Poimandres
Member
I've read the books. I was pleased with season 1, and a bit disappointed by season 2. Thus far, season 3 has been pretty decent in my opinion.
[ASoS]What a weird thing to say.You want to be refreshed of a memory of Tyrion being wretched, then you follow that up with one of his most wretched moment?
I've read the books. I was pleased with season 1, and a bit disappointed by season 2. Thus far, season 3 has been pretty decent in my opinion.
I feel similarly except I didn't like how they copped-out on the whole White Walker army cliff-hanger from last season into this season. And this last episode makes me doubt this show can handle the third book's material in general.
Fair enough. I thought that that scene did a good job of making her seem (ASOS)more three dimensional and human, without totally neutering her history with Jon. I don't really feel like either Cat or Robb (or Talisa) are very personable at this point, which is a mistake given what's coming up for them down the road. I welcome any attempt the writers make to humanize or endear us to those characters before the RW.
Also, I just found out that Jennifer Ehle was originally cast as Catelyn in the pilot but had to drop out due to conflicting schedules. Damn. I think she would have made for a much better Catelyn.
Anywhere I can find a list of the creatures of the book series? It was cool seeing a Giant in the first episode this season. I want to know what else is in store.
Natalie Dormer has one of the most distinctive faces I think I've ever seen.
- Jojen is a bit too down-to-earth compared to the way I pictured him. He always had a sense of mystery and poetry about him in the books, which I don't find here. Part of it is because he's been aged up I suppose.
- Meera sure is a badass hunter, as in the books, but she looks and sounds a bit too cocky for my taste. She's a bit like Yara Greyjoy, except she's a child of the forest.
- Overall both characters lose a bit from being aged up, or at least it has a noticeable impact on the feel of the characters. Still, I like both book Reeds and show Reeds. Can't wait to see more of them.
which might also be because they somehow look alike. that was the first thing I noticed about meera.She's a bit like Yara Greyjoy.
where is Rickon?
Man that tyrion and shae scene was bad.
Yeah, true. I noticed that with the White Walker thing as well. It seemed off, and didn't really gell with the way season 2 ended. I also thought that Theon was dead on the show, but I'm happy to see him alive and "well".
Everything else seems okay to me. It looks better than season 2, and I like the more deliberate pacing going on at the moment. Some choice lines of dialogue, and plenty of intrigue. I even kind of liked the Cat scene... it was touching.
most people seem to praise the show exclusive margaery scenes in the latest episode though.Isn't it funny how the best scenes in each episode are often the ones most faithful to the books? Stick to the source material, geniuses. You're no GRRM, D&B.
which might also be because they somehow look alike. that was the first thing I noticed about meera.
I agree with this. I always pictured Jojen as very mysterious. Talking slow and really seriously all the time. As for Meera, I don't mind her getting a little more charisma as she isn't very interesting in the books.
I agree with this. I always pictured Jojen as very mysterious. Talking slow and really seriously all the time. As for Meera, I don't mind her getting a little more charisma as she isn't very interesting in the books.
Uhhh of course Tyrion's personality and character hassomething to do with his murder of Shae. Do you think Ned, even in a similarly desperate and humiliated situation, would resort to murder the way Tyrion did? It has very much to do with his character. And I might grant that a whitewashed Tyrion would still murder Shae as presented in the books, but it doesn't make sense with a more sympathetic TV-Shae. Who, by the way, can apparently fend off rapists with a knife, so I wonder how Tyrion will strangle her. I guess he'll just crossbow her as well. Eh.
I really don't see why it was necessary to bring in the Reeds instead of just rolling them into Osha or something. There are already too many characters for a TV show and they seemed like a relatively easy cut.
Full seriesBy ADWD they appear to serve practically no purpose anymore. Unless including them in the show now confirms they'll serve further purpose in the coming books.
I always liked Meera, but I do agree that she isn't all that interesting. Always great to see badass warrior/fighter/hunter women.
Was Shae always this bad at acting and I'd just never noticed before?
Series
So far, show Mance is pretty much a new character... Cool thing about book Mance is that he always came off as jovial, funny and even a bit fragile for a guy with that much power.
SeriesLooking in that non-book spoiler thread, I get the distinct feeling some people are stealth non-book readers. That one dude already "deduced" that the Boltons are betraying Robb, and "must be" in the pocket of Tywin.
SeriesLooking in that non-book spoiler thread, I get the distinct feeling some people are stealth non-book readers. That one dude already "deduced" that the Boltons are betraying Robb, and "must be" in the pocket of Tywin.
ASOSAs for the Night's Watch, we've seen even less of this storyline, and it pretty much is going exactly as I remembered. The Watch is broken and beaten, spirits are low, and Sam is a bitch.
Full seriesI'm sure it's been discussed already but I fell behind on the thread this week. The final moments/lines of the crossbow scene, do we think they're setting her up to be the one who poisons him?
