Lyssa. Lyanna is Jon Snow's mother.
Oh yeah. Names are very similar heh.
Lyssa. Lyanna is Jon Snow's mother.
Think u have the name wrong..I think it's Season 4! It's revealed during a conversation with Lyanna and Littlefinger that it was Lyanna who actually poisoned John Arryn and not the Lannisters. It was a plot created by Littlefinger to try and cause tension between the Starks and the Lannisters, with the added bonus that with John out of the way Littlefinger could (once the dust settled) marry Lyanna and become Lord of the Vale. Lyanna then wrote to Catelyn Stark that it was the Lannisters who killed John Arryn, Littlefinger knew that Robert Baratheon would pick Ned Stark to be the Hand of the King (the only sensible choice) and he knew Ned would accept because he's an honorable and predictable man. This put the Starks and Lannisters into an inevitable collision course, which would weaken either one or both Houses.
This whole plot is revealed in a 20 second line of dialogue and never mentioned again.
This is also alluded to by Littlefinger claiming that "chaos is a ladder" to Varys early on. Likely he's going to try for chaos again this season.
Foreshadowing is one reason I think Sansa willI watched the final episodes of the first 5 seasons and the amount of foreshadowing that went in from season 1 is amazing.
In any other show I'd say that was a stretch, but the amount of foreshadowing that goes on in this makes me think what you say is not only possible but would be quite neat.Foreshadowing is one reason I think Sansa willoutlast Dany and become a Queen. Having Jon and Dany meet up and win everything is just too obvious.
I don't remember exactly where it was, but it stuck with me. Tyrion remarks as Sansa passes by, '...Sansa, you may outlast us all.'
Are they still married? Technically?Foreshadowing is one reason I think Sansa willoutlast Dany and become a Queen. Having Jon and Dany meet up and win everything is just too obvious.
I don't remember exactly where it was, but it stuck with me. Tyrion remarks as Sansa passes by, '...Sansa, you may outlast us all.'
I'm not an expert in marriage law in my own country, much less Westeros. They never consummated it, so there's that I suppose.Are they still married? Technically?
Baelish will get found out this season and meet a grisly end. I'm going to guess at a timeline.
First couple of episodes: As we've seen in the trailer, Jon and Baelish have a conversation in the crypt - probably about Jon's heritage or that he's not a "proper king" - remember that it was Baelish who told Sansa the story about Rhaegar and Lyanna in season 5. The conversation leads to Jon becoming a bit wound up and pushing Baelish up against the wall, mirroring Ned's first meeting with him in season one outside the King's Landing brothel. Littlefinger will use this chat as an opportunity to get the measure of Jon, to see how easily he can be wound up, and will begin to plant the idea in Sansa's head that she's a more worthy ruler because her temper is cooler and she's a better strategist - "Jon can't be trusted, that's why you didn't tell him about the Knights of the Vale" he'll say to her. Sansa will begin to doubt Jon, and if she's got even the slightest inkling that he's a Targaryen there could be more trouble in the works.
Mid-season: Jon has left Winterfell to go north beyond the Wall, leaving Sansa in charge. Baelish takes this opportunity to show Sansa she can manage the politics of the North by herself, that she could easily step in and do the job if Jon were to die beyond the Wall. Arya and Bran have both arrived back at Winterfell, but the reunion doesn't last long as Baelish immediately sets about causing a rift between the Stark children, playing on the fact that Arya and Sansa never got on in the first place. Cracks begin to appear in the relationship between the Stark children.
Final two/three episodes: Something happens to make Sansa reconsider things. Maybe Brienne says a few wise words. This, I imagine, is where the "The lone wolf dies but the pack survives" speech will come into it, that Sansa, Jon, Arya and Bran need to stick together when the full force of winter arrives. Maybe the show will make it really convenient and wrap it up easily, with Bran looking into the past and seeing that Baelish betrayed Ned, murdered Jon Arryn and that his feelings for Sansa are a mixture of necrophiliac lust for Catelyn and his own desire to take the Iron Throne. He's betrayed a Stark to get what he wants before, and he'll betray a Stark to get what he wants again. With everything out in the wash, Sansa sentences Baelish to death and Arya carries out the deed with his own dagger. Everyone goes home happy.
