Ranger222 said:
Chase said:
Because he had to be at the tree to bring to full-circle the dragon-glass knife to the body under the tree that created him?
Ehhhhhhh -- I would applaud the show if this was the case. They never spell it out of any of us that all of this had to happen in a particular order in a particular way. Wasn't there quite a bit of debate seasons back about where the NK was created by CoF? It wasn't like CoF directly told us "oh hey, it happended at the Godswood at WF and he needs to be killed there with this particular dagger". I'm fine if that needed to be the case but damn the show made if awfully hard for viewers to piece it all together and its being led by people on the internet picking up on these subtle clues and hints.
Either this show is for the common HBO viewer that is satisfied with how this went down with little complexity, or there is more magic and lore to the ending they just left out or didn't spell out to us before it happened. If they are trying to play both sides they haven't done it very well. Either tell us this is how it needs to happen before the battle or its all just a coincidence and none of it really matters.
As I told someone else, the vision Bran received was pretty clear but the idea it HAS TO be done that way is just a guess based on other instances in epic fantasy where a particular time, place or person have to be just so.
I think at it's heart, it's still trying to be epic fantasy but I'm worried the writers having to tell the tale beyond GRRM's works don't have the chops to do it justice. I think that is the biggest reason we're seeing so many people upset about this episode...it just doesn't jive with the way the rest of the series has gone down and much of that appears to be hesitancy to let a main character go. I mean, I cheered when Lady Mormont put the dragon-glass through the giant wight's eye but by their own admission, she should never have been part of the story and they did it because she "deserved a good ending."
My single biggest issue with this episode is the dual deaths of younger girls both held before the big bad guy happening within 30 minutes of each other. That smacks of writers not being creative enough to craft two separate interesting deaths.
We'll see how it wraps up but I certainly don't think a neat little package is something that GRRM would put out so many are sure to not care for what happens.