The Rigidity Thickens
Let’s begin with the excellent news: the dialogue has lastly stopped dragging its knuckles throughout the cobblestones. El Alcazar’s would-be-king, Guillermo Torres (Gonzalo Bouza), and Fede (Óscar Jaenada) really sound like they’ve met people earlier than. Guillermo’s simmering monologue: “What sort of city is Solaz del Mar?”—raises the stakes with a mixture of wounded satisfaction and veiled menace. He’s dropping males, dropping face, and apparently dropping persistence with People who mouth off and locals who don’t genuflect. His menace to depart city and discover “different cities with ladies” is… properly, a wierd flex. Certainly Solaz del Mar isn’t the one cease on his royal Tinder tour. After which he insults Fede’s cognac, not as a result of it’s unhealthy, however as a result of Fede wanted reminding: Solaz del Mar nonetheless bends to the crown.
“El Sacrificio” – THE WALKING DEAD DARYL DIXON, Pictured: Gonzalo Bouza as Guillermo Torres. Photograph Credit score: Carla Oset/AMC @2025 AMC Inc. All Rights Reserved |
However beneath the barbs and bravado, one thing sharper is taking form: a clarifying polarization between Guillermo and Fede. Their conflict isn’t simply private—it’s ideological. Guillermo clings to ritual and management, whereas Fede, more and more disillusioned, begins to query the price. The strain isn’t simply thick—it’s beginning to lower. And that fracture, greater than any decaying ceremony, is what provides this episode its edge.
“El Sacrificio” – THE WALKING DEAD DARYL DIXON, Pictured: Óscar Jaenada as Fede. Photograph Credit score: Carla Oset/AMC @2025 AMC Inc. All Rights Reserved. |
It’s About Daryl’s Private Pilgrimage
In the meantime, Daryl (Norman Reedus) and Roberto (Hugo Arbués) are on boat obligation, retrieving a rudder for the voyage residence. The flashbacks to Daryl’s childhood—operating away, surviving alone—add texture. Roberto says, “I do know why I’m leaving. Perhaps, you’re nonetheless making an attempt to determine it out.” Daryl’s reply, “Ain’t that the reality, isn’t settlement. It’s acknowledgment that he’s being quietly understood. For a person who’s spent most of his life operating from connection, it’s a uncommon second of recognition. Roberto is holding up a mirror and Daryl doesn’t flinch. It echoes Merle’s jail confession to Rick: “I’m a rattling thriller to me.” However, the place Merle stayed opaque, Daryl is starting to come back into focus. Not only for the viewer, however for himself.
Nevertheless it’s Daryl’s journey that reframes the episode’s emotional core. The showrunners are clearly working time beyond regulation to justify his wandering—his using away from Rick’s children, from Connie, from the Commonwealth. He left behind love and loyalty, solely to seek out echoes of each in France: one other little one needing safety, one other girl providing connection. The Camino de Santiago isn’t only a backdrop; it’s Daryl’s path to changing into.
El Sacrificio” – THE WALKING DEAD DARYL DIXON, Pictured: Norman Reedus as Daryl Dixon, Hugo Arbués as Roberto. Photograph Credit score: Carla Oset/AMC @2025 AMC Inc. All Rights Reserved. |
He’s a pilgrim now, carrying the burden of previous loves and losses like choices in his satchel. When he lays down Laurent’s Rubik’s dice on the statue of St. James, it’s not only a gesture—it’s absolution. A manner of claiming: I carried this. I honored it. Now I’m prepared to maneuver ahead. It’s genuinely touching. He cherished that child. And that second unlocks one thing. Daryl begins to voice openness to bringing Roberto and Justina (Candela Saitta) to America. It’s paradoxically irritating and hopeful. Daryl’s nonetheless haunted, nonetheless guarded, however his emotional drift has discovered path. Guilt has softened into grace, and for the primary time, he’s orienting himself towards residence.
The Exterminating Angel The place Each Secure Haven Turns into a Jail
Daryl instructed Carol to get provides from Antonio (Eduardo Noriega), which she does by stealing them. Antonio gently (virtually seductively) calls her out. What follows is much less confrontation and extra courtship: wound-cleaning, drinks on the motion pictures (due to course), and dinner. Antonio tells her to simply ask for what she needs, to not steal them. She sheepishly apologizes.
What about Antonio’s movie selection, Buñuel’s The Exterminating Angel? It isn’t only a nod to arthouse cred; it’s a rattling thesis in town, if not all the Strolling Useless Universe. Antonio explains that folks get trapped in a home they will’t work out find out how to get out of. Buñuel’s trapped dinner company mirror the survivors in Solaz del Mar: who aren’t bodily trapped, however psychologically paralyzed by ritual, concern, and the shortcoming to think about a manner out.