I hope so, but when is GoT ever this nice and fluffy? ha
Currently re-watching season 6. Don't remember it being this good when I watched it the first time around.
That's what I thought when I first saw it, but I'm really enjoying it. So many stories get further advanced like the three-eyed raven, children of the forest and the creation of the white walkers, Bran, Arya, the Hound, etc. After the overall disappointment of season 5, the 6th season was a nice rebound with a lot of stories moving forward. Maybe I need to re-watch the 5th season as well.The first half was pretty average other than episode 2 no? Then 6-10 is pretty awesome
Currently re-watching season 6. Don't remember it being this good when I watched it the first time around.
That's what I thought when I first saw it, but I'm really enjoying it. So many stories get further advanced like the three-eyed raven, children of the forest and the creation of the white walkers, Bran, Arya, the Hound, etc. After the overall disappointment of season 5, the 6th season was a nice rebound with a lot of stories moving forward. Maybe I need to re-watch the 5th season as well.
Feck me, very well put. Agree with most of what you said. Prolly everything really, just hard to imagine I can agree with everything in a post that long. Your GoT knowledge and memory is incredible.Since G.R.R.M. gave up his duties as a producer, and as they moved away from the original group of directors from the first four seasons, the show has taken a slight dip (so bits of season 5 and most of season 6). The dialogue isn't as sharp as it once was when they were able to pull lines directly from the books (you wouldn't get something like "chaos is a ladder" in season 5 or 6); the games operating in the background aren't as devious (Sansa's ace in the hole to defeat Ramsay with the Knights of the Vale would have been a hugely cathartic moment if we'd never seen her send that raven to Baelish two episodes earlier); the way characters are used in the roles they've taken on since season 5 aren't quite as entertaining (Tyrion's better in King's Landing and frankly they wasted him in season 6), and G.R.R.M.'s original idea, that characters you love would be brutally and fatally punished - fatally on occasion - for making mistakes has gone by the wayside to set up the Good vs. Evil showdown that's clearly coming in season 8 (seriously, Jon was wearing some seriously thick plot armour in the battle for Winterfell despite being a total fecking idiot and charging into battle).
But having said all of that, season 5 and 6 are still two fantastic seasons of TV for very different reasons. Season 5 is patient to put it generously, and before I watched it through a second and third time I used to tell people it was essentially six episodes of slow build-up, The Gift (where Tyrion finally meets Dany), and then three episodes where the entire season explodes in an instant, with Tyrion and Dany's first conversation, the Hardhome massacre, Shireen's death, Cersei's walk of atonement, Stannis' defeat and Jon's "death" all colliding within about three hours of television. But watching back through, season 5 might still be the weakest of the bunch but from a character development perspective it's one of the most subtle and rewarding. Sansa's journey from s4e10 to s5e10 is an arc that would usually deserve more time to develop but they pack it in brilliantly; Brienne and Pod share some lovely scenes whilst patiently waiting to rescue Sansa; the Dorne storyline is remembered for the terrible Sand Snakes but Jaime's role in that plot is the final step on his journey from Slimeball to Honourable Gentleman; the main plotline for season 6 in King's Landing is weaved patiently as Cersei arms the Faith Militant; the tension at Castle Black rises to boiling point. There's more to season 5 than people give it credit for.
