It was the episode we all anticipated with glee, and feared for a week. The night was SO SO SO DARK and full of terrors (but also SO DARK), but I watched it with the lights out, and I feel like that's the way it's supposed to be viewed. This episode was filmed like a feature film, and it should be viewed like one. The deaths we did get have seemed to resonate with me more the more I think about them, and I think we've got an amazing setup for the three episodes left to come. As always, I'm joined by my Brother at the Wall, Christopher Lockett, as we at first thought we'd just talk about highlights and the episode in general, before we found ourselves wanting to look at it shot for shot. And still managed to get this done in one day! (Though I apologize in advance for the photos being dark; it was a dark episode cinematically, but the resolution on my computer monitor wasn't crazy high so I had to go with the best I could.) So here we go...
Nikki:
As soon as the episode was over, you and I
immediately began texting back and forth wondering how the hell we were going
to cover this episode. I think our best idea was just to film separate videos
of us crying… then cut to laughing… then cut to sitting motionless over a bowl
of popcorn with our mouths half open, and then splice the videos together.
Because honestly, how do you put this episode into words?? In a nutshell, we
didn’t lose nearly as many people as I thought we would (there was a moment in
the episode when I went from believing half of the people would die to ALL of
them dying and that the war at King’s Landing would be fought against undead
versions of all of Cersei’s closest enemies to wondering if anyone was going to die), and there’s a
spectacular fist-punch-to-the-air ending that sort of made up for any deaths we
did encounter.
First, I’ll bring up the obvious: the
episode is called “The Long Night,” and throughout the episode I couldn’t help
but think of Melisandre’s constant refrain: “The night is dark and full of terrors.” Let’s put the emphasis on
DARK. It’s meant to be dark, I’ll give it that, and they wanted to put us in the
position of being as confused and lost as everyone else is in that moment—it’s
part of the disorientation we’re meant to feel. But holy COW that screen was
dark. Not even the fire swords allowed me to be able to tell who was who and
what was happening. Again, I understand they wanted us to be discombobulated,
but at some point you sacrifice realism for entertainment. For the first time
watching this show I insisted on every light being off (for once I didn’t take
notes on first viewing) and even then, there was a hall light and I swore it
was FAR TOO BRIGHT because everything was so dark.
But that’s a very, very minor nitpick.
Because this episode was fucking
spectacular.
Let’s open with the credits! As I told a
friend of mine last night, what you readers at home don’t know about behind the
scenes of me writing these is that I’m contending with a husband who likes to
fastforward through the credits. So every episode usually begins with me
throwing pillows at him and wrestling him for the remote. This season he’s
given up. Last night he was wrangling to get the kids to bed and I was yelling,
“Four minutes until it begins!!” and he yelled back down, “The opening credits
will give me an extra 10 minutes!” Blasphemer.
The blocks of blue ice this week come right
up to the threshold of Winterfell, and while the battlements were in place in
the previous episode, they look more fortified in this one. One thing that was
decidedly different: when the camera swoops into the crypts of Winterfell and
glides along the floor, suddenly all the torches went out one by one. So of
course, I was terrified for everyone in the crypts right from the credit
sequence. (At King’s Landing, by the way, nothing in the credit sequence had
changed except for Cersei sitting out front on a lawn chair holding some
binoculars while Dumbo snoozed nearby. No big.)
We then cut to Sam As All Of Us™, hands
shaking, panting and whimpering, as he’s handed two daggers, one made of
dragonglass. He moves through the Winterfell courtyard as the Unsullied go by
in that weird march that looks like they’ve got sticks up their bottoms, and he
passes by Tyrion, who now takes over this extraordinary opening scene. Theon
pushes Bran’s wheelchair through the courtyard to the Godswood as Bran just
stares creepily at Tyrion—because…Bran—and the imp grabs the essentials for
battle (i.e. a flask of wine before he departs for the crypts) and the camera
pans up after making the first cut of the episode and peers over the parapet of
Winterfell to the Godswood, the first—and virtually only—splash of colour of
the entire episode, save for the white-blue fire, the yellow-orange fire, and
Sansa’s hair.
We watch the troops mobilize while the loud
bass of the soundtrack thrummed like a heartbeat in this opening scene
(seriously, composer Ramin Djawadi reached almost godlike levels scoring this
episode) builds the anticipation until it’s almost excruciating. I LOVED this
opening scene. Davos laying down the arrows, Sansa and Arya waiting on the
parapet, Arya clutching her new weapon, the scream of the dragons as Jon and
Daenerys fly over them, the Unsullied marching to their positions, the camera
slowly panning over that GORGEOUS tableau of all the soldiers standing in
perfect lines.
The Dothraki and other horse riders holding the front line.
Brienne, Jaime, and Podrick… Tormund, Beric, Gendry, Tollett, and the Hound all
holding the second ground troop line. Sam pushing his way to the front of that
one to an eyerolling Tollett: “Oh fer fuck’s sake… you took your time,” he
says, uttering the first words of the episode at the six-minute mark. He speaks
for all of us in this moment: we’ve waited SO LONG for this moment, to watch
all of these people finally display the skills they’ve spent eight years
developing.
And then… silence. Horses pawing at the
ground. Ser Jorah on his horse, looking worried. Ghost pawing the dirt beside him.
(OMG GHOST STAY SAFE.) Jon and Dany sit with the dragons perched on a hillside.
