"Fear the Walking Dead" Pilot (TV Episode 2015) Poster

(TV Series)

(2015)

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9/10
Strong start to a much anticipated new series
john-webb-970-87931824 August 2015
Forget all the one and two star reviews they are just from trolls and attention seekers. This is a terrific new show and if anything has a stronger first episode than the Walking Dead had.

It is like the Walking Dead character driven as much as it is plot driven. If you want a plot driven show with cardboard characters this is not it. Like the Walking Dead you are invited to get to know people so that when some of them git bitten you feel the loss and it is not just a quick jump out of the seat when the zombie gets his man.

The characters are interesting and I suspect that the weakest when the world is normal such as the fat kid and the drugged up son will end up being the resilient ones once things turn ugly.

The slow realization of what is happening is also realistically portrayed although I did wonder if at this stage people were turning once bitten as opposed to turning at the point of death. If the turn is just at the point of any random death then morgues would be overrun with zombies one would think within a day of the outbreak. All in all this is a great new show.
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7/10
Walking Dead is better, but this show has potential to be great with time
serbian_00723 August 2015
Was the opening episode perfect? No. Were there things missing from the plot that I hoped would be included in the episode? Yes, Yes, Yes, but maybe these things will come in episode 2? We'll see. Was it enjoyable overall? Yes. I like the original Walking Dead with Rick waking up in the hospital much better as a series opener. However, if we are honest looking back, season 1 of the Walking Dead wasn't all that great either; only the first episode was really mind blowing and memorable, so let's try to be fair with this prequel and not come to any hasty conclusions.

In my opinion there was FEAR in this opening episode and I still feel hopeful for a great season. My heart was pounding in my chest, and I was taking slow shall breaths in the early scenes. After the midway point, though, my excitement level kind of waned and the story felt a little off point. I began to nitpick the acting, the setting, the characters, and the lack of depth in the story a little bit near the end, not to mention that none of the characters except one (Nick) were at all interesting to me. Nick reminds me a lot of Daryl; that's probably why he's my favourite character so far. The family is highly dysfunctional, yes, but kind of boring too, if we are honest - except Nick. I don't know, I guess a typical 'boring' family is kind of the whole point of the series so we'll see where this goes.

This was a character driven episode, which some people might hate. Fear the Walking Dead has promise and I think a few more episodes will either make it or break it for the fans. Let's stay tuned until then and revisit my rating after watching a few more episodes. Who knows, maybe we'll find out that Daryl is somehow Nick's biological father and then we'll get a crossover episode with sonny coming home to daddy. Now that would be interesting - sarcasm intended. (Seriously though, I do like Nick, and Daryl).
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8/10
While Rick was sleeping
fredschaefer-406-62320423 August 2015
Warning: Spoilers
If some viewers were expecting an explosive start to FEAR THE WALKING DEAD similar to the pilot episode of TWD, then they were sorely disappointed, instead, the companion series opener took its time setting the table, so to speak, for the Zombie Apocalypse. The only sightings of Walkers in the show's 90 minutes came in the opening and the closing scenes. That is how it should be, for if FTWD is about the end of civilization, then we have to get a good feel for what is about to be lost and what the main characters have that is about to be snatched away from them. Moreover, for all those who are complaining abut a slow pace, I suggest they go back and watch some episodes of season two of TWD when Rick and the gang were whiling away the time on Hershel's farm.

The plot of this pilot episode introduces us to Madison Clark, played by Kim Dickens and Travis Manawa, played by Cliff Curtis, two Venice, California high school teachers who are in love and attempting to blend their families. He has a surly teenage son, played by Lorenzo James Henrie, who lives with his Mom and doesn't want to visit for the weekend, while she is the parent to a high school aged daughter, Alisa Debnam-Carey, who is a good student with a boyfriend, and a very problematic son named Nick, a professional heroin addict. There have been lots of snide "Brady Bunch" comments, but this episode takes its time to let us get to know this family and their fault lines, while showing them going about their daily routine, oblivious to the apocalypse that is only days away. I think the writers made a concerted effort to make everybody seem very ordinary; there isn't a Rick, a Shane, or a Darryl in sight.

And that is where the tension arises from in the story, for we in the audience have the advantage of knowing what they do not: that the dead are about to rise and devour the living; that one scratch or bite will mean certain death; that the only way to kill a Walker is a head shot; that everyone is already infected. When a patient goes into cardiac arrest, we know what is going to happen, but he doctors and nurses have no idea; a viral video of police unloading on a patient who attacked paramedics at a traffic accident might look like police brutality, but we know that only a bullet to the head will make the difference. Madison and Travis are what the characters on TWD once were-simple people getting through life; we never really got to see that on the original show and we wonder what is in store for this family down the road and what will be the price they will have to pay for survival.

