The Dornish died on the way back to their home planet.
The Dornish died on the way back to their home planet.
Didn't they just make a Wolf Man reboot that nobody went to see? Maybe modern audiences just think the wolf man is stupid. What's next, a John Carter reboot?
Sophie Turner is getting some serious film work. I can't see how they wouldn't have included her in the pay raise announcement unless Sansa dies next season.
One thing they didn't address much on the show was the political impact the wildlings would have on the North. Thousands of them just get settled with lands off-screen. Wouldn't the neighboring lands have a problem with this? Wouldn't a large and well-trained wildling army pose a governing problem to the Warden of…
Isn't that a problem? I feel like they could have shown us a clever maneuver, like Tyrion's wildfire gambit at the Blackwater. Instead Jon's plan was to march his inferior army straight ahead and see what happened.
Meh. They already killed Jon Snow once. We all knew from looking at the episode title that there was no way Jon was dying in this battle, or even getting a serious scratch.
I think Tyrion deserves a gold star for maintaining the status quo as long as he did. The whole power structure in Meereen and the surrounding areas is really unstable. Dany never really had the situation under control even before Tyrion and Varys arrived, and she has three dragons. Then she hands off day-to-day…
But Jaime is a Lannister, not a Baratheon.
Who's next in the line of succession if Tommen dies? Has the show addressed that yet? Cersei isn't really a Baratheon or a Targaryen. I'd imagine Robert has a cousin Rutiger hanging around somewhere, but I don't think this has been addressed on-screen.
I'm pretty sure this was a new plot thread thrown out there. My theory is that the High Sparrow likes little boys.
Jaqen died on the way back to his home planet.
Is there even a baby? Jaime's plan is so much more genius if he made the baby up.
I feel a little sad now that we've gotten confirmation that Arya's storyline really was as shallow and pointless as it seemed for the past two seasons.
I don't think "fans who like to see things happen onscreen" is a very specific group.
I'm starting to think they're trolling us. They reintroduced the Brotherhood, Blackfish and Edmure after three seasons, and everybody in Westeros who ever made small talk with Catelyn suddenly can't stop bringing her up. I think the joke is on us.
Isn't that his Sam always does brave things? He killed the White Walker and the Thenn in the least badass way imaginable. Particularly when you compare both accomplishments with how Jon did the same thing.
It is possible that the guy we see as Jaqen is actually a few different people, so maybe we have seen a full organization and just didn't realize it.
So the biggest problem this show has structurally is that the story is told very linearly and chronologically — we jump all around Westeros and Essos following five or six different story threads, but there is never any indication that time is moving faster in one story than the other, or that a scene in one location…
I enjoyed First Class, but once I learned that it was originally developed as Magneto origin movie, I just wanted to see a full two hours of Fassbender extracting revenge on former Nazis in 1960s Switzerland and Argentina using his Magneto powers. The movie certainly loses something once it becomes a winking…
That's a good observation — from our point of view, the Baratheons haven't been in power in KL since Robert's hunting accident back in Season 1, when the Lannisters seized power. But from the general public's view, the Baratheon dynasty continued unhindered with Joffrey and then Tommen.