There really aren't given the arbitrary and capricious time restrictions the two schmucks running things gave themselves.Quote:
There are lot more things to try before burning all the citizens.
And that to me is the biggest problem.
There really aren't given the arbitrary and capricious time restrictions the two schmucks running things gave themselves.Quote:
There are lot more things to try before burning all the citizens.
I don't think burning just the Red Keep would be enough. Cersei was the queen. Conquerors always kill the sitting monarch. Lords across Westeros likely aren't afraid.AustinAg2K said:She could have just burned down the Red Keep. That would have been intimidating enough to incite fear in everyone.cbr said:i think the fun debate would be - what were her alternatives?bobinator said:
The issue with your scenario is that they didn't really build that up either. Even the writers said that she decided in that moment to make it personal.
So your "she decided she had to do it because there was no other choice" isn't really what happened, or at least it wasn't what the writers intended.
maybe someone can come up with a better one than my theory....
Or, she could have seiged the city and given the people a chance to revolt against Cersei, which seemed like her original plan two weeks ago, but then they never went through with that.
She could have tried to get the word out about how she saved everyone from the dead. Sure Cersei could have tried to keep KL from finding out, but she can't keep all seven kingdoms from finding out.
It's not like the people liked Cersei. There isn't a single kingdom which likes Cersei. She could have gone in, and just taken out Cersei, and everyone except Sansa would have loved her. If a particular kingdom revolts, take out their leadership.
There are lot more things to try before burning all the citizens.
I agree. Cbr said earlier something about reading the cliff notes to a great novel. I think that is basically what this is. It's the cliff notes. I understand wanting to leave things open to interpretation, but they've left far too much.pagerman @ work said:There really aren't given the arbitrary and capricious time restrictions the two schmucks running things gave themselves.Quote:
There are lot more things to try before burning all the citizens.
And that to me is the biggest problem.
Lol man I swear every time D&D try to explain something controversial it makes it 100x worsebobinator said:
The issue with your scenario is that they didn't really build that up either. Even the writers said that she decided in that moment to make it personal.
So your "she decided she had to do it because there was no other choice" isn't really what happened, or at least it wasn't what the writers intended.
I don't see how this changes that. If anything, it makes it worse. What is the point of living if one day the Queen might decide to come by and torch your entire city? Everywhere she goes now, people will be trying to kill her.Pendragon12 said:I don't think burning just the Red Keep would be enough. Cersei was the queen. Conquerors always kill the sitting monarch. Lords across Westeros likely aren't afraid.AustinAg2K said:She could have just burned down the Red Keep. That would have been intimidating enough to incite fear in everyone.cbr said:i think the fun debate would be - what were her alternatives?bobinator said:
The issue with your scenario is that they didn't really build that up either. Even the writers said that she decided in that moment to make it personal.
So your "she decided she had to do it because there was no other choice" isn't really what happened, or at least it wasn't what the writers intended.
maybe someone can come up with a better one than my theory....
Or, she could have seiged the city and given the people a chance to revolt against Cersei, which seemed like her original plan two weeks ago, but then they never went through with that.
She could have tried to get the word out about how she saved everyone from the dead. Sure Cersei could have tried to keep KL from finding out, but she can't keep all seven kingdoms from finding out.
It's not like the people liked Cersei. There isn't a single kingdom which likes Cersei. She could have gone in, and just taken out Cersei, and everyone except Sansa would have loved her. If a particular kingdom revolts, take out their leadership.
There are lot more things to try before burning all the citizens.
Same on the second point, in my opinion, though I think this is better than just burning the Keep - turning the peasants on the ruling party is always a good way to scare the ruling party, but I don't know if it would be true, deep-seated fear.
Nothing about saving the world from the dead incites fear.
When she decided she was going to rule with fear, she only had maybe one or two options, one of which was burning the entire city as she did.
smokeythebear said:I just want to go on record that the heel turn at the root of 8 seasons of the most popular and successful TV show of all time during the second to last episode is probably going to be argued about for at least the next 10 years, if not the remainder of the week before the new episode airs. Heck, we're talking about a character development story that has been going on for, what, 30 years now?Zombie Jon Snow said:
I didn't tell anyone to shut up. I just said it's a dead horse NOW.
It is - from BOTH sides.
That's all.
It's not like we're arguing about where a bunch of dead guys got big ass chains all of a sudden.
Finale gonna hit 20 M?Brian Earl Spilner said:
In terms of multi-platform viewership, HBO has revealed that Sunday's episode garnered 18.4 million viewers across all of the cabler's platforms (linear, HBO GO and HBO NOW), making it the most-watched "Thrones" episode by that metric as well.
AustinAg2K said:
One of the things I really hated about the end, which I haven't seen discussed at all, is Cersei's complete lack of any sort of plan. She has been the most cunning character in the entire show for seven seasons, and then we get like 3 scenes with her in the final season, and in the final episode she just sits there and does nothing. I would have liked her to have some sort of trap or escape plan.
