He wrote this one, so he's responsible for the compromising of the characters which take place within. For instance, the scene with Joffrey deserting the field, as shown here (and for a series that errs on the "tell" side so often, they pick some odd scenes to "show" that were not in the book), feels like a cheap confirmation of him as an overt coward on top of all his other faults. If anything Joffrey would be too dumb to realize the danger, rather than weasel out with excuses as he does in this episode.
The scene between Sansa & the Hound was a bit watered down, though. The interpretation of the scene in the book that I took was that he had come there to rape and kill or kidnap her, having lost everything else, including his place in society, leaving him unbound by any further restraints. Ultimately, he is swayed by her innocence and her genuine compassion, realizing that her fear of him is borne of that innocence, and not the elitism or contempt he so despises in her class.
This just makes her look like an idiot for turning down help escaping and a possibly valuable defector to the Stark cause. In the books it was a direct contrast with Cersei's advice to make people fear her and use the weapon between her legs, as Sansa rallies the panicking women when Cersei no longer intimidates them and then averts foul play through kindness rather than seduction. I suppose a bit of that comes through in the episode, but it comes across more as a pointless childish moral stance, of Sansa simply refusing to take advantage of him.
This kind of weakening or maybe dumbing down of the characterization for cheap mass consumption of a TV audience, by the author of the original version, himself, suggests the GRRMlins might have a point about him being a sell-out.
On the whole though, this was a surprisingly good episode for one that exclusively portrayed a single aspect of the story, and probably the only episode of the show so far to be set in one geographic location. I'm guessing the special FX and extras took the budget through the roof, which is ironic, making this the opppsite of a bottle episode.
The music was interesting too. The tune of the hymn is almost exactly the way I pictured it when reading the books, and the Rains of Castamere was perfect. Its use over the credits was well done too, giving alert viewers a chance to pick up on the way it might be used next year.
The scene between Sansa & the Hound was a bit watered down, though. The interpretation of the scene in the book that I took was that he had come there to rape and kill or kidnap her, having lost everything else, including his place in society, leaving him unbound by any further restraints. Ultimately, he is swayed by her innocence and her genuine compassion, realizing that her fear of him is borne of that innocence, and not the elitism or contempt he so despises in her class.
This just makes her look like an idiot for turning down help escaping and a possibly valuable defector to the Stark cause. In the books it was a direct contrast with Cersei's advice to make people fear her and use the weapon between her legs, as Sansa rallies the panicking women when Cersei no longer intimidates them and then averts foul play through kindness rather than seduction. I suppose a bit of that comes through in the episode, but it comes across more as a pointless childish moral stance, of Sansa simply refusing to take advantage of him.
This kind of weakening or maybe dumbing down of the characterization for cheap mass consumption of a TV audience, by the author of the original version, himself, suggests the GRRMlins might have a point about him being a sell-out.
On the whole though, this was a surprisingly good episode for one that exclusively portrayed a single aspect of the story, and probably the only episode of the show so far to be set in one geographic location. I'm guessing the special FX and extras took the budget through the roof, which is ironic, making this the opppsite of a bottle episode.
The music was interesting too. The tune of the hymn is almost exactly the way I pictured it when reading the books, and the Rains of Castamere was perfect. Its use over the credits was well done too, giving alert viewers a chance to pick up on the way it might be used next year.
Cannoli
“Tolerance is the virtue of the man without convictions.” GK Chesteron
Inde muagdhe Aes Sedai misain ye!
Deus Vult!
*MySmiley*
“Tolerance is the virtue of the man without convictions.” GK Chesteron
Inde muagdhe Aes Sedai misain ye!
Deus Vult!
*MySmiley*
Game of Thrones - Season 2, Episode 9 - The Battle of Blackwater! (SPOILERS)
28/05/2012 01:36:41 AM
- 1323 Views
Awesome episode. *SPOILER*
28/05/2012 05:24:03 AM
- 972 Views
What was the best line of the episode?
28/05/2012 03:22:47 PM
- 879 Views
Re: What was the best line of the episode?
28/05/2012 03:33:01 PM
- 989 Views
Re: What was the best line of the episode?
28/05/2012 09:45:37 PM
- 940 Views
Is Martin now officially a whore?
28/05/2012 08:53:37 AM
- 1066 Views
The final version of the episode was apparently significantly rewritten by the producers.
28/05/2012 12:10:58 PM
- 888 Views
Hey, the chain! Did they mention it at all this year? I thought I recall someone asking me about it
31/05/2012 05:58:16 AM
- 1044 Views
Re: Hey, the chain! Did they mention it at all this year?
31/05/2012 08:12:57 AM
- 831 Views
Are the ratings good? I don't usualy follow that. I get the impression the show is fairly popular...
04/06/2012 04:31:17 PM
- 699 Views
I agree with all but the part about Joffrey
29/05/2012 10:51:56 AM
- 864 Views
Yeah, but he didn't even come into the equation in the books. He was a mere playing piece
31/05/2012 06:13:24 AM
- 886 Views
Re: Yeah, but he didn't even come into the equation in the books. He was a mere playing piece
03/06/2012 06:46:45 AM
- 793 Views
Really well done, maybe even the best this season
28/05/2012 01:56:38 PM
- 916 Views
Re: Really well done, maybe even the best this season
28/05/2012 04:18:39 PM
- 881 Views
They didn't need the chain with this version of things.
28/05/2012 06:01:08 PM
- 951 Views
This is a good example of a common sense TV revision.....
29/05/2012 03:32:25 AM
- 1087 Views
Re: This is a good example of a common sense TV revision.....
30/05/2012 09:54:17 AM
- 740 Views
It was during the day, late afternoon likely
29/05/2012 03:11:57 AM
- 897 Views
Yes, truly amazing episode, probably the best of the entire series so far!
28/05/2012 03:18:48 PM
- 806 Views
The guy who plays Stannis is phenomenal.
28/05/2012 04:36:51 PM
- 918 Views
When Stephen Dillane was announced to play Stannis, I was very concerned.....
28/05/2012 04:47:21 PM
- 909 Views
He and Tywin are the only two who have replaced my mental images of the characters.
29/05/2012 10:19:08 AM
- 915 Views
I liked this episode, but the battles were confusing and kind of a let-down.
28/05/2012 06:10:03 PM
- 914 Views
I haven't read the books, and the whole ending was quite a confusing sequence.
29/05/2012 03:44:29 AM
- 843 Views
Re: I haven't read the books, and the whole ending was quite a confusing sequence.
30/05/2012 09:58:26 AM
- 784 Views
But we, as viewers, are not soldiers; we're more like historians. Or gods, if you prefer.
30/05/2012 04:45:37 PM
- 757 Views
You're right, but I simply saw it as a way to work with their tight budget
31/05/2012 09:05:29 AM
- 785 Views
Re: But we, as viewers, are not soldiers; we're more like historians. Or gods, if you prefer.
03/06/2012 06:44:28 AM
- 617 Views