Corry
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Prediction: Sansa will be Lady Stoneheart.
Wow
Prediction: Sansa will be Lady Stoneheart.
First major spoiler? How about:
- Lady Stoneheart is basically irrelevant
- Night's King is the captain of the Others
- Robert's bastards are basically irrelevant
- Valyrian steel can kill white walkers
- Tyrion doesn't have greyscale
- R + L = J confirmed
Too much. Just too much for me. I get what they are doing, they've been trying to make a point about fanaticism all season, and that's fine, but still, Shireen's death was too much. I won't judge them from a narrative perspective till I see where they are going with it, but just the horror of that scene kind of ruined my night.
The effects in the last scene were noticeably cheesier than last week. Some aspects of it were good, but still, step it up a bit, guys.
What was the point of the Dorne storyline. I've reserved judgment all season, but unless something big that I'm not foreseeing happens in the finale, I'll have to conclude that this season would have been better off without it.[/QUOTE]
Yeah they really botched all the Dorne stuff other than Oberyn's scenes. I remember Arianne Martell's story being one of my favorites in the books.
I guess they just wanted to keep Bronn and Jaime relevant, which I appreciate since they are great characters, but it just didn't work. And Jaime's maiming does not translate too well to television IMO.
Other than R + L = J, which still hasn't actually been confirmed, I wouldn't consider any of those "major" spoilers. I guess what I meant by "major" is whether a prominent character lives/dies or something equally significant.
Lady Stoneheart is just a departure from the books--she will still have a role in them.
Yeah they really botched all the Dorne stuff other than Oberyn's scenes. I remember Arianne Martell's story being one of my favorites in the books.
I guess they just wanted to keep Bronn and Jaime relevant, which I appreciate since they are great characters, but it just didn't work. And Jaime's maiming does not translate too well to television IMO.
Good call. I'd rank him more likely than anyone but Brienne or Ramsay.
The dragon itself looked pretty legit. It was the sky that was the problem. Not sure how that all works with the CGI, but the Drogon figure itself looked awesome.Anyone know if Pixomondo did the CG for last night's ep? They've done the dragons previously, so I'm wondering if they're to blame for what appeared to be Neverending Story 3. Based on previous interviews, I think they did, just looking to confirm.
The dragon itself looked pretty legit. It was the sky that was the problem. Not sure how that all works with the CGI, but the Drogon figure itself looked awesome.
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Crackpot theory: When Benioff and Weiss had Martin map out the end of the series beyond where the books are, he told them all kinds of BS.</p>— ☕netw3rk (@netw3rk) <a href="https://twitter.com/netw3rk/status/607781415166472192">June 8, 2015</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
SO is Arya lied to Jaquen. Does he know its a lie, or is just getting really good at playing the game of faces?
SO is Arya lied to Jaquen. Does he know its a lie, or is just getting really good at playing the game of faces?
The one small hope I have for show-Stannis sticking around and having a role to play in the endgame is the conversation he had with Sam in the library of Castle Black. His line about how "we have dragonglass on Dragonstone" reeked of "Previously on Game of Thones..." flashback material.I'll sign onto the criticism that many here have already articulated. The problem is not so much that Mel sacrificed Shireen; book readers have known that was more likely than not for some time now. Nor even that Stannis might have some knowledge of it; as Benioff and Weis said in their post S5E9 explication, Stannis is a rigid man, and if it was framed as "Allow me to sacrifice your daughter or your entire army will freeze to death and the world will end", I could see a conflicted Stannis holed up in his tent while it happened.
But Benioff and Weis chose to do it in a manner that made Stannis completely unsympathetic. What father could calmly have a coded talk with his daughter about such a thing, and then not only allow it to happen, but to watch, emotionless, while someone immolates her and she cries to him for help? That was the most utterly depraved spectacle I've ever seen on TV, let alone GoT, which is saying a lot considering some of the excesses Benioff and Weis have indulged thus far.