The poison was hinted in the episode by having Varys meeting with the girl from the kitchen that he asked about Dany eating.smokeythebear said:
I would have written it like this:
Dany isn't eating because she doesn't trust anyone around her. She's proven right when Tyrion finds out Varys was trying to poison her. She screams at Tyrion. She screams at Varys. Kills Varys. Screams at Jon. Jon says "I don't won' it". She says "then prove it by being there in the morning and helping me take the city.
The battle plays out as before. Battle is won, she's on the perch and the bells start to ring. Then Cersei turns to Qyburn and calmly says "do it". Qyburn says "...you're grace, are you sure this is a wi..." Cersei yells "DO IT!".
As the bells are ringing and Dany is letting down her guard a bit because she's officially won, pockets of wildfire start erupting all over the city. Dany mistakes this for the citizens trying to fight back against her forces so she torches them all.
Cersei smirks as she sees the people cry out in agony as she's tricked them into thinking Dany was the enemy.
wow dude....AustinAg2K said:The way things have gone down, that's not bittersweet. She is now evil. She is more evil than Cersei, the Mad King, etc. Maybe the only character worse would be the Night King, but I'm not sure that's even true.Urban Ag said:
Or maybe, maybe Dany doesn't die. And that's the "bittersweet" part of it that GRRM has often mentioned. She seats the Iron Throne but everyone she loves and cared for is dead or has abandoned her. She gets what she wanted lost everything that mattered in the process?
i was too dense to catch in in the first watch... but someone here caught it, and sure enough, second watch there is absolutely no doubt that varys is poisoning Danarys' food. And that is why she is not eating until she can launch the attack.Quad Dog said:The poison was hinted in the episode by having Varys meeting with the girl from the kitchen that he asked about Dany eating.smokeythebear said:
I would have written it like this:
Dany isn't eating because she doesn't trust anyone around her. She's proven right when Tyrion finds out Varys was trying to poison her. She screams at Tyrion. She screams at Varys. Kills Varys. Screams at Jon. Jon says "I don't won' it". She says "then prove it by being there in the morning and helping me take the city.
The battle plays out as before. Battle is won, she's on the perch and the bells start to ring. Then Cersei turns to Qyburn and calmly says "do it". Qyburn says "...you're grace, are you sure this is a wi..." Cersei yells "DO IT!".
As the bells are ringing and Dany is letting down her guard a bit because she's officially won, pockets of wildfire start erupting all over the city. Dany mistakes this for the citizens trying to fight back against her forces so she torches them all.
Cersei smirks as she sees the people cry out in agony as she's tricked them into thinking Dany was the enemy.
Brian Earl Spilner said:
I picture aTmAg like Viserys Targaryen, and ZJS like Davos Seaworth.
Brian Earl Spilner said:
I picture aTmAg like Viserys Targaryen, and ZJS like Davos Seaworth.
Cousin Orson. Thmath the beatleth, thmath em. Ku, ku, ku.Sex Panther said:Brian Earl Spilner said:
I picture aTmAg like Viserys Targaryen, and ZJS like Davos Seaworth.
Are there any autistic characters?
Robin Arryn maybe?Sex Panther said:Brian Earl Spilner said:
I picture aTmAg like Viserys Targaryen, and ZJS like Davos Seaworth.
Are there any autistic characters?
So add "Hangry" to the list of reasons for the turn. Hell that's almost reason enough for me. Speaking of which - is it snack time yet?cbr said:i was too dense to catch in in the first watch... but someone here caught it, and sure enough, second watch there is absolutely no doubt that varys is poisoning Danarys' food. And that is why she is not eating until she can launch the attack.Quad Dog said:The poison was hinted in the episode by having Varys meeting with the girl from the kitchen that he asked about Dany eating.smokeythebear said:
I would have written it like this:
Dany isn't eating because she doesn't trust anyone around her. She's proven right when Tyrion finds out Varys was trying to poison her. She screams at Tyrion. She screams at Varys. Kills Varys. Screams at Jon. Jon says "I don't won' it". She says "then prove it by being there in the morning and helping me take the city.
The battle plays out as before. Battle is won, she's on the perch and the bells start to ring. Then Cersei turns to Qyburn and calmly says "do it". Qyburn says "...you're grace, are you sure this is a wi..." Cersei yells "DO IT!".
As the bells are ringing and Dany is letting down her guard a bit because she's officially won, pockets of wildfire start erupting all over the city. Dany mistakes this for the citizens trying to fight back against her forces so she torches them all.
Cersei smirks as she sees the people cry out in agony as she's tricked them into thinking Dany was the enemy.
**** she probably ate fried goat with the dragon on her flight to Kings landing.
this is a worthy point to debate.bobinator said:
Her alternatives were "literally anything else."
