You know what makes me sad? Jorah died for this shit. It would have broken his heart to see Dany go full Mad Queen.
It may have just been the alcohol talking but I enjoyed the hell out of this last episode. I personally wanted "The Long Night" to play out as a last ditch effort where all of our characters make a last stand and give it their all but are taking heavy losses at the hands of the White Walkers and are being decimated, but it really turns out that this was like a minor scuffle and The Night King didn't even show up and had ridden his dragon and taken the bulk of his forces straight on down to King's Landing.
Looking at maps of Westeros and the Known World and I had no fucking clue Dragonstone was so close to the main continent of Westeros and to King’s Landing. It looks like less than the distance between Boston to Iceland. Weird, because I feel like I always thought or was given the impression that Dragonstone was super fucking far away (like Australia to the US for example).
Qyburn, in his lab, hooking up tubes in the dying Ser Gregor: YOU FLUSH IT OUT, YOU FLUSH IT OUT I'm sorry were we done with the St. Anger references or
I haven’t seen it with her face yet, but when I was searching earlier I saw the original clip all over the results. It never gets old.
Just watched a highlight reel of the hounds best one liners, and i am cackling at “what the fucks a lommy?” I completely forgot that line lol
lol 'Game of Thrones' actor on his surprise execution: 'Nothing could console me' “As a whole it’s been overwhelmingly positive and brilliant but I suppose the last couple seasons weren’t my favorite,” Hill admitted, later adding: “I can’t complain because it’s six great seasons and I had some great scenes these last two seasons. But that’s when It changed for me a little.” That change, he added, involved the lack of Martin’s narratives, particularly the way he wrestled with the more fringe characters of Westeros. He explained his reasoning: “I loved the traveling with [Tyrion actor Peter Dinklage] and just the two of us in that cart. I think the stuff that was said in there understood the nature of freaks and outsiders so precisely. In a way, that was lost when we got past [the narrative in George R.R. Martin’s] books. That special niche interest in weirdos wasn’t as effective as it had been. Last season and this season there were great scenes and then I’d come in and kind of give a weather report at the end of them — ‘film at 11.’ So I thought he was losing his knowledge. If he was such an intelligent man and he had such resources, how come he didn’t know about things? That added to my dismay. It’s now being rectified with getting a great and noble ending. But that was frustrating for a couple seasons.” Of his own fate, Hill was equally transparent: “I took it very personally. I took it as a person, not as an actor or an artist. I understood the reactions of previous actors who had been in the same position a lot more than I did at the time. You can’t help feeling that you failed in some way, that you haven’t lived up to some expectation that you didn’t know about. The only thing that consoles you is people who worked a lot harder than you are in the same boat. So that helps. I don’t think anybody who hasn’t been through it can identify with it. They think, ‘What’s all the fuss about? You’re all finishing anyway.’ But you take it personally, you can’t help it.”