Season 6, on the other hand, is basically the total opposite in terms of pacing - "Efficiency is coming" as we joked. Honestly, by episode s6e4: Arya's blindness is gone and her stick training is done, Dany's escaped from Vaes Dothrak with a Dothraki army, Jon's been resurrected and left the Watch, Margaery's in the High Sparrow's good books, Dorne is controlled by the Sand Snakes, Roose is dead and Ramsay has Rickon, Balon's dead and Euron has assumed his post, Bran's learning how to time-travel in his mind. There are conclusive plotpoints arriving all over the map really early on, and even some of the mid-season episodes have some great scenes (Jaime and Edmure's scene in the tent, for example). But even if they do end up making a clumsy mess of the siege at Riverrun ("But he's my lord, my lord" / Blackfish's death) and Arya's whole thing (who was the Waif? Why was Arya suddenly No One? Is anyone ever gonna explain that?), season 6 was when the show finally embraced its potential to go for needlessly grandiose, sickeningly cheesy glory, and got it spot on. Dany burning the Dothraki church is a ginormous and baffling powerplay, the Battle of the Bastards is so fecking overblown, everything that happens with Hodor's death is utterly ridiculous, Cersei's destruction of the Sept of Baelor is another powerplay and is utterly perplexing - and yet all these big moments work so bloody well because the show embraced them all and delivered each of them with really defiant conviction. In the way that the explosion of wildfire in Blackwater thrust us into a new era of the show - that would contain stunning visual effects and giant climactic incidents - and in the way that Hardhome tested that water a little more (the first time we saw the White Walkers' true power and Miguel Sapochnik's ace direction of a battle scene), season 6 takes us that step further in basically every major plotline.
And if the trailer for season 7 is anything to go by, they're going to give us one of these gigantic/baffling powerplays (or a huge battle/fight) per episode. [Spoilers follow]. We've got the Unsullied invading Casterly Rock, the Lannisters invading Highgarden, the Dothraki and dragons fighting the Lannisters, Jon & co. facing the White Walkers, a battle involving Euron out at sea, and I'd imagine there's a huge moment coming that they've deliberately left out of the trailer (my prediction is the Wall collapsing). If season 6 was anything to go by, the show's going to head into this season with the intent to make this the largest in scale in terms of effects, collisions, chaos and drama. If they deliver it with huge, overblown conviction then I can take some sloppy dialogue and clumsy writing now and then. When season 4 ended a huge reset button was pressed on the show, with so many key characters in new places on the map, which is why it slowed down a fair bit for season 5. But at the same time a reset button was pressed on the creators too, whose vision since has taken the show in a totally new direction, one where it focused less on game-playing, betrayal and small-scale tragedies (think about it, the Red Wedding was the best moment in the show's history but it was roughly 20 people being slaughtered in one room, not 1,000 people being blown to bits by Cersei). It needed to evolve to produce what we saw in season 6 and what we're about to see in season 7, and frankly I can't wait.
Loved season 4. The Mountain vs Oberyn fight and Tyrion's speech in the crowded hall were the highlights for me. Hardhome really was a bright spot in an otherwise unremarkable (another word would be boring) season. Threw me off cos up to that point, the 9th episodes were known as the can't-miss episodes from a GoT season and Hardhome was the 8th episode iirc.Hardholm on its own made season 5 a 10/10!
I think I enjoyed 4 the most, prince oberyn died way too soon
Loved season 4. The Mountain vs Oberyn fight and Tyrion's speech in the crowded hall were the highlights for me. Hardhome really was a bright spot in an otherwise unremarkable (another word would be boring) season. Threw me off cos up to that point, the 9th episodes were known as the can't-miss episodes from a GoT season and Hardhome was the 8th episode iirc.
Fecking hell, you get around Dave! Making me jealous with all the traveling you're doing.Hardholm was the first episode I ever watched. Was visiting a mate in Australia at the time and he was watching it so I gave it a go despite knowing nothing about the show, and I loved that episode so much that I watched season 4 back to back on the 14 hour flight back. Then I went back to the beginning and Pieced it all together.
Fecking hell, you get around Dave! Making me jealous with all the traveling you're doing.
Agreed. Was there any relation between him and the dude who worships the many-faced god? Jaquen whatever-his-name-is? They're all from Bravos, aren't they?Also Syrio Forel was an awesome character. We didnt see what happened to him, but we kinda know what happened. Moreso than we thought we knew what happened to Benjen.
