Tag Archives: George. R. R. Martin

game of thrones recapping: blackwater

Previously on Game of Thrones: Prince of Winterfell

Ready or not, here comes Stannis! The inhabitants of King’s Landing know Stannis and his fleet are mere hours away, and they all choose to deal with the imminent attack in radically different ways. Cersei has all but given up as she contemplates suicidal death via essence of nightshade or Ser Illyn Payne’s sword. The soldiers of the city predictably turn to alcohol and prostitutes. Only Tyrion seems to care about actually planning a defensive strategy. And Joffrey? Let’s just say he’s being as helpful, noble, and king-like as usual.

Meanwhile, the men of Stannis’s fleet are reasonably confident that their attack on King’s Landing will be successful. Their ships outnumber their enemy’s 10 to 1, and their men 5 to 1. If battles were all about numbers, then this should be a metaphorical walk in the park for Stannis and his Red Priestess. Davos, the gruff onion knight, is not so sure. He shares some history about how King’s Landing has never been breached.

Stannis’s fleet materializes eerily out of the dark fog. Only one ship sails across Blackwater Bay to meet them. This infuriates Joffrey, but the unusual strategy is clearly Tyrion’s own. As Stannis’s men suspiciously watch the single ship, Davos spots green liquid pouring from its hull. Uh-oh! Remember all that wild fire talk from a few episodes ago? The ship explodes in an impressive plume of green smoke and fire, quickly incinerating the ships closest to it.

Even with a big chunk of his fleet taken out by wild fire, Stannis still has enough men to land his ships and attack the shore. Joffrey predictably bails on the action, leaving Tyrion to heroically muster the troops. To cries of “Halfman! Halfman!”, Tyrion and the men of King’s Landing successfully throw off Stannis’s soldiers from the Mud Gate. Unfortunately, Tyrion barely has time to celebrate. He’s suddenly slashed across his face by Ser Meryn (friendly — very deliberate — fire). All seems lost for both Tyrion and King’s Landing as a fresh wave of Stannis’s men storm the shores. But surprise! Here comes a new mysterious group of riders who slash and stab their way through Stannis’s men. Tywin Lannister has come to save the day!

Thoughts

  • You know what? I completely think this episode lives up to the expectation and hype of an entire season’s worth of build-up. Great writing, great acting, great fighting (actually more violent than I expected), and great CGI explosions. This episode legitimately made me happy. I don’t know what that says about me, but I know what I like, and I liked this.
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  • So having said that, was it just or me or was this episode weirdly reminiscent of the Helm’s Deep siege in The Two Towers? Not only do both feature a siege of a heavily outnumbered army, but a weak gate is targeted, a crazy explosive substance is used, and just as the battle seems at an end, a mysterious third party arrives on horseback to turn the tide. I’m not saying I’m complaining necessarily—just pointing it out, I guess.
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  • Kudos to the writers for restricting the scope of this episode to just King’s Landing. As much as I love the show’s rich cast of characters, the Battle of Blackwater would have only suffered from being interspersed with scenes of Dany shouting or Theon whining. (See painfully slow scenes of Ents talking right in the middle of the most exciting Helm’s Deep scenes—my last Lord of the Rings reference…probably.)
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  • Cersei is both creepy and brilliant in this episode. She’s been more or less unraveling all season, but her obsessive and bitter grip on reality is noticeably slipping here. This is the first time I realized how similar Cersei once must have been to Sansa. You know, before her incestuous relationship with her brother, abusive marriage, and devil-spawn of a son.
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  • Poor Hound. I hope everyone remembers that his face looks like an ugly uglier version of Two Face because he got burned as a kid. He’s not a coward for abandoning the battle so early. It’s hard enough to fight for a brat like Joffrey without the entire battlefield reminding you of your childhood trauma.
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  • Sansa finally is getting interesting. My least favorite Stark actually got some of the best lines this episode. Who knows? I might have to switch her out with Rickon on my list of favorite Starks. Sorry, Rickon. It’s nothing personal. You just don’t really do anything.
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  • Fun fact: George R. R. Martin wrote this episode.
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  • Season finale is NEXT Sunday!!!
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**********
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Missing in action: Theon, Bran, Rickon, Yara, Catelyn, Robb, Jon, Ygritte, Dany, Arya, Melisandre

Body count: Thousands

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**********

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Quotes

Varys: “I’ve always hated the bells. They ring for horror: a dead king, a city under siege.
Tyrion: “A wedding.”
Varys: “Exactly.”

Shae: “Some of those boys will never come back.”
Sansa: “Joffrey will. The worst ones always live.”

Cersei: “The gods have no mercy. That’s why they’re gods.”

Tyrion: “Those are brave men knocking at our door! Let’s go kill them!”

 

Hayley has other interests besides just nerdy TV shows. She also is a big fan of thinking. She ponders the great mysteries of life, like how more of her time can be devoted to watching those nerdy TV shows.

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game of thrones: season one revisited

Last year, Game of Thrones found a happy home for itself somewhere between Middle Earth and a political cesspool of deceit and immorality. The HBO fantasy extravaganza has a lot in common with the world inhabited by hobbits and wizards — the weapons, the clothes, the brooding looks of men who “sense something” on the horizon — but the similarities are only superficial. 

Game of Thrones is more driven by character, and in turn, also by the vices of those characters. While Tolkien’s fantasy epic centered upon the dynamic of unlimited power that a ring introduced to a cast of dwarves, humans, and elves, Game of Thrones is about the corrupting force of basic human desires. Of course, this is all set in Westeros, a vaguely magical land of winter zombies and dragons, but that just makes it more fun. If you wanted to watch normal people behaving badly in normal settings, you could watch the news.

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Season 1 of Game of Thrones primarily focused on the increasingly poor fortunes of the Stark family. Headed by the honorable Ned (played by Sean Bean, who seemed to enjoy his time riding horses and swinging a sword as Boromir in The Lord of the Rings enough to sign up for this gig), the Stark family’s two daughters, three sons, one bastard, and one ward pretty much all embark on story arcs that spiral down to a grim conclusion. The big moment from Season 1? Ned’s head gets chopped off. Good-bye, main character. But it wasn’t all death and destruction because in Game of Thrones you always have someone new to root for. If you liked Ned, why not switch allegiances to Dany, the exiled princess who just recently acquired a trio of dragons? Or Tyrion, the dwarf lord who uses his wit and intelligence to navigate a family and a world that despise him?

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And now Season 2 is here! The much-anticipated premiere set the stage for the season’s epic showdown of wannabe kings. Now that King Robert is dead, the throne is up for grabs. There are no less than six contenders (that we take seriously): Stannis Baratheon, Renly Baratheon, Robb Stark, Balon Greyjoy, Daenerys Targaryen, and Mance Rayder. None of them are what you would call cooperative, and the ensuing mix of clashing personalities and medieval smear campaigns promise an explosive and entertaining year from our friends in Westeros.

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Things to look forward to this season:

  • Tyrion as Hand of the King (a job that is sort of like being Vice-President of Westeros except that you actually have power).
  • The creepy white walkers that lurk behind the Wall. This season, Jon Snow and his Night Watch brothers are venturing past the safety of Castle Black to take the fight to the zombie-like creatures.
  • Arya Stark disguised as a boy. The pluckiest Stark barely escaped capture last season, and now she’s headed to the Wall with a ragtag bunch of orphans and criminals.
  • Dragons!

Hayley has other interests besides just nerdy TV shows. She also is a big fan of thinking. She ponders the great mysteries of life, like how more of her time can be devoted to watching those nerdy TV shows.

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