If anyone saw GONE GIRL, then they know what a good actress Kim Dickens already is, I hope this show will really showcase her; same for Cliff Curtis, who has been very good as a supporting actor in a lot of things over the last decade, RUNAWAY JURY comes to mind. For me, the standout performance came form Frank Dillane as the heroin addicted screw up, Nick, the first person in the show who gets a glimpse of a Walker. Nick appears to be a hopeless case with no survival skills once everything hits the fan, but I'm rooting for him to surprise us, one of the joys of disaster fiction is watching characters rise (or fall) to the challenge.

Again, the pacing was slow, especially the scenes with Nick wondering around LA looking to get his fix, and there were at least two big fake outs when we thought the Walkers were about to raise their ugly heads. But one of the most intriguing parts of TWD has always been the hints they've dropped about how it all went down in the early days of the Zombie Apocalypse-think of the flashbacks in Season One of Shane futilely trying to save the comatose Rick at the hospital or Lorie, Shane, Carl, Carole and Ed's adventure on the gridlocked highway to Atlanta. They always left us wanting to know much more, and in FEAR THE WALKING DEAD, we're finally getting to know what happened while Rick was sleeping.

And that diner where Nick goes to meet Chris his pusher, looks an awfully lot like the one Sam Jackson and John Travolta visited in PULP FICTION.
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10/10
So intense and such a cool new perspective on the apocalypse.
sohomp24 August 2015
I think it was Great! I don't get the people comments, specially when we know that "Fear the Walking Dead" is THE BEGINNING. In fact, I wasn't expecting to see a zombie in the first episode; but I think what we saw was enough. I really liked the characters with their family issues. And I also liked the tone and mood of the pilot. I liked a lot of things from it, specially the video that goes "viral" on-line. It seems to me that the fear at the beginning will be more like a PARANOIA without people knowing what it is really going on. They will feel exactly like the boy when he woke up and he thought he was hallucinating. It seems to me that is good spin-off and it will give us lots of answers. The connections are already there!

I love this pilot mainly because it reminds us of fear which is the title. We're used to the survivors who have had to do some of the worst things in order to survive, this is a chance to create a show based on the fear of losing everything rather than based on source material. Everyone who wants to immediately hate the show because it's another cash grab shut up. Robert Kirkman has the ability to create another side of his universe. Let's let him do it.
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10/10
Some of the best Televsion I have ever watched. The perfect Opening.
jseph1234-262-6174889 August 2020
I have found this series to be an EXCELLENT introduction to the The Walking Dead universe. I much prefer it to the original series and I am glad I began my viewing with this Pilot.

Poignant and believable characters thrown into a world gone mad.
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6/10
Deceptive Pilot
claudio_carvalho21 December 2015
Warning: Spoilers
The hooked Nick sees his mignon friend Gloria eating another man in the joint where he is living and her runs to the street and he is hit by a car. His mother Madison Clark and his stepfather Travis Manawa go to the hospital where he is under custody of the police. Madison is the principal of a high-school where her daughter Alicia is a student and Travis is one of the teacher and they return to work. Nick flees from the hospital and Madison and Travis seek him out. Travis goes to the place where Nick claims that Gloria has eaten a man and he finds gore in the spot. Nick contacts his friend and drug dealer Calvin that tries to kill him. They fight and Calvin dies with a shot. Nick calls Travis and he comes with Madison to meet Nick. When they go to see Calvin, they see him walking. But soon they learn that something is really wrong with Calvin.

Pilots of TV Series usually are engaging to attract the attention of potential viewers. "Fear the Walking Dead" has a weird title, using the huge success of "The Walking Dead" to go up in the ratings. However, the episode is boring, showing a dysfunctional family in the lead roles. My vote is six.

Title (Brazil): "Pilot"
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10/10
Frank's acting in this episode is unbelivable!
jay-842504 October 2021
What an amazing opener, this is easily my favourite episode of all TWD franchises!

What an amazing start.

Love watching the world slowly burn.
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7/10
Stable Beginning of a Walking Dead Prequel
ZegMaarJus14 May 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This first episode of Fear the Walking Dead was not perfect, it was okay, you get a family feeling with a little bit of horror in the beginning and in the end.

