Showing posts with label game of thrones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label game of thrones. Show all posts

Monday, October 24, 2022

My Kingdom for a Dragon

So now we have look over at Team Black and Red in last night's House of the Dragon. It's also the season finale, though it somehow didn't feel like it. Still, I'm puzzled as to why some people feel the episode was disappointing.

I liked the big action sequence at the end. Those two dragons fighting was pretty great. I still wish they had arms and lances (yes, I'm still holding out hope for a good Dragonlance adaptation). But that huge, elder dragon contrasted with the little whippersnapper dragon, stalking each other in the storm like Kirk and Khan, was terrific.

But the episode began with another grueling stillbirth scene and I thought maybe they should call this House of the Miscarriage. Once again, it seems like the showrunners are presenting an argument for why it's more practical for men to rule. First Rhaenyra going into premature labour prevents them from immediately fleeing Dragonstone, then she emerges from her physical trials to demonstrate she shares Princess Rhaenys' wishy-washiness. I think Ryan Condal tried his hardest to explain why Sara Heiss didn't have Rhaenys kill the Greens last week--Rhaenys says something about how it wasn't her war to start. But, as Daemon more shrewdly sees, the war has clearly already begun and that was actually Rhaenys' opportunity to put an end to it.

Rhaenyra, surprisingly, is shaping up to be more Henry VI than Henry V. Hopefully by next season Emma D'arcy will be able to work up some of that old aggressive Milly Alcock magic.

House of the Dragon is available on HBOMax.

Monday, October 17, 2022

Who's Your Dragon?

As last night's House of the Dragon began, I wondered how Alicent's faction were going to deal with Rhaenyra taking the throne. By the end, I felt foolish for even thinking this was ever a possible scenario. And it mostly came off as very credible, giving us another nice episode that made me immediately want to watch a production of Richard III afterward.

Alicent finds, to her evident shock, that most of the small council has already been plotting how to install Aegon as King in the event of Viserys' death. Ser Christon the Unaging unceremoniously murders the one dissenter (whether or not it was on purpose, I'm not sure).

Watching the gears turn throughout the keep and the city as the machine slowly turned Aegon from the Royal Fuck Up to the Sure Thing was fascinating.

Last week, when Alicent misunderstood Viserys' dying words to mean he wanted Aegon to be heir, I wasn't sure if I liked the plot twist. Now I'm sure I don't because it doesn't make sense for Alicent, despite clearly having misgivings about replacing Rhaenyra with Aegon, to so doggedly support Aegon for the role. Realistically, I think she'd be questioning at this point if she really did understand Viserys or, even more likely, if he was really of sound mind when he said it. It just doesn't add up, with how much effort Viserys clearly expended to support Rhaenyra's claim in the previous episode.

I liked the focus on the common people of King's Landing in this episode. That was always a complaint I had about Game of Thrones, that we never had a clear sense of who the common people were or what they thought. It does make sense, in a way, because the show is from the point of view of the wealthy families and even the most broad minded among them are pretty disconnected. A good example is shown at the end of the episode when Princess Rhaenys crashes her dragon through a hall crowded with civilians, apparently little concerned that she's obviously killing and injuring dozens. At first I thought, well, these are the first casualties of the civil war. But then Rhaenys marched her dragon up to the assembled Alicent, her kids, and Ser Otto . . . and didn't kill them. It's sort of absurd. It's like Sir Lancelot in Monty Python and the Holy Grail, running in and slaughtering everyone, but then stopping at the most prominent villain and saying, "Behold, I am merciful!" Clearly, Rhaenys thought the civilians to be just so many koopa troopers. It was silly. I'm not sure it was intended to be.

At any rate, the show is still mostly brilliant and I'm looking forward to next week's finale.

House of the Dragon is available on HBOMax.

Sunday, October 09, 2022

The Throne Sharpens

What an incredible and heartbreaking episode of House of the Dragon. The eighth episode, "The Lord of the Tides", made us all sure this brewing civil war is more than a team sport, but a deeply personal drama with the whole civilised world at stake.

You'd have to be pretty heartless to watch unmoved Viserys walking into the throne room one last time. You can tell how amazing this show is that it makes you cheer when Daemon suddenly kills a guy who happened to be absolutely right in his claim to inheritance.

But, alas for him, his brother was quite right when he said that history remembers names and not blood. The reality of the whole system is the game of thrones, not the story of peaceful negotiations and birthright floating thinly on top of it.

You could say this show belabours a point that a monarchical dynasty is no way to run a country, that it requires so much violence and delusion to make function. But, in a world where the truth is hard to see, people do need something to believe. How could they know this isn't their best option?

I was surprised Viserys was still alive at the beginning of this episode, which takes place six years after the previous, when he was already looking pretty bad, to put it lightly.

Now he's a horror show, which makes it even more painful watching him try to make this system work that he's never had a great knack for. Watching Alicent and Rhaenyra make a fragile little peace over the table--by the way, a beautifully laid supper--was all the more powerful because it was genuine and obviously doomed. But at least the old man got one last happy supper with the family. This show about a ruthless dragon family really does render a painfully honest portrait of the human condition.