Yeah, Syrio was the Sword of Bravos, or something like that.Agreed. Was there any relation between him and the dude who worships the many-faced god? Jaquen whatever-his-name-is? They're all from Bravos, aren't they?
Since G.R.R.M. gave up his duties as a producer, and as they moved away from the original group of directors from the first four seasons, the show has taken aslightdip (so bits of season 5 and most of season 6). The dialogue isn't as sharp as it once was when they were able to pull lines directly from the books (you wouldn't get something like "chaos is a ladder" in season 5 or 6); the games operating in the background aren't as devious (Sansa's ace in the hole to defeat Ramsay with the Knights of the Vale would have been a hugely cathartic moment if we'd never seen her send that raven to Baelish two episodes earlier); the way characters are used in the roles they've taken on since season 5 aren't quite as entertaining (Tyrion's better in King's Landing and frankly they wasted him in season 6), and G.R.R.M.'s original idea, that characters you love would be brutally and fatally punished - fatally on occasion - for making mistakes has gone by the wayside to set up the Good vs. Evil showdown that's clearly coming in season 8 (seriously, Jon was wearing some seriously thick plot armour in the battle for Winterfell despite being a total fecking idiot and charging into battle).
But having said all of that, season 5 and 6 are still two fantastic seasons of TV for very different reasons. Season 5 is patient to put it generously, and before I watched it through a second and third time I used to tell people it was essentially six episodes of slow build-up, The Gift (where Tyrion finally meets Dany), and then three episodes where the entire season explodes in an instant, with Tyrion and Dany's first conversation, the Hardhome massacre, Shireen's death, Cersei's walk of atonement, Stannis' defeat and Jon's "death" all colliding within about three hours of television. But watching back through, season 5 might still be the weakest of the bunch but from a character development perspective it's one of the most subtle and rewarding. Sansa's journey from s4e10 to s5e10 is an arc that would usually deserve more time to develop but they pack it in brilliantly; Brienne and Pod share some lovely scenes whilst patiently waiting to rescue Sansa; the Dorne storyline is remembered for the terrible Sand Snakes but Jaime's role in that plot is the final step on his journey from Slimeball to Honourable Gentleman; the main plotline for season 6 in King's Landing is weaved patiently as Cersei arms the Faith Militant; the tension at Castle Black rises to boiling point. There's more to season 5 than people give it credit for.
Season 6, on the other hand, is basically the total opposite in terms of pacing - "Efficiency is coming" as we joked. Honestly, by episode s6e4: Arya's blindness is gone and her stick training is done, Dany's escaped from Vaes Dothrak with a Dothraki army, Jon's been resurrected and left the Watch, Margaery's in the High Sparrow's good books, Dorne is controlled by the Sand Snakes, Roose is dead and Ramsay has Rickon, Balon's dead and Euron has assumed his post, Bran's learning how to time-travel in his mind. There are conclusive plotpoints arriving all over the map really early on, and even some of the mid-season episodes have some great scenes (Jaime and Edmure's scene in the tent, for example). But even if they do end up making a clumsy mess of the siege at Riverrun ("But he's my lord, my lord" / Blackfish's death) and Arya's whole thing (who was the Waif? Why was Arya suddenly No One? Is anyone ever gonna explain that?), season 6 was when the show finally embraced its potential to go for needlessly grandiose, sickeningly cheesy glory, and got it spot on. Dany burning the Dothraki church is a ginormous and baffling powerplay, the Battle of the Bastards is so fecking overblown, everything that happens with Hodor's death is utterly ridiculous, Cersei's destruction of the Sept of Baelor is another powerplay and is utterly perplexing - and yet all these big moments work so bloody well because the show embraced them all and delivered each of them with really defiant conviction. In the way that the explosion of wildfire in Blackwater thrust us into a new era of the show - that would contain stunning visual effects and giant climactic incidents - and in the way that Hardhome tested that water a little more (the first time we saw the White Walkers' true power and Miguel Sapochnik's ace direction of a battle scene), season 6 takes us that step further in basically every major plotline.
