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*UNMARKED SPOILERS ALL BOOKS* Game of Thrones |OT| - Season 6 Offseason Thread

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-griffy-

Banned
But when people complain about the Stannis scene, it's because it doesn't make sense for him to make such a quick decision to extinguish his line to change the weather and it ruins the character. He barely even questioned Melisandre when she initially brought it up. He just said "There has to be another way." He didn't really struggle over the decision. That made him look more evil than Ramsay. I'm sure when GRRM does it, it will make sense and not ruin the character.

Again, I'm not even talking about the Shireen thing, I'm talking about going forward, shit we haven't even seen in the upcoming seasons.

Because the very simplified chain of events of:

Stannis on show burns Shireen
People complain that Stannis would never do that
GRRM says in commentary that he always pictured Stannis and Mel doing that

Seems like it could very easily happen in a much more concrete and categorically identical fashion for some future event on the show and books.
 

Speevy

Banned
This might fall into the "too ridiculous" category, but what if they turned Ramsay Bolton into a respectable character?

We all know Jon's going to end him in some fashion, but what if in an alternate history, his ascension to power made him more serious about family?

He married some noble woman, stopped the torture, and fathered a north-ruling family.

Then he was somehow instrumental in helping to fight off the Whitewalkers.
 

Ratrat

Member
There's plenty to spoil.
Yeah...

Ironborn/Euron/Asha
Jons Parentage/resurrection
Sam(Oldtown?)
Kevans death? Varys allegiance?
Martell plot(not sure where the show is going with this.)
Sansa/Rickon

A lot of these might happen in the first 5 episodes if at all but there are still spoilers, including ones I'm fogetting.
 

Speevy

Banned
I hope they don't have any obvious A team, B team, C team, Z team plots like last year.


Whatever their best is, it needs to be consistent across the various stories.
 

Szeth

Member
But when people complain about the Stannis scene, it's because it doesn't make sense for him to make such a quick decision to extinguish his line to change the weather and it ruins the character. He barely even questioned Melisandre when she initially brought it up. He just said "There has to be another way." He didn't really struggle over the decision. That made him look more evil than Ramsay. I'm sure when GRRM does it, it will make sense and not ruin the character.

Sorry but where in the show is it shown Stannis burned his daughter to change the weather? That he knew that's all it would do? He burned his daughter to win the battle and save the kingdom, it just didn't work.

And it was probably rushed because they knew Stannis wasn't important to the main story and had to get his stuff out of the way. Unfortunate but that's how it had to be I guess.
 

Lothar

Banned
Yeah...

Ironborn/Euron/Asha
Jons Parentage/resurrection
Sam(Oldtown?)
Kevans death? Varys allegiance?
Martell plot(not sure where the show is going with this.)
Sansa/Rickon

A lot of these might happen in the first 5 episodes if at all but there are still spoilers, including ones I'm fogetting.

Sansa/Rickon? What's that? I don't remember that from the books. If it's from leaks or pictures from the set, then I don't want to know that and find it out from this thread either. The rest are minor, no one cares about Sam, the Martells, Ironborn, and Kevan, and everyone knows about Jon.

Sorry but where in the show is it shown Stannis burned his daughter to change the weather? That he knew that's all it would do? He burned his daughter to win the battle and save the kingdom, it just didn't work.

And it was probably rushed because they knew Stannis wasn't important to the main story and had to get his stuff out of the way. Unfortunate but that's how it had to be I guess.

That's why he did it at that time rather than before or later. He wouldn't have done it were it not to change the weather.
 

Szeth

Member
That's why he did it at that time rather than before or later. He wouldn't have done it were it not to change the weather.

Watch the scene where he talks to Shireen right before the burning. He's making the decision because he's out of options and so he can fulfill his destiny. In his mind he's the chosen one and has to save the world no matter the cost. Dumbing it down to it was just to "change the weather" is some simplistic bull shit used to fit people's narrative.
 

