
ADragonDemands said:Everyone in the media is now assuming that this "Night King" is the SAME character as the legendary "Night's King" fought by Joramun 8,000 years ago. I'm concerned if it's just a TITLE, like "Storm King", so there can be more than one - given that it was said the Night's King was killed.
Now I want to ask "are these indeed the same character?" but I know you probably won't reveal upcoming book material. Better phrasing might be "is it appropriate to treat these as one character on a single article on the wiki, or should we split it into two articles? Or at least two sections on the same article?"
Well, you probably can't answer that as of yet.
One thing I do hope you CAN answer: Benioff and Weiss, the online guide, and even the actor Ross Mullan who plays one of the other White Walkers, CONSISTENTLY refer to him as "The Night King" - without a possessive "S". So my question is, is there *any* significance to that distinction, or can the two terms be used interchangeably?
GRRM said:As for the Night's King (the form I prefer), in the books he is a legendary figure, akin to Lann the Clever and Brandon the Builder, and no more likely to have survived to the present day than they have.
Yeah that has me wondering who is leading the White Walkers in the books. Someone should be leading them. I don't like the idea of them being a leaderless rabble with no hierarchy.
Yeah that has me wondering who is leading the White Walkers in the books. Someone should be leading them. I don't like the idea of them being a leaderless rabble with no hierarchy.
Maybe the Great Other, perhaps done like Sauron or Morgoth as a more spiritual and philosophical foe.
I think the less we know about the Others, the scarier they are. They seem more threatening when we don't know who is leading them. Once the enemy has a face, he's just another dude.
The Great Other wouldn't be just another dude. If Martin went with a Sauron/Morgoth sort of approach like Roose says it could keep him mysterious. Just have him be at the heart of Winter the same way Sauron stayed in his tower of Baradûr.
You're making the exact point I just made.
Sauron never shows up in LOTR. He's faceless in that regard, and mysterious (the less we know about the Others, the scarier they are, as I said). We never know quite what Sauron is capable of, not even in the Silmarillion.
So yeah, same point. Potato, Potahto.
The point is that a mysterious dark force or personality behind the Others is more threatening than Ice-Cube Maul.
Sauron never shows up in LOTR. He's faceless in that regard, and mysterious (the less we know about the Others, the scarier they are, as I said). We never know quite what Sauron is capable of, not even in the Silmarillion.
So yeah, same point. Potato, Potahto.
The point is that a mysterious dark force or personality behind the Others is more threatening than Ice-Cube Maul.
I disagree. We still know next to nothing about the Night's king in the show (hell, we only have that name off of a tv description, so it's noteven officially show cannon yet). The white walkers are still incredibly mysterious, and they still have that mysterious otherworldly threat going on.
This isn't a situation where the show has completely deconstructed them. It's juat given them a leader, but a leader that's still just as mysterious as the rest of them.
I don't think it really changes much, if anything, in terms of the feel of the WW in the boon compared to the show. They're both still looming unknown threats. If anything, the book WW are still a bit too nebulous. Even if we never really saw Sauron in LOTR, we still knew he was leading them. Right now, the way the books are, it would be as if there was just a massive army of orcs and belongs with no discernable leader or purpose other than to f*&ck ****e up.
Even if we never really saw Sauron in LOTR, we still knew he was leading them. Right now, the way the books are, it would be as if there was just a massive army of orcs and belongs with no discernable leader or purpose other than to f*&ck ****e up.
There is mystery but not as much as you seem to want.
You seem to know what I want better than I do. Am I needed as a part of this conversation or can you just continue debating an imaginary me in my absence?
No, we're not fully aware of the capabilities of the Maiar in the Silmarillion. Sauron seems to have shape-changing abilities, for example, but we have no idea what the limitations are on that. Heck, we don't even know for certain that the balrog had wings... its a much debated point among Tolkien fans.
I think the less we know about the Others, the scarier they are. They seem more threatening when we don't know who is leading them. Once the enemy has a face, he's just another dude.
Well, obviously there are differences in the analogy, WWs aren't like orcs (orcs aren't threatening to begin with, they are dim-witted and stupid).
But the WW or Others are supposed to be the massive army that you described. They come with the Winter, they are the Winter... they are a force of nature. That's what makes them so intimidating.
Giving them a leader at the front of their ranks just makes them like another army, with another weak point: kill the leader. Which I guarantee the show will do, given that its unlikely to be able to film a huge WW / human army battle scene. Its much more likely to have Jon just kill the "Night's King" in one-on-one combat.
Giving them a leader at the front of their ranks just makes them like another army, with another weak point: kill the leader. Which I guarantee the show will do, given that its unlikely to be able to film a huge WW / human army battle scene. Its much more likely to have Jon just kill the "Night's King" in one-on-one combat.