El Sacrificio” – THE WALKING DEAD DARYL DIXON, |
Antonio, the archivist, is aware of this. He’s not simply preserving historical past. He’s watching it reenact itself in actual time. His cabinets could maintain tales of sacrifice and survival, nevertheless it’s Justina who brings these patterns to life. Her empathy is each her energy and her undoing. Her love for his son is actual, however so is her compulsion to supply herself to save lots of her good friend, Alba. Tragic and noble, sure—but additionally acquainted, like a story humanity retains staging, repeatedly. Antonio is an attention-grabbing determine. He grieves humanity’s repetition, at the same time as he reveres its endurance.
After which issues get foolish
When retrieving the rutter, the useless rise from the water like an embarrassing plot reprisal straight out of Pirates of the Caribbean, minus the mythic weight or narrative justification. Roberto stands slack-jawed whereas Daryl single-handedly takes out a dozen walkers. Then Roberto remembers the rudder and sprints again whereas Daryl’s nonetheless mid-melee. It’s absurd, and never in a great way. In an episode steeped in sacrifice and religious reckoning, the water-walker scene appears like a misplaced comma in a eulogy—awkward, distracting, and arduous to justify.
Justina’s Folly
Justina’s arc is the place the present begins hammering empathy prefer it’s making an attempt to crack open clay pots with nothing however a speech about obligation and a guilt-soaked stare. Antonio tells Carol that Justina feels responsible. After all she does. The present virtually tattooed “empathy martyr” on her brow the second she learns her uncle has been shielding her from the lottery. As an alternative of gratitude, she volunteers herself to save lots of a good friend, justifying the impulse with a line that’s each heartbreaking and narratively irritating: “I don’t have mother and father.” Altruism within the apocalypse? Certain. Nevertheless it’s arduous to not side-eye the logic.
“El Sacrificio” – THE WALKING DEAD DARYL DIXON, |
When Justina can’t discover Roberto, Carol intercepts her. Ignoring Daryl’s recommendation to remain out of different individuals’s sh*t,” Carol refuses to play alongside. She confronts Justina with readability, not sentiment, explaining: “You may’t repair this.” Carol’s pragmatism isn’t heartless; it’s hard-won. She’s seen too many individuals die for causes that didn’t save anybody. The place Antonio sees the inevitability of Justine’s sacrifice, Carol sees selection. And she or he’s not focused on reenacting tragedy simply because it’s wearing empathy.
Justina doesn’t pay attention. She’s decided to be the sacrificial lamb, at the same time as her grandmother and uncle clearly love her. Her choice comes within the wake of El Alcazar’s losses and over her uncle’s objections. It’s noble, sure—however narratively heavy-handed. And it reinforces the Buñuelian entice: these characters aren’t evolving—they’re reenacting. It’s El Sacrificio writ small—tragic, performative, and painfully avoidable.
Low Forehead, Excessive Level
The road of the episode, perhaps the season, is Daryl’s response to Carol when she tries to attract him into the city’s drama, mentioning Alba’s destiny, he asks, “Who the F***’s Alba?” Delivered with excellent timing, the dialogue slices by way of the melodrama like a machete by way of a walker’s cranium. One excellent line in a sea of almosts; not one of the others hit as cleanly.
Sure, the episode finds emotional traction. Daryl’s reluctant pilgrimage, the decaying rituals of Solaz del Mar, and the tightening screws between El Alcazar and Solaz del Mar all give the story weight. However beneath these moments, the narrative construction nonetheless groans—strained by shortcuts and the burden of its thematic ambition. Valentina, for instance, arrives making out with two dudes like she’s auditioning for Netflix’s, “The Looking Wives“. Like a merchandising machine in boho swag, Valentina dispenses plot gas and ethical leverage with a style for paprika olives and a requirement for gunpowder. Justina’s empathy is noble however narratively overplayed. And the walkers rising from the water? That’s not metaphor—it’s melodrama. The present needs to be profound, nevertheless it retains slipping by itself shortcuts. Nonetheless, if Daryl’s laying down his burdens and inching towards connection, perhaps there’s hope but—even when the trail is paved with ethanol and emotional blackmail.
“El Sacrificio” – THE WALKING DEAD DARYL DIXON, Pictured: Irina Björklund as Valentina. Photograph Credit score: Carla Oset/AMC @2025 AMC Inc. All Rights Reserved. |
Total, the dialogue and pacing are bettering, however the emotional beats really feel extra pressured than within the France arc. There’s motion, nevertheless it’s a bit like watching a marionette stroll: technically spectacular, but you may nonetheless see the strings.
Turning It Over to You
Is Justina’s sacrifice the beginning of one thing deeper or has she already fulfilled her narrative objective? And what about Solaz de Mar? Is it simply one other cease on the apocalypse tourism circuit, or a useless metropolis ready to affix the lengthy listing of communities The Strolling Useless has chewed up and spat out? Let me know what you suppose within the feedback.
Total Score:
7/10