In a new interview in SFX, on the stands yesterday, The Walking Dead villain David Morrisey laid out an agenda for his character for the rest of the season--and it ain't pretty.

Morrissey, who plays The Governor, said that the experience of the midseason finale has left his character a different person altogether--that's an interesting twist, suggesting that Rick Grimes and his pack of survivors may, however inadvertently or inevitably, have created the more cold, sadistic Governor fans know from the comic book series.

"He's lost his daughter, he's lost his eye, he's been brutally attacked by someone and his town has been attacked by this outside force," explained Morrissey. "He feels as though he's been betrayed by one of his own, Merle Dixon, and now they've captured Merle's brother Daryl the crowd are baying for blood. They are bloodthirsty and angry, and I think he wants to keeep them that way - they want revenge and so does he. The mood he's got into means he's a changed man. There is a humanity inside him, but it's closing down very quickly, and I think that where we take him now is about what happened to the humanity in him. Will it grow again, or will it break down completely?"

Asked how much humanity the character had to begin with, given that he was seen hanging out in the world's most disturbing media room and killing outsiders for seemingly no reason at all, Morrissey seemed to contend that the character was doing what he thought was best for Woodbury at the time.

"I think what's interesting about slaughtering the army guys is that if you're the leader of a town and you have authority, the last thing you want is an army coming in there who can take authority. You don't want seven or eight guys coming in who are armed and dangerous - it's not what you need. So it's quite a cold-hearted decision that he makes there, but it's an understandable decision for me. It's a tough thing to do but from a leadership point of view he has to do it. And when he comes back he tells the crowd that when he arrived they had all been killed by walkers, because they don't have what we have - walls, security, fences. What he's sayin gto them is that they didn't have me to protect them and that's why they're dead. That's an amazing spin, I think, of leadership. I love that about him, I love the fact that he can play that."

He adds that he perceives the Governor as kind of a middle-management type in the world before the apocalypse, and that he was simply thrust into a position where power has corrupted him. And while he knows that the villain will eventually meet his maker, Morrissey told the magazine that he would like to stay aboard the hit series as long as possible.

The magazine also had a particularly intriguing two-page spread, in which Morrisey gave brief teasers of the season to come:

"What's interesting this season is seeing Rick's moral center being very different to what it was before. In season two he had this great moral crisis about killing a man; in season three he just throws a guy out the door and lets him get eaten without a second thought. There's not a lot of debate going on in Rick now and I think the Governor is brutalized in that way as well - though he's taken it further."

"[Andrea is] stuck between a rock and a hard place and now we see her confronted by a man she's fallen in love with and who is her sort of savior, and he's behaving in a way she's not seen before. It looks like he's closing down, and doing something quite brutal as far as she can see - brutal towards a man she knows and loves. It's about how she chooses to navigate that minefield."

"As a leading actor [Andrew Lincoln] takes responsibility. He's the first guy on set, the last guy to leave, he knows everybody, he's involved in everything. He cares about it to the bottom of his heart, not just about his character but the show. Andrew's work ethic, his love of the show just spreads like wildfire amongst everyone. You want to go to work and do your best."

"I think you'll get insights into the Governor's back story. Why does he do these things, where does it come from? The whole thing with Penny [his now-deceased daughter] touched on a past which is sort of lost now, so that should come out a bit. But there's nowhere where you're going to sit down and get a history lesson about these characters. They're just doing what they're doing, and you have to fill in the gaps with the little clues that you get."

There's a bunch more to be seen, so check out the issue on the stands now (they don't seem to upload the full interviews to their website).