I kept thinking are you guys going to
enter the fray or wait until everyone is slaughtered??!! But perhaps the
dragons have a limited amount of fire and they needed to wait until the exact
right time? As auntie and nephew stand on the hill, it was difficult to gauge
if their tension was due to what they were waiting for on the grounds below, or
what had just happened between them. Or a little of column A, a little of column
B.
And then… a solitary rider arrives and
approaches Ser Jorah. And it’s… Melisandre. The Red Woman. And I cheered. This
is the first we’ve seen her this season, and this is a character who’s
secondary, but who has been the engineer behind SO many things that have
happened on this show. In her bid to get Stannis on the throne because she
believed he was the one true king, she killed Renly Baratheon, helped head up
the ill-fated Battle of the Blackwater, killed Stannis’s daughter Shireen, and
when Shireen actually died (she thought she’d survive being burned at the
stake) Melisandre realized she’d been following the wrong king, and she
switched her sights to Jon Snow. When Jon was killed, it was Melisandre who
resurrected him, believing him now to be the person she once thought Stannis
was. Earlier in the series she had run into Arya when she kidnapped Gendry so
she could bleed him for the Baratheon blood she needed for a spell, and she
looked into Arya’s eyes and saw the faces of the people Arya would kill, and
promised Arya they’d see each other again. So we knew she had to return, and
here she is. And with one spell, she lights up the Dothraki weapons, not only
giving our fearless warriors a leg up on this war, but finally shedding some
goddamn light on that dark, dark field. The scene of the swords all lighting up
is nothing short of spectacular (I can only imagine the domino-like
choreography that went into getting THAT one right!).
“Valar morghulis,” she says to Grey Worm as
she trots by on her horse. All men must
die. “Valar dohaeris,” he responds. All
men must serve.
Melisandre enters Winterfell in what must
be the most fabulous robe she’s worn yet, and Ser Davos rushes down from his
perch. He’s had one goal in his life for the past few years, and it’s to end
the woman who ended the little girl he loved. “There’s no need to execute me,
Ser Davos,” she says. “I’ll be dead before the dawn.” And, knowing she seems to
see things others can’t, he moves aside to let her pass. Might as well let a
walker take her, so her death isn’t on his conscience. She sees Arya again, and
perhaps she sees in her face the faces of those Arya is going to kill, and with
a look of satisfaction, Melisandre enters the castle.
I want to mention how many times in this
episode it pulled back to an overhead shot of the sheer scope of the battle and
it was utterly gorgeous. I kept thinking throughout the episode how lucky we
are to have been rewarded as fans with such a stunning episode.
As the Dothraki charge into battle, their fire
swords light up the world around them as Jon and Daenerys sit on the cliff,
like Greek gods watching the men fight below them. And that’s when the horse
riders hit… the undead.
Christopher: Do they ever. And however beautiful and haunting that sequence
is—all those points of light riding into the darkness only to be silently snuffed
out—all I could really think was “Way to waste the Dothraki!” I know they live
on horseback and consider fighting on foot ignominious, but I’m not entirely
sure what use mounted soldiers have against an army of the undead. Militarily
speaking, cavalry have three principal purposes: quick movement, to flank or
harass foot soldiers; running down retreating infantry when they rout; and
intimidating shaky or shaken enemies into breaking their line. None of these
apply to the horde of ice zombies, who are too numerous to outflank, don’t
retreat, and don’t get scared. It’s uncertain whether their charge was part of
the battle plan (if so, fire whoever came up with THAT idea), or the Dothraki,
always more inclined to impetuous attack, were emboldened by their newly
flaming swords (sorry—their arakhs).
Either way, half of Daenerys’ army is now gone, which does not bode well for
the remaining battles to come.
ALSO. Not really liking the racial politics
of this one—eliminating the Dothraki out of the gate, and then later on it’s
the Unsullied who are tasked with covering the retreat into Winterfell? The
soldiers from Essos seem to be shouldering the balance of sacrifice.
OK, end of griping. Aside from those
concerns, I’m with you Nikki on how beautifully this episode was shot. Yes, it
was dark, often to the point of obscuring the action, but as you say the
confusion and chaos was part of the point, and the not-infrequent crane shots helped
reorient ourselves. I’ve seen a few complaints online that Melisandre’s return
was random and unexpected, but I disagree entirely—in fact, I’d say if she didn’t show up, that would be weird,
because this battle is what she’s been waiting for all her
much-longer-than-appearances-suggest life. What did we think she’s been doing
all this time? Waiting and watching.
In spite of my annoyance at how the
Dothraki are wasted, it did make for an incredibly tense few moments as the
reality of what happened registers on everyone’s faces. A horde of Dothraki
with flaming swords (arakhs) would
normally itself be the stuff of nightmares, but their charge ended in less than
a whimper. The assembled Winterfell forces watch in mounting horror as a tiny
handful of riderless horses—and a few horseless riders—make their panicked way
back to the lines, among them a haunted-looking Ser Jorah.
(But no Ghost? I was concerned about this,
because if they were to kill Ghost offscreen I might be moved to violence. But
never fear—we catch a glimpse of him in the trailer for episode 4).
