Stresses and tensions continue to grow beneath the placid surface of The Commonwealth, in an episode that sees Eugene’s life turned upside down just as he thought he had found happiness.
Since his introduction back in Season Four, the character of the high-school science teacher and self-taught engineer Eugene Porter has become one of the show’s most entertaining survivors. As intelligent as he is socially awkward, Eugene’s actions have often been motivated entirely by self-preservation. But he’s shown himself capable of resilience, bravery, and concern for others too. From the outset, Josh McDermitt has been superb in the role, able to make Eugene insufferable, endearing, manipulative, naive, and completely recognisable all at once, as his character has time and again been put through the wringer.
Life at The Commonwealth had seemed to deliver Eugene a personal reward for his perseverance: a new life with Stephanie – a soulmate that he made contact with over the radio from Alexandria, and who encouraged him to seek out her settlement. Yet in Rogue Element, just after the newly-content Eugene declares his love for Stephanie, she disappears without a trace. Convinced that she is being held against her will, Eugene recruits Princess to join his efforts to track down and free Stephanie. Eugene’s desperate search leads him to uncover more of The Commonwealth’s hidden secrets and the scale of Hornsby’s manipulation of the former Alexandrians.
Elsewhere the reverberations of the first challenge to Governor Milton’s rule revealed in New Haunts lead militia-man Mercer to doubt his unquestioning loyalty to the Commonwealth regime. Connie tests the limits of local press freedom, while Carol ingratiates herself further with Hornsby when she exposes criminal corruption in a farm community cultivating medicinal drugs. All of which confirms the showrunners’ intention to take their time uncovering the truth behind the Milton autocracy and moving the key players into position for the showdown to come.
Eugene makes for a predictably tenacious and single-minded investigator, and director Michael Cudlitz focuses attention on his efforts to peel away layers of deception and denial in what is a cleverly constructed script by David Leslie Johnson-McGoldrick. The personality of Eugene’s fellow detective Princess is shown to have softened considerably in recent months. The implication is that returning to life within a community has smoothed off the more kooky and oddball characteristics she developed in a life alone, as a psychological defence against the traumas she suffered. That’s a plausible enough explanation, but it would be a shame to see Princess lose any more of her eccentricity and impulsiveness.
The episode ends with surprises that leave Eugene spinning in confusion: revelations that suggest that Maggie and her compatriots may have made the right decision in choosing to keep their distance from the supposed ‘sanctuary’ of the Commonwealth.
New episodes of THE WALKING DEAD – SEASON 11 premiere Mondays in the UK on DISNEY+/STAR
Read our previous reviews of THE WALKING DEAD below:
Season 11, Episode 1, ACHERON: PART I
Season 11, Episode 2, ACHERON: PART II
Season 11, Episode 4, RENDITION
Season 11, Episode 5, OUT OF THE ASHES
Season 11, Episode 6, ON THE INSIDE
Season 11, Episode 7, PROMISES BROKEN
Season 11, Episode 8, FOR BLOOD