Sine poena nulla lex.
WhoopN06 said:
The Daggers name is needle. Jon gave it to Arya.
I thought tyrion said he lost it in a bet to littlefinger when he was captured by the starksFarmer1906 said:Unless I am misremembering, I don't think that was ever Tyrion's. It was the lie Littlefinger told to get the Starks to war against the Lannisters.Icecream_Ag said:littlefinger gave it to the assassin and he won it from tyrion. Where tyrion got it wasn't mentioned in the show.jtstanley4621 said:
Okay that's what I thought. And it's made of Valyrian steel. But do we know the name of the dagger, or where it actually came from?
C@LAg said:she was a tool. she allowed herself to die as her purpose was fulfilled.Zombie Jon Snow said:Truvada_for_prep said:
Red witch was the mvp why did she kill herself ?
I don't think she did - she held on long enough to see the ending - she was very very very old as her true self.
I have to disagree with this. He was the leader of the unsullied. In battle, the leader goes where he is most needed. He had to fall back to coordinate protecting the retreat. And when he had to, he made the tough call to abandon half his men to help save others. He did the right thing, IMHO.BowSowy said:Completely agree, although I guess it was expected after his scene with Missandei last week. Like I said earlier, he should've died on the battlefieldAustinAg2K said:I feel like it really makes Grey Worm seem dishonorable. He basically let all the other Unsullied die, while he's like, "I'm out."BowSowy said:The biggest one for me, and the one that pissed me off, was how Grey Worm was at the front of the Unsullied army when the wave of wights hit then a few minutes later, he's destroying the moat bridge behind the Unsullied army.Dr. Not Yet Dr. Ag said:
I've now watched the episode twice, I figured out my biggest issue with it. I'll preface this with stating that I really enjoyed the episode. I have no issues with the glaring strategical issues on the side of the living; however, I cannot get past the continuous continuity errors.
They are just obnoxiously evident on repeat viewing. Characters who were previously surrounded on all sides, suddenly surrounded on one side, or not surrounded at all anymore. Greyjoys being immediately overrun, then suddenly not. The continuity errors were just nonstop every 2-3 minutes for about a 30-40 minute stretch. If you don't believe me, have a rewatch. These are issues that could easily have been fixed, it's really just sloppy filmmaking.
I'm pretty sure he denies it. This is Littlefinger causing chaos.Icecream_Ag said:I thought tyrion said he lost it in a bet to littlefinger when he was captured by the starksFarmer1906 said:Unless I am misremembering, I don't think that was ever Tyrion's. It was the lie Littlefinger told to get the Starks to war against the Lannisters.Icecream_Ag said:littlefinger gave it to the assassin and he won it from tyrion. Where tyrion got it wasn't mentioned in the show.jtstanley4621 said:
Okay that's what I thought. And it's made of Valyrian steel. But do we know the name of the dagger, or where it actually came from?
This is the way it should have happened. Jon is clearly in over his head when it comes to battle strategy, but he's a top notch swordsman.213 Grove said:
I personally thought it would have been sick to see Jon make it to Bran, the night king sends his commanders to strike down Jon and Jon started slaying through them and you saw scenes of the wights start to fall as Jon kills the ones who turned them.
Then you can have arya come in and save the day as the night king battles Jon and kicks him aside or something...
The WW didn't have to be in the front line but a little dissapointing that once the night king got to the weirwood it ended so quick
He choker had some type of magic that kept her young. Taking the choker off causes her to progressively revert back to her actual age. She kept the choker off for so long that she aged all the way down to just a skeleton it looked like.Zombie Jon Snow said:C@LAg said:she was a tool. she allowed herself to die as her purpose was fulfilled.Zombie Jon Snow said:Truvada_for_prep said:
Red witch was the mvp why did she kill herself ?
I don't think she did - she held on long enough to see the ending - she was very very very old as her true self.
perhaps but.... she was very very old. i think she willed herself to live to see this transpire - maybe through magic. slight difference of perspective really. i think she was near death and held on - hell it might even be somewhat "Luke" like in that all the magic she did here was all she had left.
WhoopN06 said:
The Daggers name is needle. Jon gave it to Arya.
Cromagnum said:
I'm hoping that their are some legit oh **** moments in the next 3 episodes that reverse some of our current apprehensions.
The NK has always had a flair for the dramatic and played mind games with people. I think we consider him like a Terminator, no emotion, but he displayed countless times through the series he relishes in the destruction he causes. It was a little contrived, but not out of character for the NK to savior the moment or be over confident in his victory.C@LAg said:
No one going to comment on the 30 seconds of silent monologuing by the Night King in front of Bran, conveniently allowing time for Arya to magically teleport in and kill him? If he had just walked up to Bran and taken his shot.....
Classic villain trope.
But they do nothing to show how she finally figures out it is Arya.G Martin 87 said:Mel has consistently misinterpreted signs and events from the beginning. It's one of her defining characteristics. She makes mistakes. As the story has progressed, it's evident that she comes to regret her errors profoundly. After finally getting it right, she chooses to end it and pay for what's she done herself.bangobango said:Ranger222 said:
Can we talk a little about Melisandre in terms of her role in this entire series? I'm fine with everything she did last night. Lit some swords, lit some wood, told Arya what her true purpose was. Ok great, no problems here.