House of the Dragon is available on HBOMax.

Monday, September 26, 2022

Babies of the Dragon

There's a whole lotta labour going on in the Seven Kingdoms. Last night's House of the Dragon revolved around children and giving birth. It also featured a time jump of ten years so several performers were recast, something I wish hadn't been done. It was a good episode but not quite as strong as previous episodes, an unfortunate thing since it needed to carry new stars.

Emma D'Arcy is 30 and Milly Alcock is 22. A person's face doesn't change so much in those years. I know Alcock was supposed to be playing younger than she was but if she can play 17 at 22 I don't see why she couldn't play 27. D'Arcy has a completely different energy about her, not to mention a more aquiline nose. But, oh well. She gives a good performance.

It's weird no attempt was made to make Ser Cristen Cole look older. If they weren't going to recast him they should have at least given him a big beard or something.

I don't think I'll mind Olivia Cooke as Allicent though she and Cristen Cole weren't served well by last night's teleplay. They came across more as straight forward villains, even when Allicent is shocked at the end by the murders she'd inadvertently instigated. I'd also really like to know how and why Cole was excused for beating that guy to death last week.

Meanwhile, Daemon fortunately remains Matt Smith and is dealing with his own problems across the sea. Mostly brooding though.

This was a decent enough bridge episode.

House of the Dragon is available on HBOMax.

Monday, September 12, 2022

A Dragon in the House

Rhaenyra learned that freedom isn't free in last night's House of the Dragon and that the cost doesn't always come in the form of money. But Rhaenyra may console herself that she did herself come, at least, and I would guess not for the first time but probably for the first time with a partner.

She might be a little pscyho. Running around amongst the commoners in disguise didn't seem to make her even a little nervous. Witnessing sex for likely the first time, certainly witnessing an orgy for the first time, she's only fascinated and mildly amused. She may think she lacks freedom as a princess, but it's her royal position that has insulated her from developing any apprehensions that would be healthy for a commoner. If she never develops any understanding of those fears, at least, she will likely never make for a decent Queen.

Some people might compare her escapade in disguise to Disney's Aladdin but it's actually much closer to the movie Aladdin apes, The Thief of Bagdad, in which the sultan goes disguised into the town and learns via a public show that the people kind of hate him. So, as Damon tries to impress upon her, she has an uphill battle for the people's acceptance.

I was a little surprised Damon staggered back to the Red Keep through the front door the next day. I wasn't so surprised Rhaenyra lacked the discretion and her seducing her poor bodyguard was pretty tragic. I liked the way the shit hit the fan the next day and how complicated the issue became via the drama between King, Queen, and Hand. This show gets better and better.

House of the Dragon is available on HBOMax.

Twitter Sonnet #1621

Expected suits were sought beyond a death.
A second rise contorts the virgin sun.
The air reserves itself a vital breath.
A human group's reduced in ghostly sum.
Enormous larvae fill the banquet hall.
The clouds of space negate the purple air.
A lightning thought was snapped beyond recall.
Her pump has paused upon the golden stair.
The heavy scales were shed on lacquered wood.
The river ale would burst without canals.
There's something strange a candle understood.
The judges break their chalk for all the fouls.
As time exists to help a slug endure
Communal clouds will never yield a cure.

Monday, September 05, 2022

Dragons of Discontent

House of the Dragon continues to be a solid show, to put it mildly. It's probably the best thing on television.

Sunday's episode advanced the timeline to find the now Queen Alicent pregnant with her second child. I like the complicated friction between her and Princess Rhaenyra, her former best friend and superior, but now someone she has command over.

Much of the episode took place during a boar hunt, bound to recall the first season of Game of Thrones. Things go differently, of course. King Viserys is shaping up to be a nicely nuanced character. More than simply a "weak king", he's a man torn apart by obligations, trying desperately to see the right way forward between prophetic visions and the needs of those around him.

It hardly needs saying that the show is outshining Rings of Power. Handily. Even on the one thing Rings of Power is praised for, visuals, House of the Dragon outpaces it with better cinematography, locations, set design, and costumes. I love Rhaenyra's hunting outfit with the red blouse and olive jerkin.

And there are just basic things this show does that Rings of Power doesn't. There's a solid sense of place, of characters inhabiting the same space. Of the events in one area affecting events in another. The character motives are clear and the drama is engrossing. House of the Dragon is a light in our gloomy existence.

House of the Dragon is available on HBO Max.

Sunday, August 28, 2022

Drakes Get It Done

If the first episode of House of the Dragon centred on Daemon, the second, "The Rogue Prince", sets out to establish Rhaenyra as the other lead. She doesn't quite hit the ground running as well as Daemon did but she's not bad.

I'm enjoying Milly Alcock's performance and it's a shame she's set to be replaced by another actress when events jump forward in time later in the season. Alcock is 22 years old, it seems silly to replace her with a 30 year old actress. Also, I see Alcock was born on April 11, which also happens to be my birthday. So clearly the stars are on her side.

