The beginning scene was excellent. I hope we are given more Jeyne and Robb this season. [BLACKOUT]It will make the Red Wedding that much more profound.[/BLACKOUT]Stannis and Renly's scene was horribly underwhelming compared to the book. Guess they needed to give more time to Joffrey abusing 2 naked women
The beginning with Grey Wind was great, too.
Same with the ending. From what I understand [blackout]the shadow creature that the witch gave birth to, assassinates Renly[/blackout] so show it! instead of spending the final 15 minutes with conversation building up to it and ending the episode on revealing a plot device, show the plot device used and move the plot forward. Go from point A to point B rather than one hour of running place between the two.
Plus, I love cliff hangers. I am a masochist like Goffrey.
Unless you believe [BLACKOUT]R+L= J[/BLACKOUT], then yes Ned did do that first one.
Ned did what his code asked him to. This is the man who cut off a man's head for running away from the Wall. He would do the same if Benjen or Jon were the deserter. Is that any different from what [BLACKOUT]Stannis does to Renly[/BLACKOUT]? A man committing treason?
The rest, Stannis serves his God just like Ned served his.
The thing is, it is Stannis throne. You skip over that fact like it is unimportant. It is the reason Ned and Jon Arryn is dead.
You think he be doing this if it wasn't what was right? That is Stannis in a nutshell and why I love him.
I wish it ended with what happens afterwards with [BLACKOUT]Renly's death[/BLACKOUT] instead of the one we got, it certainly would've been more shocking but it's all right.
That Joffrey scene however felt tacked on, it feels like the series wants him to be more twisted than he is in the books, like he's the incarnation of evil itself or something, also I'm sure audience hates Joffrey, so why do they have the need to hammering it even more, and I thought the Qarth scene was a bit, awkwardly written.
okay so you saying stannis would not let robb continue to rule the north but renly would.Because Stannis doesn't recognize the North's secession. And right now, they're trying just that with Renly, who would be more agreeable to an independent Winterfell.
It's debatable how creditable Stannis' claim is. After all, what about the Targaryens? The throne belongs to them, if you want to go by right.
okay so you saying stannis would not let robb continue to rule the north but renly would.
I'm starting to think you're looking for reasons to complain about pacing. You've become so determined that this show is moving slowly, you are now watching episodes with the mindset to find something to complain about.
On your weekly complaints.
1) Tyrion running train is great because it shows him thoroughly building power. Last week showed him getting rid of an enemy, gaining an "ally" in Varys, selling Myrcella to Dorne and generally becoming the primary power broker in KL. This week he is now starting to put Cersei in a corner by turning even her lover into his informer. All of which will have a great payoff. To me, you're argument here could be like someone watching S2 of Boardwalk Empire and complaining that every week we only see Nucky make a small move to reclaim his power or avoid going to prison and groaning that we haven't seen him use these moves to take revenge on the Commodore, Eli and Jimmy. It's slow burning with a purpose. If you like BE, I really don't know how you can be complaining about the scenes in KL (well besides the gratuitous sex scenes).
2) I actually agree. () I think showing the payoff of the shadowbaby this week would have been a great ending that would have left audiences gasping. Instead, it leaves them just dumbfounded. What comes next is a better cliffhanger and works better than an episode opener. However, the buildup to the birth of the shadowbaby was great. The whole Davos-Melissandre scene was superb. It may be a "plot device," but it would make Hitchcock weep to waste one without draining it of its appropriate creepy value. The show took advantage of it. I just think the episode could have been 5 minutes longer. Maybe if they cut down the length of the Joffrey S&M scene, it could have fit. Oh well.
The problems I see potentially impacting this show are directly related to the source material.
The characters are great and for the most part are being adequetely to brilliantly adapted to the series. There are just SO many characters they are trying to fit in that when translated to the show, each characters arc is lasting just a few minutes every episode. They are already having to omit characters and story arcs weekly to accommodate the hour long time frame. So next week we will get a little more Greyjoy, Jon and Bran (hypothetically) replacing Arya, Davos and Dany? It's just going to get worse moving forward.
