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Posted
24 minutes ago, GoBills808 said:

Does anyone know how the whitewalker army got so large? It seems like you can't reanimate a 'dead' whitewalker, and there can't have been all that many people living up above the Wall...plus it seemed like someone w/ Valeryian steel or dragonglass could take out a good 5-10 of em before getting killed...how tf did they get so many people in that army?

 

Also, the NK has been around for THOUSANDS of years. He has been effectively collecting the dead and building his army for that entire time.

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Posted (edited)

https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/em-game-thrones-em-maisie-022025917.html

 

“I was coming into work and everybody was talking about episode 3 and [director Miguel Sapochnik] was like, ‘Have you read the [season 3 script] yet?’” she recalls.

When GoT star said she had not yet read the episode, Sapochnik replied, “Oh, I can’t tell you then.”

 

Williams couldn’t understand his reluctance. “I was like, ‘Are we fighting the wights? Does The Night King die? So who kills him? What happens?’ And no one would say anything. Why is no one saying it? This is crazy.”

 

When the cast reached the end of episode 3 where Arya saves the Seven Kingdoms by sprinting into the action and stabbing the Night King with her Valyrian steel dagger, “it got a huge f—king cheer,” Harington recalls.

 

I assume this was the Cast viewing party / premiere 

Edited by ShadyBillsFan
Posted
5 minutes ago, ShadyBillsFan said:

https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/em-game-thrones-em-maisie-022025917.html

 

“I was coming into work and everybody was talking about episode 3 and [director Miguel Sapochnik] was like, ‘Have you read the [season 3 script] yet?’” she recalls.

When GoT star said she had not yet read the episode, Sapochnik replied, “Oh, I can’t tell you then.”

 

Williams couldn’t understand his reluctance. “I was like, ‘Are we fighting the wights? Does The Night King die? So who kills him? What happens?’ And no one would say anything. Why is no one saying it? This is crazy.”

 

When the cast reached the end of episode 3 where Arya saves the Seven Kingdoms by sprinting into the action and stabbing the Night King with her Valyrian steel dagger, “it got a huge f—king cheer,” Harington recalls.

 

I assume this was the Cast viewing party / premiere 

 

"Maisie Williams arrived at the table read for the final season of Game of Thrones not yet realizing that Arya Stark kills the Night King"

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Posted
Just now, SDS said:

 

"Maisie Williams arrived at the table read for the final season of Game of Thrones not yet realizing that Arya Stark kills the Night King"

 

I guess "just a reading" wouldn't raise a big cheer.  ergo the premier where all the cast would be present

but yeah that makes sense 

Posted
5 minutes ago, ShadyBillsFan said:

 

I guess "just a reading" wouldn't raise a big cheer.  ergo the premier where all the cast would be present

but yeah that makes sense 

 

 The reading is when they all find out so yes that’s when they all cheer.

 

Nice comment:

 

2 hours ago
I thought it was fantastic, and it actually made sense! The Night King knew about Jon Snow and Danny, and had plans in place to neutralize them. He wasn't aware of Arya at all, so he never saw her coming until the last moment. Even then, he didn't know who she was or what her capabilities were. He got overconfident and that was the end of him. It was beautifully done!
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Posted

Plus now Arya and Bran are the only two people who have the mark of the Night King from getting touched by him, I dunno if that means anything because she melted him now but if she's preggo w/ a baby Baratheon in her belly from Gendry maybe that little guy is going to be a future important bad/good guy. 

Posted

I also think back to the very first episode, when Bran is practicing bow and arrow and consistently missing.  Suddenly a Bulls eye!  But is was Arya who was standing behind Bran with the bow.  She gives him that mischievous grin.  Bran looked annoyed.  Last night when they both looked at each other after she offed the NK, there were no grins or looks of annoyance...but two expressions of "we had this all along."

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Posted
2 hours ago, snafu said:

Was there no one here who wanted to see Sansa kill reanimated, headless Ned Stark (or Rob even) when they were down in the crypts?

 

i'm pretty sure the headless part negates being risen

Posted
17 minutes ago, /dev/null said:

i'm pretty sure the headless part negates being risen

 

Fun-sucker!

There don't seem to be too many hard and fast rules about this.

