

He is about to shoot a deer before he sees that it has a baby and instead decides to go hungry. They apparently haven’t eaten in some time and we learn that being a father has changed Sunny. We catch up with Sunny traveling with his son Henry. The Walking Dead: Dead City release schedule: When do new episodes come out?.The Walking Dead Rick and Michonne spin-off: Everything we know.The Walking Dead Daryl Dixon: Everything we know about the upcoming spin-off.The Walking Dead: Dead City filming locations: Where is Dead City filmed?.Where is the Hilltop community located in The Walking Dead?.She tells him she’ll help him find Sunny if he’ll join her. They have an epic battle that ends when she is about to push him off of the side of a tower but stops. She wants him to be her regent but he refuses saying he only wants to fight Sunny. You’ll remember him as the warrior that Sunny fought early in season 2 before taking his hand, and refusing to take his life. The WidowĮarly in the episode, The Widow tracks down Nathaniel. The episode starts with a beautifully shot (in typical Into the Badlands fashion) war scene that ends with a heroic butterfly being killed by a hail of arrows from Chau’s side. The Widow and Chau are entrenched in a battle for control of the badlands and the war is taking its toll on both sides.

The intro to the show let us know that all of the barons have been removed from the field except Chau.


Into the Badlands returned for its third and longest season and wasted no time jumping right into the action. The Badlands have changed, and there is a new player that will soon make their presence felt. Season 1 was too subdued and Season 3 is almost out of control, so Season 2 is genuinely the apex of this series, and a great testament to how great Western-made Martial Arts entertainment can be, when the thought and effort are both actively accounted for.By Michael Bibbins 5 years ago Into the Badlands came back and caught us up on what has been occurring over the past 6 months. Sunny is great when bouncing off Bajie, the two working almost like a double-act between the killer and the semi-genius/semi-moron, and Tilda, the adorable killing machine, gets a lot of moments to shine as well, her character showing some serious amounts of agency, as well as the performance being far more nuanced. Much of this might have been because of the higher budget, such as improved sets and more varied landscapes, but beyond that everything is far more epic, far more intense, the plot more labyrinthine (but never too complicated) and the quieter moments more meaningful. With a larger scope, higher stakes, faster pacing, genuine levity and an EXCELLENT co-starring role played by Nick Frost, Season 2 of Into The Badlands is exactly what I wanted from the first.