A more soft start then The Walking Dead.
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9/10
Ambitious, diffrent, colorful and what a setting
wilter-1046213 October 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This episode spawned 10 million viewers in ita first episode. I dont think theres any other show who's first episode spawned so many views. Obviously its because of fears older, popular and slightly more scared brother, TWD. But fear did something the walking dead never did. Showed us the start. And yes we only get a few walkers but hey. Gloria was a valiant attempt at making an iconic walker from your pilot. Similar to bicycle girl; and just seeing these characters and the phycological impact they're all having over this. I mean maddison and nick in particular when they embraced/comforted one another over the many crazy walker related moments I mean it goes to show just what you can do with a zombie show. Yes it enables certain cliches and skims through more then what we would want to see but I personally think this show started off slower then what people wanted but ultimately was great for its diffrent perspective. We've all seen Rick's awakening, but Nick's was cool in it's own way visually (hes got a nice back ;) ) even the audio was pretty good for a tv show. Posi vibes even though I know what happens in season 4 with these characters. . .
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7/10
OK start, with or without Walking Dead knowledge
jptilley15 September 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Last night, "Fear the Walking Dead" started. I haven't watched season 5 of Walking Dead yet, but it's my understanding that this companion series is watchable for anyone; although, if you haven't watched Walking Dead at all, you just won't have as much information, and it may not be as fun.

AMC's Walking Dead spin off has a title that already gives us more information than the original series by telling us we need to fear the zombies. In case, you know, you weren't sure whether dead people trying to eat your face is supposed to be scary.

But scary isn't really a good description for what we've seen so far. Fear is instead portrayed through lack of information — on the part of the characters, not the viewer. Because we know what's about to happen to the world as they know it, we're put in god-like spot of wondering how long it will take for everything to break down.

We're in the same world, but a new location — L.A. — providing some fun new scenery (drug church with cool lighting flowing in, palm trees, street art, etc.). Freshening things up with a new setting helps bring out the realization that this is happening everywhere, and so far we've only seen one subset of that.

There's no horror in the first reveal of a zombie, because there's not much groundwork to lay here. Even for new viewers, there has to be a general understanding that at some point there's going to be a zombie apocalypse. I found myself expecting anyone facing away to spin around and be a zombie, but that fades after some obvious fake-outs.

Because it's set some time before the beginning of Walking Dead, we quickly see that, despite many people supposedly having some kind of flu and a few walkers popping up and scaring the bejesus out of young junkies who look like they wish they were Johnny Depp in the '90s, things are fairly normal in the world. Regular life is the main narrative, instead of being represented in flashbacks. There's regular-life drama — work, missing junkie kid, teen love, split family dynamics — to serve as a framework to slow things down and spread out the reveal of what's going on, helping create tension and anxiety.

I found a few moments eye-roll-worthy, such as the Jack London lesson in English class when a student scoffs at needing to learn how to survive (because we know how much that skill will come in handy very soon). But the pilot has some creatively subtle moments, too, including a hospital code that uses slow motion off and on, and the scramble of teachers and kids leaving school in a routine, herd-like manner.

At the end of the pilot, you'll probably be guessing at who's going to survive or get separated or eat someone. Don't expect any hordes of zombies to attack in this first episode, but enjoy the slow burn of watching things unfold.

If that's not enough to make you want to watch, then give it a chance for creepy kid, who doesn't care if he's hurting his chances at getting into a good college, especially after a viral video surfaces of a suspect shot by police who just won't die. Creepy boy says: "No one's going to college. No one's doing anything they think they are." He's a bit much, but still entertaining.

Read more at http://koala-infestation.com
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9/10
"Fear the Walking Dead," but Crave the Next Episode!
ericrnolan24 August 2015
The pilot of AMC's prequel to its little known zombie TV show was just great! I'd give it a 9 out of 10.

It looks as though "Fear the Walking Dead" will be a smartly scripted horror drama with relatable, realistic, three-dimensional characters -- something I think "The Walking Dead" has often stumbled with. (My fan friends strongly disagree.) The cast was quite good across the board -- but especially Frank Dillane, whose performance as a heroin addict with tragic recognition was just outstanding. And "Fear" shows fans of the zombie horror sub-genre exactly what the vast majority of movies fail to examine -- what happens when an epidemic is in its infancy. No, there are none of the zombie "swarms" that are the bane of Rick Grimes and company, but the "slow burn" horror here delivers nicely.

I am on board with this.