Speevy

Banned
Watch the scene where he talks to Shireen right before the burning. He's making the decision because he's out of options and so he can fulfill his destiny. In his mind he's the chosen one and has to save the world no matter the cost. Dumbing it down to it was just to "change the weather" is some simplistic bull shit used to fit people's narrative.

It doesn't fit the book's narrative. Like a piece of the puzzle just wedged in because it seems right but isn't. There's a lot of that in season 5.

Stannis Baratheon isn't a likeable character but he wasn't supposed to have his endgame decision made that quickly.
 

Gigglepoo

Member
I haven't watched the show in a year so refresh my memory: Why did Stannis take Shireen in the first place? He doesn't usually take his wife and child to battle.
 

Lothar

Banned
Watch the scene where he talks to Shireen right before the burning. He's making the decision because he's out of options and so he can fulfill his destiny. In his mind he's the chosen one and has to save the world no matter the cost. Dumbing it down to it was just to "change the weather" is some simplistic bull shit used to fit people's narrative.

It's not. It's the truth. He could have did it at Castle Black and Dragonstone if he wanted to ensure their success. He did it during the blizzard because he wanted the weather changed so they wouldn't die. That wasn't enough for book Stannis. Book Stannis was prepared for the possibility that he and his army might starve to death in the snow and he might not be the one to fulfill the destiny. He simply said to crown Shireen in that case. So something really drastic has to happen to make him change his mind. It can't be anything like what happened in the show.
 

Azzanadra

Member
Anyone expecting the next season to be well-written? We all wondered what would happen to the shows quality once they outpaced the books, and the last season gave us the answer we all feared... however the one caveat was that they were adapting the two worst books in the series anyways, which is why I am still debating this topic.
 

Speevy

Banned
Anyone expecting the next season to be well-written? We all wondered what would happen to the shows quality once they outpaced the books, and the last season gave us the answer we all feared... however the one caveat was that they were adapting the two worst books in the series anyways, which is why I am still debating this topic.

Well written? Nah. I hope it's well staged and well acted though. I see at least 2 battles that look really cool, so I'm hopeful.
 

Moff

Member
Anyone expecting the next season to be well-written? We all wondered what would happen to the shows quality once they outpaced the books, and the last season gave us the answer we all feared... however the one caveat was that they were adapting the two worst books in the series anyways, which is why I am still debating this topic.

no, although I do think D&D are capable to write well, the critical success and the ratings of season 4 have clearly proven that people love the show D&D have created regardless of the source material, so they will continue what they did.

I did not like AFFC/ADWD, D&D changed it, it was more entertaining, but a lot dumber. certainly not better, but not really worse either. and at the moment, as I said before, I am not really thrilled for either TWOW or season 5. I will certainly consume both as they are available, though. it's still a nice franchise.
 
Anyone expecting the next season to be well-written? We all wondered what would happen to the shows quality once they outpaced the books, and the last season gave us the answer we all feared... however the one caveat was that they were adapting the two worst books in the series anyways, which is why I am still debating this topic.

I think the showrunners thought it was important to set up the Boltons as a genuine Big Bad and treat everything else as subplots, sort of like how that's Joffrey is for the first third of the story, whereas GRRM's treatment of the AFFC/ADWD era is instead to have a bunch of interlocking microconflicts and no faction truly being on top. I think we'll see a (rough) return to be closer to the books in the third act of the overall series when it's all about humanity versus the Others.
 

CoolOff

Member
Mcshane would have been an amazing Ros

grRWePJ.jpg
 
Anyone expecting the next season to be well-written? We all wondered what would happen to the shows quality once they outpaced the books, and the last season gave us the answer we all feared... however the one caveat was that they were adapting the two worst books in the series anyways, which is why I am still debating this topic.

I'm hopeful. I hope that last season was giving grrm a chance at getting his book out before some big twists come into play so they wrote it to be filler shit, and grrm still doesn't have his book out.
 

Gigglepoo

Member
I'm hopeful. I hope that last season was giving grrm a chance at getting his book out before some big twists come into play so they wrote it to be filler shit, and grrm still doesn't have his book out.