Again your "she decided she had to make an example of the whole city" theory is fine, but we didn't see that decision get made either.
And this isn't like the ending of Inception or something where it's supposed to be open for interpretation. In the end it's ended up that way, but that definitely wasn't the intention of the writers.
D-pete_claw98 said:
Euron dies on the boat, like he should have being a Greyjoy. Hound finds Jaime leading Cersie out. As he prepares to fight, the Hound yells F-off, I want him. Pointing to the Mountain. As Jaime is leading Cersie to escape.... he and Arya fight.
The Hound's words still filling her ear and Jaime saying they just want to leave. Then at this point.....everyone would be happy with whomever dies or lives. Even if everyone escapes because of tre crumbling Red Keep and all.
in the middle of the fight Cersie knocks Arya down but Jaime stops her from Killing Arya and says....No, lets just leave. He still has honor......
I guess it depends on your view for why Dany burned the entire city. If you think she had a valid reason, then she's possibly on par with some of the others. As it was presented in the show, I see no reason for her to burn thousands of people. When Cersei blew up the Sept, she was doing it to destroy her enemies. Ned beheaded people who broke the law. Generally, the innocents who died in war were not targeted, but rather unintended casualties. What Dany did was much more along the lines of the Night King and served her no purpose. She was just causing death to cause death.cbr said:wow dude....AustinAg2K said:The way things have gone down, that's not bittersweet. She is now evil. She is more evil than Cersei, the Mad King, etc. Maybe the only character worse would be the Night King, but I'm not sure that's even true.Urban Ag said:
Or maybe, maybe Dany doesn't die. And that's the "bittersweet" part of it that GRRM has often mentioned. She seats the Iron Throne but everyone she loves and cared for is dead or has abandoned her. She gets what she wanted lost everything that mattered in the process?
she is no more evil than any other character in the series. she is just more powerful. i think ultimately that will be the point.
cerci blew up plenty of 'innocent' people in the trial. That was the only person and moment in time close to her level of power.
what did brann and jamie say - 'when have you ever seen a war that didn't kill thousands of innocent people?... never."
yet another clue in past episodes.
stannis burned his own daughter at the stake.
ramsey tortured people, as did many others.
even arya killed innocent people to survive.
ned and jon executed people to survive.
the night king was evil incarnate, with no purpose - armageddon itself. and even that could not stop the game from getting played against people.
The Lannister Army already did that, before she burned the entire city. They did when they fought in the field last season, and they did it again Sunday. They fought for about 30 seconds, saw the dragon wreck shop, and said, "Eh, nevermind." She already had the fear.cbr said:this is a worthy point to debate.bobinator said:
Her alternatives were "literally anything else."
Again your "she decided she had to make an example of the whole city" theory is fine, but we didn't see that decision get made either.
And this isn't like the ending of Inception or something where it's supposed to be open for interpretation. In the end it's ended up that way, but that definitely wasn't the intention of the writers.
so, if she just kills Cersi, drops the red keep, and lets the lannister army surrender to jon, what happens?
play it out.
unless she and jon are king and queen, how can it end in any way other than death and tragedy for Danarys and probably jon too?
and jon refused that offer.
If everyone in KL is fine, even the armies are largely intact, do you think anyone up north or in the other houses would be too afraid of Danarys to revolt against their masters, instead of suiting up and going to war against her?
or do you think their soldiers would say - **** that my lord, you can ride up there and **** with her all by yourself!
i dont. Varys didnt. Sansa didnt. Cerci didnt. ultimately Danarys didnt. obviously.
They sure will now. Now all Danarys has to do is get over on her own 'friends', and she will survive and rule. Not happily, most likely, but at least she has a chance.
They'll probably get her, but if they do, i expect the series will end with the knowledge that the backstabbing and warring will continue, the wheel will keep spinning, and the game goes on.
I know, that's why I said it. Yet we don't even get the 20 seconds it would take for the payoff of Dany confronting Varys for the plot.Quad Dog said:The poison was hinted in the episode by having Varys meeting with the girl from the kitchen that he asked about Dany eating.smokeythebear said:
I would have written it like this:
Dany isn't eating because she doesn't trust anyone around her. She's proven right when Tyrion finds out Varys was trying to poison her. She screams at Tyrion. She screams at Varys. Kills Varys. Screams at Jon. Jon says "I don't won' it". She says "then prove it by being there in the morning and helping me take the city.
The battle plays out as before. Battle is won, she's on the perch and the bells start to ring. Then Cersei turns to Qyburn and calmly says "do it". Qyburn says "...you're grace, are you sure this is a wi..." Cersei yells "DO IT!".
As the bells are ringing and Dany is letting down her guard a bit because she's officially won, pockets of wildfire start erupting all over the city. Dany mistakes this for the citizens trying to fight back against her forces so she torches them all.
Cersei smirks as she sees the people cry out in agony as she's tricked them into thinking Dany was the enemy.