Are we sure both dragons are good?Wichitabear said:
I was thinking the same thing. But, I'm excited to see how they take down Cersi. Of course, we got the dragons to spit a Little fire on her army.
My wife, ever the thorough one, showed me the "next week on GoT" trailer for, well, next week. It did show two dragons wafting over the Red Keep, so it's pretty obvious they both survived well and hardy.Wichitabear said:
I'm counting on it. Lolol I didn't see the one Jon was riding get hurt. Did you?
I was thinking about the deaths, and so many of them got to redeem themselves from past mistakesHuMcK said:
We learned nothing about the NK's motivations or past, lost no major characters that matter, Bran spent the whole fight being useless (I sure hope he explains why he had to go be a raven while everyone around him died), cavalry charges into the dark against an unknown foe
I loved the Dothraki also but they hadn't really been relevant in a few seasons had they?TechDawgMc said:I was thinking about the deaths, and so many of them got to redeem themselves from past mistakesHuMcK said:
We learned nothing about the NK's motivations or past, lost no major characters that matter, Bran spent the whole fight being useless (I sure hope he explains why he had to go be a raven while everyone around him died), cavalry charges into the dark against an unknown foe
* Mormont died defending Dany
* Theon died defending Bran
* The Red Witch died after giving her all to create the fire that stopped the dead for a while
* The one eyed guy who'd been resurrected so many times saved Arya
What's unusual about this is that GRRM almost never gives someone that kind of death. It's very much in the LotR type thinking.
I am inclined to think that the one eyed raven (Bran) is basically just an information holder. His power is solely in what he knows. I suspect he has no real power to use (though you wonder why he couldn't summon a whole host of animals to join the battle somehow)
I was also bothered by the way they wasted the Dothraki. They could have been used much more interestingly in a daylight battle against Cersei's forces.
Not snobby at all. It highlights the basic problems the directors had with this scene.HuMcK said:
This will sound super snobby, but that is honestly the kind of thinking that separates the books from the show. The medium of TV just doesn't seem to lend itself to that kind of tactical minutia like the written word does, because the books are full of the stuff. This was the easiest battle to nitpick their gameplan, and it was the one that mattered the most.
Mr Tulip said:HuMcK said:
This will sound super snobby, but that is honestly the kind of thinking that separates the books from the show. The medium of TV just doesn't seem to lend itself to that kind of tactical minutia like the written word does, because the books are full of the stuff. This was the easiest battle to nitpick their gameplan, and it was the one that mattered the most.
It will be interesting to see how GRRM finishes his own work, and if he feels any compunction to play out the story in the same vein.
He has no one to blame but himself if he is upset about someone else finishing his work. After a nice two year separation between each of the first three books, it was then five years until the 4th book, and another six years until the 5th, and now eight years later he has released novellas and then a history on the Targaryen's but still no 6th ASOIAF book.HuMcK said:Mr Tulip said:HuMcK said:
This will sound super snobby, but that is honestly the kind of thinking that separates the books from the show. The medium of TV just doesn't seem to lend itself to that kind of tactical minutia like the written word does, because the books are full of the stuff. This was the easiest battle to nitpick their gameplan, and it was the one that mattered the most.
It will be interesting to see how GRRM finishes his own work, and if he feels any compunction to play out the story in the same vein.
I have hopes that the indignity of seeing his story finished for him, potentially in ways that are wildly divergent from his own vision, will motivate him to finish it up himself. On the flipside, if it's done to his satisfaction, he may just feel that the matter is closed and continue blogging about the NY Giants.
Sometimes you just run out of things to say. Been looking at my screen for several months now on another project. Its still mostly blank90sBear said:
He has no one to blame but himself if he is upset about someone else finishing his work. After a nice two year separation between each of the first three books, it was then five years until the 4th book, and another six years until the 5th, and now eight years later he has released novellas and then a history on the Targaryen's but still no 6th ASOIAF book.
I started reading his books right after the release of A Storm of Swords and have never re-read any of them. I'm about to the point where I've forgotten the differences, all the extra details, and where everyone is in the books.
I'm stuck in the same position with the Kingkiller Chronicle - an author who sold rights to TV and is now sitting on finishing his own work.
I don't think that's his problem.Assassin said:Sometimes you just run out of things to say. Been looking at my screen for several months now on another project. Its still mostly blank90sBear said:
He has no one to blame but himself if he is upset about someone else finishing his work. After a nice two year separation between each of the first three books, it was then five years until the 4th book, and another six years until the 5th, and now eight years later he has released novellas and then a history on the Targaryen's but still no 6th ASOIAF book.
I started reading his books right after the release of A Storm of Swords and have never re-read any of them. I'm about to the point where I've forgotten the differences, all the extra details, and where everyone is in the books.
I'm stuck in the same position with the Kingkiller Chronicle - an author who sold rights to TV and is now sitting on finishing his own work.
This got me, too, for a second.Limited IQ Redneck in P said:
The only character that died that I will miss is Bronn. He should have stayed home.
I think it's partly his problem. He's written himself into a position, I suspect, where he's developed this story that's so big he's not sure he can land it. It was supposed to be a trilogy. Then he kept expanding as he wrote. Now he's got all these things going and he's not sure he can get to his ending smoothly. (he'd have a much better chance if he had an editor; he's way too self-indulgent in his writing).90sBear said:I don't think that's his problem.Assassin said:
Sometimes you just run out of things to say. Been looking at my screen for several months now on another project. Its still mostly blank