Welcome to another week of our recap of Game of Thrones! As always, I'm joined by Christopher Lockett, my old university chum who is now an English and pop culture prof at MUN in Newfoundland (which, in some months, is about as habitable as being north of the Wall).
Couple of things I wanted to mention off the top that I found particularly amusing. Last week's South Park had a great bit in it where the boys are having a discussion in the classroom about two kids, and in the background Mr. Garrison is teaching World History... and if you listen to what he's saying, he's actually recapping the season 1 plot of Game of Thrones. Here's a screencap of his blackboard. Haha!!
And secondly, Damon Lindelof was actively on a Hodor kick on Twitter this week, and every time he tweeted I would laugh out loud. (Hodor is the guy who carries Bran everywhere, and the only word he ever says is "Hodor.")
Don't tell anyone, but I'm writing all the dialogue for Hodor this season.— Damon Lindelof (@DamonLindelof) April 27, 2012
Hodor's shtick would be much less affable if his name was "Fucknuts."— Damon Lindelof (@DamonLindelof) April 27, 2012
"Knock Knock.""Who's there?""Hodor.""Hodor Who?""Hodor Hodor Hodor Hodor Hodor, Hodor Hodor!!!!"— Damon Lindelof (@DamonLindelof) April 27, 2012
(Incidentally, Kristian Nairn, who plays Hodor, tweeted back at him, "I could work with fucknuts, man.")
OK! On to our recap. This week it's Chris's turn to start.
Christopher: Well, if it wasn’t already
perfectly clear, this episode established firmly the GRRM law of narrative
causality: if things look as if they’re starting to stabilize and get better,
that’s when you have to look out for a Lost-esque smoke
monster in the shape of your estranged brother behind you.
Or something to that effect. We begin, as we so often do in
this series, with the best laid plans of stags and wolves going pear-shaped.
Can it be? An alliance between Robb and Renly, with Joffrey’s doom in sight?
D’oh! No, of course not … that would be too easy. Of course, on the bright
side, now Stannis has most of Renly’s army, which will surely be enough to
smash the Lannisters. Right? Right?
OK, that’s as close to spoilery as I want to get. Last week I
opened my comments with the speculation on when we’d get a tepid episode …
which in hindsight wasn’t a fair question. Renly’s shocking death
notwithstanding, this episode certainly didn’t keep ratcheting up the tension
and the surprises (or, to use Nikki’s lovely expression, the oogy factor), but
it was riveting nonetheless and provided a lot of foundational exposition for
what is to come—and in a set us up for the next few big plot points. There were
a lot of pregnant hints (an expression I’m leery of using after last week’s
finale with Melisandre), but I won’t list them, again for fear of being seen as
spoilery.
Instead, I’ll lead us off this week with Brienne the Beauty,
the Maid of Tarth, who had her first really big moment after Renly is
killed—her palpable grief for her slain king bookending an exhibition of her
martial prowess as she handily dispatches the men who attack her on the
assumption that she is the murderess. It becomes clear here (if it wasn’t
before—and I don’t think it was, exactly, at least not in the series) that she
is hopelessly in love with Renly, and that he has won her love and loyalty in
part because he is willing to acknowledge her as a knight and does not mock her
like the rest of his lords. His death shatters her, and all she can think of is
revenge—but fortunately for her, Catelyn is present to show her reason, and as
a result she ends up swearing fealty to Lady Stark … with the proviso, of
course, that she is free to carry out her vengeance on Stannis later.
The Brienne-Catelyn relationship is an interesting one, as it
is in the novels. Brienne’s comments to Catelyn later—that she has “a woman’s
kind of courage”—could be seen as ironic, but Brienne is a character who
doesn’t indulge in irony or, really, invite it. She is a woman in a man’s role,
but her unrequited love for Renly (and her constant feeling of hurt at all the
barbs and japes men level at her) don’t let us simply map a stereotypically
masculine sensibility onto her. It will be interesting to see where the series
takes her: in the novels, though it is never made explicit, Brienne’s bitter
reminisces about her awkward girlhood suggest that, given the choice, she would
have been beautiful and feminine. One way or another, it is always clear that,
however inured she gets to them, slights against her homeliness (to paraphrase
Arya) cut deeper than swords.
What do you think, Nikki?
Nikki: Wow, your explanation of Brienne
makes me want to read the books even more. As someone who’s not yet used to the
“Quick, look behind you!… oops. Sorry, Mr Main Character, you got too
comfortable being alive” world of GRRM (though Joss Whedon should have prepared
me for it), I completely fell for the easy alliance between Renly and the
Starks. I should have known better. And I also hope I’m not the only
Lost fan in the audience who said, “Brother killed by angry
smoke monster? SEEN IT!!” Before, of course, realizing that GRRM wrote this
scene long before Darlton wrote theirs.
But once Renly bit it, Brienne being attacked by the two
guards made me scream; I thought they were actually going to kill her off, too,
and I barely knew her! Thank goodness that woman is AMAZING with a sword. She
was a marvel in this episode; from her palpable grief over Renly’s death (and I
didn’t realize she was in love with Renly, I thought she was just a
really, really loyal knight of the king’s guard, especially
when you see the anger in the others when they see his body) to the way she
bows before Catelyn and swears her fealty to her, I was completely taken by
her. And what an extraordinary actress they’ve found to play her. Gwendolyne
Christie is actually 6’3”, and in an interview with SFX this week she was quoted as saying:
"I wanted the part so very badly because from reading the books the character was so like elements of myself . . . I've not come across a part like this before, whereby the complexities of being an extremely tall woman are explored. So I decided I had to go all out for it."