Hey ... when Dillane's addict character starts screaming at the character of "Gloria" in the abandoned church, am I the only one who started humming Laura Branigan's "Gloria?"
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7/10
A Decent First Episode
panagiotis199313 December 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Travis went back to the place where Nick was doing drugs, disgusting I would never go back there, a filthy place full of used needles. At least now I know that Nick wasn't hallucinating or something. The only character that I found to be interesting was Nick, he is really troubled and the fact that he killed Calvin made his character even more interesting. I loved how in the last scene Calvin was there as a zombie trying to eat them, great way to end the episode. So ok after watching the pilot I think that this episode was some very decent build up for what is going to happen next. Good performances but I couldn't really feel the connection to the characters, but it is only the first problem so I'll have to be patient. But still I already really like Nick's character. Good first episode, my rating is 7.5/10.
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1/10
Okay but on schedule here come the 'Walking Dead' fan base...
jordan-maxwell23 August 2015
Although this was a partly thrilling thriller, i was still bothered by a number of things.

1) the 2-D characters, obviously cliché, and typical family story line of the broken family becoming stronger thanks to a zombie apocalypse.

2) Acting by the young leads was as wooden as the spoon I used to make my scrambled eggs this morning. I'm not expecting Marlon Brando or Tom Hanks, but maybe place acting over appearance in the job description?

3) no likable characters, the main female lead was probably the best, but other than that I had no desire for anyone to survive. Not like Rick and Morgan in the pilot of the 'Walking Dead'.

4) Predictable as well, which is okay for this type of TV show but doesn't match up the unpredictability and coherency of the writing from that of 'Breaking Bad' and 'the Sopranos'.

5) The intense fan base from 'the Walking Dead' that want to rate this show a 10 just...well because.

Again I'm sure this will be a fun show, but not a great one. Like walking dead it's entertaining and is easy to watch, but I can see this show in particular proving that special effect, attractive actors, and a good old but of action is the priority over clear concise writing and in-depth character development. But hey I hope to be proved wrong as we still have a few weeks left until the finale.
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9/10
What a start to this series telling how it all began before The Walking Dead.
maureen_smith525 April 2016
Warning: Spoilers
As a avid fan of The Walking Dead who has seen every episode to date I was very excited to hear of this series telling how the zombie apocalypse began in the first place before Rick Grimes woke up in a hospital bed and I have to say if it continues to be this superb it could well match TWD in the long run.

It starts in a tension filled style as junkie Nick Clark(a mesmerising Frank Dillane,a Johnny Depp lookalike)wakes up in his abandoned church drug den and after searching for his girlfriend Gloria(Lexi Johnson)he finds her downstairs but she is longer herself as he is stunned to see she is eating a person on the floor leading to Nick fleeing for his life as she comes towards him next but in confusion he is run over.

Nick wakes up in hospital to find his family surrounding him,his teacher mother Madison(Kim Dickins),sister Alicia(Alycia Debnam Carey)and stepdad Travis Manawa(top actor Cliff Curtis).When his mother and sister are gone Nick tells Travis of just what he saw not knowing himself if it happened or it was the drugs talking.Seeing how scared Nick is Travis investigates the church and is amazed to find blood and gore in the spot Gloria was before(no sign of her btw)meaning Nick was telling the truth.

The school Madison works has to close as many are off sick but of course its the walker(zombie)apocalypse beginning to take hold and after a conversation with a strange pupil Madison knows something is very wrong.

Madison and Travis find Nick has discharged himself and are furious with the hospital whilst Nick visits a friend who is a drug dealer to ask for more stuff and breaks down in his arms,his friend Calvin(Keith Powers)agrees to help but is tricking Nick and after he tries to shoot Nick at a underpass Calvin is accidentally shot dead himself.

Finally Madison and Travis find Nick rambling and saying he shot Calvin after Calvin pulled the gun out on him,they investigate but find no sign of Calvin's dead body by his car.They begin to leave in Travis's truck but stop suddenly when the supposed dead Calvin is reanimated and lumbering in front of them,after Nick urges his mother and stepdad to stay away from the now zombie Calvin they nearly get bit before Nick repeatedly runs Calvin over in the truck but all three are stunned to see Calvin turn his head to look at them leaving them terrified.

We can't go on without talking about Frank Dillane's Nick,yes others are excellent(get onto them soon)but this was a truly outstanding performance by someone relatively unknown but will be destined for greatness(and not just because he looks like a young Johnny Depp,its uncanny guys)who convinces greatly as a junkie who's struggle without the drugs are taken over by his fear of what is slowly happening around him and after that blistering opening scene we see straight away of this boys talents.Seeing him cry hard on the shoulders of Calvin,being lost for words at a zombified Gloria(and later Calvin)and best of all trying to tell Travis what he saw will give any viewer goosebumps at this guys acting ability and I had a tear a few times at both his drug urges and his realisation both to himself and others of just what is beginning to happen to the world around them,what a star he could be.

