Clearly they decided that loving close ups of Drogon was way, way more important than a direwolf.
Clearly they decided that loving close ups of Drogon was way, way more important than a direwolf.
A sad fact which really exacerbated what a huge fail it was for them to not have cast him as Danny Rand instead.
There were fight scenes in Iron Fist? I don't remember anyone fighting.
We also saw her in the second season of Daredevil.
Half of Luke Cage was amazing!
Oh oh oh, sorry. I had your cause/effect flipped. I see what you're saying now.
Honestly, you really don't have to wrap up Iron Fist. Not sure how far along you got into it? But it's very very inessential. If you skipped and just watched the last episode or two, you'd be fine.
Feige has almost nothing to do with the Netflix shows, and, since Perlmutter stopped being involved, the movies have (as a whole) gotten much better and more interesting.
I didn't, but I tried to go with overexplaining the joke, but it wasn't very funny, in retrospect.
Wearing full plate armor? Check.
Hand of solid gold strapped to his arm? Check.
Shown floating to the bottom of an apparently deep body of water? Check.
I am frankly stunned that they were able to refrain from keeping us in suspense for a week. I fully expected us to get no news of Bronn and Jaime this week, just so they could keep people talking about them being dead, only for next week to open exactly like this week's did.
Sam quitting feels like pure plot machinations to me. He got fed up and left because he's an important enough character that no one wants to see him spend the end of this show learning to become a maester.
That's Academy Award winning Suicide Squad, to you!
Seven, because Davos isn't going beyond the wall. But what a magnificent seven it is!
Which is going to get way, way, way more awkward when she realizes her mopey nephew is actually the true heir to the throne she's spent the last [fill in however much time it's been since this show started]. Gonna be a bitter pill to swallow.
When I watched that, I facepalmed so hard. Watching them talk about this show is "not great." Like, seriously? Arya and Sansa are that stupid and that easily manipulated by someone they are both actively aware is trying to manipulate them? Really?
Of the people going beyond the wall, Gendry definitely doesn't die before seeing Arya and neither does the Hound, Jon doesn't die because Jon (especially given Gilly's OMGTOTALLYRANDOM massive realization which unseats the entire premise of the show), Jorah doesn't die because his goodbye with Dany wasn't nearly…
Man oh man is it going to be too bad if Jim Broadbent's time on this show is over. Sam fleeing the Citadel seems like a pointedly premature end to that story, but, given the speed with which everything is moving, I don't really see any other way for that to work. Sam isn't going to sit out the climax getting his…
I was fed up with this meme, perpetuated by idiots who weren't even alive when Mulan was in theaters, immediately, and I reiterate that there is no fandom about which there is a greater disparity between how I feel about the fans and the art.
A question that we can only hope our country will be around for in 100 years to attempt to objectively answer.