A lot of her drama so far revolves around the unprecedented circumstance of a female heir to the Iron Throne. I wish the show did a better job of establishing how this sexism manifests in the minds of the people of Westeros and what are some of the root causes of it. It makes it difficult to drum up meaningful drama about glass ceilings, so far it's being treated merely as a matter of Rhaenyra needing to prove herself. If women can't sit on the Iron Throne, it seems obvious for a woman who wants to do so to ask, "Why not?"

If we were to look at the real Middle Ages, say in the 1400s, which seems roughly the analogous time period to House of the Dragon, there was a history of a few reigning queens to point to as examples. Eleanor of Aquitaine, Blanche of Castile, Margaret of Anjou. These were all regents who served as rulers while their husbands were indisposed or absent for extended periods. Maybe the ruler of Westeros would be more comparable to a Caesar but even then you could talk about Cleopatra. Does Rhaenyra really have no frame of reference? Are there no widow countesses or duchesses she could look to as prototypes?

Last week's episode incidentally illustrated one of the prime arguments against a woman ruler--women had a high chance of dying in childbirth. A king could continue marrying long after one unsuccessful childbirth. A queen, like Daemon's prospective bride or like Elizabeth I, could abstain from bearing a child but then that raises the obvious problem of succession. And it was a problem when Elizabeth I died, resulting in her cousin, James, already King of Scotland, becoming England's monarch. It seems like these are all matters the king's council on House of the Dragon should be bringing up.

At least the show continues to be lovely. It's so nice to have this weekly eye candy again.

House of the Dragon is available on HBOMax.

Twitter Sonnet #1616

The standing cat awaits attending serfs.
Important leeks were soon digested whole.
The boat's a bowl of lentil soup at berth.
The angry calf denounced the phony foal.
A waving tie salutes the action scene.
Constructing masks results in taking deals.
Remember now the fated Coffee Bean.
Exchange the buzz and scrap the dicey meals.
A rubber cross was sprinkled thick with glass.
A spider day accosts the smelly brute.
Elusive cakes bedevilled Fabienne's ass.
No burger breakfast stained the shepherd's suit.
The changing coat enabled lords to dive.
Beneath the sea do scaly devils thrive.

Tuesday, August 23, 2022

Targaryens in the House

Game of Thrones is back and it doesn't suck. House of the Dragon's first episode is pretty damned good, in fact. Showrunners Ryan Condal and Miguel Sapochnik seem to understand what people liked about Game of Thrones--complex characters with understandable motives; storytelling that takes its time; beautiful costumes and locations; good performances and brutal action; borderline hardcore sex scenes. So far it's nailing everything.

It's still hard for me to see Matt Smith as anything but the Eleventh Doctor but now he's a really buff, draconian enforcer Eleventh Doctor. Seriously, the skinny poindexter somehow turned himself into Mr. Muscles.

He's definitely the standout on the show. His character, Prince Daemon, really is a dangerously smart strongman in the making. This show isn't going to treat its viewers like idiots and that alone makes me excited. But I'm a lifelong fan of mediaeval fantasy so there's quite a lot on this show that excites me by default.

Oh, I loved that joust tournament. We need more jousting in film. I loved the contrast between the ruthless brawling and the little princesses putting their pretty wreaths on the lances.

I also liked the slight redesign for the Iron Throne, which, from what I understand, is closer to the books. I'm eager to see more of this show.

House of the Dragon is available on HBOMax.

Friday, February 28, 2020

Is the Desert Really Clean?

I'm always happy to watch Lawrence of Arabia. What a rare movie it is; an epic war film with a massive budget that also has razor sharp thematic focus and impeccable casting, particularly in its then unknown lead, Peter O'Toole. The hints of Lawrence's sexuality, possibly either asexual or homosexual, in O'Toole's sightly effeminate manner, along with his straying from military protocol, help create the sense of how strange it is that one man can be a catalyst for so much.

The story is about World War I and the participation of Arabian tribes but it also manages to be about the question of free will. It never feels forced at any point, even at the extraordinary coincidence of Lawrence having to execute the same man he rescued from the desert. Omar Sharif's character insists, "The writing is still yours" after Anthony Quinn remarked that the man's destiny was written, that it had been futile for Lawrence to have rescued him. Either interpretation is potentially valid.

Either Lawrence represents the spark of creativity necessary for change or the figurehead necessary to justify the change that was already going to occur as he becomes for the American journalist. In any case, his dream seems to fall out of his hands as the tides change in Damascus.

It occurred to me a better version of Daenerys' story on Game of Thrones could've taken a lot of notes from Lawrence of Arabia. The bickering among the tribes, the cultural norms that prevent them from carrying out administrative and maintenance functions when taking control of the city, these kinds of details were sorely lacking among Daenerys' diverse followers. Lawrence ordering a slaughter of Turkish troops certainly made more sense than Daenerys attacking civilians and made the point much clearer about the desire for vengeance undermining an inspiring leader's aims.

But we already have Lawrence of Arabia. In addition to everything else, it remains gorgeous and I'm happy to rest my eyes on it for hours.

