Jeffrey Dean Morgan Talks Lucille’s Return in ‘The Walking Dead: Dead City,’ 10 Year Anniversary: ‘I Earned My Stripes’

   

Jeffrey Dean Morgan as Negan looking concerned in The Walking Dead: Dead City season 2

The Canneseries premiere of “The Walking Dead: Dead City” was a special one for its star, Jeffrey Dean Morgan. The actor, who left his handprints on the Cannes Walk of Fame, was accompanied by actor wife Hilarie Burton and their two children, calling the experience “an incredible honor.” Speaking with Variety after the trip, the actor gushed about his families — his real-life one, and the one he made while working on the world of “The Walking Dead.”

“The Walk of Fame thing was huge,” he adds. “To have my family there made it even more special. I love my kids and my wife so much. My wife had never been to Cannes; my daughter had never walked a carpet in her life, and, boy, she took to it like a fish to water. Both my kids did. I was convinced after day one that [my son] Gus was going to walk away with a multi-picture deal from Paramount, he was just so cool.”

“The Walking Dead: Dead City” is the first sequel to “The Walking Dead” and the fifth series in the franchise. It follows Dean’s fan-favorite anti-hero Negan and his archnemesis Maggie (Lauren Cohan) as they travel into a post-apocalyptic Manhattan long cut off from the mainland. The latest season follows the escalation of the war to take over New York, with the leading duo battling on opposite sides. 

Asked about how it feels to be heading into his tenth year playing Negan and his plans to continue doing so in the near future, Morgan says it’s “nuts.” “This has been part of my life for so long now that I don’t ever picture it ending unless I finally say I’m too old to do this anymore, which I am getting dangerously close to. It’s interesting, especially doing this spinoff with two characters who want to kill each other 90% of the time, because I had never heard of this being a workable concept before. Yet, here we are, with season two coming out and talking about doing more. We’ll see.”

The actor, who joined “The Walking Dead” in the iconic Season 6 finale, originally believed he would only play the character for four years, but the creative team kept “enticing” him back with new angles and storylines. His first appearance saw the actor join a moving train, whereas he is now the conductor of his spin-off, ushering new talent in, such as Dascha Polanco and Gaius Charles.

 

“I don’t know if I’m a conductor,” he humbly responds. “But it feels like I am one of the veterans now. I feel like I’ve earned my stripes. 10 years is a long time. This is not an easy show to do in any way, mentally and certainly physically, so I’m amazed by the fact that I’m still able to pull off my part of it.”

 

Morgan, who signs as an executive producer alongside Cohan, says the creative role is “his favorite part.” “Especially making decisions on the cast and crew, because that is your family. This is who I’m going to spend half the year with, every single day, for 14 hours a day, so you want to find people that you love, because we don’t want any as assholes on the show. ‘The Walking Dead’ has always been really good at picking great people. These are people who are all still my friends, even if they’re no longer alive on the show, and I can’t say that about a lot of other jobs I’ve had.”

There is also the timeliness of “Dead City,” which broaches discussions of greed, the fight for resources, energy as currency, and the exclusionary nature of privilege. This connection with not only the zeitgeist but the existential is a quality of the whole franchise, says Morgan. “The show has never been about zombies or walkers. It’s always been about people.”

The actor goes on to recall how “The Walking Dead” writer and producer Scott M. Gimple recently told him that Robert Kirkman originally wrote the series with slow walkers because they are “defeatable.” “It shouldn’t be a huge pain to kill slow walking walkers. But in order to defeat them, you have to work together, and the problem is that people don’t have the ability to work together, and that is really the series, and every iteration of ‘The Walking Dead’ is about the fact that people can’t get along. It’s a good conversation starter.”

And for long-standing fans of the universe, “Dead City” brings a special treat: the return of Negan’s infamous weapon, Lucille. The bat wrapped in barbed wire is back in a new iteration, informing much of Negan’s journey in the Season 2. 

“I knew she’d be back a year before we started shooting, and I was excited,” recalls Morgan. “I’m not a prop actor. I know some actors [whose props] inform their whole character, and I had never had a prop like that until I met Lucille. I completely understand it now. To have her back in my hands was more important to me, Jeff, than it was even to Negan. Negan is a little bit thrown off having Lucille back in his life. Jeff was fucking thrilled. I loved it. I don’t let the prop guys take her from me. She goes to my trailer with me, she goes to craft services with me. I keep her with me all day long and don’t let people play with her,” he laughs. 

Morgan sees Negan’s relationship to his weapon as one of “love and hate,” because its return also signals the return of the “performative” Negan we first meet in the show. “There’s a lot of battling going on within Negan, and Lucille has a great deal to do with that. I think she represents so much to him, but when he burned her in ‘Here’s Negan,’ that was him trying to get rid of a part of his life, and now that is going to come roaring back into his world. A lot of this season is Negan figuring out how to deal with that.”

“The Walking Dead: Dead City” Season 2 premieres May 4, 2025, only on AMC and AMC+. Jorné serves as showrunner and executive producer on the series, which is overseen by Gimple. Cohan and Morgan also serve as executive producers, along with Brian Bockrath.

The Walking Dead: Dead City season 2's Rotten Tomatoes score has been revealed, confirming how the new episodes hold up compared to season 1. Dead City season 2 will focus on Maggie (Lauren Cohan) returning to New York City in order to rescue Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) from the Burazi. However, she's unaware the group's leader, the Dama (Lisa Emery), is using him to help unite the survivors of Manhattan under her rule. The upcoming season will run for eight episodes, a first for the typically six-episode seasons of the series' latest spinoffs.

Now, Rotten Tomatoes has revealed The Walking Dead: Dead City season 2 has an 80% critics score based on its first five reviews. This makes its debut score the same as season 1's final percentage, which is also 80%, but based off 57 reviews. However, reviews for season 2 are only just being released, meaning this initial score could go up or down in the near future. For now, though, it appears to be equivalent to the series' debut episodes.

What Dead City Season 2's Rotten Tomatoes Scores Say About The Show

Lauren Cohan looking concerned as Maggie in The Walking Dead: Dead City season 2

So far, it seems the zombie spinoff is engaging critics at the same level as the previous season, with a few degrees of change here and there. The Walking Dead: Dead City season 2 review from ScreenRant's Sarah Moran praised the show for having a more interesting story than season 1, but criticized slow pacing. Other reviews echo similar sentiments, though a commonality appears to be the introduction of interesting characters. This likely means newcomers like Kim Coates' Bruegel will be stealing the show from time to time. 

With a low number of reviews from critics so far, it's unclear if the show will fall in percentage due to its plodding pace, or rise because of its more interesting ideas. Since Dead City's characters appear to be a highlight for many critics, the series will likely have plenty of memorable moments with them as Maggie's rescue mission commences. However, all that's known for sure is the series will be getting deeper into the groups of Manhattan, as well as the New Babylon Federation's interest in using the dead to produce ethanol.

 

Our Take On The Walking Dead: Dead City Season 2's Rotten Tomatoes Score

What Does It Mean For The New Episodes' Quality?

Maggie looking serious with a group of people behind her in The Walking Dead Dead City season 2

The Walking Dead: Dead City's Rotten Tomatoes score signals the series will be around the same quality as season 1, with some more interesting story beats along the way. This bodes well for the spinoff, though, as it promises some exciting additions, even some attributes of the show, like Maggie and Negan's tension, remain the same. It appears that, with new ideas on the horizon and a longer season, the spinoff has a chance to create a memorable follow-up to its first big city adventure.

The Walking Dead: Dead City season 2 premieres Sunday, May 4 on AMC and AMC+.