The rest of the cast even Curtis are overshadowed by Dillane,that's not to say they are not excellent(we see them better in episode two)with Dickins teacher helping her students(including one Tobias who tries to warn her about zombies early on)and be a good mother,Carey as stroppy teen Alicia who seems happier around her boyfriend Matt(Maestro Harrell)but cares dearly for her family and of course the excellent Curtis as Travis a caring person who is trying to look after his new family and his own son Chris(Lorenzo James Henrie)whilst struggling to realise the things he is seeing happening before a zombified Calvin convinces him which sees both him and Madison at the end of the episode both look at each other in shock trying to fathom a dead person walking about even after being run over countless times.

Like its bigger brother predecessor FTWD focuses on superb acting and its characters probably more than the zombie carnage but even for a first episode there is enough action/horror to keep you gripped and its the absorbing opening scene that gets it going in style with a spaced out Nick slowly going through the drug den seeing dead bodies in doorways before he comes across his now zombie girlfriend gorging on another body,it really is a supreme way to start a pilot episode and I was truly scared watching it(something TWD never really makes me feel,does at times though).Other moments I loved were the foreshadowing this episode was doing for the future including seeing a keep out sign at the church,Madison seeing a person walk slowly through a park(had to be a zombie)and missing notes plastered about the city plus liked how in one episode the beautiful Los Angeles city went from bright and sparkling to a more creepy place as people disappeared and the first zombies appear and how there is no going back.The ending sequence matched the opening as the family face off with the now zombie Calvin who does not want to die despite being run over again and again and his slow look at them at the end could give you nightmares like them.

What a start to this prequel series that perfectly sets up the events of TWD with a brilliant set of new characters headlined by a star making performance by Dillane,foreshadowing of what's to come,tension that grips like a vice,a for now beautiful LA and the first of the dead who will roam the planet.A job well done again to Robert Kirkman.
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10/10
A great
silvestrefilho23 August 2015
Warning: Spoilers
A great start , everything seems slow, too slow , and so it goes , in no time the episode wanted to be walking dead , but an epidemic movie with a big load dramatically with no exaggerated characters , not seen many zombies , but enough to show that the series will focus on the issue of epidemic , expect to continue in this rhythm and go evolving.