And if the trailer for season 7 is anything to go by, they're going to give us one of these gigantic/baffling powerplays (or a huge battle/fight) per episode. [Spoilers follow]. We've got the Unsullied invading Casterly Rock, the Lannisters invading Highgarden, the Dothraki and dragons fighting the Lannisters, Jon & co. facing the White Walkers, a battle involving Euron out at sea, and I'd imagine there's a huge moment coming that they've deliberately left out of the trailer (my prediction is the Wall collapsing). If season 6 was anything to go by, the show's going to head into this season with the intent to make this the largest in scale in terms of effects, collisions, chaos and drama. If they deliver it with huge, overblown conviction then I can take some sloppy dialogue and clumsy writing now and then. When season 4 ended a huge reset button was pressed on the show, with so many key characters in new places on the map, which is why it slowed down a fair bit for season 5. But at the same time a reset button was pressed on the creators too, whose vision since has taken the show in a totally new direction, one where it focused less on game-playing, betrayal and small-scale tragedies (think about it, the Red Wedding was the best moment in the show's history but it was roughly 20 people being slaughtered in one room, not 1,000 people being blown to bits by Cersei). It needed to evolve to produce what we saw in season 6 and what we're about to see in season 7, and frankly I can't wait.
[Quite a long post / Potential spoilers in some of this based on rumours, even for people who've seen the trailer for season 7]Bravo, you've made a pretty good fist of highlighting the changes the show has gone through. I agree with most of it. All I would add is that I think good storytelling has been sacrificied for cheap crowd-pleasing (both fans and critics alike) gimmickry, since the books have finished.
For example female empowerment got a push - no doubt to placate those who have accused the show of misogyny. Ironically the shows female characters have never been more shallow or badly written than in season 6, but hey we live in a world where Barbie war cries trump character complexity. As for Unellas fate, well that seemed little more than liberal revenge fantasy as punishment for her slut-shaming ways - shoutouts to the twitterverse. Never mind the rape and torture, (nor the pornographic framing and celebratory tone of the scene) it's allowed if it's for our righteous cause. It's a scene that represents the creative, intellectual and moral chasm into which the show descended in season 6, followed closely by much of the fanbase( I'm only partly joking). Really hateful, thoughtless stuff.
Given what you have pointed out i'm surprised that you didn't find season 6 fecking dreadful like I did. It felt to me like bad wwf at times but without the integrity or self awareness. As you mention, the pacing is shot to shit and characters and their relationships are stripped of any internal worth, serving merely as tools for the next in a long line of checklisted plot points. Characters now only arc in the way lemmings arc off a cliff.
But I guess if you are aware of the shortcomings/changes and enjoy the show despite them or because of them, then I can't argue with that. Also the battle in season 5 episode 8, on a design level, was a step above anything in 6. 1,2,5,4,3,6.
Feckin hell, this thread is exploding. Saying that, just over a feckin week to go.
Also, another general comment about the pacing of the show is that in some ways it's not sped up as much as people generally think. Remember back to season one, where Tyrion goes from King's Landing, to Winterfell, to the Wall, to the Inn at the Crossroads, to the Eyrie, to the Green Fork and back to King's Landing in 10 episodes? [Continues in a spoiler box, season 7 spoilers]
If Jon goes from Winterfell to Dragonstone, to beyond the Wall, to King's Landing this season, is that any quicker or further in distance than Tyrion travelled in the early days?
It's always been in the show's make-up to move characters around at speeds which are necessary for the plot.I've never understood any of the comments about how quick characters move from place to place.
Essentially, Westeros is huge. Travelling between places should take a long time with the transport available. The show, at times, seems to make light of this and have characters appearing in multiple locations sometimes within the same episode. Littlefinger and Varys in particular clock up the miles in record time.I've never understood any of the comments about how quick characters move from place to place.
Essentially, Westeros is huge. Travelling between places should take a long time with the transport available. The show, at times, seems to make light of this and have characters appearing in multiple locations sometimes within the same episode. Littlefinger and Varys in particular clock up the miles in record time.
