Then she finally reaches the outskirts of the prison, surprise! It turns out that not only did the Governor actually survive the zombies in the building, but he teleports right up behind her. Again he accurately predicts exactly where she'll be, he gets there quickly, invisibly, and silently. [./quote]
It is entirely reasonable for him to guess she's going to the prison - it is the only place for her to go, really, and her purpose to save her old crew is pretty obvious, too. And it seemed pretty clear to me that the implication is that he's been tracking and stalking, not predicting and teleporting.
I mean how could she not?
Dramatic inappropriateness.
You keep saying you're a fan of ZA genre, but then how can you miss the fact that, as a branch of horror, only some characters have the moral position to defeat the villain? She isn't one of them.
They obviously *cannot* show every single second of action on-screen. Exactly how does the Gov subdue her? We don't have time to go into it, and that isn't the interesting bit of story, anyway.
And at the end we see that not only did she not kill him, but how the hell did he manage to get her in that torture chair?
I figure there's a gun involved, and she's exhausted and unarmed.
Did she just frickin' give up? Why?
She has fought off swarms of zombies, sure. But she's also learned that sometimes fighting is not the best way to survive - you pick your battles when you can. She probably didn't think that he'd put her in that chair, though, or she might have fought.