ceecee
Coolatta® Enjoyer
- Joined
- Apr 22, 2008
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- 8w9
Cersei's Prophecy
Well, the kids are all taken care of -- "gold for their hair, gold for their shrouds."
The Valonqar is the most interesting part now -- the term means "little brother" -- as it went thusly: "And when your tears have drowned you, the valonqar shall wrap his hands about your pale white throat and choke the life from you."
For a long time, the assumption was that this would be Tyrion, with a contentious relationship and the blatant enmity between the two (and where Cersei almost managed to get Tyrion executed in Season 4).
Now, thematically, it's become more and more plausible that it could be her incestuous lover twin (who is slightly younger than her) Jaime, mainly because of how it's established from Episode 1 of "what Jaime is willing to do for love" rather flippantly, when he disables Bran by callously pushing him out a window to preserve the secret of the twins' incest, and you'd think this might get revisited / spun around in some way.
- Jaime is ethically noble on some level and willing to break a commitment when the lives of many are at stake -- such as breaking his vow as King's Guard to stop Aerys II from destroying King's Landing with wildfire. Brienne sees the noble aspect to his character, and you see him respond to that. It doesn't help that Cersei has just killed a large number of people using wildfire.
- Jaime's largest point of admiration for Cersei was how she (like Catelyn Stark) would do anything for her babies... but here Cersei has essentially sealed the doom of her last child -- also Jaime's child -- and without a tear climbs upon the throne to claim power. Essentially at this point, Cersei seems to have resigned herself to the inevitable and is now going for broke; there will be no reining her in, her children were her focus before but now they are all gone and she has nothing to live for.
- The look upon Jaime's face at her coronation is unreadable, aside from the "WTF have you done???" She might have in the short-term saved herself and rid the city of The Sparrow and his militants, but she has created a host of difficulties in the long run and essentially ruined the Lannisters in terms of the longevity of the House.
The main difficulty is that Jaime isn't wrapping one of his hands around anyone's throat -- it's made of metal -- but I suppose it depends on how literal the prophecy is.
But essentially you seem the twins moving in opposite directions now. Jaime is moving away from his dark and irresponsible reputation to act more nobly and to preserve life (which you saw flickers of potential for when he broke his vow to murder Aerys) -- and he's even been taking actions to prevent bloodshed as much as possible on the battlefield -- while Cersei is moving away from machinations in the dark and the imposed constraints of protecting her children to simply wielding power with impunity.
How can love survive?
Yeah, I still think aside from Lyanna telling off the northern leaders towering around her, one of the best scenes was between Cersei and Unella (or whatever her name is). Karma is a bitch. The ambiguity of outcome probably made it better -- my imagination is probably worse than what they could show. Was I really rooting for Cersei there? It was a deliciously acted scene.
as far as Margaery:
That sucked. I really liked Margaery. And she was wily, and smart, and socially cunning. But she was young and not necessarily ruthless -- and Cersei has had years to stew inside The Game. She will go to the wall, without apology. Margaery was a deadly enemy and threatened to take her sons from her, and Margaery has also arranged things to destroy Cersei via the Sparrow's faith while extracting herself. So Cersei took her out without even playing the social games; she just did something so outrageous, without regard for other life, that Margaery had no way to respond in time.
In her favor, she knew something was wrong shortly before the end. The Sparrow was the fool. That didn't save Margaery, but she played well while simply just not being experienced enough to see this coming + have a backup plan. Imagine if Margaery had another twenty years of game playing under her belt; she might have become more like Cersei. But in this case, alas. It reminds me slightly of that bit in the original Robocop movie, where Bob Morton sees himself as the new up and comer, but wily old Dick Jones takes the game to another level of ruthlessness and finishes him off when he least expects it... because age/experience and lack of scruples counts for something.
Margaery did win in the sense that she actually had Tommen. Cersei thought she could save her son; but she had already lost him. She didn't predict Tommen's next action and thought she still had him under wing.
haha you were really rooting for Cersei, I was too. I think the buildup of bad things happening to her had a blow out (literally) and now we can go back to hating her because....
Dany, the Unsullied and the Dothraki are coming
The dragons are coming
The king of the north is coming
Winter is coming
Are we all ready for the big wedding that's going to happen next season? It has to. That's why she broke up with Daario Naharis and even said a marriage alliance is the only way. There's really only one choice but we'll have to get over that Targaryen sort of incest thing first.
The dragons are coming
The king of the north is coming
Winter is coming
Are we all ready for the big wedding that's going to happen next season? It has to. That's why she broke up with Daario Naharis and even said a marriage alliance is the only way. There's really only one choice but we'll have to get over that Targaryen sort of incest thing first.