Family
- Episode aired Nov 6, 2022
- TV-MA
- 44m
IMDb RATING
8.5/10
7.6K
YOUR RATING
Reunited, the group heads back to the commonwealth where the aftermath of Eugene's trial is felt.Reunited, the group heads back to the commonwealth where the aftermath of Eugene's trial is felt.Reunited, the group heads back to the commonwealth where the aftermath of Eugene's trial is felt.
Cassady McClincy Zhang
- Lydia
- (as Cassady McClincy)
Josh Hamilton
- Lance Hornsby
- (credit only)
Storyline
Did you know
- GoofsDuring the train station shootout, Gabriel looks into the scope of his rifle with his blind eye.
Featured review
The penultimate episode builds towards an explosive finale, ending up being a great and memorable episode in its own sense
The premise of episode 11.23 titled "Family": Mercer secretly brings Eugene to Max and Yumiko. He is said to be hiding in an apartment until further action has been clarified. Meanwhile, a group led by Maggie, Negan and Daryl take the train to take down Pamela for good. They bring the missing people back to the Commonwealth. There, an angry crowd is already protest in front of Pamela's office and demanding. Magali Lozano & Erik Mountain & Kevin Deiboldt penned the script for 11.23 and they brought the writing back to how it should be, the dialogue felt natural and overall well written, excellent even. The episode uses the big budget wisely, making it brilliant both technically and the acting and so on, the camera work are brilliant and visually a great episode, an overall impressive production. There's so many shots in this episode that are brilliantly shot, such a stunning looking episode, it felt like The Walking Dead again.
Sharat Raju directed "Family" and being a recurring director for both TWD and Fear, he knows the actors and universe quite well so the visual storytelling is all great. Raju's vision and direction were truly amazing, bringing his skills and experience to a show that currently needs it. His work on the episode are surely one of the highlights. The cinematography and the other departments, especially the makeup and special effects departments, were as always top notch. The attention to detail and all the shots in the nature, they nailed it on the camera side of things. The cinematography is once again breathtaking and incredible, just right for the show, the way it was shot and so on, simply brilliant. The sets were detailed and perfect, and so are the art and production design. I also found the effects to be fantastic in this episode, practical effects always makes it so more real, and The Walking Dead is known for their practical effects and they didn't let us down for this episode. Superb sound design and a musical score both gripping and dramatic. It's one of many things on the technical side of things that the show succeeds perfectly with.
The Commonwealth arc have had its ups and downs but I'll have to admit, I really liked this episode. I thought it was great. But I still don't agree it's the right direction for the show, it could have focused on something bigger like they've been building towards. This is the penultimate episode of the final season of the entire show, it doesn't feel like it, there is much more unpredictability but also much more tension and suspension in the episode. It doesn't feel big enough. I've written how the Commonwealth have evolved into a military-state, leaning more and more into fascism. It's brilliant really, believable too. I think Pamela Milton is a great character but underused and could have been used better if Angela Kang would have went a different direction with being bigger. The universe of The Walking Dead is now big with CRM but haven't been used at all, I think that was a bad choice from Angela Kang but especially Scott Gimple who surely calls all the shots.
Episode 11.23 has most if not the whole cast in it, it feels like an old episode of The Walking Dead. I think this was one of the better episodes of Part C, it offered us some superb drama, character interactions that keeps you engaged, and a well shot action sequence but also multiple zombie scenes for everyone who likes zombies. I just love the scenes with Ezekiel and Negan, those two actors and characters together in a scene, makes for some fine drama and terrific performances. The scene with Aaron and Lydia was also extremely well written, brilliantly acted by the two. The passion in Ross Marquand's performance is visible and I think his performance in this season have been one of the better ones. Some other performances who I think deserve some praise are Laila Robins who completely nailed her performance as Pamela Milton, what might be her best performance in the season. But let's talk about "Family" and what that episode title mean for the episode, a lot if not everything, but mostly of the Grimes family and how Judith want their legacy to remain and make her deceased brother proud, a character who shouldn't have died. Cailey Fleming have been great as Judith Grimes and continues in that direction in this episode, I'm glad she got more screen time, finally. Norman Reedus and Cailey Fleming have such perfect chemistry and you really notice how their relationship are on and off screen, it's wonderful really. I'm looking forward to the series finale, I wish, I hope that they won't fail the show. We deserve a great ending, we deserve an unsafe episode of The Walking Dead with risk and tension, an episode with the audience on the edge of their seats, an episode worth talking about like Andrew Lincoln's last episode "What Comes After". But we need a finale that's grandios, the penultimate was far from grandios. But for season 11, "Family" is incredible and engaging from start to finish, one of the season's best episodes.