The series begins with showing one of the central character in an abandoned church, there he would contact the first zombie is stunned taken to hospital after being hit , we are introduced to the other three central characters . Maybe what I have found most interesting in these characters , is which Comm they are fragile people with problems and family , distant , unhappy dramas , but still with a sense of logic about things that you'll notice in the final scene .
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7/10
This episode was mostly dead. Not a great start for the series.
ivyleague9291 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
When civilization ends, it ends fast. Not so fast, Tobias (Lincoln Castellanos). This episode shows that, with its slow burn approach. Created by Robert Kirkman and Dave Erickson, Fear the Walking Dead is the second television Zombie Apocalypse show in The Walking Dead franchise. However, while The Walking Dead is an adaptation of the original comic of the same name by Robert Kirkman, Fear the Walking Dead is instead an original story featuring innovative characters created by Kirkman for the show. Further distinguishing this show from its mother show is its premise and place in the timeline. While The Walking Dead's main plot kicks off two months into the apocalypse, this series showcase the outbreak in its early days, as news reports begin to come in of a strange virus sweeping the country. What follows is the struggle of a Los Angeles family to survive during the ensuing mass hysteria and chaos of the collapse of society as the dead begin to rise. It sounds pretty good, but this companion prequel isn't living up to the hype. It feels more like a crime drug drama, than a horror show. Honestly, this show also had one of the most lackluster show intro ever. It even lacks creepy music to start it off. I really don't get, how chronicling the first weeks of the outbreak could be so dull, but somehow this episode did, just that. This episode was long and boring. Sadly, I don't think, the writers did, enough to impress the fan-base, or the casual viewer with this pilot episode. Directed by Adam Davidson, this pilot tells mostly the story of Nick Clark (Frank Dillane), a drug-addict whom is trying to figure out, if the brutal things that he saw, was a heroin hallucination or not. This episode also features his family, his mother Madison played by Kim Dickens, Travis (Cliff Curtis), her boyfriend, who has an ex-wife and son), his sister Alicia (Alycia Debnam-Carey), all trying to figure out, if he's telling the truth about the end of days or if it's a drug-trick. All the actors are doing a good job, so far. The supporting cast not so much. They weren't so memorable. Nothing worth noting. They gave so & so performances. After all, the first episode is normally the introduction to the main cast. Another problem of doing a prequel episode is how obviously cliché, and predictable, it can be. I know that a lot of critics might hate these characters for doing stupid stuff, but let's remember, in the setting of this show, nobody ever heard of a zombie. Don't be surprised if they do, a lot of stupid things. It can be frustrating waiting for the character to catch up. Anyways, that wasn't my beef, against the first episode. It's not, even because the episode lacks zombies. It's more about, how the writers miss some really great opportunities in situations that would put all the main characters in potential dangers. The episode really needed some more action. Honestly, they should had Nick tied down on the hospital bed, while the old man besides him turns. That would had work. By the way, what type of nurse, would untied a dangerous patient restraints like that and then leave. It makes no sense. Then acts, like a b*tch and dismissive to Madison and Travis when they come in looking for him. Also, what the hell, happen to Gloria (Lexi Johnson)!? Wouldn't it, make sense, for her to confront Travis at the church? Instead, she just disappears. How did she escape? The church is mostly gated in. Unlike The Walking Dead pilot, there's only a few notable scenes of gore, here in the Fear the Walking Dead pilot. Most of them were somewhat off-screen or view in a far distance shot. It doesn't revel in the horror. The man on the highway getting shot was perform somewhat cheesy. It was a bit laughable. It was also a bit off that everybody would be, watching it on their phone in HD, unless everybody at the school has a death lust. I physically cringed at the same time in response to the dialogue, a sensation I had never experienced before and never hope to again. I really didn't like what Alicia's female classmate said. It's not believable. A young female woman would never have that type of reaction to seeing real-life violence. A young guy, maybe, but not a young female unless she's a psychopath. Just saying. Also, that viral video is little too clear, for what I believe is supposed to set in 2010, but who knows, it can be any year. I like how, they are working in, a bit of social commentary here with the police zombie shootings, but the obvious shades of growing controversy of police brutality was a few years, too early if it set the same time, Walking Dead was. Still, I do like the foreshadowing that Fear the Walking Dead does, not only for next episode, but a few more episodes coming up. Sadly, the ending of Fear the Walking Dead pilot was so anti-climax, compare to the Tank scene in Walking Dead 2010's 'Days Gone Bye', Episode. Being associated with The Walking Dead is a blessing and a curse for the show. I know that the co-branding title, allow Fear the Walking Dead to have the largest TV audience history for a pilot TV show, but it also means, that character driven episode like this, would have to step up to make it, enjoyable. Sadly, I didn't felt like they did. The 2013's Video game The Last of Us gets you more connected to the characters in the opening scene then 90 minutes of this pilot. Fear the Walking Dead has promise in the writing department and I think a few more episodes will either make it or break it. This show has potential. I just wish, the writing was better than what I saw, so far.
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10/10
Pilot was Awesome!
ScottVKS8 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Do not, i repeat, do not let these One Star reviews spoil the fun of this show! It is extraordinary, and by next season it will be such a beautiful creation!

Robert Kirkman sure did shake the industry with his excellent graphic novels and executing it perfectly to a TV show, make that two TV shows! I love how there's nothing tacky or phony about it, it feels so dark and serious which i love! 2 guns up for Robert Kirkman and pulling off the "infected/dead/zombie" genre, i hope it lasts as long as it can!

There was a lot of buzz surrounding the companion series and prequel to AMC's wildly popular The Walking Dead. Was it worth the hype though? Absolutely! Fear the Walking Dead's premiere snagged an staggering 13.96 million viewers, the highest ranked debut of a cable series ever. By the show's 3rd episode, that number had dropped to 11.6. Still an impressive feat for a show's debut season. All the buzz hits a boiling point in the first season finale.

People complained that the show's debut season, comprised of 6 episodes, moved at too slow of a pace, but people seem to be forgetting that Fear the Walking Dead is set during the early stages of Kirkman's zombie apocalypse. The Walking Dead didn't pick up the pace until the show's third season. Showrunners Robert Kirkman and Dave Erickson had to take a new approach to a storyline that we've all become accustomed to having seen 5 season's of The Walking Dead. We, as viewers, are witnessing the beginning of the apocalypse through the eyes of a dysfunctional blended family, even more dysfunctional than The Walking Dead's Grimes family. For viewers of the show that haven't read Kirkman's comic books on which the show is based on, it wasn't until the end of the series' second season that we found out anyone who dies comes back as a mindless, flesh eating cannibal. This revelation was brought to light during Fear the Walking Dead's pilot episode. This is a focal plot point of the series. Our cast of survivors on Fear are still learning the ropes, and, on more every occasion, try to reason with their friends who've died and came back as walkers.

