Game of Thrones is BACK, folks!Honestly, after that intro, HBO could show me 60 minutes of characters just talking around a dinner table and I'd walk away completely hyped. It feels too good to have this show back in my life.
Every episode is going to be picked apart by a thousand different viewers so there's really not much I could add to a conversation that's going to be dissected in every possible angle, but I'll try highlighting the big takeaways:
The Good:- Jon flys a dragon: Jon aced his first test in 'Targaryen 101'
- Tormund is a handsome devil (almost literally to Dolorous Edd).
- Arya and Jon reunion: almost a shot for shot recreation of the last hug they share. Terrific.
- Euron (aka Josh Jackson from Dawson's Creek) is a magnetic villain. If there's anything this show is great at (and there's many) raising the bar of hateable villains has to be up there. I'm not saying he's higher or lower than Ramsay or Joffrey...but he's right in the mix.
- Literally anything with Tyrion. I almost cried from laughter and joy at his witty joke about eunuch jokes being to him because he 'has balls and you don't." God bless Peter Dinklage.
- The most eye-brow rasing quote from Sam to Jon: "You set aside your crown for your people. Would she do the same?" <- That is some foreboding subtext. That quote combined with Vary's about Dany keeping older advisors at a distance because 'nothing lasts' has me worried about this relationship.
- The GoT intro visuals: I can't wait to see the in-depth analysis by Alt Shift X on this sequence alone. Lots of juicy tidbits.
The Bad:- Theon's rescue of Yara with Kraken Team 6 (hilarious term I read on a show re-cap article). Felt way too rushed, but I'm glad they at least got it out of the way.
- Sam finding out about his father/brother's death and then running to Jon to tell him about his parentage was a weird transition sequence.
The biggest peeve I had with last night's episode was the line by Arya regarding Sansa:
"She's the smartest person I've ever met."^Like, what? Sansa has been a pawn almost the entirety of the show. Outside of 'tricking' Littlefinger (which was done in tandem with Arya), what exactly has she done that was smart? Using the knights of the vale to rescue Jon wasn't some crafty maneuver. She literally hid that army from Jon and almost got him killed for it. Managing the provisions at Winterfell? Cool, she remembered that armor should have leather in it. Outside of those 2 instances, every choice she made was the wrong one. And I always felt that Arya was the smartest, most resourceful, Stark. Idk, it's like the show is trying to ret-con the Sansa character that was constantly in a position of being manipulated into a position of strength to artificially create a sense of real conflict between her and Dany...and it doesn't feel earned at all.
But like I said before, I will happily watch anything being led with that GoT intro music. This show is too awesome. Also, here's some pics from my premiere party that I hosted with me and about 10 friends. Among other things we dished up some punny food items such as:
- King Robert's Special (pulled pork)
- Theon's Greyjoys (pigs in a blanket)
- Hodoritos
- Brie of Tarth (brie cheese), A Manchengo Has no Name (Manchengo cheese), Parmesan Snow (Parmesan Cheese)
- Targaryen Tacos