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Fear the Walking Dead - Season 5 Episode 16: End of the Line
Season 5 begins with a series of new tasks as the group faces unexpected risks in a short period of time. When the group lands in an unknown area in search, you will face more real risks in search of survivors. Morgan and Alicia are trying to meet on a mission with a new survivor as the group struggles to achieve its high goal during that period.
It's a pathetic, anticlimactic, ridiculous conclusion to one of the worst seasons in Walking Dead history. Despite a few bright moments, this was the kind of finale that should make everyone involved with its creation ashamed.
Like Ginny's gun, Fear the Walking Dead's fifth season can't be described as anything less than a misfire of terrible characterization, underwhelming villains and idiotic decisions. And Tom.
[Puts] a crooked exclamation point on what was a thoroughly disappointing season. The only way I can really describe the season finale is as nonsense. Complete nonsense.
While the finale's grim ending is arguably a dramatic high point for the season, I can't help but wish Morgan's final bow were in a much better episode.
"End of the Line" was not the worst episode of the series, but it was another throwaway one. All that's left to do is hope that a miracle happens between seasons to course correct, but that's probably asking for too much at this stage.
While I do indeed enjoy Colby Minifie as the doom-harboring antagonist Virginia, she's only been around for a few episodes, and definitely hasn't proven herself to be worthy of taking out such an important character within the Walking Dead franchise.
This was a good episode, and a strong way to end a wobbly season. It had a little bit of everything: a wedding. A baby. A ton of zombies. A cliffhanger.
It mostly felt like a waste of an episode... It's not that the performances from the cast are bad. It's poor narrative planning that breeds less confidence in those manning FTWD, even with the promise of never having to hear another Morgan life lesson.
Fear the Walking Dead ending on a cliffhanger with a potential major character death shows that the creative team behind the franchise hasn't learned from past mistakes.