SoraanTribal
Member
I have no idea how people accidentally enter the spoiler thread.
Well, I was just quickly glancing at the title of the thread and it says "Game of Thrones Season 4" and clicked on it.
I have no idea how people accidentally enter the spoiler thread.
Spoilers relating to the "Inside the Episode #8 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RB3vgeMijCc)" -At 8:50 it is mentioned that he is "poisoned"- so I presume that means Oberyn was indeed using poison. It only makes sense given his style and "Viper" nickname.
Hah, that sums it up pretty well.Yeah it seems instead of poetic justice we get poetic injustice. The honorable to a fault Ned Stark lies and admits treason, both dishonoring himself personally and publicly before being beheaded. The stoic Rob forsakes his promises for love and gets to see his wife stabbed in her pregnant belly before being cut down. Catelyn helps start a war with the Lannisters over their attempt to murder her son, in the process letting two lannisters go free and then watches her other son die on the orders of the lannisters before dying herself. Oberyn seeks vengeance on the man who murdered his sister and his confession, and instead gets to experience what she experienced in her last moments at the hands of the same man, while that man proudly gives him the confession he sought.
Meanwhile Joffrey dies a noble and brave king, not knowing that he is dying and not at the hands of the people he had wronged.
Someone earlier in the thread asked why we keep watching, and I think in part of it is that we keep waiting for the catharsis of some poetic justice.
Probably because normal people die when a spear gets shoved into their chest area?
Spoilar Morghulis
Valar Spoilarhus, all men must be spoiled.
To those who keep entering the Book reader thread...Subscribe to this one, and only ever enter it though your subscription list. It's that easy.
So what happens if/when the wildling army breaks through the wall? I assume Roose Bolton calls his bannermen, but will Tywin raise the south's armies and march north to help?
What's Stannis gonna do when this is all going down?
There is no other way
I was under the impression that Stannis is marching North as he seems to be the only one that gives a fuck about the message the Crows sent out.
So what happens if/when the wildling army breaks through the wall? I assume Roose Bolton calls his bannermen, but will Tywin raise the south's armies and march north to help?
What's Stannis gonna do when this is all going down?
Tyrion and Jamie bonded over bugs.
I figured it was just Tyrion rambling out of sheer terror that he might die.I didn't quite get the point of that whole conversation. Any ideas?
Let what slide? Oberyn chose to be Tyrion's champion. And was killed because of it. His death was as fair as it could be in GoT universe.
Spartacus was more violent and had more sex.
I didn't quite get the point of that whole conversation. Any ideas?
Well they'd be pissed about the prince, but you're right, there's not much they could complain about. However, public confession that Princes Elia Martell was raped and butchered by Tywin Lannister's lackey? That I can see causing a spark. Tywin Lannister has carved himself a reputation of being a man in control of every situation, a man to be feared, and a man with a calculating and iron fisted agenda. No way you can convince Dorne that such a man had no idea and/or lacked the power to stop the Mountain from committing such a crime. Rememeber, Tywin gave the order to sack the city. When a city is sacked, rape and pillage is the natural order of the day. The fact that Tywin gift wrapped the dead bodies of Elia and her kids in Lannister red, and deposited them at Robert's feet, tells me this guy knew what went down.
I didn't quite get the point of that whole conversation. Any ideas?
I have a few ideas on the meaning behind it:I didn't quite get the point of that whole conversation. Any ideas?
My boy Stannis is going to take the throne the first....errr......next chance he gets.So what happens if/when the wildling army breaks through the wall? I assume Roose Bolton calls his bannermen, but will Tywin raise the south's armies and march north to help?
What's Stannis gonna do when this is all going down?
I didn't quite get the point of that whole conversation. Any ideas?
A man about to die trying to figure out why life can be so cruel.
I have a few ideas on the meaning behind it:
1. Sometimes things happen and there is no reason or logic to it.
2. Metaphor for the way Tyrion has been treated during his life. He is one of the beetles, constantly getting beaten down.
3. Very meta metaphor where George R.R Martin is the 'moron' who keeps indiscriminately killing off these characters for seemingly no reason.
It's a metaphor for how GRRM will kill anyone, at any time, for any reason.