Sharat Raju directed "Family" and being a recurring director for both TWD and Fear, he knows the actors and universe quite well so the visual storytelling is all great. Raju's vision and direction were truly amazing, bringing his skills and experience to a show that currently needs it. His work on the episode are surely one of the highlights. The cinematography and the other departments, especially the makeup and special effects departments, were as always top notch. The attention to detail and all the shots in the nature, they nailed it on the camera side of things. The cinematography is once again breathtaking and incredible, just right for the show, the way it was shot and so on, simply brilliant. The sets were detailed and perfect, and so are the art and production design. I also found the effects to be fantastic in this episode, practical effects always makes it so more real, and The Walking Dead is known for their practical effects and they didn't let us down for this episode. Superb sound design and a musical score both gripping and dramatic. It's one of many things on the technical side of things that the show succeeds perfectly with.
The Commonwealth arc have had its ups and downs but I'll have to admit, I really liked this episode. I thought it was great. But I still don't agree it's the right direction for the show, it could have focused on something bigger like they've been building towards. This is the penultimate episode of the final season of the entire show, it doesn't feel like it, there is much more unpredictability but also much more tension and suspension in the episode. It doesn't feel big enough. I've written how the Commonwealth have evolved into a military-state, leaning more and more into fascism. It's brilliant really, believable too. I think Pamela Milton is a great character but underused and could have been used better if Angela Kang would have went a different direction with being bigger. The universe of The Walking Dead is now big with CRM but haven't been used at all, I think that was a bad choice from Angela Kang but especially Scott Gimple who surely calls all the shots.
Episode 11.23 has most if not the whole cast in it, it feels like an old episode of The Walking Dead. I think this was one of the better episodes of Part C, it offered us some superb drama, character interactions that keeps you engaged, and a well shot action sequence but also multiple zombie scenes for everyone who likes zombies. I just love the scenes with Ezekiel and Negan, those two actors and characters together in a scene, makes for some fine drama and terrific performances. The scene with Aaron and Lydia was also extremely well written, brilliantly acted by the two. The passion in Ross Marquand's performance is visible and I think his performance in this season have been one of the better ones. Some other performances who I think deserve some praise are Laila Robins who completely nailed her performance as Pamela Milton, what might be her best performance in the season. But let's talk about "Family" and what that episode title mean for the episode, a lot if not everything, but mostly of the Grimes family and how Judith want their legacy to remain and make her deceased brother proud, a character who shouldn't have died. Cailey Fleming have been great as Judith Grimes and continues in that direction in this episode, I'm glad she got more screen time, finally. Norman Reedus and Cailey Fleming have such perfect chemistry and you really notice how their relationship are on and off screen, it's wonderful really. I'm looking forward to the series finale, I wish, I hope that they won't fail the show. We deserve a great ending, we deserve an unsafe episode of The Walking Dead with risk and tension, an episode with the audience on the edge of their seats, an episode worth talking about like Andrew Lincoln's last episode "What Comes After". But we need a finale that's grandios, the penultimate was far from grandios. But for season 11, "Family" is incredible and engaging from start to finish, one of the season's best episodes.
helpful•1316
- Holt344
- Nov 14, 2022
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Filming locations
- Georgia, USA(filmed on location in)
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime44 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content