Very predictable episode, but still good. You knew Rickon was going to die when he runs back to Jon. You knew the Giant was going to die. You knew Sansa's secret army was going to show up. BTW, dick move by Sansa keeping that army secret. Could have told Jon about it and saved many unnecessary deaths.
Well you'd knew he would die as soon as he started running in a straight line.
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Really though, I can't be the only one that didn't care that Rickon died. Yeah he's a Stark, but he was just never in the show.
Plus, he's the only one who never did anything cool.
Robb: Led the entire north in the battle against the Lannisters/Baratheons and never lost a battle. The only way they could stop him was by convincing a sworn bannerman to betray him in his own home which will likely ruin his house over time. Unfortunate end to a promising young man.
Jon Snow: #######, yet rises to Lord Commander of the Night's Watch. Gains the favor of the entire wildling army, who barely was ever commanded by any one leader over the centuries. Dies by the hands of his own men, comes back to life, and kicks ass all over the Bolton's claim on Winterfell. Plus...Ygritte.
Sansa: Yet to come into her own, but was already betrothed to the king of the 7 kingdoms. Ended up marrying the king's uncle. Then married the lord of Winterfell (I guess the previous marriage was just annulled?), finding a foothold in the north again. Gathers an army, and curb stomps her sadistic husband in his own home. She does all this without any real leadership skills, military skills, strong claim to the north, or any really likable qualities. Impressive indeed.
Arya: Despite not having a home of her own for years, she picks up mad individual fighting skills and life survival skills from Yoren, Tywin Lannister, the Brotherhood without Banners, the Hound, and eventually the House of Black and White in Braavos. Ends up becoming one of the most deadly assassins in the 7 kingdoms in a short time. Awesome.
Bran: Becomes the 3-eyed raven incarnate. While we don't know the true role he has to play, it's clear that it's a hugely important one in the war against the White Walkers and Wights. Not bad for a cripple who isn't even grown into a man yet.
Honestly, Rickon never had a chance because he never did anything cool. He was just sorta...there.
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Last edited by Cali Panthers Fan; 06-21-2016 at 09:49 PM.
Ya my bad. Seriously though it was a great episode. The over the shoulder view of Jon stumbling around in the chaos is the best scene I've ever witnessed in a TV show and definitely up there for any movie as well. Just amazing.
Also apparently this scene here was real, no CGI at all, they lined up 40 horses, pointed them at Kit and said "Charge!". Acting or not man that would be intimidating.
I love the Stark's Armor and the attention to detail the show gives to this type of thing.
Its just... leather, not fancy chain mail, it is practical to make and wear
Plus, he's the only one who never did anything cool.
Robb: Led the entire north in the battle against the Lannisters/Baratheons and never lost a battle. The only way they could stop him was by convincing a sworn bannerman to betray him in his own home which will likely ruin his house over time. Unfortunate end to a promising young man.
Jon Snow: #######, yet rises to Lord Commander of the Night's Watch. Gains the favor of the entire wildling army, who barely was ever commanded by any one leader over the centuries. Dies by the hands of his own men, comes back to life, and kicks ass all over the Bolton's claim on Winterfell. Plus...Ygritte.
Sansa: Yet to come into her own, but was already betrothed to the king of the 7 kingdoms. Ended up marrying the king's uncle. Then married the lord of Winterfell (I guess the previous marriage was just annulled?), finding a foothold in the north again. Gathers an army, and curb stomps her sadistic husband in his own home. She does all this without any real leadership skills, military skills, strong claim to the north, or any really likable qualities. Impressive indeed.
Arya: Despite not having a home of her own for years, she picks up mad individual fighting skills and life survival skills from Yoren, Tywin Lannister, the Brotherhood without Banners, the Hound, and eventually the House of Black and White in Braavos. Ends up becoming one of the most deadly assassins in the 7 kingdoms in a short time. Awesome.
Bran: Becomes the 3-eyed raven incarnate. While we don't know the true role he has to play, it's clear that it's a hugely important one in the war against the White Walkers and Wights. Not bad for a cripple who isn't even grown into a man yet.
Honestly, Rickon never had a chance because he never did anything cool. He was just sorta...there.
Somebody already mentioned Rickon's Wolf Shaggy Dog and how that foreshadowed his character arc, but they all do.
Sansa's "Lady" gets killed, which essentially foreshadows her change into a strong woman from a fragile lady
Arya's is Nymeria which is named after a famous Dornish warrior Queen. Now Arya is becoming a warrior from an exotic land herself.
Robb's was Greywind. This one is a bit tougher, but "words are wind" would describe his falling out with the Frey's
Yup they all foreshadow the character arc. - wasn't sure how much speculation was allowed In this thread though.
Bran's was Summer and of course we see that he is tied directly to the WhiteWalkers now and it leads to the potential start of "winter" once the direwolf was killed.
Last edited by SuperMatt18; 06-22-2016 at 09:19 AM.
Really though, I can't be the only one that didn't care that Rickon died. Yeah he's a Stark, but he was just never in the show.
I can't lie I actually laughed when he got killed. Partial because of his straight line to death, but also because you knew a Stark was going to die and of course they sacrificed the least important one.
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There's more incentive to draw it out. They want longer subscriptions, not shorter ones
How many people are just going to get a subscription for just the show and cancel. HBO also prevents you from cancelling mid billing cycle month. So 10 weeks or 13 weeks is the same to them, as not would require a 3 month minimum.
How many people are just going to get a subscription for just the show and cancel. HBO also prevents you from cancelling mid billing cycle month. So 10 weeks or 13 weeks is the same to them, as not would require a 3 month minimum.
I misunderstood. I thought you meant condense the number of seasons