Monday, May 20, 2019

So Long to the Throne

Well, that's it, no more Gamey Thrones, at least not on television anyway. It was a pleasant series finale, filled with fond farewells. Considering my least favourite character in the series ended up in charge of the Seven Kingdoms, it was pretty painless.

Spoilers after the screenshot

Do you suppose the image of that fateful bell that at last unmasked Danaerys' (Emilia Clarke) hypocrisy was meant to evoke the Liberty Bell? Considering the show once got in trouble for putting an image of George W. Bush's head on a pike, it wouldn't be the first time they made a reference to U.S. politics. If that's so, arguably Danaerys has become a metaphor for Trump, ironic considering how often people invoked her as an emblem of Hillary Clinton during the 2016 presidential campaign. But the most ironic thing of all may have been the fact that the finale, with its hints at the beginnings of social reforms and Samwell's (John Bradley) awkward remarks, praised democracy while a petition to have the whole season rewritten has gained more than a million signatures.

Considering most of those signators would prefer a season where Danaerys was portrayed in a positive light as a conquering queen, or as one who inexplicably endorsed a republic, this is a good example of why art should not be a democracy. Though, to be fair, the show hasn't been as well written since it strayed from the source material. There are, as people have complained, too many shortcuts. Bran (Isaac Hempstead Wright) becoming king being a last example, as he went suddenly from being a character with no longer any apparent desire to assert himself in worldly affairs to becoming the king of the world. There's mention, indeed, of how he had no desire for the throne yet he said himself that he came "all this way" for this sole purpose.

Thinking back on "The Bells", though, it has occurred to me that Danaerys' infamous "heel turn" may have needed to not make sense. If she had done the more logical thing and gone straight for the Red Keep and Cersei (Lena Headey) then people would probably not have been horrified by her actions, even if collateral damage had included dead children. The glory of finally killing the hated Cersei and claiming ultimate power would have pleased people too much for them to worry over trifling details. That's always been a problem with democracy--tyrants tend to be popular. I'm reminded of John Milton's 1660 pamphlet, "The Ready and Easy Way to Establish a Free Commonwealth". As the hope for an English Republic fell apart because the people of England seemed to prefer the return of a monarch, Milton in exasperation speculates that perhaps sometimes the people must be forced to make the right decision.

Maybe the best historical comparison for Danaerys would after all be Oliver Cromwell, a leader who rode a wave of popularity for an ideal as a liberator and advocate for republic who then led an infamously horrific conquest of Ireland. Benioff and Weiss might have learned a lesson from that as Cromwell's motives were fundamentally tied to religion which, like Anakin in Revenge of the Sith, helps explain his seemingly incongruous actions.

It would have been nice to dwell more on Queen Danaerys and her introspection. I also would've preferred it if Drogon had killed Jon (Kit Harrington) instead of the Iron Throne, a symbolic act I should hope we're not meant to think the dragon himself understood, otherwise we'd rightly wonder why he happily obeyed Danaerys' command to slaughter children. But this was meant to be a victory lap to revel in as the show returned characters to some of their most memorable positions--Jon at the Wall, Arya (Maisie Williams) heading off for unknown adventure at sea as she did at the end of season four. Oddly, the impression I was left with was a perhaps unintentional admission by Benioff and Weiss that the show had never really progressed beyond those points. They did the best job, really, that could be expected from average television writers but there's no way anyone could match work George R.R. Martin crafted over periods of years. I guess we'll all have to learn to read again.

Twitter Sonnet #1237

With fragile words to highest seats they're led.
As em'rald hills appeared behind a mist.
And further off, a wall forestalls the dead.
The headsman's heavy sword but rarely missed.
Discussion shades the easy road and hard.
Collected thoughts ennoble wolf and cat.
Collected eggs bequeath a hopeful card.
To Queens and knaves at large who gamely chat.
When armies tread across a winter's pond.
A broken hand may yet deserve a watch.
Succeeding reigns of children stretch beyond.
A broken wheel may yet turn round a notch.
As fire melts the metal bells are toast.
A fond adieu returns the crew to ghost.

Sunday, May 19, 2019

There are Places I Remember Inaccurately

It's one of those days when all kinds of different historical periods are jumbled together in the 2008 Doctor Who audio play "Dead London". The first episode in the Eighth Doctor's second stand alone series, he returns with the nice enough companion Lucie Miller for a story that, at under fifty minutes, feels too short, as most of the stories in this particular series of audios do.

The first scene drops us into the Old Bailey where the Doctor (Paul McGann) is on the dock, answering for the crime of leaving the TARDIS in the middle of traffic while Lucie (Sheridan Smith) was away shopping. What started as a modern day preceding unexpectedly becomes a 17th century one and the Doctor is sentenced to death. Meanwhile, Lucie encounters similar problems on the streets of London, one of which, Fleet, unexpectedly transforms into its river namesake.

There's an amusing supporting character played by Clare Buckwald called Spring Heeled Sophie, presumably a reference to Spring Heeled Jack. Though I'd have enjoyed her character more if her voice were more distinguishable from Sheridan Smith's. I also enjoyed a reference to The Wicker Man when the Doctor and his companions find themselves suddenly in a Wicker Man about to be torched in pagan Britain.

