Which seems like a more logically consistent outcome: Jorah leads a cavalry charge into a wall of undead and gets killed, or Jorah leads a cavalry charge into a wall of undead and comes back basically unscathed?
Which seems like a more logically consistent outcome: Jorah leads a cavalry charge into a wall of undead and gets killed, or Jorah leads a cavalry charge into a wall of undead and comes back basically unscathed?
Desire is so underrated. Hurricane gets all the attention, but Isis is the real centerpiece of that album.
The difference is there used to be a frequently updated section of new reviews - movies, music, TV, books - right on the front page. There was a dedicated section for it. It was much easier to find and discover things. Now, the homepage is mostly a list of clickbaity stuff like “ZOMG Bradley Whitford didn’t realize…
I don’t really understand that argument, since Sansa did end up as a queen, and Arya clearly and openly had no interest in being tied down to noble life.
You really think so? I think it’s the worst of the lot, even worse than Phantom Menace.
I mean, it can’t be worse than The Last Jedi though, right?
Raven for You
Doesn’t surprise me. Storm’s End has already become Gendry-fied, you know King’s Landing was gonna be next.
A wizard did it.
“A trained assassin killing someone is not a deus ex machina.”
For me, it’s less about Arya getting around Winterfell than how she even got close to the Night King once she was anywhere close to the Godswood. She had to sneak around the library when there were like a dozen of them in there, but somehow she just waltzed into the middle of a batallion of walkers and wights? I get…
Does the Night King even speak? I’m not sure Bran could have gotten him monologuing.
I think he had to be warging, or greenseeing, or whatever it is he’s doing, in order to “call” the Night King so he knows where to find him.
Yes. It’s endlessly rewatchable, whether you’re actively watching or just to have on in the background, and seasons 2-6 are some of the best comedy TV ever.
Cersei’s prophecy states that she will meet her demise at the hands of (literally, choked to death) her little brother. So Jaime could still play a role in that. It could of course mean Tyrion as well, but Jaime would be more poetic, especially given his status as the Kingkiller.
Indeed. These writers love themselves a good deus ex machina, and having the Red Woman show up with a bunch of magical clerics to save the day is right out of their playbook.
Beric definitely has to die, now that Thoros of Myr is gone. But not before he does something important, because otherwise why would they keep him around this long? Wasn’t the whole point that the Lord of Light had some big plan for him?
Maybe that’s the thing? She doesn’t want to talk about it in interviews because she knows it’s bullshit, but can’t admit it publicly because she doesn’t want to get cut off from her family. It’s not like I’m paying attention, but I haven’t noticed her out crusading for Scientology in the same way that Tom Cruise does,…
I obviously can’t speak to their performance in this movie, but I saw Method Man & Redman when they performed at Soundset a number of years back and to this day it remains the single worst, laziest, most boring live act I’ve ever seen.
Sorry I am apparently bad at reading