I think then that the proper term is "Behroozed" after that kid from Day 4 on 24 who was kidnapped by the bad guys and then never seen or referred to again.
I think then that the proper term is "Behroozed" after that kid from Day 4 on 24 who was kidnapped by the bad guys and then never seen or referred to again.
Of course it's for pacing purposes, but it's also fun to speculate that the Night King knows about all the bullshit that's happening to the south and is just allowing everyone to kill each other off and make his job easier.
Maybe, but did they establish definitively that there's only one supership in Euron's fleet?
I suppose Dany and Jon could tear down the Wall and let the White Walkers conquer Westeros while they hole up at Dragonstone, but I wouldn't bet on it.
I was also relieved that Cersei's plans for Ellaria and her daughter didn't involve having the Mountain rape them to death or anything else overtly graphic, but it was still conceptually horrifying to consider Ellaria being chained there for possibly decades (if Cersei gets her way) with nothing to do but stare at her…
I don't think we need to assume that Euron was personally at Casterly Rock; is it just as likely that he split some of the ships off from his fleet and sent them there earlier?
I'm in, if only for the inevitable edits on YouTube with "Eye of the Tiger" replacing the score.
Maybe Sherman's march to the sea? 10,000 Unsullied marching five miles wide and laying waste to everything in their path would be a cool sight.
I saw it as providing an interesting insight into Tyrion's mind, and how he makes mistakes when he lets his emotions get in the way. He knew that Casterly Rock wasn't an important target, but he couldn't resist the chance to stick it to his family (and Tywin in particular, even if he's dead) one more time. And he paid…
They did explain the lack of air cover: Dany is the only one who can fly a dragon (for now), and while the dragons may be nigh on invincible, all it would take is one lucky arrow to kill her.
#Rule34
See, I'd love to have seen either of those movies on their own. Cramming them both together just didn't work.
Elba's one of my favorite actors, and I think he'd be a terrific Bond. My only concern is that at 44, he'd already be getting a late start, especially if (as you said) Craig comes back for one more. Also, between Luther, the MCU and (god-willing) the Dark Tower series, he may already be involved in as many franchises…
I think mine would go:
Clifton James.
And that they go to sleep every night on a big pile of money.
They're both definitely worth seeing; Children of Men is an absolute masterpiece and Apocalypto is proof that, as messed up as Mel Gibson may be, he's a hell of a filmmaker. Just make sure you watch Apocalypto on an empty stomach; it's about as gruesome a movie as I've ever seen.
The only thing I dislike about the Craig Bonds is that they completely nixed the idea that "Bond" is just a codename for different secret agents (as Lazenby hinted at in his sole outing) because they decided to give him a full backstory. That just means we'll never get to see Idris Elba play him.
Quantum of Solace was hamstrung by the writers strike; it came down to Craig and Forster trying to bullshit entire scenes while they were already out on location, and then it was the poor editor's job to somehow get something coherent out of it. Craig himself said that they were lucky to get an actual movie out of it.
For old Bond movie cheese, nothing tops the sequence in You Only Live Twice when the rocket is landing in the volcano base, and the smoke effects don't do a very good job of hiding the entire damn crane that's lowering it onto the set.