![]() ![]() "The guy is weirdly radically honest at times he could very easily tell the kid like, 'No, I didn't do it. Jeffrey Dean Morgan as Negan - The Walking Dead _ Season 11, Episode 14ĭespite his reluctance to beg for any sort of forgiveness, Negan doesn't shy away from the monster he was all those years ago. ![]() ![]() I don't think he's all the way there to the point where he's like, 'I'm sorry.'" "I definitely think he is trying to make up with it via actions. "He doesn't have a lot of remorse that he shows there," Kang added. But I think when he looks at the generation below, as somebody who used to be a teacher, he really sees nothing but promise in children."Įven so, Negan has never outright apologized to Maggie for what he did, instead voicing regret over the fact that he didn't just kill Rick's entire group from the get-go. I think he's a guy who, it doesn't bother him being in conflict with his peers, because he's a guy who's got to survive, and if he's got to push some people aside and knock some people down with the bat to keep surviving, he will. "That's also just something that is an established part of his character, he does admire children. "When it comes to kids, that is one of the areas where Negan actually can be just purely altruistic and heroic," Walking Dead showrunner Angela Kang explained to Entertainment Weekly. However, it is high-time the baseball bat-loving antagonist (or rather ex-antagonist) began to confront the horrific sins of his past, especially now that he's got a kid of his own on the way with Annie (Medina Senghore). After all, he and Maggie still have a New York City adventure looming just on the horizon. Of course, viewers know Negan isn't going to die just yet. Upon learning that the person standing before him is the "bad man" who killed his father before he was born, Hershel holds the world-weary survivor at gunpoint, but doesn't end up pulling the trigger. When she sees how Negan protects her son, she even admits to him that she could be beginning to trust him, which means that Maggie would literally rather trust Negan, the man who killed Glenn, than join the Commonwealth.The brutal Season 7 murder of Glenn Rhee ( Steven Yeun) came back to haunt Negan ( Jeffrey Dean Morgan) in Sunday night's episode of The Walking Dead's eleventh and final season when the former leader of the Saviors came face-to-face with Maggie ( Lauren Cohan) and Glenn's young son, Hershel (Kien Michael Spiller). Throughout Season 11, Maggie and Negan work together to fight the Commonwealth soldiers. By this point in the show, Negan had proven himself valuable by taking out Alpha, the leader of The Whisperers, in Season 10, but Maggie, having just returned after years on the road, still despises him. However, in Season 11, we actually see a miracle - these two start to work together in a fragile alliance, but an alliance all the same. In the same episode as Rick’s departure, she realizes that killing Negan isn’t going to change anything or bring Glenn back - which is what spurred her to leave with Georgie in the first place. Which is understandable - the man killed her husband, so I’d be pretty upset, too. ![]() (Image credit: AMC) Maggie Would Rather Stick With Negan Than Join The Commonwealth (Season 11)Ī big thing with Maggie in The Walking Dead is that she had an obsession with killing Negan in Season 9. ![]()
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