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I guess we are suppose to forgive Negan after viewing this ep. The problem is the show didn't make him just a bad guy. The show made him a reprehensible, beyond disgusting villain, so forgiving him his past is almost too difficult especially for Megan. Joanie The smug smile from Negan at the end, the inference is that old Negan has returned. But do you wonder if Negan has had a bit of an epiphany and decided he wants to be with his wife and hes returned to the camp to push Maggie to kill him, kind of commiting suicide on purpose?
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While the TV series The Walking Dead departs at times from its graphic novel source material, by and large the series has been amazingly faithful to both the characters and the stories. The major arcs and elements of the graphic novels are depicted in the TV shows, some scenes play out 1:1 exactly as they are in the graphic novels, while other scenes play very much LIKE they are in the graphic novels, though they may be assigned to different characters. But the basic foundation of the series is clearly Kirkman's TWD graphic novel series. And I think that's good. Just like Lord of the Rings or Game of Thrones, Walking Dead takes its source material seriously and tries to be a faithful adaptation within the frame of a long running TV series (well, it's a long running graphic novel series, so that helps). I like that it is an actual adaptation and not just a "Walking Dead" by name only. For that reason I don't think Negan will die at all in the TV show, because he does not die in the comics either. I blackened it not because of a TV show spoiler, but because of something that happens in the graphic novels that might influence the TV series. Because in the graphic novels, Negan is one of the characters that remains alive all the way to the end of the series.
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