GRRM's Stannis is a very sympathetic character, to which his popularity attests. But Benioff and Weis ruined their Stannis by making him do something appallingly evil; and why? Because it provided a "good" story arc of a Stannis introduced to us by burning men on the beach of Dragonstone who ends up burning his own daughter? That's not good writing.
And now people are understandably rooting for him to die soon and horribly. Which, from the perspective of the books, would be very anticlimactic. The odds of Stannis getting a happy ending are not good, but he's been much too pivotal to GRRM's major plotlines to simply die in an unsuccessful siege of Winterfell. He's either going to end up really bad, or he's going to be a major player in the coming showdown between Dany and the Others.
This whole development has highlighted the major flaw with the HBO series. As Benioff and Weis have converted the books to the small screen, they've flattened a complex and nuanced fantasy epic in countless ways. So while GRRM has the space necessary to break Stannis in his own time, HBO has to speed it up and spell it out as bluntly as possible. Very frustrating.
I'll sign onto the criticism that many here have already articulated. The problem is not so much that Mel sacrificed Shireen; book readers have known that was more likely than not for some time now. Nor even that Stannis might have some knowledge of it; as Benioff and Weis said in their post S5E9 explication, Stannis is a rigid man, and if it was framed as "Allow me to sacrifice your daughter or your entire army will freeze to death and the world will end", I could see a conflicted Stannis holed up in his tent while it happened.
But Benioff and Weis chose to do it in a manner that made Stannis completely unsympathetic. What father could calmly have a coded talk with his daughter about such a thing, and then not only allow it to happen, but to watch, emotionless, while someone immolates her and she cries to him for help? That was the most utterly depraved spectacle I've ever seen on TV, let alone GoT, which is saying a lot considering some of the excesses Benioff and Weis have indulged thus far.
GRRM's Stannis is a very sympathetic character, to which his popularity attests. But Benioff and Weis ruined their Stannis by making him do something appallingly evil; and why? Because it provided a "good" story arc of a Stannis introduced to us by burning men on the beach of Dragonstone who ends up burning his own daughter? That's not good writing.
And now people are understandably rooting for him to die soon and horribly. Which, from the perspective of the books, would be very anticlimactic. The odds of Stannis getting a happy ending are not good, but he's been much too pivotal to GRRM's major plotlines to simply die in an unsuccessful siege of Winterfell. He's either going to end up really bad, or he's going to be a major player in the coming showdown between Dany and the Others.
This whole development has highlighted the major flaw with the HBO series. As Benioff and Weis have converted the books to the small screen, they've flattened a complex and nuanced fantasy epic in countless ways. So while GRRM has the space necessary to break Stannis in his own time, HBO has to speed it up and spell it out as bluntly as possible. Very frustrating.
Or greyscale being completely contagious.Also, so much for dragonscales being virtually impenetrable.
I think after every scene transition there should be an intercut of Jon doing something for 5 seconds with an Olly reaction shock as he sharpens a knife in the shadows. Because, subtle.
That's not the problem at all. Everyone here has come to terms with that. The plot had to be culled, we get it. Eliminate Strong Belwas, fine. Send Jamie to Dorne, fine. The problem with what they're doing to these characters is that many of their actions are 100% the opposite of that character's established personality and motivations, even exclusively within the context of the show. Stannis is not a religious fanatic and he loves his daughter. Those facts are established both in the books and in the show.I get more and more mad as the show continues to ruin characters with terrible changes from the books, and then I realize that, in my mind, I'm pouting like a little girl.
This is literally how I feel sometimes.
I get more and more mad as the show continues to ruin characters with terrible changes from the books, and then I realize that, in my mind, I'm pouting like a little girl.
That's not the problem at all.
That's a problem but not, IMO, the biggest one. I think it's much worse that D&D can't even keep their story straight within their own show.The problem isn't the show ruining characters from the books with terrible changes?
The flaw is attempting to turn something so complex and turn it into 10 different 45 minute episodes, once a year while trying to keep it as simple as possible for the non-book readers. So it does a disservice to the book readers but really, it fits with TV production.