Originally posted by brick wall
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Game of Thrones [TV] Master Thread
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Originally posted by horge View PostIn the show, Sam is headed for the Nightfort, west of Castle Black.
He specifically proposes that he, Gilly and her child enter it through
a secret (forgotten) entrance, thence proceed to Castle Black.
The party of Bran, Rickon, Osha and Hodor, on the other side of the
Wall, have thus far avoided capture by going into the wilds West of
the old road between Winterfell and Castle Black. Unless they turn
East (and they cannot, for fear of capture) and get on the old road,
they will have to reach Castle Black some other way (and they had
not yet really decided how to go about it): blunt skippy is that as of
the end of Episode 9, Bran and the Reedlings are heading towards the
the vicinity of the Nightfort.
The odds of Bran running into Sam in the show are thus good, but at
or near the Nightfort, not Castle Black itself.
good to know bro...i'm not really familiar with the names of gates and places of the wall.
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Originally posted by -Lowkey- View PostI don't think a single dagger holds any real importance the information is whats important Sam now knows that Dragon Glass kills white walkers there going to need a **** load of Dragon Glass weapons.
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Originally posted by THE REED™ View Post
1:55 Jamie as Floyd .. Excellent Retort by ned
My favorite line from the show:
Jaime Lannister: Come, Stark. I'd rather you die sword in hand.
Jory Cassel: If you threaten my lord again...
Jaime Lannister: Threaten? As in, I'm going to open your lord from balls to brains and see what Starks are made of?
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Originally posted by brick wall View Postit goes without saying...if he was able to bring it to the nightwatch they would find out what's it made of.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ca2-...e_gdata_player
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Originally posted by bojangles1987 View PostCan't say for certain that it applies to both.
has been pretty good about exposition and plot-integrity.
What it doesn't show (from the books) affects what happens
onscreen, and as it enters Season 4, substantial divergence
from the books is inevitable. Bad news for spoiler-trolls, lol.
As you and others point out, however...
It makes little difference if Bolton's bastard told his father
about Bran and Rickon, or not. Bolton released Jaime as a
hedge against the increasingly-apparent hopelessness of
Robb's cause, and by the time of the Red Wedding, one of
his key concerns was (IMO) to make lemonade out of lemons.
With Robb and Cat eliminated, and Bran and Rickon officially
dead, the House of Stark was up for grabs --the husband of
Sansa or Arya could claim Winterfell and all the power and
prestige to go with it. The Tullys are in disarray: Edmure's
either dead or held hostage by the Freys, and his child (if
we presume the marriage was consummated) by a Frey girl
will have good claim to Riverrun.
Old fuck Frey also wants Winterfell, but Bolton holds it in
possession, and can wait to eliminate all of his Red-Wedding
co-conspirators (and rivals to Winterfell), as he eliminated
Cat and Robb.
tl;dr
Ned Stark comes back as a wraith, and marries zombie Cat.
Their bisexual progeny "Catned" eats the world.Last edited by horge; 06-05-2013, 05:30 PM.
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[QUOTE=-Lowkey-;13451233]He already knows its made of dragon glass (obsidian) he knows as soon as they find the stash.
ok good, good...
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Originally posted by Danny Gunz View PostJamie and Ned had some of the best scenes.
My favorite line from the show:
Jaime Lannister: Come, Stark. I'd rather you die sword in hand.
Jory Cassel: If you threaten my lord again...
Jaime Lannister: Threaten? As in, I'm going to open your lord from balls to brains and see what Starks are made of?
make sense, even if it's more visually pleasing. If the object was
to "take him alive, kill his men", why leave a wounded Ned behind?
One can try to force an explanation that Jaime didn't mean what
he said... but that's just weak.
Thankfully the show got a little better at handling transitions from
what was written.
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Originally posted by horge View PostThis is an example of a divergence from the books that doesn't
make sense, even if it's more visually pleasing. If the object was
to "take him alive, kill his men", why leave a wounded Ned behind?
One can try to force an explanation that Jaime didn't mean what
he said... but that's just weak.
Thankfully the show got a little better at handling transitions from
what was written.
There was some divergence but nothing very crucial was left out.
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