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Evil Star-Burns
avclub-ec0ee15712abab09eaacb2e7afafebc9--disqus

I WILL FIGHT YOU

I think his films made enough money worldwide for him to keep getting funded.

There's a whole plot point about them firing blind, but I don't remember how literal it was.

Same. I only remember this movie is happening when someone mentions it on the internet.

If you find out you're gonna die of cancer, does that guarantee you can prevent it?

Knowing about something doesn't mean you can prevent it.

They are definitely alive.

We see him get un-warged. His eyes are no longer white at the end there. It's totally Hodor holding the door.

Those theories are nonsense. There's no way the story would end that cheaply.

Warging is frequent in the books, but the show mostly ignored it, so it's understandable. But yeah, disappointing. The scene of them finding the wolves one of the first things Martin created in the story. It's a big deal, and the show made a big deal out of it. In retrospect, it feels kinda pointless.

Shut up, I like her.

The Night's King in the books is different from the Night King in the show, which is just the leader of the White Walkers.

That'd be my guess too, or maybe they want to kill the Uber Greenseer before going through for some reason. The White Walkers had more than enough time to get to the Wall since Hardhome if that's what they wanted. They were probably chilling in the Haunted Forest (where Wiki of Ice and Fire says the cave is located)

They really should've done that legwork last season. Instead, they gave us Dorne, hooray. Now they have no time and we're getting payoffs without setups. It worked for me because I read the books and I know about the CotF and shit, but I can totally see a show watcher going "wait, what now? where did all this come

Like Summer and Lady, she was kind of brownish.

Oh come on there was no way that wasn't going to be in the books.

This has been my exact reaction to this whole season, but this episode… I mean, there were some clunky/dumb things happening here and there, but imho they nailed the three scenes that mattered: Daenerys and Jorah, the play and that whole final sequence, which was seriously thrilling. If you didn't feel anything during

She said it two times. Young Hodor, about twenty.

By the way, how many man-hours does it take to build one thousand ships? Daenerys will have already conquered Westeros by the time Euron finally sets sail.

If that sketch doesn't already exist, it's about to.