Fear The Walking Dead, Leave What You Don’t: Things To Note

Garret Dillahunt as John Dorie - Fear the Walking Dead _ Season 5, Episode 13 - Photo Credit: Van Redin/AMC
Garret Dillahunt as John Dorie - Fear the Walking Dead _ Season 5, Episode 13 - Photo Credit: Van Redin/AMC /
facebooktwitterreddit
Prev
4 of 5
Next
Matt Frewer as Logan – Fear the Walking Dead _ Season 5, Episode 11 – Photo Credit: Van Redin/AMC
Matt Frewer as Logan – Fear the Walking Dead _ Season 5, Episode 11 – Photo Credit: Van Redin/AMC /

11) As we get a wide shot of the stretch of highway where Sarah and Wendell catch Rollie, we can see (Courtesy of the tree) that it’s the same stretch of road used for Martha’s flashback last season.

12) To add to her collection of nicknames for people, Sarah calls Logan “Logie”.

13) According to Logan, he soured on Clayton’s philosophy when Clayton couldn’t (Though, to Logan, it likely looked more like didn’t) help him save Serena, which was the day Sarah and Wendell stole his truck. This would put the flashback at the beginning of this episode on or around the Season Four episode, “The Code”, wherein Morgan met the latter.

14) It’s rather ironic that Logan should have become what we’ve seen of him this season during Season Four’s “The Code”, because, Clayton couldn’t be there for Serena (Or Logan, for that matter) precisely because Sarah and Wendell didn’t adhere to “The Code”.

15) The walkers finding their way to the oil field seems like it may be mirroring the origin of the quarry herd that terrorized Alexandria in The Walking Dead’s Season Six opener, “First Time Again”.

16) Logan’s new philosophy that helping people (And, subsequently, giving them false hope, in his opinion) is bad is not too dissimilar from Martha’s belief that helping people made them weak, though it seems he approached that epiphany from the opposite end — Where Martha was the person who wanted help, got the false hope, and ultimately didn’t get that help, Logan was the person trying to help, but, ultimately couldn’t, instead giving false hope.