...

On another subject, to-night is the final episode of Game of Thrones so I figure this is my last chance to make predictions. All my predictions so far this season have been wrong but I figure that's no reason to stop now (spoilers for past episodes ahead).

I think the reason we never saw Danaerys' face during her rampage last week will be explained by the fact that she'd lost telepathic control of the dragon--she told it to go for the Red Keep but all he heard was "Urg, rage, kill, kill!" and decided to burn civilians instead. I predict there'll be a shot of Drogon pulling the Iron Throne from the rubble. And I suspect that Bran might do something with time travel and alternate time lines since that kind of thing seems to be popular right now.

What do I hope will happen? That Cersei ends up being alive and rules long and benevolently on the Iron Throne. I wonder how many people would sign an angry petition about that.

Tuesday, May 14, 2019

Our Devils and Dragons

Still thinking about Game of Thrones, this morning I read the new, very good Sirenia Digest, which includes Caitlin R. Kiernan's new story "The Last Thing You Should Do". The title reminds me of the David Bowie song from his 1997 album Earthling. Like the song, Caitlin's story seems to be about an anxiety revolving around a compulsive self destruction. It consists of a dialogue between two people who might be one person as they discuss the dream one has had and the action of crushing the sun with one's fingers, or appearing to, due to forced perspective, is described. There's discussion of fairy tales involving bears and dragons eating the sun which of course also put me in mind of Sunday's Game of Thrones.

Spoilers for Sunday's Game of Thrones ahead

Like a lot of people, I suspect Daenerys going mad is probably close to the ending George R.R. Martin had planned because there's plenty of evidence for it in the books and can be seen in episodes that were still following the books. Going back through my own old reviews, there were two things that I often thought were mistakes in the writing that I now suspect were calculated--Daenerys making obviously despotic decisions and the near total avoidance of any depiction of commoners in King's Landing. We don't actually know what the people thought of Cersei, other than the fact that they liked Margaery better, for reasons that were clearly established as superficial. Like any political faction, Cersei's camp must have had supporters but we never heard from them. Even if there were only a few, they must have existed and the fact that their voices were omitted is telling.

Here are a few quotes from myself that seem pertinent now. From my review for the episode "Eastwatch" from 2017:

Cersei believes that her choices are either losing the war and dying and surrendering and dying so it makes sense she's willing to parley especially now that she's pregnant. She doesn't know yet that Daenerys was willing to spare any of the Lannister allies who bent the knee to her--it would be interesting to find out what Cersei would do if she did know. I don't quite follow the logic that it's better to roast uncooperative families alive than imprison them, especially when Daenerys has her father's reputation to live down.

From my review of "The Winds of Winter" in 2016:

Daario who? I'm only half joking--I kind of have to struggle to remember how Daenerys met him and why he's important. I think we're meant to consider how heartless Daenerys is becoming from the fact that she doesn't care about cutting him loose but could it simply be he's very dull?

From my review for "Home" in 2016:

We actually have one moment among the lower classes in last night's episode where a man in a tavern in King's Landing makes drunken boasts regarding Cersei's "Walk of Shame" last season. This is a reminder of the distinctly unrealistic and unexplored reactions from the crowd last season. The point of the scene now is not to explore the thoughts and feelings of the common people but rather to show Cersei is taking vengeance on each and every heckler with her cool new zombie Mountain.

From my review for "Mother's Mercy" from 2015:

I felt a little bad for Cersei but it's really hard to connect with the reality of the scene when none of the people around her feel authentic. Who are the citizens of King's Landing? Cersei's unpopular but why, exactly? When Charles I was beheaded, it turned popular opinion against the regicides partly because the execution of a ruling king by his own subjects was unprecedented, rulers were seen almost as divinity. So one being forced to walk naked through the streets might excite the derision you see if she's unpopular but it also would have provoked some awe just for the significance of such a person being so humbled. People throwing food at her ought to have also exhibited quite a bit of nervous energy. Not only because you're basically looking at a rather potent symbol of your whole universe not functioning properly but also throwing crap at your sovereign when she's two feet away from you and can see and possibly remember your face doesn't seem like it's in the interest of living a long life. Has anyone heard of "The Emperor's New Clothes"? The people jeering at Cersei seem less like actual citizens and more like manifestations of Cersei's nightmares, or tools to punish her for her pride which is tied to sexuality by the focus of the High Sparrow's questions in her confession

From my review for "The Dance of Dragons" in 2015:

And, finally, the moment I think we all knew was coming but were really pleased to see it anyway, Drogon Dragon shows up and starts roasting the fuckers. I kind of liked that it still wasn't completely one sided, that the dragon seemed to be sustaining real injury from the Sons. Though, again; who are these guys? Maybe we'll learn they're a sect of elite martial artists who live in the mountains only to be called down when the slave masters are in direst need. Or something like that. It could work.