Was there filler? If anything, they rushed through storylines (Sparrows ascent, Stannis' downfall). And they could have resurrected the Greyjoys or introduced Dany's suitors if they needed more plot.

My problem wasn't that the season was skimpy, is that a lot of their story inventions didn't work.
 
Was there filler? If anything, they rushed through storylines (Sparrows ascent, Stannis' downfall). And they could have resurrected the Greyjoys or introduced Dany's suitors if they needed more plot.

My problem wasn't that the season was skimpy, is that a lot of their story inventions didn't work.

The entire Jamie in Dorne arc was filler, as was Hardhome.
 

Speevy

Banned
I think filler is something which is created to fill time and doesn't advance the overall storyline.


If the overall storyline is about Whitewalkers coming to kill everyone, then Hardhome wasn't filler.
 
I think filler is something which is created to fill time and doesn't advance the overall storyline.


If the overall storyline is about Whitewalkers coming to kill everyone, then Hardhome wasn't filler.

From an anime standpoint, Filler is anything that wasn't in the original novel/manga the anime was adapted from. So in that case, Hardhome was filler.
 

Gigglepoo

Member
From an anime standpoint, Filler is anything that wasn't in the original novel/manga the anime was adapted from. So in that case, Hardhome was filler.

That's strange. The conversation between Cersei and Robert in S1 gave insight into their marriage and a greater understanding of who they were. Hard to consider that filler.
 

Lothar

Banned
Was there filler? If anything, they rushed through storylines (Sparrows ascent, Stannis' downfall). And they could have resurrected the Greyjoys or introduced Dany's suitors if they needed more plot.

My problem wasn't that the season was skimpy, is that a lot of their story inventions didn't work.

This is right. The season's problems weren't the book's problems. The show was just written poorly and rushed everything that should have been important and good. Perhaps if Stannis was struggling over the decision to burn Shireen and starving in the snow for most of the season, then it would have worked. It could have made for lots of really tense, dramatic, and emotional scenes. Instead it was shock and Stannis looks evil and it comes off as stupid.

The book was written well, just bloated with all the useless new POVs, needed to be edited down, and lacked a climax because he couldn't fit it in. If you just look at POVs by themselves, Cersei's and Jon's were as great as every other POV from any of the books. Theon's, Bran's, Jaime's, Davos's, Asha's, Sansa's, Arya's, Barristan's, and Dany's were all fine. Tyrion's and Brienne's weren't good simply because of the bloat. We didn't need all of those chapters for as little as they accomplished.

When I go back and read FoC and ADWD, I skip over all the Ironborn, Dorne, Tyrion, and Brienne chapters and if you do that then I think they're pretty good reads.

I hope this comment from George will shut the mouth of some "fans", who believe they know the characters better than the show's producers (who are doing the SHOW VERSION of these characters...). So much hyperbole and nonsense going about their writing these past two years.

It won't and it shouldn't. The show producers are idiots. Most fans do know the characters better.
 
I hope this comment from George will shut the mouth of some "fans", who believe they know the characters better than the show's producers (who are doing the SHOW VERSION of these characters...). So much hyperbole and nonsense going about their writing these past two years.
Not disagreeing, but see my post that has an audio clip from the Blu-Ray:



Apparently there was no comment from George, it was just Iain Glen speculating in the commentary based on what we already heard D&D say in the behind the scenes materials.
 
I hope this comment from George will shut the mouth of some "fans", who believe they know the characters better than the show's producers (who are doing the SHOW VERSION of these characters...). So much hyperbole and nonsense going about their writing these past two years.

There's no comment from GRRM, unless I've missed something.

D&D said after the Shireen episode aired that he had told them Shireen would be burned but never said anything about Stannis' involvement. In the commentary Iain Glen refers to their comments and that website ran it as official confirmation that GRRM has said Stannis burns Shireen.
 
There's no comment from GRRM, unless I've missed something.

