Wow. That was a random vitriolic response.PatAg said:
those people represent everything I hate
Wow. That was a random vitriolic response.PatAg said:
those people represent everything I hate
that would be the absolutely last place I would want to watch the show.PatAg said:
those people represent everything I hate
he loved a lady too don't forgetBrian Earl Spilner said:He killed a White Walker. He killed a Thenn. Show some gd respect.wannaggie said:Sam is a total loser, featured in the series primarily to give the mom's-basement nerds in the audience someone to identify with.TPS_Report said:
Qyburn kills Varys. The Little Birds kill Qyburn.
The Mountain kills Arya. The Hound kills The Mountain.
Cersei kills Sansa. Tyrion kills Cersei.
Jon rules the North, Dany rules the South.
Sam appointed head of the Citadel.
Sam as head of the Citadel would plunge the continent into a dark(er) age within 10 years.
I agree. To each their own.Charlie Conway said:that would be the absolutely last place I would want to watch the show.PatAg said:
those people represent everything I hate
Yep, all those people do is show up and talk Thrones, cheer Thrones and watch Thrones.Charlie Conway said:that would be the absolutely last place I would want to watch the show.PatAg said:
those people represent everything I hate
aTmAg said:
One thing about the episode that makes me wonder.. how, in real life do they deal with all the bodies during the fight?
Like for example, the Spartan 300. You are stabbing guy after guy, if you stop to move a body out of the way, you get stabbed. What did they do about that in real life?
Bunk Moreland said:
For the Arya kill...how much better would it have been for Arya to have taken Bran's face, and when the NK gets close to him Bran(Arya) gets out of the chair and stabs him? Then real Bran could have been his raven sitting and watching on a tree branch with someone having hid him nearby.
Max Power said:
Man, now that was an episode of TV, just wow. The tone, dark, cold, ominous, filled with dread. Music was outstanding. Seeing everyone in formation to then see their blades go up in flames from left to right, charge into the night and disappear. The wave of the dead, the snowstorm blowing in, dragon fighting, the dead keep coming now matter how many they take down. They climb the walls, still coming. Lyana Mormont, giant killer. The night king isn't burned by dragon fire, raises the newly dead as Jon Snow is bearing down. The dead rise in the castle, including the crypts. The insurmountable task climbs ever more difficult. All hope is lost, the only thing standing between the night king and Bran is Theon Greyjoy, then no one. Then, just as the sword is about to be drawn Arya saves the mf'ing day.
I do not understand anyone that disliked this episode. Was it fan service? You're damn right it was. It was service to everyone who has watched this show for years to watch Ned Stark get beheaded, Rob and Catelyn die at the Red Wedding, Jon Snow murdered by his own men, Prince Oberin having his head popped by the hands of the mountain, Sansa go from one hell to another, trying to save the wildlings to have them be killed and raised to fight the living, Rickon running to Jon only to die in his arms, a dragon killed which is turned and ultimately takes down the wall, so many dead direwolves. Yet, we stayed and kept watching, it's the episode I needed. After watching A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms I was sure that maybe up to half these characters were done for, but they weren't.
Three episodes left, and I'm as hooked on this show as I ever was, I'm in for the rest of the ride.
Human nature is a bich. No matter how good we have it or how thankful we should be for what we have, most of us always end up coveting and wanting more. That euphoric "i'm just glad to be alive" feeling is almost always fleetingbenchmark said:
For me, the battle for Winterfell was never meant to be the climax of the series, although it was obviously important. Going forward, I'm curious about how it affects everyone's thought process. If it were me, I would be "Who care about a damn throne? We just defeated Death! Life's too short to worry about who's King."
I know the character's care - so it will be interesting to see how (or if) surviving Winterfell changes their perspectives.
Like everyone else, I have lots of guesses about who lives and dies and who kills whom in the last 3 episodes. But I hope the character development continues.
Thisguy1 said:Silvertaps said:
3. She'll be queen for a time, until a "younger more beautiful to cast you down and take all you hold dear".
Obviously means Dany, unless some strange twist has a Stark girl on the thrown.
To me, this refers to Sansa and not Dany. Dany is hot and everything, but all anyone talks about with Sansa in the show is about how she's a "great beauty." Cersei has even said it.
Good Lord, lighten up Francis. You hate people having fun in a bar? Nobody says you have to go watch it like that if that's the way they want too, they can.PatAg said:
those people represent everything I hate
Clicked on the link and watched when they saw Lyanna kill the giant and a bartender hands guy a drink in an animal horn. Made me want one.wangus12 said:
I liked to two hipster-lesbo girls crying in the front of the room. I bet the bartender loves dealing with them
They had more dragonglass than they did Valyrian steel. The latter is extremely rare and hardly anyone knows how it's made.Quote:
Also, did no one think to make some arrowheads out of Valyrian steel?
chris1515 said:
With the way all the army was lined up outside the front gates of Winterfell, why didn't the army of the dead just walk around and attack the other side?
Also, did no one think to make some arrowheads out of Valyrian steel?
smokeythebear said:
Also, the criticism about characters being completely overrun one second and then fighting wights one-on-one two seconds later are fair, given you watch the scene with full objectivity.
But my take on the battle, and GOT has been pretty consistent with this in Hardhome, BotB, and Loot Train, is that these battle scenes are more subjective in that you're supposed to feel the feeling the characters have. They FEEL overwhelmed by and insane force, and then after hacking a few wights up, they regain their composure and feel more confident in their situation. It's not meant to be an objective 3rd party view ala watching a basketball game on TV. It's supposed to give you the feeling of being on the ground, disoriented and surrounded by enemies, and then regaining your orientation and re-engaging the enemy. So for example, the massive wave of bodies when the wights got to the unsullied is an exaggeration, but it is meant to give the viewer the same kind of emotional shock as what the unsullied would have felt in that moment.
Just my take.
aTmAg said:
They've lost the ability to make Valyrian steel. They tipped almost everything in dragon glass instead.chris1515 said:
With the way all the army was lined up outside the front gates of Winterfell, why didn't the army of the dead just walk around and attack the other side?
Also, did no one think to make some arrowheads out of Valyrian steel?