Cut to Jon and Daenerys on their
promontory, who have a brief disagreement on strategy. “The Night King is
coming!” Jon says as Daenerys moves to mount Drogon. “The dead are already
here,” she snaps back. One would have assumed they’d have figured out their
priorities beforehand, but apparently not. And for what it’s worth, Daenerys
seems to be vindicated, as when dragonfire makes its first explosive appearance
on the battlefield, the troops are already hard pressed.
But before that moment … more tense
waiting, made all the tenser by the guttural croaking of the approaching horde.
And then the tsunami of the dead crashes
against the Unsullied. Speaking as a great fan of the zombie apocalypse genre,
as well as someone who has written about it from a scholarly perspective, it is
my professional opinion that ice zombies are the walking dead you want to face
the LEAST. Were these the shambling ghouls of The Walking Dead, the Unsullied et
al could stand against them for days. But here we have zombies who can not
only sprint, but wield weapons. Not a happy combo for our brave heroes.
Indeed, mere minutes into the battle, it
looks like the defenders are being overwhelmed. We get a fantastic action shot
of Brienne bellowing “STAND YOUR GROUND!”, but even the newly knighted Lady of
Tarth finds herself swamped. In a moment of narrative poetry, Jaime comes to
her rescue; she has reverted to inarticulate screams of rage, reminding us of
the final moments of her fight with the Hound when she brutally pummeled him
with a rock as she made much the same noise.
And then … deus ex draconis, as Drogon swoops in and torches the front ranks
of the dead and giving the defenders a brief reprieve. I loved this shot, as
we’re with Jaime, who looks up in wonder, no doubt remembering the last time he
encountered dragonfire on a battlefield. We cut up to Daenerys above the fray,
and then down again to where Tormund is kicking ass and taking names, and then
to where Sansa and Arya stand on the parapet, seeing for the first time just
what a dragon can do. The look on Sansa’s face seems to say “OK, perhaps
letting her be queen wouldn’t be all bad.”
But then Jon sees where the White Walkers
have arrayed themselves at the treeline, and breaks off to attack. Not in
itself a bad idea, except that the Night King’s not going to make it that
easy—before he can bring them his warm greetings, a blinding storm sweeps in
and envelops him.
And thus begins stage two of the battle …
on the battlements, Arya twigs to the fact that shit just got real, and tells
Sansa to head down to the crypts (remember: the safe place). Over Sansa’s protests, Arya hands her what looks like
a dragonglass dagger. “I don’t know how to use it,” Sansa says, hesitant.
“Stick ‘em with the pointy end,” says Arya, because OF COURSE SHE DOES. Full
circle, people!
Meanwhile, the storm rolls over the ranks
of the defenders, enveloping Daenerys and Drogon as well as they give the
wights one last blast of fire. The people on the ground look about in the newly
opaque air, realizing what Arya just did. Whatever relief from the assault the
dragons gave them? Not so much now. And of course the icy mist descends also in
the Godwood, where we see for the first time Theon and his merry men defending
Bran. (Just as an aside, in the I-wish-I’d-thought-of-that department, my
favourite pop culture critic at NPR, Glen Weldon, has dubbed him “Bran
McGuffin.”) It’s just a moment—enough to obscure everyone gathered around the
weirwood tree—but another of the many of the haunting and beautiful bits of
camera work that make up this episode.
And then: a confused montage of our
favourites. Jorah, unhorsed; Brienne; Tormund; Jaime; Podrick; Gendry; the
Hound; and then, in quick succession, Jaime and Tormund getting jumped from
behind, and then Sam—who looks to have been acquitting himself well—knocked
down and nearly killed, but saved by Edd Tollett. And Edd, in rescuing Sam,
becomes our first Death Of A Key Player, stabbed from behind.
In a brief and wordless interregnum, we
follow Sansa as she makes her reluctant way down into the crypts (pausing and
looking back for an ominous instant as she hears the door crash shut behind
her). She walks into the midst of the people crowded into the space, exchanging
a look first with Missandei, and then Tyrion. The wordless exchange with Tyrion
is perfect: no words, but perfectly articulate. He asks how the battle is
going. She replies, I’m down here now, aren’t I? And then Tyrion uncorks his
wineskin and slugs back a drink because … well, because Tyrion.
Jon Snow, meanwhile, still seems to be in
the first act of How to Train Your Dragon
as he accidentally flies Rhaegal into some treetops. Of course, visibility is
nil, which is why he and Daenerys collide, both almost falling off their rides.
The storm has taken them away from where they need to be.
Back at the gates of Winterfell, phase
three of the battle commences with the command to “Fall back!” Lyanna Mormont
orders the gates opened, admitting a stream of bloodied and broken soldiers;
the Unsullied form a rearguard to protect the retreat (again, I hope the racist
Winterfellians take note), and we get yet another lovely crane shot of the
retreating soldiers pouring through the gaps in the defenses and into the
(relative) safety of Winterfell. Jon and Rhaegal find their way to the wall
around the Godswood (looking like they did some damage to the masonry on
landing), with Jon looking around, presumably, to see if the enemy has taken
the bait.
Not yet. Back out on the battlefield, the
Unsullied show their preternatural discipline, closing ranks against the undead
and retreating one backward step at a time while the rest of Winterfell’s
forces make their way behind its walls. And then Grey Worm sounds the retreat
for the Unsullied, and gives the order to light the trench. Which doesn’t quite
go as planned, initially …
Nikki: When Melisandre initially lit up the Dothraki arakhs, I thought to
myself, “OOOH, fire melts ice!!!” But, of course, ice also extinguishes fire.
