And now my watch has ended.
Started on 1/11, so just under 3 months.
One more week!
Started on 1/11, so just under 3 months.
One more week!
C@LAg said:wrong. 6 days 23 hours and 1 minute of as now.Brian Earl Spilner said:
And now my watch has ended.
Started on 1/11, so just under 3 months.
One more week!
Why would they fight each other if they were both undead? They'd be on the same team. I would think they would have the undead mountain going against living hound. Hound would set the mountain on fire to provide sweet ironic justice.Brian Earl Spilner said:
So, Cleganebowl is 99% certain to be happening. (GET HYPE.)
They teased it very strongly in the finale.
Question - Will it be an undead on undead fight, or will Hound still be alive? What will be the circumstances leading up to that fight, and who wins?
Brian Earl Spilner said:
Undead Mountain isn't a wight. He fights for Cersei, so they wouldn't be on the same side.
Oh, you mean current mountain vs undead hound. Of course in that situation, the show would be forcing us to root for the mountain against the Hound. That would contradict where the show has been going for the last several seasons. The Hound is the reluctant hero that we are supposed to like, not the other way around.Brian Earl Spilner said:
Undead Mountain isn't a wight. He fights for Cersei, so they wouldn't be on the same side.
And I though I was confused before...Quote:
I think it's more likely (and predictable) that the Hound gets killed, becomes wight, and is killed by the Hound in a grand duel.
Oops.. I meant the mountain.. fixingBelton Ag said:And I though I was confused before...Quote:
I think it's more likely (and predictable) that the Hound gets killed, becomes wight, and is killed by the Hound in a grand duel.
I got it, just giving you a hard time.aTmAg said:Oops.. I meant the mountain.. fixingBelton Ag said:And I though I was confused before...Quote:
I think it's more likely (and predictable) that the Hound gets killed, becomes wight, and is killed by the Hound in a grand duel.
I agree that they've been setting up Hound vs Mountain and it feels like most fans would be disappointed if we didn't get it.Zombie Jon Snow said:
I think it's always been sitting up for (real) Hound to get his revenge on the Mountain for years of abuse. I expect nothing less.
GRRM is an underdog writer - Dany, Jon, Tyrion and a lot of the sidekicks too are underdog stories: The Hound, Brienne, Pod, Bronn to some degree, etc. Of course some will die (cuz that's also GRRM) but I expect a resolution of their arc to happen before they do.
Quinn said:I agree that they've been setting up Hound vs Mountain and it feels like most fans would be disappointed if we didn't get it.Zombie Jon Snow said:
I think it's always been sitting up for (real) Hound to get his revenge on the Mountain for years of abuse. I expect nothing less.
GRRM is an underdog writer - Dany, Jon, Tyrion and a lot of the sidekicks too are underdog stories: The Hound, Brienne, Pod, Bronn to some degree, etc. Of course some will die (cuz that's also GRRM) but I expect a resolution of their arc to happen before they do.
Regarding your next point - why does it matter "cuz that's also GRRM"? Do you think B&W are trying to finish the story like he would or are they taking ownership and giving it their own ending? I tend to think they are taking it their own way.
Couldn't they have just gone in through that gate? That seemed like a big weakness. A sort of a flaw in the story, IMO.Brian Earl Spilner said:
Interesting.
Personally, I don't love the idea of a "magic item" like a horn bringing it down, but then again, as cool as it was to see a dragon bring it down, I didn't love that either.
It essentially made it so that our heroes were the reason they were able to attack Winterfell in the first place. The Wall had stood for generations, and there wasn't any huge reason to think the Wall couldn't stop them this time.
Which is ironic to think about, in hindsight. Tyrion tells her "sometimes doing nothing is the hardest thing to do", when she has to go rescue everyone.
In this case, doing nothing would have meant the death of everyone who ventured beyond the wall, but it also ensured the Army of the Dead would never cross.
redline248 said:
I'm sure the walkers had a plan to get past it (no idea what it could be), but the dragon was obviously an easy plot device that requires no explanation
I guess that is magic that is no match for a dragon.redline248 said:
The wildlings almost made it through the gate, but the undead probably succeed bc of the sheer numbers. It would cost them a lot, and the night's watch probably just drops fire all over them.
Then again, there are numerous unmanned gates that the walkers never went through. Which probably means there was magic holding them out. The books certainly talk about it (Coldhands can't go through).
"They" = Army of the Dead?aTmAg said:Couldn't they have just gone in through that gate? That seemed like a big weakness. A sort of a flaw in the story, IMO.Brian Earl Spilner said:
Interesting.
Personally, I don't love the idea of a "magic item" like a horn bringing it down, but then again, as cool as it was to see a dragon bring it down, I didn't love that either.
It essentially made it so that our heroes were the reason they were able to attack Winterfell in the first place. The Wall had stood for generations, and there wasn't any huge reason to think the Wall couldn't stop them this time.
Which is ironic to think about, in hindsight. Tyrion tells her "sometimes doing nothing is the hardest thing to do", when she has to go rescue everyone.
In this case, doing nothing would have meant the death of everyone who ventured beyond the wall, but it also ensured the Army of the Dead would never cross.
Quote:
"The Wall's not just ice and stone," Benjen told Bran and Meera. "Ancient spells were carved into its foundation. Strong magic. To protect men from what lies beyond. And while it stands, the dead cannot pass. I cannot pass."
I mean, the gate isn't all that wide. All they would've needed is to light that tunnel on fire and none of the wights can come through.aTmAg said:Couldn't they have just gone in through that gate? That seemed like a big weakness. A sort of a flaw in the story, IMO.Brian Earl Spilner said:
Interesting.
Personally, I don't love the idea of a "magic item" like a horn bringing it down, but then again, as cool as it was to see a dragon bring it down, I didn't love that either.
It essentially made it so that our heroes were the reason they were able to attack Winterfell in the first place. The Wall had stood for generations, and there wasn't any huge reason to think the Wall couldn't stop them this time.
Which is ironic to think about, in hindsight. Tyrion tells her "sometimes doing nothing is the hardest thing to do", when she has to go rescue everyone.
In this case, doing nothing would have meant the death of everyone who ventured beyond the wall, but it also ensured the Army of the Dead would never cross.
You don't have to worry about it because that fat ass isn't finishing the booksQuote:
Do you guys think GRRM will go a different direction as far as how he brings down the Wall?
Was it known info that a dragon could bring the wall down?Episode IV said:"They" = Army of the Dead?aTmAg said:Couldn't they have just gone in through that gate? That seemed like a big weakness. A sort of a flaw in the story, IMO.Brian Earl Spilner said:
Interesting.
Personally, I don't love the idea of a "magic item" like a horn bringing it down, but then again, as cool as it was to see a dragon bring it down, I didn't love that either.
It essentially made it so that our heroes were the reason they were able to attack Winterfell in the first place. The Wall had stood for generations, and there wasn't any huge reason to think the Wall couldn't stop them this time.
Which is ironic to think about, in hindsight. Tyrion tells her "sometimes doing nothing is the hardest thing to do", when she has to go rescue everyone.
In this case, doing nothing would have meant the death of everyone who ventured beyond the wall, but it also ensured the Army of the Dead would never cross.
I don't think so:Quote:
"The Wall's not just ice and stone," Benjen told Bran and Meera. "Ancient spells were carved into its foundation. Strong magic. To protect men from what lies beyond. And while it stands, the dead cannot pass. I cannot pass."