From my review for "Hardhome" in 2015:

"A ruler who kills those who are devoted to her is not a ruler who inspires devotion." It's funny because it's obvious. Too bad Tyrion wasn't around when Daenerys publicly executed that one devoted fellow popular with the "common people". When Tyrion asks her what it was like when she only had the support of the common people and not the rich I noticed she wasn't quite able to divulge she hadn't exactly allowed that scenario to play out organically.

But Tyrion and Daenerys sitting down together over wine came out so much better than I'd dared hope. The actors have chemistry--Emilia Clarke seems to up her game quite a bit acting opposite Peter Dinklage, she has layers, visibly suppressing strong emotions provoked by Jorah and by Tyrion's criticism, consequently making her sexier than she's been in quite a while. And, yes, I'm a little ashamed of myself for saying it but, gosh, when she said she was going to "break the wheel" it was just so adorable. The music swelled so Tyrion didn't get a chance to say, "How? And to what end?"

...

Poor Cersei. I feel like I'm the only one who likes her. Think about how much harder it is to endure solitary confinement when you have no faith in a greater good. Of all the characters on the show, Cersei has always seemed the most alone to me, and that's saying something. The only thing she has faith in is fundamental human corruption and I rather think her current circumstances only confirm her belief, only they make her realise she wasn't broad minded enough. She thought life was cruel but it's even crueller than she thought. Reviews I read consistently try to read other things into her--people talk about how, for once, her name can't protect her. She hasn't had faith in her name since she was a kid, we saw that in the first episode's flashback. She always regarded it as a tool she would use for all it's worth because nothing else was going to save her, either.

From my review for "Kill the Boy" in 2015:

First [Danaerys] arbitrarily imprisons all the heads of great families in Meereen after the gold mask Klansmen killed Ser Barristan, then she randomly executes one of them whose name and personality we never hear anything about, then she decides to propose marriage to Hizadr, one of the family heads, in the hopes of making an alliance that makes her part of the society. That should sit really well the former slaves who were pissed off when she summarily executed a former slave.

From my review for "The House of Black and White" in 2015:

Do you execute someone without trial for executing someone without trial? No, that would be too self-evidently stupid, no-one could possibly carry out that action without being overburdened by the massive weight of obvious irony. Oh, but that's exactly what happened last night. Or was Daenerys questioning the guy in the throne room supposed to be his trial? If that's the case, why all the hand wringing about having a trial for the first guy? Now everyone in the city hates her which she and all of her advisers should have seen as inevitable as noon but none of them do.

From my review for "The Breaker of Chains" in 2014:

More and more, I think about how Revenge of the Sith was really the Star Wars appropriate for this generation. Whatever flaws that movie has, I think George Lucas is due some credit for the courage to show his anti-hero walking into a school and slaughtering children in a time when school shootings seem to have become an epidemic. Those who cry for the cool power of going against the social codes ought to be reminded now and then how very, very ugly it can be.

You could say what happened in "The Bells" was basically Anakin Skywalker becoming Darth Vader. In both cases, there was a lot of foreshadowing, a lot of times where we saw that our good hero has a very simple morality that's based on the idea of the unquestionably good side, his side, having the right to use destructive force to stop his enemies. Anakin killing the younglings in Revenge of the Sith is a little more plausible, though, than Danaerys going after the civilians in King's Landing because Anakin was specifically targeting a culture and an institution. There was a religious element to it.

Lately I've also been re-reading The Brothers Karamazov, Fyodor Dostoevsky's 1880 novel, and its debates on morality and the inherent capacity for cruelty in human nature have loomed over everything I've watched and thought about the past few days. I've just finished the section featuring Father Zosima's biographical narratives, Zosima being a religious leader, a kind hearted Elder in the Eastern Orthodox Church. His section follows a long conversation between two of the brothers Karamazov, Alyosha and Ivan, mostly consisting of Ivan, an intellectual and atheist, outlining his beliefs and his reasoning for them. Ivan's words and Zosima's are clearly paired for a purpose. Wikipedia says "Zosima provides a refutation to Ivan's atheistic arguments" but it's not actually so simple as that. Zosima provides an alternative perspective to Ivan's but he never categorically refutes Ivan. Ivan presents questions about existence and human nature that still haunt us.

“By the way, a Bulgarian I met lately in Moscow,” Ivan went on, seeming not to hear his brother's words, “told me about the crimes committed by Turks and Circassians in all parts of Bulgaria through fear of a general rising of the Slavs. They burn villages, murder, outrage women and children, they nail their prisoners by the ears to the fences, leave them so till morning, and in the morning they hang them—all sorts of things you can't imagine. People talk sometimes of bestial cruelty, but that's a great injustice and insult to the beasts; a beast can never be so cruel as a man, so artistically cruel. The tiger only tears and gnaws, that's all he can do. He would never think of nailing people by the ears, even if he were able to do it. These Turks took a pleasure in torturing children, too; cutting the unborn child from the mother's womb, and tossing babies up in the air and catching them on the points of their bayonets before their mothers' eyes. Doing it before the mothers' eyes was what gave zest to the amusement. Here is another scene that I thought very interesting. Imagine a trembling mother with her baby in her arms, a circle of invading Turks around her. They've planned a diversion: they pet the baby, laugh to make it laugh. They succeed, the baby laughs. At that moment a Turk points a pistol four inches from the baby's face. The baby laughs with glee, holds out its little hands to the pistol, and he pulls the trigger in the baby's face and blows out its brains. Artistic, wasn't it? By the way, Turks are particularly fond of sweet things, they say.”