This whole battle was like a game of rock/paper/scissors where someone decides
to use a thumbs-up to represent dynamite and you never win. (That would be my
son.) So as the ice of the white walkers has moved across the ground towards
Winterfell, it’s turned the trench spears into icicles and the fire doesn’t
touch them. It’s like watching someone try to light a cigarette when their
lighter is almost out of fluid and it’s -40 outside, and they just flick and
flick and flick.
And that’s when Grey Worm sees the Red Woman stride out of the
Winterfell gates, and he commands the Unsullied to rearrange themselves to
allow her to pass. She holds onto the ice-covered log and begins chanting her
spell as the Hound slices at the walkers, as the Unsullied try to hold the
line, as the undead break through and begin reaching for her. She’s calm at
first, then, as the spell doesn’t take, there’s a waver in her voice, and it’s
only when she shouts the spell with absolute terror that the log she’s holding
suddenly ignites, lighting the entire trench. It’s yet another magnificent
moment of photography as we cut to the overhead picture of the trench as the
ring of fire shoots around Winterfell, keeping the walkers out and the good
guys in.
Of course, the Hound wishes they’d used anything other than fire.
And then… the white walkers just… stop. And
stand there. They’ll wait.
Meanwhile, in the safe zone, Tyrion stands guard over the door while Varys cracks
wise and Sansa just glares. Tyrion hates being down there. “If we were up
there, we might see something everyone else is missing. Something that makes a
difference.”
Varys scoffs.
Tyrion spins around. “What? Remember the
Battle of Blackwater? I brought us through the mudgate.”
“And got your face cut in half,” says
Varys.
“And it made
a difference,” Tyrion sneers. “If I was out there right now…”
“…you’d die,” says Sansa, and she says it
in a way that suggests she’s happy he’s not out there right now. “There’s
nothing you can do,” she says as kindly as she can.
And so he returns to the group, tossing
aside an empty flask to pick up a new full one (ha!). Sansa says the people
down there can’t do anything, that the most heroic thing they can do right now
is look the truth in the face. “Maybe we should have stayed married,” he says.
“You were the best of them,” she remarks.
“What a terrifying thought!!” he says with
some shock. But she’s not wrong: when compared to Joffrey Lannister, Ramsay
Bolton, and Petyr Littlefinger, Tyrion was one of the good guys. But she adds
that their marriage never would have worked because of his divided loyalties
with the dragon queen.
“Yes,” Missandei pipes up, showing that
EVERYONE is listening to this conversation. “Without the dragon queen there’d
be no problem at all. We’d all be dead already.” Touché.
Back to the Godswood, Theon notices the
trench has been lit, and tells Bran. Bran McGuffin (genius) turns silently and
just stares at him. Theon completes another step of his 12-step program and
tries to make amends with him, but Bran doesn’t allow him to. He says
everything Theon has done has brought him home, to Winterfell. “I’m going to go
now,” Bran says, as if he was ever really there, and then his eyes turn white
and it’s Wargapalooza Time.
Cut to the ravens in the trees, who swoop
over the battle as Bran’s personal drone system, and they fly into the
blizzard, knowing only they can zero in on one thing: the Night King. And he
senses Bran in them, and looking at them from atop Viserion’s back, he reaches
out to them. He’s coming.
Back to the stoic walkers who continue to
just stand there, and my husband and I are like, “They aren’t moving!! Shoot them with your arrows now, for god’s sakes,
just mow them down!!” But everyone seems too confused to do a damn thing.
Of course, once Monsieur Roi de la Nuit shows up, it’ll all be moot anyway so
it didn’t really matter. But still.
And that’s when the undead begin throwing
themselves on the pyre. At first it doesn’t make much sense until Ser Davos
looks down the line and realizes they’re creating undead bridges for the other walkers
to cross over. I always thought the Unsullied were the greatest warriors the
world has ever seen, but when your forces have no brains and don’t really give
a shit… wow. And then everyone moves inward to man the walls, as Jon looks up
and sees the Night King arrive on Viserion.
The dead hit the walls and at first you’d
think the guys on top have an advantage just by virtue of being above them, but
it’s not long before the white walkers simply begin forming an inhuman chain up
the side and climbing on top of each other, like a slower version of that scene
in World War Z. Up on the parapets
you now have many of the soldiers who’d just been holding the front lines:
Jaime, Gendry, Tormund, Brienne, Jorah, Grey Worm, and the dead—in various
states of deadness—begin climbing the walls as the entire horde behind them
approaches VERY QUICKLY. Brienne begins just Monica Selesing her way through
all of them as Sam sits on the ground whimpering and crying and realizing dead
things or not, the crypts would have
been the safer place. Did anyone else think Sam, why didn’t you just listen,
because Tollett already died saving you and now Jaime’s having to focus on
saving you instead of fighting the battle? I love you, Sam, but when Sansa said
the most heroic thing they could do is admit they can’t help on the
battlefield, I thought of you.
As Beric’s flaming sword slices through the
army and the knights try to hold the parapet with limited success, we cut to
the Hound standing in a doorway, breathing heavily and momentarily paralyzed,
just as he was back in the Battle of Blackwater when faced with so much fire.
“Clegane!!” yells Beric, who can’t reach him at all.
