Rick and Michonne’s storyline in their Walking Dead spinoff would be incomplete without a reunion with this fan-favorite character.
The Walking Dead TV Universe has not followed the comic source material closely, straying from the original plot as the series progressed. This meant controversial changes, such as Carl Grimes dying in the Saviors War and Judith Grimes living past infancy. While viewers can argue Carl should have lived over his sister, that doesn’t change the direction the franchise took.
Therefore, it’s best to look at Judith’s character as it stands in the universe. Despite not falling in line with the comics, the more mature Judith has been a wholesome addition to the storyline. Her character is a reflection of her father, brother, and adopted mother, showing bravery and resilience when facing tragedy and conflict. She’s also a fascinating look into how children are raised in the apocalypse and how this situation makes most apocalypse babies natural-born survivalists. In the Rick and Michonne spinoff, The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live, which finally premiered in February, it would be an injustice not to include Judith.
Updated by Jordan Iacobucci on March 19, 2024: The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live’s series premiere finally reunites Rick Grimes and Michonne Hawthorne, two of the most iconic characters from the original series. Together again after many years apart, Rick and Michonne face the colossal power of the Civic Republic Military, which threatens to destroy everything they built back home. While the series primarily focuses on its two central characters, some other individuals from The Walking Dead need to appear in the spinoff, including Judith Grimes.
Judith Outlived Her Comic Counterpart
Cailey Fleming Trivia:
- Beginning with Season 9’s massive time jump, Judith Grimes is portrayed by Cailey Fleming. The actor has appeared in several significant franchises, playing young Sylvie in the MCU series Loki and young Rey in Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens.
In The Walking Dead television show, Judith Grimes has long outlived her comic counterpart, who died in the prison as an infant. Not all fans appreciated this change and thought Judith brought little to the adaptation. However, some of the best Walking Dead decisions have conflicted with the source material. Judith wasn’t supposed to be a major influence, but turned out to be the most significant young character in the final season. The found family that makes up the main cast protected each other like they would any relative, especially the children they’ve all taken responsibility for protecting and raising, including Judith herself.
One of the worst aspects of the TWD universe is young characters being killed off before they can influence the world. This includes tragic deaths for shock value, like Carl Grimes, Beth Greene, and Sophia Peletier. Keeping Judith alive finally gave the audience a representation of the future of the post-apocalyptic world. She’s more prepared to survive in the dangerous world than any child thrust into the deadly climate at the beginning of the apocalypse. At this point, it would make far more sense for young characters to survive, becoming the next generation to rebuild their world, rather than resigning themselves to early deaths that remind viewers of the difficult environment.