 

Posted
1 hour ago, ShadyBillsFan said:

I assume this was the Cast viewing party / premiere 

 

54 minutes ago, ShadyBillsFan said:

 

I guess "just a reading" wouldn't raise a big cheer.  ergo the premier where all the cast would be present

but yeah that makes sense 

 

Table reads are amazing fun, tears/laughs/cheers are common. The cast and crew really get into it and on shows like GOT it's the first time they've gotten to see the full story so there's usually a lot of surprises for the actors. 

 

 

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Posted
3 hours ago, Logic said:


Actually, I agree with the first line.

It is specifically the lack of follow-up on some of the nuance and subtleties of storytelling that have occurred over the years that directly LEAD to some of my disappointment.

I didn't HATE it or anything, I just felt they missed some opportunities. Ever since the show surpassed the books, it has gradually lost some of its magic. That's to be expected. Benioff/Weiss are not George RR Martin. Some of what makes his early storytelling so great, though, is missing in these later seasons, as they have (by necessity) sped toward a conclusion. 

 

I had issues with the episode myself.  It was very inconsistent and kind of just ridiculous in some parts.  Payoff on several storylines was weak.  

 

Reminds me me of the disappointment I felt in the LOST series finale.  

 

Didn't hate the episode, but was definitely disappointed in it.

Posted
5 hours ago, Reed83HOF said:

 

In every scene with the NK & Jon, the NK could easily wipe him out every time and never does (this was like the 4th time). There is always this look he gives Jon, raises his hands and Jon escapes. I get the series is most likely about Jon (Fire & Ice), but still there is this whole arc that just wasn't used at all besides as a vehicle to get Jon and Dany together. It really feels like there needs to be more depth to flesh it out a bit

Pretty much...

The Night King is a Targaryan ... Jon Snow is a Targaryan

Posted
Just now, frostbitmic said:

The Night King is a Targaryan ... Jon Snow is a Targaryan

Targaryn's weren't even around back then...Night King was on of the first men

 

The only thing that could kill the NK was a valerian steel blade in the same place the dragon glass. One of the D&D guys mentioned that today I think

Posted
Just now, Reed83HOF said:

Targaryn's weren't even around back then...Night King was on of the first men

 

The only thing that could kill the NK was a valerian steel blade in the same place the dragon glass. One of the D&D guys mentioned that today I think

When Dany had her Dragon unleash enough fire on the NK to melt Antarctica he came through it like Dany did when she emerged from the fire with 3 Dragon eggs.

 

Targaryan's don't burn.

Posted (edited)
1 minute ago, frostbitmic said:

When Dany had her Dragon unleash enough fire on the NK to melt Antarctica he came through it like Dany did when she emerged from the fire with 3 Dragon eggs.

 

Targaryan's don't burn.

Wrong

 

https://www.theverge.com/2019/4/29/18522808/game-of-thrones-got-season-8-hbo-final-night-king-fire-dragon-targaryen-theory

 

The Night King was created by the Children of the Forest as a weapon in their war against the First Men, the original race of humans that came to Westeros (later followed by the Andals and the Rhoynar). This took place roughly 6,000 to 8,000 years before the Targaryen conquest of Westeros after the downfall of Valyria, around 300 years before the series started.

 

The Night King, on the other hand, (at least in the show) has been around so long that he was not only deployed by the Children of the Forest against the First Men, but the plan backfired. He became such a threat that the Children and mankind eventually allied against him.

 

George R.R. Martin notes that — in his books, at least — the Targaryen family possesses no such powers. “Targaryens are not immune to fire!” Martin said in a 1999 interview. “The birth of Dany’s dragons was unique, magical, wondrous, a miracle. She is called The Unburnt because she walked into the flames and lived. But her brother sure as hell wasn’t immune to that molten gold.”

Edited by Reed83HOF
Posted
Just now, Reed83HOF said:

Wrong

 

https://www.theverge.com/2019/4/29/18522808/game-of-thrones-got-season-8-hbo-final-night-king-fire-dragon-targaryen-theory

 

George R.R. Martin notes that — in his books, at least — the Targaryen family possesses no such powers. “Targaryens are not immune to fire!” Martin said in a 1999 interview. “The birth of Dany’s dragons was unique, magical, wondrous, a miracle. She is called The Unburnt because she walked into the flames and lived. But her brother sure as hell wasn’t immune to that molten gold.”


hey brother, how do you embed tweets here?

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