sturula
barber
sturula

I just want to say that the series doesn’t end with Cooper and Carrie in the road outside the Palmer house. It ends where it began — with the eternal innocent victim/corrupted femme fatale whispering her secret to the eternal detective/truth-seeker/savior. He can only understand what she whispers to him when he’s

The look of straining after something wonderful on Diane’s face mirrored the look on Becky’s face in the car. Something amazing, attainable and just out of reach at the same time.

Well, we saw it start to snow in King’s Landing, so it made sense to me that the WWs would be beginning their assault.

I’m depressed.

Ed does that all the time. He got the exact same look on his face while he was watching Nadine walk away. It's a snapping back to attention after having been lost in thought look.

I don't think Sansa has cared at all about being a lady ever since her last stay at Winterfell showed her how worthless being a lady can be. She's matured through her suffering; Arya's suffering seems to have stunted her emotional growth. I predict Arya comes close to killing Sansa, realizes what she's doing and then

Kind of like a…a FARM?

I don't. I think she really hates Sansa.

It really doesn't take much for you to think that, judging by the way you react to the comments here.

Arya IS dangerous and unhinged, though. And also — dangerously cocky. She thinks she's smarter than everyone around her and invincible.

That wasn't love; that was sexual passion.

I think the costumes are too sci-fi this season.

Arya's stuck in a place the other characters have moved on from.

It's ridiculous. It's impossible to believe they're in an arctic wilderness when not one even puts a hat on.

I scrolled down as far as I had the energy for, so apologies if there's been a discussion of this, but I had a totally different read on the Arya/Sansa relationship from the reviewer. Arya was suspicious of Sansa the moment she heard her being called "Lady Stark." Arya gave Sansa a tight, fake little smile when they

There's a really trite, juvenile moral sensibility underlying del Toro's work which makes it feel like bizarro Disney to me.

If there's one thing the writers of this show have been consistent about, it's that Dany's sense of entitlement to the Iron Throne is problematic. She has never stated any reason for wanting the throne other than "I'm the last Targaeryon." She's always placed too much emphasis on all her titles.

I think that's too easy. I mean, how can Varys be a traitor when he straight-up said Dany could only count on him as long as he thought she was good for Westeros? I don't think there's a traitor yet, but I think if anyone eventually turns on her it'll be Tyrion.

For a show that was unafraid to kill its main characters there is way too much teflon-coating going on now.

Yes. I think she is referring to her persona on the show. It's like Audrey is screaming at Charlie what Sherilynn Fenn was ranting about on Twitter, and Charlie is Lynch saying, "Well, I can always just end your story." Which is eerie, since the filming of that scene obviously preceded the Twitter rant.