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-   -   Movies and TV Game of Thrones Seasons 7-8 (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=307938)

Fish 08-07-2017 04:40 PM

It was a little weird to see Jaime riding the horse along the beach in 1" of water toward the dragon, and fall off the horse and somehow sink 20' down...

http://i.imgur.com/7BNUqsm.jpg

mdchiefsfan 08-07-2017 04:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fish (Post 12996646)
It was a little weird to see Jaime riding the horse along the beach in 1" of water toward the dragon, and fall off the horse and somehow sink 20' down...

http://i.imgur.com/7BNUqsm.jpg

Good point LMAO

vailpass 08-07-2017 04:54 PM

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DFGaZOnXYAEHsFd.jpg

Buehler445 08-07-2017 05:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DJ's left nut (Post 12996264)
Again - there's no such thing as 'out of the reach' of the undead. They can reanimate anything. Moreover, they're going to eventually be among your own cities and castles - how precise you think dragonfire is in close quarters? It would be like carpetbombing enemies at your own gates.

There are myriad of reasons why 'duh - dragons' isn't the answer for the Walkers. And if the Walkers had a dragon of their own, this shit is over.

Biggest thing is that you can knock down a wight and night king is all like "nah try again"

Quote:

Originally Posted by Discuss Thrower (Post 12996567)
This dude's recap captions are on point, but this week's are particularly hilarious:

http://imgur.com/a/TWGgF

Revenge of the Blackfish. ROFL

Gravedigger 08-07-2017 06:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fish (Post 12996646)
It was a little weird to see Jaime riding the horse along the beach in 1" of water toward the dragon, and fall off the horse and somehow sink 20' down...

http://i.imgur.com/7BNUqsm.jpg

That's the first thing I thought too. That dropped off quick, wonder how many kids drown in that lake.

Frazod 08-07-2017 06:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gravedigger (Post 12996805)
That's the first thing I thought too. That dropped off quick, wonder how many kids drown in that lake.

I hadn't really thought about that before, but yeah, there should have at least been some no swimming signs posted. :D

Sandy Vagina 08-07-2017 07:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pestilence (Post 12995956)
I wonder if Bronn will bend the knee to Dany with Tyrion there. I don't see why she wouldn't easily give up a castle to him to control. Maybe Casterly Rock.

Bronn is a heartless merc that shot her dragon... Bronn be straight dead, when she gets hands on him.

Quote:

Originally Posted by lcarus (Post 12995980)
I was rewatching season 1 this weekend and I've never quite understood Varys and his intentions. He claims he is on "the side of the realm" because "someone must" but that just seems like a cop-out answer to me. I think Varys looks out for Varys and aligns with whomever gives him the best chance for survival and a place at the table.

disagree. Maybe that's what Varys was, but now I think he is legit when saying he wants the best for the realm.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fish (Post 12996646)
It was a little weird to see Jaime riding the horse along the beach in 1" of water toward the dragon, and fall off the horse and somehow sink 20' down...

wow, never gave that the attention deserved.. lmao

Mephistopheles Janx 08-07-2017 07:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bowser (Post 12996266)
I don't even think she had thought THAT far ahead. She was pissed that she had gotten her ass kicked to that point and was hellbent on some payback. I think it's a significant look into where her head is at when you couple this battle with her telling Jon Snow that he still needs to bend the knee despite the fact of hardcore proof of what's coming for them out of the north. She's slipping into Targaryen madness - a lust for power.

She didn't have to do ANY thinking ahead. Just simply look at the battle field. Unless those wagons were, somehow, attacking her forces... the Lannister army is still the better target by leaps and bounds.

Option A: Attack inanimate objects.
Option B: Attack the humans with sharp pointy objects that can injure my army.

Option ****ing A it is.

DaFace 08-07-2017 08:24 PM

With the Stark family getting the party back together, has it occurred to anyone else that this ended up being a brilliantly-cloaked, pretty standard trope fantasy?

A bunch of young kids lose their parents. They go out into the world, get split up by the bad guys, gain a bunch of crazy new skills, and end up saving the world.

Not complaining. It's actually kind of impressive.

Frazod 08-07-2017 08:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaFace (Post 12997338)
With the Stark family getting the party back together, has it occurred to anyone else that this ended up being a brilliantly-cloaked, pretty standard trope fantasy?

A bunch of young kids lose their parents. They go out into the world, get split up by the bad guys, gain a bunch of crazy new skills, and end up saving the world.

Not complaining. It's actually kind of impressive.

Martin borrowed heavily from Dune in this regard. Ned was a carbon copy of Duke Leto - a good, heroic and noble man thrust into a dangerous political environment that was completely beyond his ability to understand. About halfway through the book I realized that he was going to die.

Mephistopheles Janx 08-07-2017 08:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaFace (Post 12997338)
With the Stark family getting the party back together, has it occurred to anyone else that this ended up being a brilliantly-cloaked, pretty standard trope fantasy?

A bunch of young kids lose their parents. They go out into the world, get split up by the bad guys, gain a bunch of crazy new skills, and end up saving the world.

Not complaining. It's actually kind of impressive.

I think what sets this series apart from others in this genre is how rich and full the rest of the world they are set in is. In most series there is only a singular, albeit super powerful, baddie while in this one we have several villains with varying degrees of ability to mess things up for our intrepid heroes.

Not only are there a large number of baddies but they are all extremely well constructed and each with a real possibility of assuming power over the whole thing.

If it weren't for his horrendous pace... this series would eclipse LotR as my favorite fantasy series.

RustShack 08-07-2017 08:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaFace (Post 12997338)
With the Stark family getting the party back together, has it occurred to anyone else that this ended up being a brilliantly-cloaked, pretty standard trope fantasy?

A bunch of young kids lose their parents. They go out into the world, get split up by the bad guys, gain a bunch of crazy new skills, and end up saving the world.

Not complaining. It's actually kind of impressive.

Hope they all make it(wouldn't mind if Sansa didn't though)... buuut I wouldn't be surprised if Jaqen pays Arya a visit.

Bowser 08-07-2017 09:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RustShack (Post 12997453)
Hope they all make it(wouldn't mind if Sansa didn't though)... buuut I wouldn't be surprised if Jaqen pays Arya a visit.

Hmmm, never thought of that with all the other shit going on. Jaqen will not be happy the next time he sees her.

Chiefspants 08-07-2017 09:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaFace (Post 12997338)
With the Stark family getting the party back together, has it occurred to anyone else that this ended up being a brilliantly-cloaked, pretty standard trope fantasy?

A bunch of young kids lose their parents. They go out into the world, get split up by the bad guys, gain a bunch of crazy new skills, and end up saving the world.

Not complaining. It's actually kind of impressive.

The Red Wedding helps cloak this as well.

Robb Stark is set up to be the heir apparent after Ned's tragic death.

It doesn't work out, in fact, it gives the appearance that GRRM is flipping the standard tropes of fantasy.

What sets Martin apart is that his universe was so massive that the other children instead take up the mantle we all assumed Robb was holding. Hell, he even threw in his Aragorn (Jon Snow), who literally served as a ranger, but who has the bloodlines to be King of Westeros (with a sword that can kill Sauron, to boot).

mr. tegu 08-07-2017 09:48 PM

The world building sets GOT apart from anything I am aware of. It's so extensive, detailed, and thorough that sometimes when listening to the history or reading the back stories that you forget the events didn't really happen.


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