‘Walking Dead’: What to expect next

Andrew Lincoln stars as Rick Grimes in AMC's
Andrew Lincoln stars as Rick Grimes in AMC's "The Walking Dead."
  • "Walking Dead" exec producer Robert Kirkman gives a preview of season three's end
  • Rick has a handle on his hallucinations, and Michonne will be welcomed to the group
  • With Andrea, the rest of the season will focus on how she's handling the Governor
  • Kirkman: There may be a casualty or more still to be experienced

Editor's note: This article may contain spoilers.

(EW) -- With just four more episodes of "The Walking Dead's" third season to go, this would officially qualify as the homestretch. So what should we expect to see as we head toward the inevitable confrontation between Rick and The Governor?

Is Rick sane again? Has Michonne proved her mettle? And should we assume that not everyone will make it out of the season alive? We spoke with exec producer Robert Kirkman, who offered up some cryptic clues and teases for what lies ahead.

Entertainment Weekly: Is Rick past his hallucinations now? Did that encounter with Morgan refocus him? Where's his head at as we get closer to the big showdown?

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Robert Kirkman: He has started to get a handle on it to a certain extent, and a big thing that helped him with that was his interaction with Morgan in this last episode. He sees this fun house there, who he could eventually be if he keeps going down this path. I think that's going to help rein him in a great deal and set him on the path to healing. Now, he could have a relapse, but I think right now he is getting a handle on what is going on within him.

EW: We last saw Andrea standing over the Governor with the knife and not being able to go through with killing him. How pivotal a role is she going to play going forward?

Kirkman: The rest of the season really is about what Andrea is doing and how she's handling this situation. The scene where she stands over him in the bed is really the beginning of her plan and what she's going to be doing and why she's doing what she's doing. The fact that she wasn't able to kill the Governor is really going to play in to a lot of the upcoming story for the rest of the season. Andrea is in a really horrible position. She has relationships with people in Woodbury. She knows there are good people there. She knows that the Governor is instigating a war between those people and other people that she has a relationship with that she also knows to be good people. She's kind of stuck in the middle and can't help either group win because that would mean the destruction of other good people but she's going to have to do something to try to make this situation resolve in a way that not too many people get hurt. So that's really what she's going to be trying to do moving forward.

EW: Tyreese and his group now seem firmly with the Governor. Is Tyreese, like Andrea, a swing character in this conflict?

Kirkman: Tyreese is a character coming into a very explosive situation with not a lot of information. He got a lot of misleading information from Rick and his group, using Rick's behavior as an example of what that group is like. Certainly an inaccurate portrayal of those people, and having that information, he is being easily wooed by the Governor. We've always tried to maintain that Tyreese is this big-hearted character. He's someone who — like Dale in the second season — still sees the humanity in the world and still sees the need to do what's right as opposed to what will help us survive. And that's something that will either be subverted by the Governor and used to his benefit, or something that may eventually turn Tyreese against the Governor.

EW: Let's talk about the Dixons. Daryl started to seem to realize that maybe Merle was no good for him by going back to the prison, and then Carol told him straight up that Merle was no good for him. Where is the relationship between the brothers headed?

Kirkman: I think now the real question is, can Merle be affected by this group the same way that Daryl has been? That's something that Daryl hopes will happen. He does see that being with these people and being a part of this group has helped make him a better person. He still loves his brother and sees the value in having his brother around, but he's hoping Merle can come around the same way that he did and calm down a bit and be a little bit more of a reasonable person. That's really going to be the main conflict for those two moving forward for the rest of the season.

EW: What about Daryl and Carol? They obviously have had something of a flirtation. Now that Daryl is back and Axel is out of the way, are we going to see some movement with those two romantically?

Kirkman: All I can say is that those two characters are extremely close, and I would imagine that the more time they spend together that they would only get closer and closer. They definitely have a unique bond that is formed over their time together and whether or not that evolves into an intimate relationship remains to be seen, but they do certainly like each other.

Norman Reedus talks possible Daryl-Carol romance on 'The Walking Dead': 'I want her to make the first move'

EW: Michonne was able to make a connection with Carl this week. Is she becoming more a part of the group?

Kirkman: Definitely. That was by design. I think Rick took her on that trip to feel her out and get to know her better and test to see if she was the type of person that would be a valuable member of that group, or if she was going to continue to be somewhat problematic. And I think he got a very positive answer out of that and Carl was a big part of that. And coming out of that trip, I think she's going to be a much more integral, welcomed part of this group who will continue to become more invested in this cause and be a contributing member.

EW: You made us wait 30 episodes to bring Morgan back. So now we can reset the clock on me asking you that same question all over again: Are we going to be seeing Morgan again?

Kirkman: We definitely didn't kill him, so he's still alive and still out there. We checked in on him. Whether or not that's the end of Morgan's story, or we check on him again, or he shows up later at some point in a surprising fashion remains to be seen. But he's definitely still out there, so the possibilities are wide open.

EW: You guys are big on there being repercussions so that the action feels real. If there is a big battle or zombie attack, people often die. With this confrontation really gearing up, should we then assume that not every character is going to make it out of the season alive?

Kirkman: I'm afraid there may be a casualty or more still to be experienced by the end of this season. We'll see.

EW: Will this Woodbury vs. the prison storyline be resolved by the end of the season? Season one was the set up and going to the CDC, season two was about the farm, and season three has been the prison and Woodbury. Should we expect a new setting next season?

Kirkman: That would certainly appear to be settling into a cycle. I don't want to give anything away because we have some really cool stuff planned for the finale, but I will say that there is a resolution to the storyline at the end of the season, as people would expect. It becomes a whole complete story that you've been able to experience over the course of season three. And It will set things up nicely for season four. There are new places to go in season four, but whether or not that means a new setting or new story direction or simply new characters I can't really nail down any specifics.

See the original story at EW.com.

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