Great Game of Thrones music video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1CLCOvZOh1o&feature=youtu.be
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1CLCOvZOh1o&feature=youtu.be
Please, please for the love of god save Arya's character.
They butchered her last season.
Have we seriously heard nothing about [ACoK]casting?Bastard of Bolton
Her stay at Harrenhal in the books was brutal.What do you mean? The scenes with her and Tywin last season were some of my favourites.
Huh? He wasn't chasing her...?
Sir Amory Lorch was chasing Arya around Harrenhal because he caught her with a note about Robb's forces that he couldn't read and she couldn't use for anything. For some reason none of the Lannister soldiers gave a fuck about one of their commanders running and screaming after Tywin Lannister's new cupbearer. (and ending up dead afterwards)
I agree with everything you said. She is well like but no one thinks of her as a main character. In the book arya was not only top 3 in terms of favorite character people really looked forward to her chapters and anticipated them. In the show people enjoy watching her but if her scene doesnt show up in an episode no one will notice like if dany and tyrion took an absence. Something that would never happen in the book
huh? I am pretty sure tywin reacted on that
That entire chase scene made no sense. If I see one of my commanding officers chasing a girl I would react. Not only did nobody react, they didn't say who he was chasing when he ends up dead a minute later. Even if they didnt know her name someone should've spoken up and said he was chasing a young boy/girl. Arya should've been found out right away.huh? I am pretty sure tywin reacted on that
HahahahahahahahahahaSansa's arc is far more interesting than Arya's in ACOK and ASOS.
Hahahahahahahahahaha
Wasn't there an eyepatchless guy named Beric Dondarrion in season one? Was he recast?
I lost it once he mentioned the books.Great Game of Thrones music video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1CLCOvZOh1o&feature=youtu.be
Great Game of Thrones music video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1CLCOvZOh1o&feature=youtu.be
Sansa's arc is far more interesting than Arya's in ACOK and ASOS.
I thought Arya's arc in ACOK was one of the dullest in the book. Her storyline in ASOS is much better, but even then I found myself far more excited about Sansa chapters than hers.
AFFCAnd Sansa in the Eyrie with Littlefinger is by far a more exciting storyline than Arya in Braavos with the Faceless Men. By fucking far.
Wasn't there an eyepatchless guy named Beric Dondarrion in season one? Was he recast?
My jaw just literally dropped and hit the keyboard.
You might be the only person on the planet that thinks this.
AFFC: That. So riveting.playing in the snow
ASOSThat's in ASOS.
Her stay at Harrenhal in the books was brutal.
By this time in the books Arya has killed several people and been accomplice to a lot more.
That's possible. I'm just not entirely sure why.
ACOK & ASOSAs I've said before, one of my biggest problems with Arya's storyline in ACOK is just how far removed she is from anything of importance. At least Sansa gave a peak at important events and players in King's Landing. In Arya's storyline we were treated to her being tormented by bit players of no significance, and exact vengeance on bit players of no significance. Even more frustrating, when she has the ability to actually have TYWIN LANNISTER assassinated, she realizes it just as he's leaving. Oops.
These problems are alleviated in ASOS, as Arya with the Brotherhood and Arya with the Hound are far more interesting, but even then, this doesn't compare to Sansa's wedding with Tyrion, her flight from King's Landing with Littlefinger, and her time in the Eyrie. It's not even close for me.
this X infinitySansa is just a meek helpess sadsack, a predictable damsel in distress, while Arya is off having adventures, exploring the world, risking her life, saving people, making friendships, and plotting death for her enemies.I like Sansa, I feel for her, but I'm pretty sure I audibly groaned every time a chapter of hers came up.And delivering death to her enemies too.
Sansa is just a meek helpess sadsack, a predictable damsel in distress, while Arya is off having adventures, exploring the world, risking her life, saving people, making friendships, and plotting death for her enemies.I like Sansa, I feel for her, but I'm pretty sure I audibly groaned every time a chapter of hers came up.And delivering death to her enemies too.
The more I think about it, the more I find this aspect of her character problematic.
ACOKThe way she so calmly kills several people towards the end of the book, with little in the way of remorse, hesitation, or even trauma, is strange to point where it borders on unrealistic. I wouldn't be surprised if this is part of the reason the showrunners decided to cut back on Arya's transition into Jack Bauer in season 2, possibly to make the shift smoother.
Sansa is not a warrior, and the situation she is in is incredibly dangerous, and can't be solved with simple violence. The way she navigates these perils, and slowly starts to learn the game, is just naturally more intriguing to me.