Meanwhile, on the other side of the
courtyard parapet, Arya finally unleashes her amazing weapon and goes to town.
I LOVED this scene. She seems almost invincible with this spear, using it
exactly the way Jaqen H’ghar had taught her when he took her eyes from her. But
soon there are too many of them.
As Arya falls into the courtyard she sees (oh
my heart) the undead version of Wun Wun, who died tragically at Winterfell
when, riddled with arrows Saint Sebastian–style, Ramsay Bolton shot him in the
right eye and killed him, prompting Jon to rush Ramsay and beat him to death
with his bare hands.
Now Wun Wun has returned to the scene of
where he died, and standing in the exact spot where he took his final breaths,
he’s faced by the tiny but mighty… Lyanna Mormont. Whom he instantly flings
aside as if she were a hamster.
We cut to Sandor Clegane, who tells Beric
that they should just give up; there’s no winning this one. “We can’t beat
them! Don’t you see that, you stupid whore? We’re fighting death. We can’t beat
death.”
“Tell her
that,” Beric says, as the Hound looks up and sees Arya fighting a horde of
white walkers against the odds. Without a moment’s hesitation, the Hound races
into battle to save the only person he’s ever cared about.
And back to Lyanna Mormont, who was not killed by the giant, but who instead
stands up, her body broken, and, raising her dragonglass axe, she races at him
in a hobbled way, screaming the whole way with so much determination my heart
swelled. Wun Wun reaches down and grabs her like King Kong grabbing Fay Wray,
and he squeezes her. We can see her armour denting inwards, and can imagine her
ribs beginning to break one by one. My husband: “Well, she’s toast.” Me: “She’s
going to die a hero. They know how
much we need that.” She knows she’s not coming back from this one, but with her
final ounce of strength she reaches up and stabs Wun Wun’s remaining eye with
her dagger, and dies a beautiful, heroic death. I know some people probably
thought she was a very minor character, but I adored Lyanna Mormont, and truly
hoped she was part of the future of Westeros. I needed a moment after this one.
But we don’t get moments to recover in this
episode, for it’s back to the skies and the dragons.
Christopher: Was that really Wun Wun, though? I mean, I definitely think we’re
meant to think so, what with the empty right eye socket and all, but the
logistics are all wonky. Wun Wun died in the courtyard of Winterfell. They
would not have sent his body back north of the Wall, and it has been custom
since season one for the wildlings to burn their dead. I suppose it’s possible
he was buried outside the castle walls and the Night King resurrected him as
his army advanced, but the episode very clearly suggests that he did not deploy
that particular whammy until after Daenerys tried to dracarys him to death. Also, in the final episode of last season,
we see among the serried ranks of the ice zombies a handful of zombified
giants. So if we’re supposed to think
this in Wun Wun, which I think we are, that’s just bad work on the part of the
continuity editor.
But yes, back to the skies and the dragons,
where, halfway into the episode, we get the first bit of the confrontation we
think we’ve been waiting for. Except not really: a lot of the anticipation for
this particular battle had to do with the showdown between zombie Viserion and
his not-dead brothers, figuring an epic battle in the skies to mirror the epic
battle on the ground. But there’s actually not all that much dragon-fighting to
be had: the Night King comes blasting at Jon and Daenerys in a blaze of blue
fire, but just as quickly dives away toward the ground, leaving auntie and
nephew hovering above the clouds, baffled, for an unconscionable interval. I
mean, it’s really only about ten seconds, but COME ON. There’s the Big Bad—get
him!
Then we cut to Arya re-enacting the third
act of World War Z as she sneaks
around trying desperately not to attract the attention of the undead in what
appears to be a library. Which, I have to say, is my least favourite scene in
the episode—even though it is tense and scary, it doesn’t make much sense.
There aren’t a huge number of wights, and after Arya’s previous scene of
wholesale undead obliteration, I was wondering if she’d lost her weapons,
and—oh, nope. Stabbed one in the chin. I suppose if it were any other character
(like the Hound, e.g.) we might allow for trauma breaking their ability to
fight, but this is Arya—she fed
Walder Frey’s sons through a meat grinder and served them to him in a pie, for
the Old Gods’ sake. Watching her skulk about in fear is about a believable as
seeing Daryl Dixon lose their shit over a handful of zombies in season nine.
The whole point of this sequence, it
becomes clear, is to set up Arya’s rescue by Beric … which is a bit of
narrative gerrymandering I don’t particularly care for. But that will come up
momentarily. In the interim, we cut from Arya’s panicked flight down a dark
corridor back to the crypts, where the silence of the huddled masses is broken
by the sound of bodies crashing against the crypt door, panicked cries of the
defenders, and the shrieks of the dead. And then—as we focus on Sansa’s worried
face—silence again.
Oh, don’t worry, people. You’ll have stuff
to panic about soon enough.
But first, back to the creepy dark
corridors. Beric and the Hound come sneaking around the corner, and are in
place to come to the rescue when a door is knocked off the hinges by a wight
attacking Arya. Beric saves her by throwing his flaming sword and then scooping
her off the ground and (more or less) throwing her at the Hound while a zombie
manages to stick a dagger in his calf. Arya and the Hound get away while Beric—sans flaming sword, which is why you
should never throw your sword—is
overwhelmed. Arya picks up an ax and is about to rejoin the fight, but the
Hound picks her up and runs while Beric, at long last, dies a permanent death
(poor Arya—she’s like a cat, nature’s perfect killing machine, but small enough
to pick up).