I'm just not satisfied with her ending and really her meaning. So her destiny was to strike out the terror of the night and bring light -- accomplished. But why then, if this was her real purpose, was she messing around with Stannis for so long and his pursuit of the Iron Throne? She just realized after she left Winterfell what her true purpose is and just been hanging out?
We can say that her line to Arya about stamping out "blue eyes" and the call back to season 4 (?) was "great writing", but when she first found Arya with Gendry, she cared little about her if she knew then that Arya would ultimately kill the NK and that was Melisandre's true mission in the assist. She still cared more about Gendry then! I think it was more of the writers going back and using something of little consequence back in season 4 to play it up here because it was convenient. "Blue eyes" was not even emphasized in Melisandre's quote in season 4.
And this also plays into what the 'Lord of Light' wants with Jon and his true purpose....she says that Beric has served his purpose and now will die once the LoL is finished with him. Well....the NK is defeated. What is Jon's purpose now with the LoL? Here is a bigger question -- once that task is completed, is Jon just gonna die as he was brought back to serve one role?
They retconned that quote to try to make it seem like they didn't pull this out of their asses. It was just last season Melisandre told Dany to send for Jon bc she and him were the Pwip.
Urban Ag said:
So what's the general opinion here now on the AA/Prince that was Promised/Lightbringer prophecy?
Not needing it to happen to beat the NK, the Army of the Dead vanquished, and Lady Mel gone, it's gotta be pretty much taken out of play, right?
Can't really see how it fits in to the KL arc.
Well, Bolton said he was right before the battle of the *******s. That's about all the evidence we've had that Jon is competent at anything at all.C@LAg said:is he really? on the TV show?Trident 88 said:Quote:
but he's a top notch swordsman.
I've just about given up on hollwood writers even trying to make something that makes tactical sense. It drives me crazy, too, but it seems to be beyond the ability of these people to make a battle that is both dramatic and competent planning and strategy.4the_Record said:
I haven't read this entire thread so this may have already been discussed.
I am just getting into GoT this season and I find it very interesting in a number of ways.
The 3rd episode last night was extremely well shot and, overall, I enjoyed it.
The thing that really bugged me last night however were the battlefield tactics.
Yeah sure it's a show and I may be getting to far into the details but I'm wondering if anyone else felt the same way.
The nature and number of the enemy they're facing should have dictated a drastically different approach but even if we weren't talking about massive hordes of mindless Zombies, their plan was highly flawed.
Sure they could have all this piled into the castle for a classic wall defense but say they were too numerous and that they wanted to take advantage of their cavalry and siege weapons to thin out the enemy before seeking shelter or perhaps they were worried about the damage an ice dragon could/would do to tightly compacted troops... or that they wanted to show a path to the bait (Bran) for the Knight King. For what ever reason, they positioned outside the wall and we'll assume that they had good reason.
However, positioning the massed, well armed and trained unsullied phalanx behind the siege engines and those behind the Cavalry is just a terrible tactical alignment made even worse by the straight ahead heavy shock charge made with little to no support. Especially against an enemy where morale is not at all in question. They essentially threw away their cavalry and their siege and left their infantry with no support and no options but to retreat through extremely narrow bottlenecks.
Even without the benefit of an historical Alexander the great in their world, they should have known to use those troops to better advantage. Ramsey Bolton did a better job of prepping for an assault on that same ground. Phalanx center front. Lighter infantry on their wings, cavalry on the flanks with siege and archers(flaming arrows or dragon glass) to the rear or on the walls with a number of previously established firing solutions.
Using the flanking cavalry to slash the undead while they were engaged with the unsullied would have been far more effective and they could have retreated south when the infantry was over run and retreated. They would probably still have gotten their butts kicked but they would have done much better.
Am I over analyzing unnecessarily or did that affect the otherwise masterfully written and shot episode?
There's no "maybe" about it. Jon's story arc has not been "completely invalidated." It remains unresolved. He is the legitimate heir to the Iron Throne, not Dany.bangobango said:But they do nothing to show how she finally figures out it is Arya.G Martin 87 said:Mel has consistently misinterpreted signs and events from the beginning. It's one of her defining characteristics. She makes mistakes. As the story has progressed, it's evident that she comes to regret her errors profoundly. After finally getting it right, she chooses to end it and pay for what's she done herself.bangobango said:Ranger222 said:
Can we talk a little about Melisandre in terms of her role in this entire series? I'm fine with everything she did last night. Lit some swords, lit some wood, told Arya what her true purpose was. Ok great, no problems here.
I'm just not satisfied with her ending and really her meaning. So her destiny was to strike out the terror of the night and bring light -- accomplished. But why then, if this was her real purpose, was she messing around with Stannis for so long and his pursuit of the Iron Throne? She just realized after she left Winterfell what her true purpose is and just been hanging out?
