The Walking Dead 5×05 Review: Self Help

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The fifth episode of Walking Dead season five focused entirely on the group that’s already on their way to Washington – Abraham, Rosita, Eugene, Glenn, Maggie, and Tara. Of course I wish that we could have learned more about what all of the other characters are up to, but I was pleasantly surprised at how most of “Self Help” was handled…including the “big reveal” at the end.

But more on that later – first things first, we finally got to see some relationship-esque interactions between Abraham and Rosita. Yes, they’re together in the comics, but up until now the show has treated their relationship as a secondary thing (if that). But in the first scene they are natural, almost laid-back – as are most of the other characters.

Except, of course, Eugene. He’s always been awkward, but in “Self Help” he was so obviously uncomfortable that it was hard to not know that things weren’t going to continue on that positive track – it wasn’t going to be a trip full of music and mullet jokes.walking-dead5-665x385

At first I actually thought that Abraham was distracted by the walkers and hit something, causing the accident that ended their happy travels – I was definitely surprised that Eugene was already sabotaging things, and also that he almost readily admitted as much to Tara. Unfortunately for him, Abraham isn’t easily swayed, and Glenn keeps his promises. Despite the fact that they were only fifteen miles from the church, they kept going.

Even when they stopped for the night and Rosita suggested that they stay in the bookstore and scour the surrounding area for supplies, it didn’t take much for Abraham to convince her otherwise. Almost immediately after he argued with her, others suggested staying, and Rosita was pretty forceful in backing Abraham’s decision to keep going.

One thing I’m torn about is this episode’s pacing. There were several scenes featuring one-on-one conversations (Tara and Eugene on the bus, Glenn and Abraham in the bookstore, etc.) that could have been cut or timed better; they gave a disjointed feel to an episode that had some good tension and great zombie action.

abraham-the-walking-dead-self-help-trailer-hints-at-something-rotten-in-dcAlthough at first I thought the overall focus of “Self Help” would be on Eugene and his story, in the end it was far more about Abraham. Yes, Eugene has finally admitted that he’s lying, he’s not a scientist, and he doesn’t have a cure, but it’s Abraham’s reaction that is most poignant. When combined with the flashbacks – which Talking Dead revealed was Abraham losing his family after they were assaulted by people who were supposed to be his friends – it’s clear that there’s a lot more to Abraham than we know. The question is, will he – or any of them – be able to move on from this?

“Self Help” closed with the travelers still out in the open, without a vehicle, and in my opinion far too close to a very large horde of zombies…and of course we’re still in the dark about what’s going on with Carol and Beth and about who is with Daryl (quick thought: perhaps it’s actually Noah from last week’s episode?). With just three episodes left before the mid-season finale, I hope that some of these loose ends are tied up soon.

Author: Tara Lynne

Tara Lynne is an author, fandom and geek culture expert, and public speaker. She founded Ice & Fire Con, the first ever Game of Thrones convention in the US, and now runs its parent company Saga Event Planning.


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5 thoughts on “The Walking Dead 5×05 Review: Self Help

  1. I honestly thought the episode was going to end with Abraham shooting himself like he attempted to do in the flashback scene, then the sound of the gunshot drawing that huge herd towards them. I’m happier that it ended somewhat open ended and with Abaraham just on his knees having a personal revelation. I don’t want him to die, despite the fact that he killed people, and I really want them to pick up the pieces to move forward.

    I haven’t read the comics, but if Eugene manages to survive that I’m going to be shocked. That was a pretty brutal head injury. It’s actually giving me a headache thinking about it. Despite all the gore and rotting corpses, him getting socked in the nose and bleeding out like that is what made me flinch and turn away from the screen.

    1. Well, Abraham clearly has a HUGE temper/anger management problem, but there’s still so much we don’t know about his past…though we know he was in the army, and now we also know that he lost his family. In case you didn’t watch Talking Dead, Michael Cudlitz explained that what happened is, Abraham and his family were holed up with neighbors/friends of theirs from before the ZA. Abraham went on a supply run and when he returned he found that his family had been assaulted by these people who’d supposedly been his friends…so he went nuts and killed them. That’s why he was telling his family that “it” would never happen again :-/

      1. Yeah I don’t watch that and that totally wasn’t clear. Wonder if they’ll make that more clear in the future or assume that everyone watches TD? It just seemed like a random bashing without that clarification.

        1. I agree, i don’t watch the Talking Dead and so it did feel a bit random to me, maybe they will explain more as the series moves….the Eugene reveal was awesome, i knew about him from the comics but i wasn’t expecting it to happen this soon…even though i liked the episode, i couldn’t help but wish to know more about what happened to Carol…she has become my favorite and i could watch episodes just about her saving people and killing zombies :)…as for Glenn, i wish he became his awesome self like he was when the series started.

      2. I also don’t watch TD, and so when this was happening, I was thinking that Abraham had a dark, (domestic) abusive side and that’s why his family was so afraid. I predicted early on that Abraham latched onto Eugene’s mission when he had nothing else, which is why he felt so strongly about said mission. Also, I felt like I was profiling Eugene all along, but I’m glad to know that it wasn’t unjustified.

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