Remember the comment Dany made when her brother died to molten gold? "Fire cannot kill a Dragon." Her being a super-legit Targaryen makes her fireproof.
Remember the comment Dany made when her brother died to molten gold? "Fire cannot kill a Dragon." Her being a super-legit Targaryen makes her fireproof.
Yeah. Arya doesn't blink over that. Bran's like *whatever.* Sansa should probably be freaking out a bit.
Which only halted the SUPER awkward conversation/explanation of that time when Melisandre explains how she burnt Shireen to a crisp for the wrong Prince that was Promised.
So is Sansa totally cool with Jon coming back to life? It certainly implies that they caught up off-screen, but I feel like that's a detail you can't yada-yada your way past.
Gotta have someone to kill at the end of the Battle of Winterfell. Or else it's too easy, and if GoT is anything, it's never "too easy."
I'm sad about the turn that Loras has taken as a character. Sure he was always the foppish pretty boy, but in season 1 he was suppose to be a knight of great renown. You'd at least hope that he'd be a little stronger than this.
SVU is the Law and Order zombie that never dies. That's number 5.
Watch Osha pull a knife out of nowhere and do some serious "downstairs" damage to Ramsey the first time he tries something. That woman don't play.
That's a curious point- doesn't this mean that everyone now knows the Stark boys may not be dead? So much of the Bolten's plans is there not being a legit Stark heir to challenge them.
Well, all the ships burned down last episode, so….
Well, when "back" is "raised from the dead by your own/ your god's hand," I'm a little willing to let it slide.
OK, that's a legit point. But you have to explain why you're not an oathbreaker right? While things getting desperate might make such matters of honor less important, it's a hit on his credibility if everyone thinks he's running from the wall to save his own skin/advance his own agenda.
I mean, being the Prince that was Promised is basically the messiah, right?
So if you want to believe that Jon's the Messiah, there seems to be a little bit of a problem- not enough people knows he died. During the Sam scene, I was totally expecting him to get a raven saying that Jon's dead, but he doesn't, which probably means that no one widely broadcasted his death. It's further confirmed…
He's a man of the swamps! Who knows what weird frog toxins they've got going on over there.
It's sad that I missed Joffery at that point. At least that motherfucker would have done *something,* even if it would have been the wrong/cruel thing.
I don't think he has a plan now. But as soon as he runs into Sansa and hears what an ever-loving shit Ramsey is, I bet he decides it's time to make amends.
Who absolutely needs to die by series end, but would be the hardest to get to? I feel like that's Arya's destiny.
Ok. So unless Sam pulls a rabbit out of a book while in Oldtown, we're not getting any more Valyrian steel. But 227 is a LOT of swords.
But then why the ceremony? Why bring him in front of the White Walker council? From this episode, it's clear there is no sort of ritual needed. A literal wave of the hand can do it.