Game of thrones thread go! [ S8 ]

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pneuma wrote:
The show is definitely getting more awful at an increasing rate like a hockeystick graph. Thank god it's only got one more episode.

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Here's a good question for y'all: When did it jump the shark? What was "the moment" when the show hit the inflection point?

For a while I thought that the moment Jon was brought back, the show lost its point. Resurrection just screws up way too much of the setting, but that was at the start of E6 and there were certainly signs before then.

"Bad poosey" and the whole Dorne-plot-mangling in S5 was certainly bad, and that was even earlier.

Yara's hilarious "Theon rescue attempt" in S4E6 was surreal at the time. Maybe that was the moment, because I can't think of anything truly inexcusably bad before then. Most of Dany's plotline (starting from S1) was somewhere between bad and "meh", but nothing that completely took me out of immersion and made me think I watched the wrong show like that did.


When the show had to start winding down. Lets be honest; it was a sprawling mess that was fun to watch while everyone was off doing their own little things, but once the show had to start getting everyone together, getting the story to its conclusion, it started falling off the rails.

Thats probably one of the reasons the books haven't been finished, either.
LOL HAH the leaks were truth
Dys an sohm
Rohs an kyn
Sahl djahs afah
Mah morn narr
Well that ending was something.

It does follow in a long line of great shows with pretty awful send offs.

Cheers, Friends, Seinfeld, Dexter, Sopranos, ect... all ended nowhere near what they were in their prime.

In fairness I dont know what they could have done so salvage the characters arcs that were in warp speed. Still wow.

Spoiler
For those that read the books the interesting nod to Brandon the Builder, and then Brandon the Broken wasnt lost on me. Still it wasnt an ending that made much sense other than Sansa pushing the interests of the North. Other than that holy fucking meh

"Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt."
- Abraham Lincoln
Spoiler
Bran literally didn't do anything and he became a king LOL
Dys an sohm
Rohs an kyn
Sahl djahs afah
Mah morn narr
I might be in the minority. But, while the first 40 minutes seemed to drag on too long, in the end I didn't mind the final episode.

I couldn't say I found every character's choices consistent with what I would have expected. But, then again, when a change as seismic as the one that occurred in that fictional world happened probably at least a few people might pick a new direction for themselves.

Major major spoilers, don't read unless you've seen the last episode ....

Spoiler
I didn't see Bran being picked to be the next king. But, on reflection it kind of made sense in a "least worst, maybe even pretty darn good choice" kind of way.

Of all the not-so-believable choices made I don't know why the Unsullied didn't destroy Jon Snow on the spot, rather than imprison him after killing their queen.
Now that prestige classes will finally leave lab in 4.0, will GGG get it right this time or will they find new ways to repeat old mistakes?
I do have to say, the hooha about this season is making me rather curious to watch GoT.
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鬼殺し wrote:
Late last night, I had a super cynical thought: this would be a *great* way to sell even more copies of Martin's 'true ending' -- give people a shitty one in another format first. It wouldn't be the first time I've seen it done, but then I realised D and D just aren't that smart and Martin probably doesn't care.

To answer previous question: the red wedding was the show's peak. I don't remember much past that, and I remember most leading up to it. But I don't think it ever jumped the shark, if 'jump the shark' means when a show does something outrageously out of character to retain or gain viewers. I think it was always going to go this way -- see aforementioned comparisons to HBO's other big budget attempt at spec fic, True Blood. They just don't know how to stick it out or, maybe more importantly, develop and evolve it. Started as sex, swords and political skullduggery, and it'll end that way. What didn't change was the lack of meat under all the boning.

I would be very surprised to learn if any truly successful 'finished' TV show didn't have a sense of its ending from the start. Sure, writers need to get creative on the fly (especially when they're told they're being cancelled before they're done), but you really shouldn't be at the 'airing' stage if you don't have some vision of how it'll all end.

