Fear the Walking Dead Season 3 Episode 14: El Matadero Review
Questionable character motivations threaten to derail Fear the Walking Dead's mojo.
ThisĀ Fear the Walking DeadĀ review contains spoilers.
Fear the Walking Dead Season 3 Episode 14
In watching āEl Matadero,ā I couldnāt help but feel that this particular hour was a requiem for Fear the Walking Deadās third season that might have beenāhad it ended with last weekās game-changing āThis Land is Your Land.ā (You can read my review of that episode here.) āEl Mataderoā is also a requiem for Nickās sobriety, something thatās been so easy to take for granted ever since the first season. If heās ever been tempted these last two seasons, we never knew it. So his pill-popping fall from grace was a bit sudden and unexpected. Most notably, though, āEl Mataderoā is a requiem for Ofelia Salazarāa character that might have been. But more on the barbarian-turned-barberās daughter in a bit.
In the meantime, after headlining last weekās episode, it was a bit disappointing to see Alicia relegated to the sidelines. This doesnāt impede her from killing a zombie girl in a call pit; nor does it stop Alicia from crossing paths with a mysterious survivor (played by Edwina Findley). We discover in short turn that Findleyās salty, pick axe-wielding stranger has seen her share of action. Through her we learn a bit more about post-apocalyptic capitalism (gold fillings and severed fingers are important commodities). Findley also gets one of the episodeās better lines: āWhy the hell are your potatoes in my car?ā Whether Findley survives into next season remains to be seen, but I hope her uneasy alliance with Alicia doesnāt get her killed. Seriously, you know by now how it is with these troublesome Clarks.
And speaking of which, itās one thing for Nick to go off the deep endābut why take Troy with him? Until they meet up with āthe butcher,ā Troy is at best an observer, and at worst a jumpy, fearful sidekick. Itās almost as if his outsized charisma went up in flames along with his familyās ranch. Whatever the case may be, Iām well past caring what happens to Troy, who, lest we forget, has expressed no remorse for murdering numerous innocents. Which makes the continued Nick/Troy bromance so troubling; how can we root for Nick if heās willing to overlook the terrible things Troy has done?
Then again, Madison has turned a blind eye to Troyās many misdeeds as well, going so far in āEl Mataderoā to cite strength in numbers. What better way to confront one murderous psychopath (in this case, Daniel) with another one at your back? This is the apocalypse, after all, where morality is seen more of an inconvenience than as something to strive for. Hence the episodeās best line, uttered by Alicia: āSurviving is killing me.ā But Fearās writers would have you believe Madisonās shifting morality, and with it, her various loyalties, all boil down to keeping her word. This is flimsy motivation at best, and Strand is right to call her out for it. Indeed, he accuses her of squandering their dwindling resources just to keep her promise to Daniel. Strand has never been sentimentalāat least not with the people he considers his friends. A doomed cosmonaut brings out his humanity, but not Madison Clark. Strand is right, thoughānow that Ofelia is dying, they’re all basically screwed. Madison’s plan, to rely on the kindness of strangers like a post-apocalyptic Blanche DuBois, is no plan at all.
And what is Madisonās plan, now that her children have all but abandoned her? This is especially curious, given how much of this season has revolved around Mama Clark protecting her kids at any costāwhether it meant seizing control of the ranch or desecrating Native-American relics, or covering up the murder of the Otto patriarch. Suddenly, this same person is putting up no fight as Alicia and Nick go their separate ways. Is she too tired to keep her family together, or is this more about inconsistent writing and subsequently inconsistent character motivations?
Which finally brings us to Ofelia, a character whose motivations never seem fully defined. Last season, we saw Ofeliaās sudden transformation into a gas-siphoning, zombie-killing machine in search of her stateside fiancĆ©. We didnāt see much of her after that until she resurfaced earlier this season as part of Walkerās Black Hat tribe. From there, she poisoned some ranchers (including Nick) yet rallied to save many more of them by unblocking an air vent. All in all, it was a circuitous route to a quiet, inglorious death in a stadium parking lot. Which makes her line about looking forward to getting to know her father so ironic. Did we ever really get to know Ofelia herself? As likable as Mercedes Mason is, Fear‘s writers never quite knew what to do with her. I suppose whatās more egregious about her death is how impersonal it feltāmuch like Chrisās death last season. But whereas Chris had no last words, the last thing Ofelia ever does is thank Madison for ostensibly making her final moments about how sheās failed her own kids.
Hereās to hoping that Madison and Fear regain their mojo in next weekās two-hour season finale.
Some closing thoughts:
Itās obvious Strand has struck some Faustian bargain with the bazaarās powers-that-be. Like everyone else, Strand is hell-bent on survivalāeven if it kills him, or at the very least, those closest to him.
Nickās blood suit makes its triumphant returnāand with it, his feeling of reckless invincibility. For all of Troyās āresearch,ā youād think heād have discovered the benefits of zombie guts as camouflage long ago.
TWD creator Robert Kirkman officially announced a crossover between FTWD and TWD. I for one am excited about this. Let the rampant speculation about how this will happen commence!
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