The fact that Beric dies in a Christ pose
is a point I’m just going to ignore.
Still, he’s alive enough to make it with
them into an empty room that they barricade themselves inside. He dies with no
final words as Arya watches, anguished, and the shadow behind her resolves
itself into the cloaked and hooded figure of Melisandre. “The Lord brought him
back for a purpose,” she says. “Now, that purpose has been served.” “I know
you,” Arya says, though what I really wanted her to say was, “Hey, my new
boyfriend and I were just talking about how you put leeches all over him.” (I
suppose that would not have matched the tone of the moment). And then: the hint
I really should have taken about how this episode would end, when Arya recalls
Melisandre’s prophecy that she would close many eyes. “Brown eyes, green eyes,”
Melisandre acknowledges, and then after a suggestive pause, “and blue eyes.” I
assumed at the moment she meant the legion of wights Arya had permanently
furloughed, but no …
“What do we say to the God of Death?”
Melisandre then asks. “Not today,” Arya replies, and they share a significant
look. And while the Hound brandishes his ax in anticipation of the dead
breaking through the barricaded door, Arya runs off in a different direction to
… where?
Well, we get a bit of a hint when the scene
shifts to the Godswood as Theon & co. can now hear the croaks and cries of
the dead. “Here they come!” he warns, and the protective circle around Bran
ignite their arrows.
But we move swiftly on from there to the
skies, and the Night King’s descent upon Winterfell. Viserion blasts the walls
with his blue fire, but isn’t able to wreak too much damage as Rhaegal hits
him, and they grapple while Theon and his men shoot fire arrows into the
marauding wights. The two dragons claw and bite at each other, and the Night
King tries to aim his ice spear, but can’t make his target. And then: deus ex Daenerys, swooping in and
knocking the Night King from Viserion. But Jon and Rhaegal are also knocked out
of the sky, with Rhaegal making a rough landing that pitches Jon from his back.
Daenerys remains airborne, however, and
zeroes in on where the Night King touched down. He looks up at her and she
utters what should be the coup de grace:
“Dracarys.”
Except … well, not so much. Apparently,
Night Kings are immune to dragonfire? Which, I assume, makes them the only
being in existence that is. Until this moment, the Big Bad has never shown
anything resembling emotion, but right now he is definitely smug. And will
remain so for the rest of the episode. He picks up his ice lance and hurls it
at Drogon; Daenerys, remembering what happened to Viserion, wisely beats a
retreat.
Meanwhile, Jon Snow, now earthbound,
unsheathes his sword and follows the Night King … who pauses, turns around, and
very theatrically raises his hands—slowly!—and does his thing.
Nikki: And every warrior from Winterfell looks around them and just
screams, “Oh FFS!!!!”
Before we get to the Return of the Living
Dead, I completely agree with you on the Arya scene in that library. After we
watched many, many episodes of her learning to fight with a spear whilst blind,
of putting on another face and killing with it, of basically being the most
ruthless assassin in the world… to have her cowering over a few walkers and
then saved by two men was a little… bah. I kept hoping she’d corner a walker,
take its face, and then pretend to be one and just take them out one by one.
Sadly that did not happen. But the one thing that did make me happy about that
scene was Melisandre saying that Beric’s entire purpose was to save one person.
She knew. She knew what was going to happen at the end of this episode.
(And on the Wun Wun front, I paused the
scene and slowly moved it ahead frame by frame, comparing it to previous
footage of the actual alive Wun Wun, and I’m pretty sure it was him; I always try to make sure of these things before
making assumptions, but you never know with this show; I could be wrong. There
were only two giants left, and only one of them lost his right eye. But you’re
right; if they’d burned him, how the heck did the Night King get him? And if
they didn’t burn him, why the hell not? They had a gazillion other bodies to
burn while they were at it… Perhaps they decided to sacrifice continuity for
poetry.)
But ANYWAY, back to the very fabulous Night
King, who, as you say, is incredibly theatrical—I half expected him to say,
“Showtime!” You know, if he ever had anything to say. We see the dead rise on
the battlefield, with Jon looking around thinking oh great here we go again. We see the bodies rise at Winterfell,
with Sam and Podrick and Brienne and Jaime all wide-eyed, like this can’t
actually be happening.
And then Lyanna Mormont opens her ice-blue
eyes (Noooooooo!) and Tollett opens his (oh come ONNNNN) and I thought if you
make me lose my beloved Lyanna Mormont a
second time so help me I will march on HBO myself with my three cats
marching beside me with wings tied to their backs. (Well, “march” is probably
too strong a word; they’d all have gone purposely limp by that point and I’d be
dragging them along the ground by leashes but it’s the principle, people.)
It was at this point I felt like the Hound,
and almost gave up completely. I mean, what shot do they honestly have left at
this point?? They have the white walkers PLUS their own dead companions
fighting against them. They can cut someone down, but the person will just get
up again? What’s the bloody point? The Night King just stares Jon down, and Jon
looks back at him like, “I hate you so much right now” as the dead begin to
fight him.
