After I saw this episode I could no longer support the protagonist. He always had a slight morality to his selfish decisions. Now? Now he has crossed the immutable line. There is no going back. RIP Mr. Underwood.
After I saw this episode I could no longer support the protagonist. He always had a slight morality to his selfish decisions. Now? Now he has crossed the immutable line. There is no going back. RIP Mr. Underwood.
Defining what a character wants is NOT Writing 101. In fact having every character with well defined motivations is juvenile. In Tad Williams' Otherland, for example, we don't know what he's truly after until the last scene of the last act in the last book of the series. The best writers have suspense even inside the…
Five years later, I thought I should point out that I had never read the books but followed the pilot just fine. T was brilliantly written to the point that I could easily ascertain what was going on despite the complexity.
Except she gave him permission to burn her when she agreed to do whatever she could to help him.
False. Because the Melisandra told Stannis he needs Davos, remember?