We can say that her line to Arya about stamping out "blue eyes" and the call back to season 4 (?) was "great writing", but when she first found Arya with Gendry, she cared little about her if she knew then that Arya would ultimately kill the NK and that was Melisandre's true mission in the assist. She still cared more about Gendry then! I think it was more of the writers going back and using something of little consequence back in season 4 to play it up here because it was convenient. "Blue eyes" was not even emphasized in Melisandre's quote in season 4.
And this also plays into what the 'Lord of Light' wants with Jon and his true purpose....she says that Beric has served his purpose and now will die once the LoL is finished with him. Well....the NK is defeated. What is Jon's purpose now with the LoL? Here is a bigger question -- once that task is completed, is Jon just gonna die as he was brought back to serve one role?
They retconned that quote to try to make it seem like they didn't pull this out of their asses. It was just last season Melisandre told Dany to send for Jon bc she and him were the Pwip.
Look,l it doesn't work. I am not saying anybody is dumb or anything for liking it, but the way they went completely destroys all the build up about the prince who was promised, Jon's story arch, Rheagar and Lyanna's story, which led to Robert's Rebellion. It completely invalidates Ned protecting Jon's identity for all those years. It completely invalidates Jon being resurrected.
A lot of people came to this story from a fantasy fiction perspective, and if you were looking at it from that perspective then you probably saw the battle for the throne as less important as the battle against the dead. A big theme is that Jon forsakes any and all ambition for the more important battle, but then he never gets his moment to "shine" so to speak, and that is really disappointing for a lot of people who have gone through this story waiting for the pay-off for that character.
Maybe it comes in the next three episodes, but I really feel like the screenwriters lost their way on this when the source material ran out and are handling this just like any other show, which it was anything but like every other show for the first several seasons.
Furlock Bones said:
Yup. As I said earlier, this is not going to age well at all. They effed up the entire series.
Quote:
Am I over analyzing unnecessarily or did that affect the otherwise masterfully written and shot episode?
Like I said, if the Iron throne is what drew you into this story, then that probably works great for you. i think there are more than a few of us, however, that were much more interested int he mystical aspects of this story than the political intrigue. Putting Jon in the middle of that is going to cheapen the hell out of his character, to me.G Martin 87 said:There's no "maybe" about it. Jon's story arc has not been "completely invalidated." It remains unresolved. He is the legitimate heir to the Iron Throne, not Dany.bangobango said:But they do nothing to show how she finally figures out it is Arya.G Martin 87 said:Mel has consistently misinterpreted signs and events from the beginning. It's one of her defining characteristics. She makes mistakes. As the story has progressed, it's evident that she comes to regret her errors profoundly. After finally getting it right, she chooses to end it and pay for what's she done herself.bangobango said:Ranger222 said:
Can we talk a little about Melisandre in terms of her role in this entire series? I'm fine with everything she did last night. Lit some swords, lit some wood, told Arya what her true purpose was. Ok great, no problems here.
I'm just not satisfied with her ending and really her meaning. So her destiny was to strike out the terror of the night and bring light -- accomplished. But why then, if this was her real purpose, was she messing around with Stannis for so long and his pursuit of the Iron Throne? She just realized after she left Winterfell what her true purpose is and just been hanging out?
We can say that her line to Arya about stamping out "blue eyes" and the call back to season 4 (?) was "great writing", but when she first found Arya with Gendry, she cared little about her if she knew then that Arya would ultimately kill the NK and that was Melisandre's true mission in the assist. She still cared more about Gendry then! I think it was more of the writers going back and using something of little consequence back in season 4 to play it up here because it was convenient. "Blue eyes" was not even emphasized in Melisandre's quote in season 4.
And this also plays into what the 'Lord of Light' wants with Jon and his true purpose....she says that Beric has served his purpose and now will die once the LoL is finished with him. Well....the NK is defeated. What is Jon's purpose now with the LoL? Here is a bigger question -- once that task is completed, is Jon just gonna die as he was brought back to serve one role?
They retconned that quote to try to make it seem like they didn't pull this out of their asses. It was just last season Melisandre told Dany to send for Jon bc she and him were the Pwip.
Look,l it doesn't work. I am not saying anybody is dumb or anything for liking it, but the way they went completely destroys all the build up about the prince who was promised, Jon's story arch, Rheagar and Lyanna's story, which led to Robert's Rebellion. It completely invalidates Ned protecting Jon's identity for all those years. It completely invalidates Jon being resurrected.
A lot of people came to this story from a fantasy fiction perspective, and if you were looking at it from that perspective then you probably saw the battle for the throne as less important as the battle against the dead. A big theme is that Jon forsakes any and all ambition for the more important battle, but then he never gets his moment to "shine" so to speak, and that is really disappointing for a lot of people who have gone through this story waiting for the pay-off for that character.
Maybe it comes in the next three episodes, but I really feel like the screenwriters lost their way on this when the source material ran out and are handling this just like any other show, which it was anything but like every other show for the first several seasons.