Just watched again with the wife. Much better knowing not to expect anything wild. She also really liked it since I warned her to lower her expectations.
easttexasaggie04 said:
Are there any shows on MAX worth watching or should I go ahead and cancel it?
Would have been a great cliffhanger and also a decent resolution of that storyline for the season.Quad Dog said:
Saw this somewhere. This should have been the last scene of season 2. And episode 8 should have been the opening of season 3.
Quad Dog said:
Saw this somewhere. This should have been the last scene of season 2. And episode 8 should have been the opening of season 3.
Brian Earl Spilner said:
Also I forgot to mention before, but the music at the end went hard.
Yes. I honestly believe the acting, the cast itself, and the dialogue is so next level, that yes I would.brillag said:
Would you watch this season again? Would you watch this series again up to this point?
Hard no from me and I think that sums it up pretty well.
Capstone said:
I think a lot of people, myself included, got spoiled with the pacing of GoT. It pretty much held to the one book, one season philosophy. Add into that the crazy amount of time they are about to take to produce/release season 3 and the issue is exacerbated.
From what I've seen, this is going to be a 4 season arc. At the current pace, it is going to take 5-6 years to from beginning to end.
I read all the books that GoT was based on, but nothing since then. I did a little Googling and Fire and Blood was under 800 pages. So, it is on par with the 5 novels (so far) in ASOIAF - the last of the 5 books exceeded 1,000 pages.
Additionally, to me, none of the characters are nearly as compelling or fleshed out as the starting lineup in ASOIAF. There isn't a Littlefinger, Varys, Tyrion, John Snow, Tormund, Hound, Brianne, Dany, etc. Even villains like Joffrey and Ramsey were compelling in that they absolutely made you despise them and hope for their brutal demise.
I'm sure that Aemond is going to die at some point, but I don't know that I care. That was never the case in GoT.
I don't think so. We don't really know the full extent of what he saw in the vision. We also sort of know at least one big piece of how this show ends which leads me to think that what Daemon saw is leading him to "play his part" which is stepping aside for Rhaenyra right now, but not permanently.BCG Disciple said:
Daemon is the only compelling character. And last episode seemed very much out of character for what we have learned about him.
Deamon (not this season), Aemond, Larys, Cargyll twins, Hugh, Rhynaenys even Otto are all compelling to me.BCG Disciple said:
Daemon is the only compelling character. And last episode seemed very much out of character for what we have learned about him.
I think this list shows the problem with the writing of this show that I've hammered over and over, the only compelling characters that actually have known motivation, ambition, goals, etc are Daemon and Otto.dude95 said:
Deamon (not this season), Aemond, Larys, Cargyll twins, Hugh, Rhynaenys even Otto are all compelling to me.
Poot said:
Jace's idea was to bring in high borns that weren't officially royalty.
His hang-up with bass turds is that it weakens his claim to being officially royal. It's always been suspected/known that his dad was Harwin Strong. But one of the things he could point to was that he was a dragon rider, so that pointed to him not being a bass turd. If any Targ bass turd can dragon ride, it opens him up to more scrutiny and it damages his claim to being a true heir to the throne.
I think both can be true at the same time. Poot's point is correct in that this is why Jace is whining - it's what Jace is thinking.Quote:
It doesn't really though, it's just him whining again. If his mother is the one in charge and recognizes him as her son it doesn't matter who his father is. Now if his claim to the throne were through his father, but it wasn't his actual father (like with Joffrey) that would be different.