Arya on the other hand has always left me cold.
SeriesI think my bigger issue is that I feel that Arya's use of violence and her proclivity towards it should be seen as tragic. But Martin hasn't made much of an effort to paint it that way. She kills people with the ease and comfort of a seasoned veteran. Hell, Brienne seemed to show more remorse towards killing. For some this might be a large part of the character's appeal, but for me it just created a disconnect. What's happened to her as a person should be seen as an awful descent, but instead whenever people think of Arya eventually becoming an assassin for the Faceless Men, the first reaction seems to be "badass".
Not really Entire SeriesShe lives in a violent world where death is everywhere. Over the course of the books she watches her friends and family killed. And as you go through her storyline the worse things that happen to her the more she begins to think casually about death. At one point pondering the whether or not she could kill Hot Pie because he knows too much.
In the series, unless they decide to completely alter her storyline it's going to be more jarring. In the books she has some of the highest page counts of any character that allowed things to happen to her and for her to become casual to death. The show doesn't really have that.
SeriesI see your point, but I never felt that killing really weighed heavily on her. For me it felt like there was a 0 to 60 transformation from spirited tomboy to Hit Girl. She shrugs off the killing of the stable boy and never looks back. I know a lot of people loved the weasel soup scene, but for me it was shocking how brazenly she kills several people and doesn't seem to register any guilt or grief for what she's done. As I said, for me this just created a disconnect with the character, and made me question where Martin was really going with her.
The more I think about it, the more I find this aspect of her character problematic.
ACOKThe way she so calmly kills several people towards the end of the book, with little in the way of remorse, hesitation, or even trauma, is strange to point where it borders on unrealistic. I wouldn't be surprised if this is part of the reason the showrunners decided to cut back on Arya's transition into Jack Bauer in season 2, possibly to make the shift smoother.
Oh...early reviews coming out:
Jace Lacob (Televisionary) Raves about GoT Season 3.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newswe...of-hbo-s-third-season-of-sex-starks-more.html
Season 3, which will depict roughly the first half of Martin’s A Storm of Swords, will present Benioff and Weiss with their greatest challenge yet, as both sides attempt to pick up the pieces after the last season’s climactic Battle of the Blackwater. The first four episodes of the new season, provided to critics ahead of its premiere, demonstrate a canny ability to fuse the literary with the visual, resulting in an exhilarating and magnificent thing of beauty, particularly in those scenes that make full use of locations as diverse as Iceland, Croatia, and Morocco.
While Season 3, like the novel on which it is based, takes a little while to get going, when it does pick up speed, it soars—particularly in the sensational third and fourth installments (“Walk of Punishment” and “And Now His Watch Is Ended”, both written by Benioff and Weiss. The first episode back lacks energy and intensity, but provides a necessary foundation off of which to build dozens of separate plots for the scattered characters.
Sansa is not a warrior, and the situation she is in is incredibly dangerous, and can't be solved with simple violence. The way she navigates these perils, and slowly starts to learn the game, is just naturally more intriguing to me.
Arya on the other hand has always left me cold.
SeriesI think my bigger issue is that I feel that Arya's use of violence and her proclivity towards it should be seen as tragic. But Martin hasn't made much of an effort to paint it that way. She kills people with the ease and comfort of a seasoned veteran. Hell, Brienne seemed to show more remorse towards killing. For some this might be a large part of the character's appeal, but for me it just created a disconnect. What's happened to her as a person should be seen as an awful descent, but instead whenever people think of Arya eventually becoming an assassin for the Faceless Men, the first reaction seems to be "badass".
Nice job with the OP, Steely! I may steal some of your cast photos for WiCnet, if you don't mind.
Couple notes, the link to the offseason thread is broken. Also, unless I missed it, I don't see a link to the no-book-spoilers thread in the OP. I think that should probably be prominently linked so our non-book reading friends don't stumble into this thread by accident.
Looking forward to another fun few months of discussing Thrones!
Oh...early reviews coming out:
Jace Lacob (Televisionary) Raves about GoT Season 3.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newswe...of-hbo-s-third-season-of-sex-starks-more.html
In fact, several shocking revelations within the novels are seemingly spelled out for the viewer rather than left until later to unfurl as major plot twists.
You really put the fun in book fundamentalist.Enjoy the premiere folks. I'm off for two weeks and I'll catch up with all my elitist, purist griping.