The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. You really haven't seen it until Lee Van Cleef's nostrils are bigger than you are.
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. You really haven't seen it until Lee Van Cleef's nostrils are bigger than you are.
The pod-racing sequence on the big screen was legit.
NO INCEST
"Hey, remember that time you showed up 20 minutes too late to see our mom and brother before they were horribly butchered? You really missed out, the food was great that night."
Weed.
It's the Arya/Bran reunion that's really got me interest now, though. Like, do they just both stare impassively at each other in aloof silence?
Don't you get it?! We are the Good Job, Internets!
This is already weird enough without seeing a fucking "Great Job, Internet!" tag slapped onto it. Christ.
I've managed to see a few heist movies so I don't need TVTropes to explain the concept to me, haha. I'd have to go back and doublecheck, but I'd gotten the impression they were referring to the fleet as though it had already left at that point - Missandei has her "I'm sad because Grey Worm is gone" face.
I can dig it.
Wait. wait wait wait.
I would just assume it operates on the same growth/replacement principle as their teeth.
Villains going good is always a weird thing. I loved how Gillen handled it with Loki in Journey Into Mystery by twisting it into this whole sneaky meta-narrative thing, especially as I kinda got the impression it was initially an editorial mandate responding to Loki's recent popularity.
Like with cockroaches! Or snakes (I think?)!
"pretty much every character acts like a massive idiot to avoid the plot being solved in 15 minutes. The ending goes surprisingly dark, and bizarrely turns the main character into a creepy idiot."
Wow, did not expect to see anyone bring that story up, let alone here. Read it years back - I believe it was part of the classic Looking Glass short stories collection? - but was too young to pick up on any gay themes. The collection also had Silent Snow, Secret Snow so at the time I just thought weird kids killing…
I feel like Euron's fleet is actually legit magical but he's such a massive shithead that nobody else pays enough attention to notice.
Tyrion describing it was a bit weird given that he waited until the Unsullied had already left before explaining to Dany how they were supposed to actually win…
I feel like that's maybe a bit more precise control than she actually has over the dragons at the moment.
I like how that shot was "btw Bronn's in the back" and then it panned over to be like "no seriously you guys, check it out, it's Bronn!"