- We might NOT see the reformed Jamie we like again. Cerei is pregnant again. She will use it to keep Jamie act against his NEW values. Infact Jamie himself might truly change to protect the child.
- Sam you idiot you were ignoring what Gilly was saying - I don't blame you for it - you missed her mention Rhaegar's second marriage.
- Tarly's died invain. I don't blame her for burning them. They had their chance.
- Yay Gendry is back. Am I the only one who is thinking that he might end up with Arya if they survive. They might both not survive though. Martin hasn't killed anyone we like in ages and he must be itching to do so.
^^ My big worries is that, with the lack of detail this season, they won't focus at all on this issue. (When the hell would they even have time, with a zombie invasion + a War of Westeros to wage in only eight episodes left for the entire series?)
They really needed about one more season to do this story and characterization at least SOME degree of justice. Makes you wonder whether this was the showrunners' choice or HBO wanted to finish this up so they could do a bunch of spinoffs.
Do we have a release date for the next book yet?
I know he's still a brother of the night's watch, but with the Tarly men torched and Sam in possession of his father's ancestral sword, does Samwell become Lord of Horn Hill?
Last season and this season especially have really redeemed what initially seemed to be a sadistic meandering slog of a story. I always held out a futile hope that the story would arc appropriately; that characters would change into better versions of themselves; that events would begin coming together for a grand and emotionally rewarding climax- and by Jove that seems to be occurring! Go HBO! Thank you for saving the story from its author.
The hound has been redeemed.
Sansa has been redeemed (kinda maybe?).
Tyrion has been redeemed.
Jon Snow has been redeemed.
Sam has been redeemed.
It even looks as though Danyris might be redeemed through Jon's example.
Arya hasn't quite yet but it appears as though she might finally be stepping in it courtesy of LF.
Bran has been redeemed.
Jamie has (long) been redeemed.
Cersi is still clinging to her old drum (likely why she's the least likeable character currently).
Dragonstone dude Jorl or whatever has been redeemed.
It really feels like True Detective all over again- which was another show I really hated until the very end, at which point I changed my mind and ranked it among my favorites.
Tolkien would also be proud.Disney would be proud. Which season? EDIT: I will guess first season, since that was the one that was heavily darkly existential until the very last minute, then had the hopeful little twist you seem to appreciate.
Tolkien would also be proud.
And yes I meant the first season. The second was so bad I often forget it exists.
The entire point of true detective season one was that pessimism was no more or less logical than optimism- a point game of thrones has thankfully adopted as well. Slapping a happy ending onto a story arc makes no more or less sense than slapping a miserable one on there. This show has had more miserable ends to arcs overall than it has happy ones, so this natural balance reaffirmed at the end feels more like good writing than bad.Not really. Tolkien was consistent in his story telling and wasn't afraid of darkness even after victories were won. Slapping happy arcs on the trail end of a TV series is little more than sloppy writing.Well, we agree about that.You know some of the stuff that sits with me from Tolkien? A big one is when Frodo comes home after succeeding in his mission (although he actually failed -- in the end, he could not go through with ridding himself of the ring, and it was Gollum who accidentally saved everyone), and every year on the day of some pretty terrible anniversaries of Frodo's arc (like when he was stabbed by the Witch King or stung by Shelob), he becomes ill or has a kind of malaise/fit. Eventually he finds he cannot enjoy the Shire and has to simply encourage himself with the idea that -- though he could not save the Shire for himself -- he had helped save it for people he loved, and then he gets on a boat at the Grey Havens and disappears into the West in hope of finding some peace. End result: Frodo does succeed, but he is in pain for the rest of his mortal life, in his soul and body. Oh, there was a lot of that kind of thing in Tolkien. Like the aftermath of Denethor's death and how Faramir and Eowyn had to rebuild their lives (it's really beautiful, the tenderness they have for each other as sole survivors of some nasty family drama and losses), or how Arwen -- while she was part of the notable third union between man and elf -- also paid the price of losing Aragorn when his mortality was finally offered up, and she went and died in Cirin Amroth... she who should have gone with her people forever into the West and never tasted that degree of sorrow. I could go on with more. Tolkien told it like it was.