D and D claim they could have had more episodes but wanted to wrap it up in 6. I can't tell if that was them trying to convince everyone it could be done that economically after seasons of very little narrative economy (and yet with some seriously rushed game pieces being moved around), or if they were just sick of it all and just want it out of the way. Given how many flubs and weird decisions they've made with s8, I'm inclined to think the latter. The fatigue seems to have set in at every functional level of the show's production.

Anyway, I'm genuinely sad it went this way. Mainstream big budget fantasy doesn't happen more than once or twice in a person's lifetime, and you really want it to succeed. I find it grimly ironic that when GoT was announced, when that first season broke all sorts of records, we had a SLEW of copycat shows. None of them could even begin to compete and they all died not long after popping up...but in the end, not even GoT could live up to its own standards.

I look forward to reading the synopsis for Winds of Winter and A Dream of Spring on wikipedia someday.






Is that even legal, though? I mean he held the show to his own ending, how he wanted them to end up. I'm sure all of this is in a contract in some form or fashion.

I really dont think this is a bait and switch. I look at it like this. If you are upset with how the character's ended up, thats GRRM's fault. This is the ending for the characters he wanted. Now, if you are upset with the paths that lead them to this ending, that's D&D's fault.


GRRM built the cities, D & D built the roads.

I'll go a step further and say one of GoT's greatest strengths, the desire to fight and subvert tropes, ended up being one of its greatest problems in the end. Because people like tropes. They love trope endings. They are entertained during the meat of the story with deaths, and all the subversion, but at the end they are like, "Ok enough with the games and tease, give me what I want." And people didn't get that, they got more GoT.

Its like being tied to a bed and teased. At first, its cool. This is different. But after an hour your like, get the hell on with it already, enough is enough. Thats what GoT is for me. The first few seasons, your like, "Oh, I didnt expect this. I like this." Then by the end your like enough with that shit. It was cool 30 minutes ago, woman. Now, its just annoying.

If Infinity War was the last MCU movie, how do you think people would feel. Probably how people in GoT feels right now. Infinity War worked because you know there was another coming. To give you the ending you wanted.
Last edited by Destructodave on May 20, 2019, 2:44:54 AM
It ended where it began, in location and a riding out North of the Wall, which was neat. Liked the episode, was way better than the preceding few and it had some good resolutions.

Would have been amazing if the preceding nonsense didn't suffer from the bad writing and shoehorning effects, and it all got there with style and good acting (most of them were sleepwalking their lines in). Could have drawn some tears and surprise, not just a sense that it was a decent resolution and some mild delight at the Stark girls' continued journeys.

Some lovely cinematic moments, such as Drogon's wings spreading out from behind Dany so it looked like she had dragon wings. The costumes, especially hers, Sansa's and Arya's at the end, were gorgeous in the case of the former two and plain badass in Arya's.

We watched Episode One afterwards just because, and not only did it all start where it ended, at the Wall, it took a month for the crew from King's Landing to ride in convoy to Winterfell. My how times changed. No news to those who've pointed out the video game aspects.

Sam floating the idea of Democracy at least 300 years too early was a fun moment.

B - for "shoulda seen that coming because he clearly did" Bran.



I mean B - for Burgundy, all the way to the bank.



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鬼殺し wrote:
I think Sopranos ended *magnificently*. I benefited from the usual 'wait and see', especially after all the hubbub about that last scene, but hindsight and analysis caught up and revealed just how perfectly crafted it was. That show is supremely marathonable.


The Sopranos is 100% fantastic.

The ending is just so lazy in my view. There has been discussion about subtext, and owning the series for yourself by determining what "you think happened" in the fade to black.

The fact that the writers and directors dont have (or want to share) a view of the shows culmination is infuriating.

The oustanding show deserved better imo.
"Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt."
- Abraham Lincoln
It ended exactly the way I thought it would.

Spoiler
I find Bran one of, if not the most boring character in both the book and the show. Its only fitting for him to take the grand prize. Bittersweet, indeed.
Last edited by Johny_Snow on May 20, 2019, 9:42:48 AM

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