No one has commented that Jorah met his little sister for the first time ever, and they didn't show it on screen.
Do you feel that any villian that is human lacks originality? After all 99.99% of the time they are human.Render said:
Anyone else feel the White Walkers and their zombie hordes are lame villains? It's just another form of zombies. Nothing unique. Plus they all conveniently die when their "host" gets even slightly clipped by a magic blade, causing them to instantly shatter. The threat lacks originality and dramatic tension, imo.
Render said:
Anyone else feel the White Walkers and their zombie hordes are lame villains? It's just another form of zombies. Nothing unique. Plus they all conveniently die when their "host" gets even slightly clipped by a magic blade, causing them to instantly shatter. The threat lacks originality and dramatic tension, imo.
Even more terrifying is that they are organized and led like an army.StringerBell said:
from a micro perspective sure they're just zombies.
from a macro perspective that they are a swarming horde that basically takes over whatever town the conquer then the larger horde moves on to the next one and they can only be killed with a very specific weapon....well that's pretty dramatic and tensiony.
cause they're cousins, not brother/sisterOnlyForNow said:
No one has commented that Jorah met his little sister for the first time ever, and they didn't show it on screen.
aTmAg said:Do you feel that any villian that is human lacks originality? After all 99.99% of the time they are human.Render said:
Anyone else feel the White Walkers and their zombie hordes are lame villains? It's just another form of zombies. Nothing unique. Plus they all conveniently die when their "host" gets even slightly clipped by a magic blade, causing them to instantly shatter. The threat lacks originality and dramatic tension, imo.
StringerBell said:
from a micro perspective sure they're just zombies.
from a macro perspective that they are a swarming horde that basically takes over whatever town the conquer then the larger horde moves on to the next one and they can only be killed with a very specific weapon....well that's pretty dramatic and tensiony.
To me, prior to GoT, the most scary "zombies" by far was those in 28 days later. It's as if the writers tried to think of the worst possible case. Athletic zombies that turn living people into new zombies very quickly. Well in GoT, their "zombies" are as bad as those in 28DL, but they also happen to be organized into a cohesive 100,000+ man army. And since the books were written before 28DL, it can't be said that the books copied 28DL.Render said:aTmAg said:Do you feel that any villian that is human lacks originality? After all 99.99% of the time they are human.Render said:
Anyone else feel the White Walkers and their zombie hordes are lame villains? It's just another form of zombies. Nothing unique. Plus they all conveniently die when their "host" gets even slightly clipped by a magic blade, causing them to instantly shatter. The threat lacks originality and dramatic tension, imo.
Humans can have different motivations. So you have endless possibilities for villains, and some may not even feel like "villains". Meanwhile zombies are practically the same in whatever story they're in - people you care about are resurrected and they kill the living.
I have a suspicion that "killing the living" isn't really what they want. I also think it's probably worth some debate on if 'they' want anything, or if it's really just a 'him.'Render said:
Dude, obviously they're villains. They want to kill the living!
StringerBell said:
i think in this case the zombies are no different than the dothraki or the unsullied. they're an army that's being used by a main player in the story.
so sure the zombies arent really interesting...but what's interesting is how and why the night king is using them to accomplish whatever his goal might be.
I'm not gonna lie, I haven't laughed this hard in a while.Quote:
Samwell: My dog, Pongo?
Daenerys: Run over by a carriage.
Samwell: My goldfish, Goldie?
Daenerys: Eaten by the cat.
Samwell: My cat?
Daenerys: Choked on the goldfish.
wangus12 said:
So the really big question is how does Jon/Sam/Bran break the news to the rest of the world that he is actually a Targ?
agrams said:
They are cousins, not siblings.
Sam: "Whew, what a battle, eh Aegon?"wangus12 said:
So the really big question is how does Jon/Sam/Bran break the news to the rest of the world that he is actually a Targ?
daughterChalupa Batman said:agrams said:
They are cousins, not siblings.
She's his niece
Chalupa Batman said:agrams said:
They are cousins, not siblings.
She's his niece
Marcus Aurelius said:
So is John Snow actually a cousin of Daenerys?
My guess is Jon tells Dany but they decide keep it under wraps until after the war. Jon asks Sam to please not tell anyone, and Sam reluctantly agrees.wangus12 said:
So the really big question is how does Jon/Sam/Bran break the news to the rest of the world that he is actually a Targ?