There's no word for cousin-killing, though. Doesn't count.I took it as some people are inherently violent and not always with any rhyme or reason.
btw let's not forget that Jaime killed his own cousin while held captive in Robb's camp.
Haha, my housemate smoked up and watched the most recent episode with his missus tonight, and really felt that last scene. Been a couple of hours and he's so down about it, came in to tell me he's convinced people will just stop watching the show now. One plot device that drives him mad (not at the device, but the emotional resonance it produces) is the "heroic character has easy victory snatched away at last second due to ego", and it really, really go to him here.
He's so bummed.
I think the "no name for killing your cousin" came up as a reference to Jaime killing his cousin to escape Robb's army. thats probably why it came to Jaime's mind so easily anyway.I actually took this conversation completely differently. Recall that they were discussing the various "-cides" (fratricide, regicide, etc.) and Tyrion says "there's no name for killing your cousin..." which he then pivots to the story of cousin idiot-bug-smasher. He finishes the discussion with a very brief quip "...and then he was killed by the mule that kicked him."
I took his opening of "there's no name for killing your cousin" and the seemingly "and the mule killed him" and his ramblings about the pointless nature of killing all those beetles...and I deduced that Tyrion decided to kill the cousin...weird I know, but that's where I ended up. The way he stresses on about the helpless bugs being pointlessly crushed, and that's all the cousin seemed interested in...it just seemed to me that Tyrion had a hand in correcting something he saw as pointless destruction...maybe its out of character but that's my interpretation...
The pivot from "there's no name to killing your cousin" to a discussion about a cousin, ending with how he was killed by a mule just seemed too contrived
I think that's one of the major themes of the show. Entitled and self-important people try to one-up each other while ignoring the various existential threats that surround them.When you think about the onslaught of wildlings, then winter with Whitewalkers and (maybe) Dany with her dragons it makes all the stuff happening in King's Landing/Vale/Dragonstone seem incredibly petty.
The last few sentences here make me think you're talking about the books.
Yeah it seems instead of poetic justice we get poetic injustice. The honorable to a fault Ned Stark lies and admits treason, both dishonoring himself personally and publicly before being beheaded. The stoic Rob forsakes his promises for love and gets to see his wife stabbed in her pregnant belly before being cut down. Catelyn helps start a war with the Lannisters over their attempt to murder her son, in the process letting two lannisters go free and then watches her other son die on the orders of the lannisters before dying herself. Oberyn seeks vengeance on the man who murdered his sister and his confession, and instead gets to experience what she experienced in her last moments at the hands of the same man, while that man proudly gives him the confession he sought.
Meanwhile Joffrey dies a noble and brave king, not knowing that he is dying and not at the hands of the people he had wronged.
Someone earlier in the thread asked why we keep watching, and I think in part of it is that we keep waiting for the catharsis of some poetic justice.
I think the strongest common theme in what I have seen over three seasons is that shitty people do horrible things, and those that are wronged never get vindication/revenge. The death of Joffery teaches the reader/viewer that its not even a case of George setting up for a big pay-off later. No one wanted to see him die that way. The only protaganist that is getting her way is Daenerys, but I won't be surprised if she is killed off before she ever gets to King's Landing.
The big question of course, is whether Tyrion is going to die. Going by theme I've observed thus far, I'd say yes. For me the viewer I find that unfortunate, since he is such a strong character. I applaud George for being willing to kill off main charactrers, but I'm not always convinced that he is able to replace them successfully with other characters that I should care about. I honestly don't care about the whole Stanis plotline, mainly because I don't find myself rooting for or against. I'm just indifferent to what happens there. Same with the Grey Joy/Bolton plotline. I care about Theon, and Ramsay, but about those kingdoms in general.
Tyrion could somehow escape and run for it.
but the problem is that there is no place for him to go and nothing for him to do there and if a character might as well be dead in this series, i can't imagine them not dying.
The only problem I have with this scenerio is how would Stannis know that there are 100,000 wildlings marching to the Wall? Unless Melisandre saw the WW and the Wildlings in the flames, I don't see how he could prepare for that (even with the backing of the Iron Bank).Stannis is going to bail out the Night's Watch and get mad respect from the North, IMO. The scene was foreshadowed in an earlier season when Davos handed Stannis the letter about what's coming to the North ... Davos bailed himself out of a death sentence with that one.
