It's another year, and an entire new universe for "The Walking Dead," as the midseason finale for the AMC dramas's fourth season left Rick Grimes and the jail tenants scattered after their cellblock home was decimated by the Governor and his followers.


Also the pictures for Season 4, Part 2 — which debuts on Feb. 9 — affirms it, as Rick and son Carl walk together along railroad tracks under the slogan "Don't Look Back." 

Accompanying the midseason finale fight with the Governor — throughout which the enormous baddie fiercely killed adored vet/farmer Hershel and afterward was executed himself after a horrendous battle with Rick — Rick and his assembly were divided from one another as the jail was harmed and everybody fled in inquiry of another place of refuge. 

Managing Hershel's demise and the misfortune of the jail will move the survivors in the second 50% of the season, which showrunner Scott Gimple and "TWD" maker Greg Nicotero told us "will feel like an alternate show"

"It's quite, altogether different in structure, nature's domain, in circumstance. It truly simply couldn't be more not quite the same as the first 50% of the season," Gimple said. 

Included Nicotero, who guided the Feb. 9 midseason opening, "It will feel like an alternate show, due to the areas, in view of the circumstances that everybody's been put through, and due to who these characters are currently, having saw the pulverization of their home, and the butcher of somebody that they adored. …  Now that we're out in the world once more, its opened up an entire other venue.When you go back to Season 1, where we were encountering the walker-assaulted planet through Rick's voyage into Atlanta, its amusing to kind of notice once again to those scenes. It felt enormous and felt epic. Season 2, we were on Hershel's farm. In Season 3, we were at the jail. Also the first 50% of Season 4, we're at the jail. The goal truly was to open up this planet again and to let our characters experience what its get a kick out of the chance to need to survive; the decisions they need to make to survive; astoundingly upon diverse circumstances, how they handle them.

"The outside world is quite, exceptionally unsafe, and it can hail from anyplace. So the second 50% of the season truly plays up that thought." 

"The Walking Dead Season 4" proceeds Feb. 9 at 9 p.m. on AMC.

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