The other issue is the tone of the story. I have read all the books and very little happens that anyone would consider positive or in anyway uplifting. I believe viewers will be hard pressed to stay with the story, despite loving the characters, if nothing good happens for them. In other words, are people going to remain devoted to show that is essentially a MAJOR downer for 5 or 6 seasons?
Quite the contrary, actually. I want to like it as I find the setting and characters to be interesting. That is why I haven't quit the show yet despite it's overly slow pace.
And your Boardwalk Empire analogy is off. Every episode of BE is self contained, it moves the greater plot forward (granted at a slow pace) while also telling a self contained and satisfying story or episodic arc. That is how a slow boil should work. It tells a greater plot (which moves forward slowly) while also giving the audience a sense of fulfillment and closure for each week's episode.
This is more like the recent HBO series Luck, where after watching for an hour, you felt like you were in the same place as the previous week.
A television series is episodic. Even if it is a serialized show, it is still episodic. It would be forgivable if this were a mini-series, but it is a full series. Therefore each episode needs to tell a story (even if it is part of a greater story). This on the other hand is treating it like a chapter of a larger story with no real regard for telling a self-contained story within a story.
The way Game of Thrones works can be done, but the pace needs to be faster. You can't expect your viewer to be satisfied with spending 6 episodes of people sitting around talking because it builds to the bigger plot (ask The Walking Dead producers). If you want to focus exclusively on the "bigger plot," with no episodic value the pace must be faster (like 24).
Boardwalk Empire is a slow boil, but it tells a satisfying story each week, GOT isn't doing that, IMO. I shouldn't have to know what is going to happen to justify it or have to look back in retrospect and say, "okay...those boring episodes sue did provide a lot of narrative clarity that made episodes 8,9 and 10 good!"
When I decided that Martin's writing style wasn't for me, I started wiking some of the books and I agree with this. There is a reason that NO ONE is watching Boss despite it being one of the best shows on TV. There is a reason that no one watched Luck. Most audiences do not want to see nihilistic, evil always wins downer story lines. That will draw resentment from the audience very quickly, IMO.
and I thought the Qarth scene was a bit, awkwardly written.
if robb doesnt want the iron throne why not combine with stannis to take kings landing?didnt jaime say ned could have taken the throne but let robert have it?robert and ned combined it seems robb and stannis should have too.
Quite the contrary, actually. I want to like it as I find the setting and characters to be interesting. That is why I haven't quit the show yet despite it's overly slow pace.
And your Boardwalk Empire analogy is off. Every episode of BE is self contained, it moves the greater plot forward (granted at a slow pace) while also telling a self contained and satisfying story or episodic arc. That is how a slow boil should work. It tells a greater plot (which moves forward slowly) while also giving the audience a sense of fulfillment and closure for each week's episode.
This is more like the recent HBO series Luck, where after watching for an hour, you felt like you were in the same place as the previous week.
A television series is episodic. Even if it is a serialized show, it is still episodic. It would be forgivable if this were a mini-series, but it is a full series. Therefore each episode needs to tell a story (even if it is part of a greater story). This on the other hand is treating it like a chapter of a larger story with no real regard for telling a self-contained story within a story.
The way Game of Thrones works can be done, but the pace needs to be faster. You can't expect your viewer to be satisfied with spending 6 episodes of people sitting around talking because it builds to the bigger plot (ask The Walking Dead producers). If you want to focus exclusively on the "bigger plot," with no episodic value the pace must be faster (like 24).
Boardwalk Empire is a slow boil, but it tells a satisfying story each week, GOT isn't doing that, IMO. I shouldn't have to know what is going to happen to justify it or have to look back in retrospect and say, "okay...those boring episodes sue did provide a lot of narrative clarity that made episodes 8,9 and 10 good!"
Joffrey being into S&M doesn't surprise me. That's really the only scene they added for him not in the book. I don't think they're making him more evil. He was pretty purely that in the books. A complete sociopath. Tyrion sees that. Tywin sees that. Even Jaime comes to the conclusion that he is as bad as the Mad King and he is the father of Joffrey!
Joff is a sadistic little monster. I think the scene was a bit redundant given we just saw him torture and strip Sansa in the throne room. But it's not really out of character at all, in my opinion.