My love/hate relationship with this show continues to demoralize me.
That was the classic bait and switch, my horrified face staring back at me in the black screen as the credits rolled.
Hope Tyrion finds a way out of this, his face at the end![]()
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I have a few ideas on the meaning behind it:
1. Sometimes things happen and there is no reason or logic to it.
2. Metaphor for the way Tyrion has been treated during his life. He is one of the beetles, constantly getting beaten down.
3. Very meta metaphor where George R.R Martin is the 'moron' who keeps indiscriminately killing off these characters for seemingly no reason.
Show seems to me like every character is in a greek tragedy. It's their flaws that get them killed. Oberyn y u gotta showboat?
Only place for Tyrion is the Wall I think. He seemed to get on well with Jon.
Showboating didn't get him killed though. You'd have a point if the Mountain hacked him down during one of his flashy twirls. His obsession to get the confession out of him made him lose his mind both figuratively and literally.
I suppose if Jon took command of the watch he could shelter Tyrion there, but to what end? I feel like Jon is already fleshed out enough as a character that Tyrion could not really mentor him on anything or contribute to the fight against the wildlings or walkers.Only place for Tyrion is the Wall I think. He seemed to get on well with Jon.
same problem. what does he do in Dorne that is relevant enough to keep him as a main character? I don't think he's ever hinted at a relationship with Dorne and he had never met Oberyn before. [except as a baby]Or hitch a ride to Dorne. The one place in Westeros that hates Lannisters, is probably the safest place for him if he escapes execution.
I suppose if Jon took command of the watch he could shelter Tyrion there, but to what end? I feel like Jon is already fleshed out enough as a character that Tyrion could not really mentor him on anything or contribute to the fight against the wildlings or walkers.
same problem. what does he do in Dorne that is relevant enough to keep him as a main character? I don't think he's ever hinted at a relationship with Dorne and he had never met Oberyn before. [except as a baby]
Only place for Tyrion is the Wall I think. He seemed to get on well with Jon.
Only place for Tyrion is the Wall I think. He seemed to get on well with Jon.
This....Dany was pretty damn lenient to exile Jorah instead of outright beheading him.
Problem is, there may not be a Wall to go to by the time he even gets there.
I have a few ideas on the meaning behind it:
1. Sometimes things happen and there is no reason or logic to it.
2. Metaphor for the way Tyrion has been treated during his life. He is one of the beetles, constantly getting beaten down.
3. Very meta metaphor where George R.R Martin is the 'moron' who keeps indiscriminately killing off these characters for seemingly no reason.
Problem is, there may not be a Wall to go to by the time he even gets there.
Fair enough. Dude still should have just killed the mountain when he had the chance. Obsession is as good a flaw as any to do you in.
she gets seasick on the way to Braavos and falls over the side of the boat.Exactly. Or he gets there just as the wildlings raid the place and kill everyone. Whatever happens I'm just going to expect the worst.
My wife is starting to worry me. She said that if Arya gets killed she's going to hunt down GRRM and go Misery on his ass. Ha!
The brutality of the spectacle of Oberyn's death, screaming through shattered teeth as massive hands rip his head apart,was enough to keep me from sleep for much of last night.
But what bothers me now is how terrible and nonsensical Oberyn's downfall was choreographed. The man can do eight flips in the air, using his spear as a pivot point, keep hold of it the whole time. But a man flat on his back sweeps a single leg from under him and he flies up in the air and lands flat on his back like a cartoon character on a banana peel,v letting his spear fly away in the process. He couldn't roll out of it, he couldn't immediately shift his weight to his other leg, he couldn't hold on to his fucking spear he was so tightly holding before. His Achilles heel was literally his fucking heel, and it just seems like an absurd way to end such a well choreographed fight. There are innumerable ways that they could have arrived at that finish while still putting over Oberyn's thirst for vengeance and overconfidence without immediately stripping away all his fighting and dodging prowess in one fell swoop of his feet.
Shit, I feel like two WWE guys could have come up with a better transition into that finish on the fly instead of the one we got. Also, watching Oberyn fail so frustratingly close to victory quickly took the sting away from Seth Rollins betraying The Shield.