And then we cut to the very safe crypts. Sigh. You called it, my friend. The Stark arms
began shooting out of the sides of the concrete crypts and I thought for SURE
we were going to see a reanimated headless Ned coming after them. Thankfully
the showrunners didn’t go there—my heart wouldn’t have been able to take it at this
point. These were the really old and dusty Starks, though I assume Lyanna was
among them, which makes me sad to even comprehend. Sansa, Gilly, Tyrion, and
everyone just stand there with gaping mouths like they can’t believe this is
happening. And one by one, the walkers begin grabbing the women and children
who thought it would be safer down here.
Now to the Godswood, where Theon and his
fellow soldiers are… actually doing a hell of a job. He turns to check Bran at
one point who, nope, still white-eyed.
“Bran…”
“…”
“Bran…”
“Shhh… taking in Avengers Endgame, it opened this weekend…”
“Bran, we don’t—”
“SHHHHH.”
Cut back to Jon, also doing a formidable job at this point until, as you say,
there’s another Daenerys ex machina.
Jon shouts “Bran!” at her, and she tells him to go. But unfortunately she
watches him run away a little too long, and suddenly Drogon is absolutely
covered in ice zombies. Daenerys is thrown from her beloved child’s back, and
Drogon takes to the sky, shaking the bodies off as he flies. So NOW we not only
have white walkers and reanimated undead, but fucking bodies falling from the fucking sky. Like, how amazing was
that??! Just when you think you’ve seen it all, we cut back to Winterfell and
bodies are just falling in droves from the parapets, from the sky, from the
balconies… Jon cuts his way through as we see Sam looking overwhelmed by the
fighting (OMG), Brienne and Podrick and Jaime all holding their own. Jon fights
his way through the crowd of walkers, and slams a gate closed as the arms flail
through the slats trying to grab him. “This is the best episode of The Walking Dead I have EVER SEEN!” I
shouted at my husband at this point. Don’t ask why, but somehow this whole confluence
of events—raining bodies, warriors all still fighting, walkers still
coming—made me positive gleeful as a TV fan.
Back to Theon, who is fighting better than
I’ve ever seen him fight, as if he refuses to get scared off like he did when
Yara was kidnapped. He zings arrow after arrow, as if Legolas was his archery
teacher, until he reaches into the bucket… and there are no more arrows. So he
just starts hitting walkers with his bow, and eventually stabs one and kills
it.
Daenerys isn’t so lucky, as she watches her
once-faithful Dothraki now turn blue-eyed and as menacing as the day she first
met them, and as they come at her one by one we realize Daenerys is a leader,
but she’s no fighter. She’s always used her dragons, and Rhaegal is currently
MIA and Drogon has just taken off to try to swat the walkers off him. Just as
it looks like it’s the end of our platinum-haired queen, Ser Jorah swoops to
the rescue, with Heartsbane taking out one walker after another.
Meanwhile, down in the safe space, Sansa
and Tyrion hide at the end of one of the crypts while listening to the
slaughter happening on the outside. Sansa realizes there’s no hope left, and
she pulls out the dragonglass dagger that Arya gave her. She looks at Tyrion,
who gives her a look of resignation. He knows they have no other choice, and he
knows this might be the last time he looks upon the lovely face of his ex-wife.
He gives her a weak smile, takes her hand and kisses it, and takes a deep
breath.
Here the music is extraordinary. Just a
quiet song played on the piano, with snippets of the themes we’ve heard
throughout the series. It plays loudly while the diegetic sounds fall to the
background. Ser Jorah continues to fight through the walkers. Jon dodges
Viserion’s blast and the walkers break through the gate. Daenerys cries out in
fear as Ser Jorah falls to one knee but keeps going. Theon refuses to stop
battling even though he’s long run out of weapons. The Night King walks around
the corner in slow motion with his soldiers by his side. Jaime and Brienne and
Podrick continue fighting, now mowing down the soldiers who’d stood at their
side only moments before. Sam lies on a heap of bodies, crying, as Jon forces
himself to keep moving and not stop to save him.
And back at the Godswood, Theon swings and
swings and swings… until there are no men left. As the camera pans above them,
you see scores of dead soldiers on the ground, and only Theon standing. It’s
incredible.
Bran’s eyes flip forward, and Theon looks
at the Night King, flanked by his soldiers, with two large crowds of white
walkers standing on either side of the Godswood, and he knows this is it. He
can’t fight anymore. He can no longer protect Bran. As he stares at the Night
King, his eyes well up. “Theon,” Bran says behind him. “You’re a good man.”
Only it sounds like he says, “You were a good man.” Tenses, Bran… TENSES. The
camera slowly move in on Theon. “Thank you,” Bran says.
And with that, Theon’s character has come
full circle. A casualty of a war his father started, taken as a child as a
hostage, raised as an outsider in a close-knit family, rejected by his own
family when he returns… a failed uprising, failed battles, failed reunions…
Theon’s entire arc on this show has been one of one failure after another,
until he was physically emasculated by a man he trusted, his entire being taken
from him, ground down to absolutely nothing and no one. And then he’s worked so
hard to try to rise out of that, to become a real person again. Now he stands,
on the verge of apocalypse, as the lone person between life and death of all
civilization, and he may have failed again. He’s made his amends, and Bran
telling him he’s a good man is possibly the greatest thing anyone could say to
him.
And so he does the only thing he can, and
he runs at the Night King with everything he’s got. His death is a quick one,
and Bran is unmoved (natch). Theon dies at Winterfell, the place of his
greatest sorrows, and his greatest joys. Alfie Allen did a tremendous job of
making us hate Theon for so many years on this show, and did an even more
astounding job making us like him again. Now THAT is a tour de force
performance.