While The Walking Dead focuses on what Rick Grimes would do to protect his family, Fear the Walking Dead shares a similar focal point but shifts the focus to a point in time where society is beginning its downward spiral. By the time Grimes' finds his family in The Walking Dead's 3rd episode, the apocalypse has been going on for a few months. Fear the Walking Dead, being set during the initial outbreak, gives us a chance to witness these characters come to terms with life as the lights are going out.

The Pilot episode i thought was right on the money! Not moving too fast nor too slow!

I enjoyed every second! Keep it coming Robert Kirkman!
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6/10
Review 1.1 Not quite Autopilot.
southdavid3 May 2018
With the conclusion of Season eight of the main show, I've decided to fill the zombie shaped whole in my life by watching the spin off show "Fear The Walking Dead".

The pilot revolves around one family, the always brilliant Kim Dickins plays Madison Clark whose two children Nick and Alycia are very different. Alycia is preparing to escape her life by heading to Berkley and Nick too is escaping his life, though via the much more dangerous route of taking heroin. It's Nick who proves our introduction to the world, stumbling across a zombie attack and ending up hospitalised and nearly sectioned as he attempts to come to terms with what he's seen. The families search for him, whilst the realisation dawns that all is not right in the world, is the thrust of this first episode.

So the pilot is, for my money, a little too slow moving. There's isn't really enough story to justify that run time and there's a balance required in establishing characters before putting them at risk to make you care, and I'm not sure it really gets it right. It has a reveal at the end of the opening scene that we are back at a time when the apocalypse is starting out, that I assume was quite the reveal at the time it first aired, but unfortunately it was information I already had prior to seeing the show.

None of the characters seem initially to be particularly annoying at this early stage and even the well tread dynamic of children being resentful of a step parent doesn't seem to be as worn out as usual. I don't have much of an idea of where the series is going from here, but I'm certainly interested in watching the next one.
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10/10
A fantastic season premiere
sultanafatimah8 May 2021
Having a drug addict to be one of the first people to see the undead is a brilliant concept for a zombie apocalyptic show that's meant to be realistic...

The family dynamic is so realistic and the dialogue is really really human unlike later seasons where we have to deal with Gimple speak.
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7/10
This pilot episode is a promising start to the series, setting up an intriguing premise and introducing compelling characters
fernandoschiavi8 April 2024
Drug addict Nick Clark awakes in an abandoned church where he finds his girlfriend, who appears dead, eating another person before running into the street and getting hit by a car. His mother, Madison, and stepfather, Travis Manawa, arrive and don't believe his story, convinced it was hallucinogenic. They eventually go to the church and find no girlfriend but a dead, eaten, corpse. Later on, Nick escapes the hospital and calls his friend and dealer Calvin.

Madison goes to work as a guidance counselor and one of the students, Tobias, brings a knife to school and shares his fears of the virus; and how it's apparently making people kill and the government is trying cover it up. More students end up not showing up the next day and Madison beings wondering if Tobias was right.

The pilot episode of Fear the Walking Dead serves as a strong introduction to the prequel series, setting the stage for the events that will unfold in the early days of the zombie apocalypse. The episode focuses on introducing the main characters, particularly the dysfunctional Clark-Manawa family, and establishing their relationships and dynamics. We see the world through their eyes as they go about their daily lives, unaware of the impending disaster.

One of the most impactful scenes is when Nick, the troubled son of Madison Clark, witnesses a gruesome attack that hints at the chaos to come. This scene effectively sets the tone for the series, highlighting the horror and uncertainty of the new world the characters will soon inhabit. The episode also touches on themes of family, addiction, and the breakdown of society, laying the groundwork for the deeper exploration of these themes in future episodes.

Overall, the pilot episode of Fear the Walking Dead is a promising start to the series, setting up an intriguing premise and introducing compelling characters. It effectively sets the stage for the horror and drama to come, leaving viewers eager to see how the characters will survive in the face of the growing apocalypse.

After explaining his problem to Calvin, Nick wonders if the drugs made him see things. Fearing Nick will sell him out, Calvin takes him to an underpass intending to kill him but Nick shoots him in the middle of a scuffle. Madison and Travis arrive and witness Calvin's body rise up and snarl and attempt to bite at them. Despite Nick running him over again and again, Calvin continues to come at them.
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10/10
Masterpiece
senoralala10 May 2021
The first episode is simply brilliant, and the character dynamics is so realistic and genuine.
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7/10
Pilot
rfgtdfgvdfg15 November 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Im gonna start rating every Fear The Walking Dead episode.