I don't think this as much of an issue as some people make out. But nothing short of a detailed itinerary of a character's journey is going to be enough for them.
Essentially, Westeros is huge. Travelling between places should take a long time with the transport available. The show, at times, seems to make light of this and have characters appearing in multiple locations sometimes within the same episode. Littlefinger and Varys in particular clock up the miles in record time.
I don't think this as much of an issue as some people make out. But nothing short of a detailed itinerary of a character's journey is going to be enough for them.
I'm watching last episode of Season 5 tonight and then have 9 days to watch Season 6 (easy shit).
For all those who didn't know Sky Atlantic do a live viewing of the new season on Sunday at around 2am. So Sky Record it (less adverts), or like me... watch it live.
Also, another general comment about the pacing of the show is that in some ways it's not sped up as much as people generally think. Remember back to season one, where Tyrion goes from King's Landing, to Winterfell, to the Wall, to the Inn at the Crossroads, to the Eyrie, to the Green Fork and back to King's Landing in 10 episodes? [Continues in a spoiler box, season 7 spoilers]
If Jon goes from Winterfell to Dragonstone, to beyond the Wall, to King's Landing this season, is that any quicker or further in distance than Tyrion travelled in the early days?
Your encyclopedic knowledge of the show fascinates me.It's always been in the show's make-up to move characters around at speeds which are necessary for the plot.
The fastest mover is probably Littlefinger, who's been moving at the speed of light ever since season 3. He goes from King's Landing in s3e6 to The Eyrie in s3e7, to just off the coast of King's Landing in s4e2, to just off Dragonstone in s4e4, to the Eyrie again in s4e5. In s5e2 he's at the Crossroads Inn, in s5e3 he's at Moat Cailin, in s5e4 he's at Winterfell, in s5e6 he's at King's Landing again. At least in season 6 it takes him four episodes to get from King's Landing to Mole's Town.
Can someone answer these questions for me? Even after watching through season 6 twice, I'm still unsure.
- Cersei did her walk of atonement in Season 5. So why's she gotta go to trial at the end of season 6?
- Why did Queen Marjorie bow down to the High Sparrow? Was it cos she saw the state her brother was in? She obviously wasn't buying the religious nonsense as she handed her grandmother the note.
- Why was Loras kept locked up in the dungeon while Marjorie was released? Surely, he would have agreed to whatever she did to have been released as he seemed in more worse shape than her?
There's a superb website I use when things like this come up (https://quartermaester.info/). They're great resources.Your encyclopedic knowledge of the show fascinates me.
1. Cersei was held captive for sleeping with Brother Lancel, a Lannister of course, in season 5 ("What happens when we strip away your finery?"), but she managed to strike a deal that would allow her to return to the Red Keep before her actual trial: the walk of atonement. The trial at the end of season 6 was for her various other crimes, but of course we all know why she didn't attend that one.Can someone answer these questions for me? Even after watching through season 6 twice, I'm still unsure.
- Cersei did her walk of atonement in Season 5. So why's she gotta go to trial at the end of season 6?
- Why did Queen Marjorie bow down to the High Sparrow? Was it cos she saw the state her brother was in? She obviously wasn't buying the religious nonsense as she handed her grandmother the note.
- Why was Loras kept locked up in the dungeon while Marjorie was released? Surely, he would have agreed to whatever she did to have been released as he seemed in more worse shape than her?
Can someone answer these questions for me? Even after watching through season 6 twice, I'm still unsure.
- Cersei did her walk of atonement in Season 5. So why's she gotta go to trial at the end of season 6?
- Why did Queen Marjorie bow down to the High Sparrow? Was it cos she saw the state her brother was in? She obviously wasn't buying the religious nonsense as she handed her grandmother the note.
- Why was Loras kept locked up in the dungeon while Marjorie was released? Surely, he would have agreed to whatever she did to have been released as he seemed in more worse shape than her?