the torture of fArya is illogical in the book too (or rather, that Roose allows it to happen)
the torture of fArya is illogical in the book too (or rather, that Roose allows it to happen)
Does it make a lot of sense that Ramsay's allowed to get away with that?
I think it was more like she was expecting to have to sleep with him, but not expecting the cruelty and physical pain Ramsay would put her through.
Whoa! I did not notice that! Which one?
they managed to film a rape scene last year BY ACCIDENT.
It was weird to have more feelings about Aemon's death than Ser Barristan's.
ADWD is a complete misfire from start to finish and remains one of the most disappointing books I've ever read.
You're going in circles with LF. He gave Sansa to them: they have no inkling he might have any objection.
He also suggests she murder an entire caste of people
Don't you have to really compress the definition of panic, to get that? Dictionary.com says that it "produces hysterical or irrational behavior," and the Google definition says that it "causes wildly unthinking behavior." Cambridge Online says it "prevents reasonable thought and action." Websters calls it…
"Daario’s masculine panic"? He didn't seem that panicked to me.
That position was, and I quote, 'he only fucked her'. Kinda hard to come back from that
I don't want TV!Sansa to be a complete moron), but she still had the option of saying 'No', yet she didn't take it. That leads to the disturbing conclusion that she was in a way responsible for what happened to her - a very distasteful, blame-the-victim scenario.
It's also been clearly established that Ramsey is sadistic madman, so it's doubly unnecessary from this perspective.
1a. Ramsey's actions don't have to make sense, he's crazy. He does these things because he's driven to.
1b. In the books Ramsey is not aware of of how much he is angering the Northerners, he has to be told. In the show he hasn't been told (yet). In neither does he give a shit about LF, or see any reason why he…
no shit, it's rape.
Lifted more or less straight from the books, right, with Tyrion in the role of Quentyn Martell?
As long as it happened to some guy in the books, makes perfect sense to me!
it took me until halfway through this to realize it was sarcasm.
the writers really seem to take the view that Theon "betrayed" the Starks and that he needs to redeem himself to them, which was not the story in the books.
Fuck his sense of humor; how'd he keep his erection? Concussed like that, I mean. They damn near beat him to death.