Days Gone Byethe Walking Dead : Season 1 Episode 1 Review

The episode’s pacing is deliberate and cinematic. The image of Rick riding a horse into a deserted, traffic-jammed Atlanta is one of the most iconic frames in modern TV. It evokes the Western genre—a lone lawman entering a lawless frontier. The score by Bear McCreary and the desaturated color palette reinforce a world that has been drained of its vitality. The Horror of the Unknown

The episode begins not with a jump-scare, but with a tragedy. We meet Sheriff’s Deputy Rick Grimes in a pre-apocalypse setting that feels grounded and mundane. When he is shot in the line of duty and later wakes up in a derelict hospital, the silence is deafening. Darabont uses visual storytelling—the wilted flowers by Rick's bed, the flickering lights, and the iconic "Don't Open, Dead Inside" doors—to build a sense of dread that is psychological rather than just visceral. Rick’s journey out of the hospital is a literal and metaphorical descent into hell. Human Connection in the Void Days Gone ByeThe Walking Dead : Season 1 Episode 1

The climax in Atlanta shifts the tone from eerie quiet to claustrophobic chaos. When Rick is swarmed by a massive herd and forced to take refuge inside a tank, the episode ends on a brilliant cliffhanger. The voice of Glenn Rhee crackling over the radio ("Hey you, dumbbell. Yeah, you in the tank. Cozy in there?") serves as a necessary injection of hope and a reminder that while the world is dead, society—in some small, fractured form—is trying to survive. Conclusion The episode’s pacing is deliberate and cinematic

"Days Gone Bye" succeeded because it treated the apocalypse with gravity and cinematic beauty. It didn't rely on gore alone; it relied on the vulnerability of its protagonist. By the end of the hour, the stakes are clear: the struggle isn't just staying alive, but holding onto one’s soul in a world that no longer recognizes it. The score by Bear McCreary and the desaturated