Well yes and no because they are still sisters who care for each other, who'd want to catch up.
Well yes and no because they are still sisters who care for each other, who'd want to catch up.
Can't help feeling this whole Arya & Sansa conflict could be solved quite easily if they just sat down and had a proper chat, the way you would with a family member you'd not seen in years and had assumed was dead.
Heh you're probably right, he's definitely the most straight forward and less likely to overanalyze what he's seeing.
Not seen anyone else mention this, but I feel like it's supposed to be important that Dany executed them with dragon fire, rather than a beheading which is at least seen as the more traditional, honourable westeros way of executing people. I know it shouldn't really matter, and it was still a quick death, but it…
I figured that the Firemen/Giant is normally all cryptic, but seeing that all he had to work with was Andy, thought "oh well fuck it" and just used some magic white lodge power to make him suddenly understand everything.
Feel like lots of characters on Game of Thrones would really benefit if they just opened sentences with "Look, I know this is going to sound insane but…"
What was Littlefinger's conversation with Jon Snow?
Mark my words. Just as Theon looks like he's about to give up and drown at sea, he'll be rescued by Gendry.
"Hello, I'm The Waif. I'm highly skilled assassin, and I hate Arya Stark so I'm going to kill her!"
We already know the scene wasn't intended to be rape. It completely came across that way on-screen, but canonically it wasn't a rape. I don't think it does destroy Jaime or Cersei character, it just means that the entire production team massively fucked up one scene, but what's done is done. All scenes between them…
I didn't make that connection with the bells, but I thought him being shot with a crossbow twice and Varys saying "What have you done?" was the confirmation.
A classic case of Chekov's Moon Door.
Jesus fucking christ are there any comments that aren't just scrawler defending Shae like she's his fucking mother or something? I'd quite like to read what else people had to say about the episode.
You do realize the fact that you're even saying Jamie raped his sister is kind of the point. The director said he didn't think it was a rape scene, presumably the writers didn't intend it as a rape scene either. Yet even the people who are defending the scene are saying it was a rape scene. That's a bit fucked up for…
The best newspaper headline is from the beer baron episode where the headline BUMS THREATEN TO LEAVE TOWN is followed later in the episode by BUMS EXTEND DEADLINE. That episode also has the excellent FAMILY SEDAN OUTRUNS COPS
I wish there was an HBO show where the camera tastefully panned over to the curtains before you see any sex or nudity. I'm not a prude, I'm just bored of it.
It's strange that people could think Louise is too mean or antagonistic. To me she's the most straight character after Bob. She's a child that doesn't understand the weird conventions that her parents and society force upon her. She doesn't relate to the interest of other girls her age, she just wishes people would…
These comments are too confusing now, I can't tell if some people genuinely don't know this isn't a serious article or if they're just pretending not to.
Just from the commentaries I've listened to, Mike's tended to come across as more thoughtful on talking about the process of writing and working out story, where's one's with Matt tended to be more aimless goofing off kind of commentaries.
I was really impressed with how it replicated the ambiance of these movies. In general it can be weird to have silence in animation as the usual method is to go fast and loud all the time, but this got it spot on. A relief after last week.