1x1 Rating: 7.3/10

Storyline: Drug addict Nick Clarke (Dillane) sees his friend Gloria eating another man in the drug den where he is staying, frightening him and causing him to run into the street and be hit by a car. His mother, Madison (Dickens), and his stepfather Travis Manawa (Curtis) go to the hospital where he is under close watch by the police. Madison is the guidance counselor of a high-school where her daughter Alicia (Debnam-Carey) is a student and Travis is one of the teachers, and they return to school as normal. Nick flees from the hospital and Madison and Travis later seek him out. Travis goes to the place where Nick claims that Gloria has eaten a man and he finds gore in the spot. Nick contacts his friend and drug dealer Calvin that tries to kill him. They fight and Calvin dies with a shot. Nick calls Travis and he comes with Madison to meet him. When they go to see Calvin, they see him up and walking around, but soon they learn that something is really wrong with Calvin. They watch in disbelief as the city of Los Angeles descends into utter chaos around them.
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5/10
Slightly promising, but mediocre for a pilot
erikersson24 August 2015
To be honest, if this show wasn't tagged with "Walking dead" you guys wouldn't be watching the next episodes.

Writing this I have to add the fact that I'm a hardcore Walking Dead fan. Since this was supposed to be a pilot, everything was happening too slow. The times between the (few) chilling fears where too long. Too few plots where planted and the writers left a Little too much to the Viewers and the pre-knowledge of the Walking dead universe.

Sure Rick and the bunch wasn't too good of actors and into their roles in the first episodes but since more of the Fear cast are established actors I had hoped for more. Dialogue was just as bad as in the first episode of The Strain and that show got itself together later on. Probably Fear will too.

The Video game The Last of Us gets you more connected to the characters in the opening scene then 60 minutes of this pilot. Strangely enough since Kirkman bunch are good writers.

Nough nagging. Footage was very good. Tension in the few scary scenes too, they where just to few...I have high hopes for when hell is actually breaking loose and will stay tuned.
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8/10
It's not real. It can't be real.
reddiemurf8127 November 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Nick Clark (a 20ish year old young man with a heroin addiction) wakes up in an abandoned church in Los Angeles.

To the local drug addicts, the abandoned religious bldg serves as their shelter & hideout after they've scored their next fix from the dealer on the corner.

Nick reaches out for his girlfriend, Gloria, who nodded off beside him after they both shot up, but she is nowhere to be seen.

After stumbling around the abandoned bldg awhile, Nick hears a loud scream,, and then he finds a dead body. Neither of which are completely uncommon in this place,, but this person didn't o.d., they were killed (as evidenced by gaping wounds found on there body). This sends Nick into a panic (not certain if he's having a bad trip or not). To the point where he frantically searches for Gloria. He quickly finds her, bent over, facing the floor, convulsing. As Nick calls her name, telling her they have to leave, Gloria turns to face him, snarling! Nick falls backward as he sees his girlfriend, eyes bloodshot & dead, mouth dripping with the blood and flesh of the body she was feasting on, lumbering towards him. The Gloria he knew is gone. All that remains is a creature who wants to feed on him.

I remember hearing about The Walking Dead getting a spinoff/companion series, set somewhere else in the world from the Georgia/Virginia area. Being a giant fan of TWD series, I was psyched! After watching this episode when it came out, I knew that AMC had developed something good to pair with the original show.

Madison Clark, her two kids Nick & Alicia, and her boyfriend Travis find themselves in the middle of a zombie virus outbreak in Los Angeles (as if it were not a dangerous place to live already). Learning that the dead are re-animating and feeding on the living, how will they survive?
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1/10
No Fear Of The Walking Dead
Mandeth23 August 2015
Fear The Walking Dead was a huge letdown and my expectations were actually set pretty low to begin with. The show kept building to the climax moment when the central characters finally realize the dead are rising. And when it got to that point it was a weak finish. The characters actually reacted like it was no big deal. Like they had run over a dog or something. The rest of the show was forgettable and uneventful. 15 - 25 minutes of show stretched out over 90 minutes.

Walking Dead and now FTWD like to move along at a snail's pace. That means the viewer gets less bang for their time spent watching it and the creators get to do less and maintain a lower budget.

I'm not going to bother pointing at flaws, as if the pilot could've been better if this or that were different. Instead I'll write it off as a total waste of space. And the most lackluster intro to a zombie apocalypse I've seen in the zombie genre.

I give it 1 star because it failed to achieve any of it's goals.
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