I spent the first chunk of this episode entertaining the possibility that the entire series could just be one long coma nightmare for Rick Grimes. It reminded me very much of the BBC pilot for Life on Mars, in that Grimes was in every scene up until he and Lennie James parted at the sheriff's station. It wasn't until we got the scene with Morgan's target practice from the upstairs bedroom that I put that theory to bed.
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Originally Posted by
Joe_H 
At the very beginning before the opening credits, he runs out of gas in his car and goes to a gas station... which ends up not having gas. But then later on, we see him run out of gas at the farm, from which he takes the horse. I'm assuming that the first instance happens chronologically before the time at the farm, but then that doesn't give any explanation of how he somehow managed to find gas and continue on.
He was probably running low when he saw the gas station sign, and decided to stop and check. He didn't finally run out until the farmhouse.
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Originally Posted by
joshEH 
I can't believe they blew a little zombie-girl's brains out in the first five minutes. I'm really curious about the rules for basic cable gore now, because that pilot easily tops
Breaking Bad's second episode, in terms of gratuitous splatter.
There are no rules for any cable. The FCC only has jurisdiction over the public airwaves. Any limitations on basic cable are self-imposed by each individual channel based on its image and what its advertisers are willing to associate their products with. I would not be surprised if some advertisers declined to advertise with this show because of the violence and gore. The premium cable stations like HBO and Showtime have a little bit freer hand because they don't have to justify themselves to advertisers, but there's no law preventing stations like AMC from showing and saying anything.
I loved the way they brought Grimes to the point of total isolation and despair, with him ready to drop a bullet in his brain, before finally letting us exhale with the call over the CB radio. He's no less trapped than he was a minute before, but just hearing another human voice makes it all seem bearable. The closing pullout shot from the tank to the sky, presumably the vantage point of the helicopter, was really well done because we got an overview of how the zombies swarm.
I grew up in a house in the middle of a field, and we had ant problems perennially every spring and fall. One spring, it's late at night and I'm feeling a hankering for a snack, so I grab the box of Honey Smacks from the top shelf of the pantry and plop down on the couch in the dark and start eating. The first thing I noticed was that all of the Smacks were clumped together for some reason. After a couple minutes, I noticed this tingling feeling all over both arms. I swipe one arm with my hand and feel things moving. I turn on the table lamp, and black ants are absolutely pouring out of the Smacks box up both of my arms, over my shirt, onto the couch. Just positively everywhere. It's the closest I've ever come to personally experiencing a horror movie moment. Turns out there was a gap in the back wall of the pantry, and they were attracted to the honey in the cereal. The way the zombie swarmed the dead horse reminded me very much of how the ants used to swarm bits of food, until you couldn't see whatever it was under the pulsating black mass.
It also explains why they don't go after each other: they require living flesh, for whatever reason, and their flesh is dead.