During an interview with The Direct at Multicon, Gimple was asked about the future of the Walking Dead franchise beyond the current running shows. When asked about whether the franchise will go back to the previously planned movie route, the franchise boss confirmed it was "less likely" to happen, but that there are currently talks about returning to the original show's long-form episode count. See what Gimple said below:
I mean, I would just say different formats... They're always in our minds and, you know, is it a six-hour, is it a two-hour, is it a... my dream would be another 16-hour-a-year series. We're talking about that. Feature films... probably less likely. But different ways that we do the show, we have to do it and we will.
What This Means For The Walking Deads Future
AMC Is Looking For Another Flagship
In the years since both the mainline show and Fear the Walking Dead came to a close, the franchise has been in an interesting flux. Where some interconnected TV universes, like Law & Order or Star Trek, have always ensured there is a long-form show running concurrently with a shorter spinoff, The Walking Dead has instead shifted towards shows that only run for a handful of episodes each, the longest of recent being the upcoming Dead City season 2, which is set to be comprised of eight episodes.
The most likely avenue for a new, long-form show in the universe would be that of a culmination of the various spinoffs into one project. The Rick and Michonne-focused The Ones Who Live, originally planned as a trilogy of films, ended with them reuniting with their children, but not with the rest of the main characters of the original show, while Dead City and Daryl Dixon have their leads in regions away from Alexandria and the Commonwealth. While it'll take some narrative hurdles to overcome, a long-form Walking Dead show could be about all of their journeys back to each other.