“Brother, what are you driving at?” asked Alyosha.

“I think if the devil doesn't exist, but man has created him, he has created him in his own image and likeness.”

The alternate perspective comes much later on from Zosima who talks about his own experience having nearly murdered a man in a duel and then having a colleague confess to him that he has committed murder.

Remember particularly that you cannot be a judge of any one. For no one can judge a criminal, until he recognizes that he is just such a criminal as the man standing before him, and that he perhaps is more than all men to blame for that crime. When he understands that, he will be able to be a judge. Though that sounds absurd, it is true. If I had been righteous myself, perhaps there would have been no criminal standing before me. If you can take upon yourself the crime of the criminal your heart is judging, take it at once, suffer for him yourself, and let him go without reproach. And even if the law itself makes you his judge, act in the same spirit so far as possible, for he will go away and condemn himself more bitterly than you have done.

There's nothing in what Zosima says that absolutely settles Ivan's questions about human nature. Fundamentally the question over whether having free will makes up for the suffering which innocent people, particularly children, experience is not satisfied. But if Danaerys had learned the lesson Zosima articulated then the people of King's Landing may have had much longer lives. We loved Danaerys, we loved the punishment she inflicted on her enemies because we are like her.

Twitter Sonnet #1235

To those for coffee find the greatest thirst.
The diner's grace derives from Greater Went.
Her steady eyes in dreams'll see us first.
Where cherry pies'll go hereafter sent.
We watched precisely things we always saw.
Competing flames it seems were ever one.
Effects were slowly pitched upon the draw.
The dust of crumbled walls obscured the sun.
The glow of sabres lit the story's shapes.
Again the flashing steps alert the mind.
An errant mass disturbs the sway of drapes.
Our metal hands and hands we hope to find.
A set of dreams recall the branching choice.
From stone and cloud there came the strangest voice.

Monday, May 13, 2019

The Old Fashioned Dragon

Well, I hope we all learned a valuable lesson from last night's Game of Thrones, the penultimate episode of the series. I do appreciate audacity though it's nice when it makes sense. But there were some really impressive visuals that came along with the show finally putting some focus on the common people of King's Landing.

Spoilers after the screenshot

Last night was so close to brilliant. If it were just a little different, I'd have been willing to take back every bad thing I said about Benioff and Weiss. If you look back over the series, the signs that Daenerys (Emilia Clarke) might not be the most stable leader are plentiful. Her crucifying all the people in Meereen, her preference for letting her dragons roam around poaching livestock until they inevitably killed some people. And then there's the fact that, despite all Tyrion (Peter Dinklage) says about how Cersei (Lena Headey) having public policies that abuse the people, we never actually see any of it.

The worst thing we actually saw Cersei do was blow up the temple that was full of her enemies, the people who forced her to march naked through the streets while people threw garbage at her. Cersei, who's also been forced to watch all her children die. And yet, after last night's episode, one of the main complaints I saw on Twitter was that Cersei didn't suffer enough. Why did people root for Daenerys and hate Cersei? This is why last night's episode was almost brilliant, because it was the culmination of a hypothetical exercise in propaganda, on just how easily people are convinced to place their loyalty in one faction over an other. Daenerys was younger, prettier, and the point of view was with her in her sufferings.

But it doesn't really make sense that she'd rampage throughout King's Landing after everyone had surrendered. Even if she snapped and let her rage take over, it seems obvious the first thing she'd do was fly straight for the Red Keep and go for Cersei. Just like last week's episode, part of the explanation would seem to be that Benioff and Weiss just don't know how to write dragons. Now Daenerys flies over and above the ballistae, easily burning all the weapons that suddenly weren't as capable of as rapid a fire rate. Why didn't she do that last week?

And this is why internal logic is so important to the story. Ideally, to-day people should be having conversations about how populations can be misled and manipulated, but you can't make a point about how human nature works by just randomly making things up.

Anyway, it was nice seeing all the ground level stuff, Arya (Maisie Williams) running around, suddenly not seeming as godlike. The relentlessly desperate situation was well conveyed by director Miguel Sapochnik; it was like a cross between Skyrim and Children of Men.

I didn't quite buy that Arya would give up her quest for vengeance so easily but it was still a sweet moment between her and the Hound (Rory McCann).

And I was really sad to see Cersei die, but there was a powerful bittersweetness in her final embrace with Jaime (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau). I suppose it was the best ending for her I could've expected. And she certainly won the moral victory, if nothing else.

Monday, May 06, 2019

First in Tyranny

After the moral clarity of a battle with the Night King, Game of Thrones delivered a more dramatically fraught episode last night, "The Last of the Starks", the best episode of the season so far and my favourite since season six.

