O'Finger's facial expression after that was actually pretty quality. Just a shame he's been making inexplicably shit plots and decisions all season.
O'Finger's facial expression after that was actually pretty quality. Just a shame he's been making inexplicably shit plots and decisions all season.
The shit decision was offing him in front of everybody when they could have done it secretly and harvested his face.
The face and that lol voice.
I would have loved it if they made him shit himself when he died, as he's been sounding like he's been holding in a massive shit throughout the whole series.
I kept expecting him to burst into song.
'Where are those happy days, they are so hard to find...'
He was the same in The Wire. The man can't stick to a consistent accent, he will jet off all over the world over the course of a few sentences at times.
He turned into Batman come the end of it so he didn't have to bother with the accent.
It may have been mentioned in here and I missed it but in all my assuming that it'd be the Hound who'd do for Mount Zombie I totally forgot that way back in season 1 Ned Stark sent Beric (being played by a different action) to bring him in or kill him.
Poor Ned.
That's always been one of my favourite scenes from Game of Thrones, and probably my favourite Ned scene full stop. I like how they show the shock (from the small council) and awe (from the commoners) that someone has rolled up who's willing to dole out a rare bit of actual justice from the Iron Throne. Obviously got him nowhere like, but impressive all the same.
I had forgotten Beric was sent out to bring him to justice though. It probably got a bit lost in translation, what with that acting doing little else than nodding in Ned Starks direction before getting replaced.
Would they sacrifice "Cleganebowl" to let Beric take him down instead though? People would be annoyed. There are large sections of the internet that seem to exist solely to see The Hound and The Mountain throw down at some point. I wouldn't be mad at it though, given there's a definite "fan fiction coming to life" feel to the whole thing at the minute.
They will combine them. The Don will either have another unsuccessful attempt at killing him, at which point the Hound avenges him, or the Hound will say 'Mate, he's done you twice' and step in for him.
Finger putting his quill back in his book like a boss at the end of that scene. I miss Old Finger.
It basically sums up Ned the character. The reasons to like him (sending a hundred men to kill the Mountain) and the reason he was such a naive fool (thinking that summoning Tywin was going to end well for him.)
Sky are starting re-running them from the beginning this week. I'll be all over it.
I saw something else saying Cleganebowl was "off the cards now" but I've no idea why. I dunno if they assumed the Hound's comment about knowing what's coming for Gregor meant somebody other than himself.
A lot of great scenes have taken place in the throne room. Personal fav:
A hall to die in, and men to bury me.
Such a boss but all I see now in that scene is the Kingsguard on the far right struggling to put his sword away.
Yeah I remembered seeing that as well.
"Even now, I could cut through the five of you like carving a cake!"
I love Joffrey's reaction when he throws the sword on the floor too.
Tywin riding his horse into the throne room to be named Hand of the King (and letting it shit on the floor in the process) also has to rank pretty highly in terms of "boss-like shit that's happened in the vicinity of the Iron Throne" too.
Not throne-room but Tywin:
Just that tiny movement of the head and expression when Joffrey has the dig at him is better acting than half of the rest of the cast could dream of.
Is that him from the Ali G film?
I always loved that he's not joking about serving Robb's head to Sansa on a plate in that scene Ian just posted. What a maniacal little shit he was.
And how Tywin twists the knife by ordering the nightshade to "help him sleep" even after he's already essentially won by removing him from his own small council meeting.
Tywin was great. His look in that scene when Joffrey oversteps is not dissimilar to Tormund's when that letter from Ramsey mentions skinning the wildlings.
You really can't imagine anyone but Charles Dance playing the character so well.
There are a lot of killed off characters who had the best actors. I thought Joffrey was great actually.
A couple of Tywin/Olenna scenes probably realised the show's acting peak though.
You never can when someone has sort of defined a character well like that already.
But, Ben Kingsley maybe. I could sort of see someone like Ralph Fiennes do a decent job at it as well (too theatrical, maybe).
The show has gone more crazy as well though, leaving the remaining actors with not so much to really work with, I feel like. They are all just in super extraordinary scenes all the time now, and have all been reduced to one definiting character trait per character (this one is GOOD, this one is BAD, this one is FUNNY, this one is SMART, etc).
Take Tyrion who during the first 4-5 season got to do a wide range of different types of scenes, whereas now his only ever role is to look puppy-eyed and trying to be "the voice of reason" whilst all choked up, every single scene.
Jon Snow is similar in that now all he does is different variation of his meant-to-be-epic "I doont knoo much... but ah doo knoo we well ALL die soon onless...!"
Davos has gone from conflicted, troubled and mourning father to some sort of comic relief character.
Cersei used to display a certain range, now she just articulates a lot and sticks out her lower lip in every scene (look how HATEFUL I am).
Etc.
Denaerys has had these shit hyperbolic scenes throughout which is why she's seemed extra shit throughout (even if here acting isn't very good in even the few more regular scenes).
That's a great point actually. I bet watching it back now will be pretty jarring. Going from a storyline to all out action hero will be pretty SAD!
Sky are reshowing it from the first series so I'm starting it again. It's mostly been Daenerys getting taken from behind or otherwise getting her wabs out so far.
I also forgot that Joffrey tries to straight up murder Arya in the second episode.
Ned, though.
I've been thinking to rewatch the whole thing again but I'm probably going to let it for next fall-ish, when season 8 is about to hit.
I don't think I could sit and watch them all again.
I reckon I'll enjoy the first two or three series and then get to a point where I'm just winding through most of the scenes of Dragontits moping about in Mereen and getting bored of Ramsay devouring scenery.
It's easy to forget how brilliant the first 4 seasons are in particular, definitely the sort of thing that benefits from re-watching.
I'd watch the first couple again, but once Dany hits Meereen it grinds to a halt and you might as well skip everything bar Charles Dance and some Tyrion/Arya.
Oberynn appeared after the Queen of Toasties hit Mereen, didn't he? Every scene he's in is worth watching.
There's good stuff in every series. It's just some have more utterly skippable stuff than others.
Every season apart from one are very good tele. I think it was season 5 which was actually quite shit.
The latest season was probably the weakest as a whole. You could tell the books were done and character development went out the window completely. Still enjoyed it but it definitely lost something from being so rushed.
It was still massively entertaining though, in my opinion. Season 5 (if that's the one I'm thinking of) was just boring.
I enjoyed the last season more consistently than I had the one or two before that, I think.
I mean, Ramsay being consistently evil, Theon being consistently shat upon or literally anything that happened in Essos wasn't exactly great character-building work either.
I'm with RL, the most recent season is a load of bollocks but because of all the work they've done establishing the characters, settings and stakes, the bollocks doesn't actually impinge on one's enjoyment of it.
The last season was the most un-Game of thrones-y one easily and somewhat made a mockery of the premise of the show, but at the same time it was pretty entertaining.
Was that not expected though given what the end game must be?
On previous series pace we would still be on Dragonstone backing the ships into the harbour, so they had to speed it up; but then the inherent problems of any fantasy bollocks (most people would not watch something like this without the tits and the violence) start to become obvious once you start running low on the interesting characters who turn a nerdfest into a SERIOUS DRAMA.
It's a good story made adequately with adequate performances, only they were always going to run out of good story so it has to survive on your familiarity with the remaining characters and a desire to see how it ends.
They're all shit.
My view on this is the same as it was a few weeks ago. The 'end game' necessitates a transition from Machiavellian power plays into unashamed fantasy epic. If you're going to make the transition, you might as well do it properly rather than half-heartedly. The character development is already in place to support the transition.