But you ain’t seen nothin’ yet.
Christopher: No, because you’re about to see the DEUS EX ARYA! (Which,
incidentally, is the text I sent Nikki moments after the episode ended).
OK, so before I get into the awesomeness,
the obvious quibbles: first, this was a pretty cheap solution to a
seven-and-a-half seasons long enmity, one that evoked at once the logic of Lost Boys (kill the original vampire,
and all those it sired die) and the end of The
Avengers (somehow the Chitauri all die when their home base gets blowed
up). Of course, we’ve been primed for such an ending, from the moment last
season when killing a White Walker caused all the zombies to collapse like
snipped marionettes; and it was made explicit in the previous episode when Bran
as much as said, kill the Night King and destroy all his works. So we knew this
had only one ending.
But it still felt a bit easy. I won’t get
into it here, but might do so in an another ancillary blog post in which I talk
about the contradictions of genre in GoT.
But not now, and not on this day. I suspect
I’m not alone in assuming it would be Jon Snow who gave the Night King his
quietus, and was thus getting increasingly anxious at his inability to get past
Viserion. As I say above, I missed the import of Melisandre’s reference to blue
eyes. Never have I been happier to be wrong: Arya brings it, and does so with a
move she showed us when sparring with Brienne, dropping the blade from one hand
to the other. Dragonfire might not perturb the Night King, but Valyrian steel
does the trick … and speaking of full circles, we should note that that dagger
was the one that put much of the action of GoT into play: given to an assassin
to kill Bran, its ownership (falsely) ascribed to Tyrion by Littlefinger, which
prompted Catelyn Stark to abduct Tyrion and take him to the Eyrie, and which
finds it way into Arya’s hand and facilitates Littlefinger’s execution.
The Night King shatters into a million
little pieces, as do all his lieutenants, and then all the wights—including
Viserion, who was about to give Jon Snow a blast of his blue fire—fall to the
ground, to the amazement of all our heroes. And a moment after the zombies
collapse, so does Ser Jorah, what last strength he had holding him upright
leaving him. He dies in Daenerys’ arms as she sobs, but then, I have to assume
that would have been his preferred mode of death had you asked him. It’s a
lovely moment, but what made we well up was when Drogon joined her in her
mourning, sheltering her in the crook of his wing and resting his head sadly on
the ground.
Jorah’s death is part of a montage of our
heroes surveying the ambivalent field of victory, which ends with the Hound
coming out into the courtyard with Melisandre. While he pauses in exhaustion,
she walks on out through the gates, shucking her red cloak as she passes
between the piles of the dead. Someone follows—Davos, with his hand on his
sword, as if he’s ready to make certain she will in fact die before dawn. But
he stops and watches as she walks out under the lightening sky. She tears her
necklace from her neck—the one with the glowing red stone we realized, some
time ago, provides her the glamour to appear young and beautiful—and drops it
to the snowy ground.
Davos watches as she grows small in the
distance, her hair going white and her clothes sloughing off her, until finally
she collapses into the snow.
Gah. This episode was a kidney punch. It
was emotionally eviscerating. It had flaws galore, as we’ve cited throughout
this discussion, but its grace notes and emotional payoffs far outweighed them.
It will be interesting to see what Winterfell looks like by daylight in the
aftermath of this battle, and what happens next … and how it happens next.
That’s it for this week, friends! Take a
moment or ten to hug someone you love, and we’ll see you next week.
4 comments:
Great episode yet flawed by the darkness. We watched on an 80" screen in the dark and still couldn't tell what was happening during the dragon fight except to see the Night King fall. We were also unsure why Arya didn't just cut down the few zombies in the library unless she thought if one saw her the rest would automatically know where she was.
The White Walkers really suck at being bodyguards - none of them even saw or tried to stop Arya?
Also - what time period is this and how did Melisandre have the Reality Stone all this time?
-Tim Alan
I loved that Arya was the one to make that final blow, though I do feel like there weren't enough deaths - some of the survivals felt like plot armor (as a friend of mine said) than reality, but the deaths we did get were gutting.
My biggest complaint is the handling of things in the crypt. While I loved that moment between Sansa and Tyrion, I was waiting for the two of them to come up with the brilliant plan to save everyone down there, rather than simply standing around. It felt like a massive lost opportunity for the people in the crypt. Why even bring out the Stark zombies at all? It felt like it just distracted from other things and had no real payoff.
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Great recap, as always! Two minor things, both of which were brought to light by Joanna Robinson on the Cast of Kings podcast:
1. Apparently it was mentioned to Robinson by those responsible for the episode, either Benioff & Weiss or perhaps by director Miguel Sapochnik, that Arya's behavior in the library was affected by her serious bleeding head wound. In other words, she was not quite operating at full power just then. I think we can see that she rallies after her conversation with Melisandre after Beric's death.
2. In response to the commenter above who says the White Walkers suck at being bodyguards: remember that Arya has spent years on the show learning to be a ninja-like assassin. She has already proven she can get very close to powerful men undetected. Although we didn't explicitly see her do that in this episode (because it would have ruined the surprise) I believe we have more than enough evidence through Arya's history to infer that she'd have no trouble getting past the Night King's henchmen.
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