Spoilers after the screenshot

First of all, what a great party (complete with coffee, as sharp eyed viewers observed). It was fun seeing everyone drinking and relaxing, particularly the Lannister brothers and Brienne (Gwendoline Christie). Inebriation finally brings out some of Tyrion's (Peter Dinklage) old cruelty and he loudly informs everyone that Brienne is a virgin, not an observation requiring the keenest of insights. Jaime (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau), fortunately, is more of a gentleman and assists his former captor in changing this lamentable state of affairs.

This ends up being a set-up for Jaime's departure for King's Landing. There are evidentially some viewers who believe he's going off to join up with Cersei (Lena Headey) again, despite that prophecy still hanging over Cersei's head about being strangled by her brother. Though that might be difficult for Jaime to accomplish with one hand. Anyway, poor Brienne.

Before he leaves, though, we get the amusing confrontation between the Lannister brothers and Bronn (Jerome Flynn) who basically uses his order to kill the two fellows as an opportunity to demand more money. I do hope we haven't seen the last of him.

It looks like this was likely the final episode for Sam (John Bradley), Gilly (Hannah Murray), and Tormund (Kristofer Hivju), who all make their farewells, which makes sense--none of them really have any stake in Daenerys (Emilia Clarke) taking the throne. Less explicable is the departure of Ghost, the dire wolf.

He's aptly named. Watching the rarely glimpsed significant plot element from season one, he's like the ghost of the Game of Thrones we'd have had under George R. R. Martin's unfettered stewardship. Seeing the beast go for no apparent reason seemed symbolic of the show bidding farewell to its book origins finally and totally. The characters say something about Ghost having no place in the south but that doesn't explain why he can't stay at Winterfell.

At the heart of last night's episode, though, was Daenerys (in another terrific outfit), who I really started to feel for. Seeing her watch Jon (Kit Harington) being Mister Popularity at the party following her foray into cleverness by making Gendry (Joe Dempsie) a lord and then Tyrion and Varys (Conleth Hill) having a sober (despite Tyrion's vigorous attempts to drink it down) debate about her viability as a ruler all contributed to a dark cloud over her future. It made the usual paradoxes of her character a bit poignantly sad--you could sense everyone's chagrin when she demanded she could use the might of her dragons to force herself as sole reigning Queen onto the kingdom as part of a project to "end tyranny", an evident and all too common contradiction Varys points out to Tyrion as gently as possible. Everyone is finally, belatedly wondering what makes Daenerys such a good bet anyway, and even if Jorah (Iain Glen) were still alive, the writers had long since lost the will or ability to use him as her cheerleader.

And then Daenerys loses one of her dragons in another stupid surprise attack from Urine--I mean, Euron (Pilou Asbaek). A fleet of ships on a beautiful day like that ought to be visible on the horizon, long before they could get into firing range. Lookouts at Dragonstone should've been able to spot them in ample time, particularly in broad daylight, to say nothing of Daenerys' own ships or the birds eye view offered by dragons. And once Euron is in range, what exactly stops Daenerys from attacking them from behind or above? Plot armour, I guess.

I don't necessarily need a plot to make sense but in a case like this it's crucial. The reason something like the Red Wedding works and something like this doesn't is that the Red Wedding made sense. We knew everyone's motives, we knew how the Starks misread the situation, we knew how it could happen logistically. All of these questions need to be answered because it's painful for people to see their favourite characters get killed. If they get killed for no reason, it's like a cheap prank pulled by the writers. If you show reasons, then it might still be painful but the viewer is forced to recognise how it reflects the way things work in reality, which ultimately makes it a cathartic experience. This is why the best part of last night's episode was the troubling questions surrounding Daenerys' fitness to rule and Jon's complete inability to keep his heritage secret.

He is such a dope. That's part of what makes him likeable, but do people really want a dope on the throne? It might be nice for a change, I suppose. But no-one really comes off as very clever on the show anymore, I think because Benioff and Weiss simply aren't very clever. Which doesn't necessarily make them bad writers, but I wonder if they were themselves aware that Tyrion was basically responsible for Missandei's (Nathalie Emmanuel) death.

Tyrion walks up to the gates alone, Cersei wants to execute him the spot but she can't bring herself to do it. She really does love her family or, more likely, she doesn't want to be seen publicly doing something so cheap and cruel. Which is exactly why Tyrion shouldn't have publicly declared that the people hate Cersei and Cersei hates the people. After that, any concession Cersei made to Tyrion would be as much as to say, "Yeah, you're right, I do hate the people." Tyrion is talking like someone so blinded by the ideology of his chosen side he longer has any ability to negotiate. This would be more interesting if Tyrion had made one useful contribution in the past three seasons, but at this point he's another character whose capabilities we're supposed to take on faith who continually fails to demonstrate them. Tyrion forced Cersei to choose between executing Missandei and losing public support then and there.

I guess it was sad to see Missandei go. Her and Grey Worm (Jacob Anderson) are both really cute though not the most exciting of characters.

Anyway, it was nice to see an episode that was predominately about thoughtful debate and negotiating emotional stakes. I'm looking forward to seeing where it goes next week.