D&D said after the Shireen episode aired that he had told them Shireen would be burned but never said anything about Stannis' involvement. In the commentary Iain Glen refers to their comments and that website ran it as official confirmation that GRRM has said Stannis burns Shireen.

Yeah, if all it is is what Rogue Agent posted, then George hasn't said shit. And as most others have said, it's likely Shireen will be burned in the books, but the circumstances will probably be different. At the very least it will make more sense.
 

Gigglepoo

Member
I hope this comment from George will shut the mouth of some "fans", who believe they know the characters better than the show's producers (who are doing the SHOW VERSION of these characters...). So much hyperbole and nonsense going about their writing these past two years.

Robb idolizes Ned. In both the books and the show, he wants to be just like his father and every decision reflects that. He's a miniature Ned.

Except in the show he breaks his promise because he met a cute woman. That's not who Robb was at all, in either narrative. By forcing in a love plot where it didn't make sense, the show undermined their own character and proved they didn't understand him or his motivations.

Huh. This is my definition of filler too as an anime fan. I don't know why everyone is saying that's dumb.

Because added scenes could add important plot details or character development. Did you see my post about Robert and Cercei's conversation? I don't know how anyone could classify that as filler even though Martin didn't write that scene in Game of Thrones.
 
You don't really need to twist things when D&D's motivations were pretty clear. They wanted to change Robb love interest into something more than a plot device to magnify the effect of the Red Wedding. And they generally succeeded there. I don't really care much for Talisa, but Jeyne Westerling is barely a character in the books, she speaks in two scenes.
 
Robb idolizes Ned. In both the books and the show, he wants to be just like his father and every decision reflects that. He's a miniature Ned.

Except in the show he breaks his promise because he met a cute woman. That's not who Robb was at all, in either narrative. By forcing in a love plot where it didn't make sense, the show undermined their own character and proved they didn't understand him or his motivations.

Yeah, I had less sympathy for show Robb. In the book he made a mistake in a moment of weakness and followed through with it as his father would have. It was a mistake, but I could sympathize. In the show he's basically, "Screw my promises, let's fuck! LOL!"
 

Speevy

Banned
Why are we talking about anime?

I'm not trying to invade your head space but this is a Game of Thrones thread.

In television, filler takes up time and doesn't advance the plot.
 

Gigglepoo

Member
You don't really need to twist things when D&D's motivations were pretty clear. They wanted to change Robb love interest into something more than a plot device to magnify the effect of the Red Wedding. And they generally succeeded there.

Oh, I know their motivations. I'm just pointing out how it goes against what they had established of Robb's character. It's hard to argue that they know the characters and story better than fans when they so callously undermine both aspects for shock value (Sansa's rape), emotional manipulation (Robb's wedding) or just no reason (Jamie refusing to sever ties with Cersei)
 
Yeah, I had less sympathy for show Robb. In the book he made a mistake in a moment of weakness and followed through with it as his father would have. It was a mistake, but I could sympathize. In the show he's basically, "Screw my promises, let's fuck! LOL!"

I think it actually makes him less stupid to do it for love than for honor (despite the fact that he's shitting on the Frey's honor). I don't know that Ned would have done the same. Though that works for his character as Robb actions were often the immature boy's version of what Ned would do.

Oh, I know their motivations. I'm just pointing out how it goes against what they had established of Robb's character. It's hard to argue that they know the characters and story better than fans when they so callously undermine both aspects for shock value (Sansa's rape), emotional manipulation (Robb's wedding) or just no reason (Jamie refusing to sever ties with Cersei)
Yeah, I'm not defending all of their decisions, I just think that particular one worked ok.
 

Speevy

Banned
In the show, the trip to Hardhome is like the straw that broke the camel's back in terms of killing Jon Snow.

Since Jon Snow is the most important character we know about so far, I think this event is important.
 

Dysun

Member
I hope this comment from George will shut the mouth of some "fans", who believe they know the characters better than the show's producers (who are doing the SHOW VERSION of these characters...). So much hyperbole and nonsense going about their writing these past two years.
Show fans are so desperate to throw George-too in the face of all criticism
 
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