Likewise, Clementine is establishing a bit of control herself. Control is his endgame, not just power, and he sets the stage for a bleak future for Clementine and her group – one that should prove to be full of violent revenge and no-win decisions in the coming episodes. He’s calm, calculated, and equally terrifying whether he’s talking to a little girl or torturing a man. Madsen is an actor who’s been known to chew through scenery, but in “A House Divided” his subdued performance as Carver is superb. Like Negan and The Governor in The Walking Dead comics, he will have major, memorable ramifications on Clementine and her crew. Clementine’s fascinating character arc continues down a dark hole, but this episode truly belongs to actor Michael Madsen and his character Carver, a villain with a quiet, terrifying menace. It’s one of the best episodes of the series to date. While the first episode focuses more on character development than plot, the second finds its direction, puts everything in context, and delivers a brutal, violent story that fractures the relationships established last time. Seeds sown in The Walking Dead: Season 2’s premiere don’t sprout in Episode 2, “A House Divided” - they explode like a bomb.
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