I think the main thing that's lacking in the Night's Watch scenes is a lack of danger due to the budget and daytime filming. ASOSIn the book last episodes scene happened at night with torches being the only thing protecting the watch from the weights, when Sam goes down and his brothers torches vanish into the woods there's actually a reason to be concerned for him. When he's 3 years away from the conga line of brothers in broad daylight with Mormont in his face seconds later commanding people to watch over him it feels like everyone's safe, the scene doesn't achieve much beyond making Sam look like a bitch again. On top their situation seems nowhere near as dire due to the fact we didn't witness the horror at the Fist.
Other than a few parts I enjoyed the episode and really liked what they did with Margaery. I just wish that it was Vargo Hoat rolling up at the end with the brave companions, hopefully the characters them seem to have had their personalties neutered develop into more than generic man/boy later in the series.
Isn't it funny how the best scenes in each episode are often the ones most faithful to the books? Stick to the source material, geniuses. You're no GRRM, D&B.
SeriesLooking in that non-book spoiler thread, I get the distinct feeling some people are stealth non-book readers. That one dude already "deduced" that the Boltons are betraying Robb, and "must be" in the pocket of Tywin.
SeriesHe also said Jamie killed the mad king under orders of Tywin, so he might just have gotten lucky, or consulted wiki about Bolton or he is deliberately saying wrong things to throw off the scent. I also found the 'speculation' that Robb had made a former ally an enemy because of his marriage a bit suspect. Really hard to tell what is real speculation and what is people trying to look smarter than they are. Let the witch hunt begin.
If the wildlings go to the fist and see some carnage in episode 3, which was in the books, I expect it would have made the Night's Watch situation look more dire. Perhaps they should have shuffled around the trek to fit in after that.
The main problem with the show is that changes to characters and lack of interior monologue is really killing a lot of them.
They've done a wonderful job of creating a living, breathing world but the character development is just not good right now. A show about zombies is doing a better job of developing characters and making us care about them.
John Snow as a fourteen year old kid is so vastly more interesting and different than what comes across in the show. The way they are writing Margaery--that's how Cersei was supposed to be. They've turned her into an old woman. Jaime, Dany, Tyrion, Arya are perfect. Something about Catelyn and Robb are off, can't put my finger on it, but I could care less about them as they are portrayed in the show.
This show has problems, but TWD does not do better than it.The main problem with the show is that changes to characters and lack of interior monologue is really killing a lot of them.
They've done a wonderful job of creating a living, breathing world but the character development is just not good right now. A show about zombies is doing a better job of developing characters and making us care about them.
John Snow as a fourteen year old kid is so vastly more interesting and different than what comes across in the show. The way they are writing Margaery--that's how Cersei was supposed to be. They've turned her into an old woman. Jaime, Dany, Tyrion, Arya are perfect. Something about Catelyn and Robb are off, can't put my finger on it, but I could care less about them as they are portrayed in the show.
The main problem with the show is that changes to characters and lack of interior monologue is really killing a lot of them.
They've done a wonderful job of creating a living, breathing world but the character development is just not good right now. A show about zombies is doing a better job of developing characters and making us care about them.
John Snow as a fourteen year old kid is so vastly more interesting and different than what comes across in the show. The way they are writing Margaery--that's how Cersei was supposed to be. They've turned her into an old woman. Jaime, Dany, Tyrion, Arya are perfect. Something about Catelyn and Robb are off, can't put my finger on it, but I could care less about them as they are portrayed in the show.
I always got the impression that the Brotherhood were against ALL who would harm the small folk, wolf or lion. Regardless, one of them lazily singing "The Rains of Castamere" hardly feels out of character.
Her scene with her grandmother was almost word for word from the book. They have done well with the two big scenes she had this season that weren't in the book(orphanage, crossbow) but overall their original scenes simply aren't good television; I thought the Brotherhood was great though. The Shae scene was just bad, largely due to her acting. I liked Cersei's scene with Joffrey well enough but some might argue it was redundant.most people seem to praise the show exclusive margaery scenes in the latest episode though.
where is Rickon?
Her scene with her grandmother was almost word for word from the book. They have done well with the two big scenes she had this season that weren't in the book(orphanage, crossbow) but overall their original scenes simply aren't good television; I thought the Brotherhood was great though. The Shae scene was just bad, largely due to her acting. I liked Cersei's scene with Joffrey well enough but some might argue it was redundant.
I think a lot of this might have to do with how/what characters are used. Apparently this season will have a lot of new scenes with Lady Olena and I'd imagine they'll be good television. But Ros and Shae apparently also have extended scenes...why? I think part of the reason people say the episodes fly by to many peoplr is because each episode features multiple uneventful scenes many people don't care about; so if you're getting 30 minutes of characters you like, while your favorite character (for instance Arya wasn't in ep 1, Dany wasn't in ep 2) is absent, of course you'll feel like the show breezed by.
I really think that will continue to be a major problem with the show as new characters are piled on, plus uneventful new scenes with characters no one likes.