and Michonne, because in the end, it's about them. I'm glad that we're not trying to expand the universe by force here, giving the other characters "equal" opportunities relative to screen time. They don't get it, because they should appear only when they are necessary, as they are only background and complement the picture depicting a couple in love with each other, the heart of this universe.
My rating for the episode is actually 9/10, but I add +1 for the fact that this episode hits differently by the fact that Danai Gurira wrote it. She wrote, she directed, she played a role.... This episode was based on dialogue and you have to admit, Danai can write dialogue, oh she can.
And now... please let Jadis off the leash, let her catch them at any cost ;).
This touching episode gave the main characters the depth that this series needed. For the first time in a long time, I don't care that an episode from the TWD universe had a slow pace, because they used it to their advantage.
I'm glad that the focus was only on Rick and Michonne, because in the end, it's about them. I'm glad that we're not trying to expand the universe by force here, giving the other characters "equal" opportunities relative to screen time. They don't get it, because they should appear only when they are necessary, as they are only background and complement the picture depicting a couple in love with each other, the heart of this universe.
My rating for the episode is actually 9/10, but I add +1 for the fact that this episode hits differently by the fact that Danai Gurira wrote it. She wrote, she directed, she played a role.... This episode was based on dialogue and you have to admit, Danai can write dialogue, oh she can.
And now... please let Jadis off the leash, let her catch them at any cost ;).
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaMichonne mentions how she thought she was going to be a writer at one point in her life. Dana Gurira who plays Michonne is the sole credited writer on this episode.
- ErroresRick and Michonne unplug a Nissan Frontier to leave the collapsing building. Nissan Frontier has never been available in an EV or Hybrid option.
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- Tiempo de ejecución
- 49min
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