I’m
thinking the casting agents must have stifled loud squeals of “OH MY GOD SHE’S
PERFECT” when she entered the audition room.
I agree
that this episode was very plot-heavy, and needed to move some things along to
get us to the next stage, but as you say, that doesn’t mean it was slow by any
means. Stannis “impregnated” Melisandre with an angry vengeful smokey sludge
monster that could take his form and kill the person standing in his way. Arya,
on the other hand, uses less carnal methods and happens upon a man in Harrenhal
who offers to help her off three people she needs gone. Like a strange-talking,
less Robin Williams–version of Aladdin’s genie in the lamp, Jaqen H’ghar is the
man she freed from the burning cart back at the camp before she was captured as
a prisoner. I knew then that the writers were pointing him out as someone to
remember. She decides to test him by asking him to kill the torturer, which he
does, peering out from behind a window and holding up one finger, indicating to
her and her alone that he’s finished one, and now she has two left. Who will
they be?! Could she risk revealing herself and say, “Well, in that case,
Joffrey and Cersei, go to it!” Or will she be more devious? My money’s on the
latter. Arya is one smart cookie, and now that she’s on the inside as Tywin’s
little assistant and cup-bearer, she can hear the goings-on. Oh, how I loved
the scene when he asked her where she was from, and she bungled the first lie
but managed the second one so beautifully (as if she’s a master hustler) that
he believed her, and then asked her what her people think of Robb Stark. She
speaks of him not as a sister but as one who would have grown up in the north,
raised by myth, and tells him that Robb has been known to ride into battle on
the back of a direwolf and cannot be killed.
“Do you
believe that?” Tywin asks the little girl, amused by her admiration.
“No.
Anyone can be killed,” she answers back, staring into his
eyes and looking like she may have unnerved the great man. Tyrion has grown up
in the shadow of his father, a brilliant man who values intelligence in others.
And Arya may be the one to outwit him in the end. What a fantastic scene.
Christopher:
I love how perturbed Tywin looks at Arya’s reply—however self-assured and
powerful he is, he still can’t hold her gaze for long. Have I mentioned lately
how brilliant Maesie Williams is as Arya? I feel as though I should say that
several times per post, because not only does she not exhibit many of the flaws
most child actors exhibit, she’s easily on par with everyone else in the cast,
and better than most. (The only other show I’ve seen with child actors this
good was The Wire—and in my TV universe, that’s the highest
praise there is). I’d go so far as to
say she’s as good as Dinklage. If she doesn’t get a nomination for an Emmy this
year, I say we go all Khal Drogo on their asses.
I’m
loving how the Arya story arc is being handled this season, in part because the
Arya-at-Harrenhal is one of my favourite sequences out of the novels so far. In
having her captured right away, the writers made a shrewd choice … in the
novel, they have her and Gendry and Hot Pie stumbling through the countryside
for a long while before finally being caught by the Lannister men, and if they
needed to jettison some of the story, I’m happy this was one of their choices.
Arya’s “reunion” with Jaqen was done beautifully—the actor they have playing
him is spot-on (incidentally, in her email when she sent me her last
installment, Nikki said she thought there was a distinctive resemblance between
Jaqen and myself … she didn’t mention it here, but I’m doing it, because
really, that’s just terribly flattering. He’s a handsome man, both in the books
and in the series).
Obviously
Jaqen is a character of some significance, but I specifically encourage all the
GRRM newbies to pay attention to him—he becomes a pivot-point in Arya’s story.
Not now, but later …
Turning
to the frigid north—well, I guess winter has come. (Though speaking as someone
living in Newfoundland: that was what April 30th looked like when I woke up).
The Night Watch’s rangers have traveled past the Haunted Forest and into an
arctic snowscape, and put down stakes in an ancient and indeed primeval
fortress, the “Fist of the First Men.” We meet Qorin Halfhand, who takes a
small group, including Jon Snow, to scout the approaches to where the Wildlings
are mustering. I must say, all of the northern sequences were pretty
spectacular—they were filmed in Iceland. In an interview, Kit Harrington—the
actor playing Jon—said ruefully that there were no special effects at work.
“When you see us shivering,” he said, “it’s because we’re freezing our arses
off.”
Aside
from the introduction of Qorin, a peripheral character much-loved in GRRM fan
circles, all the Watch segments were mostly expository, setting us up for some
big moments next week. People who have read the books, you know what I’m
talkin’ about. Heh.
There
was one particular moment in King’s Landing this week that set my professorial
and theatrical bells ringing, and which called to mind an essay I read in
Salon just after the season started. Laura
Miller did an interesting piece highlighting the fact that GRRM was
as inspired by medieval European history as by such novels as The Lord
of the Rings, in particular the Wars of the Roses, the
fifteenth-century English civil war between the houses of Lancaster and York
(as Miller points out, Lancaster and York are pretty decent phonetic parallels
to Lannister and Stark), chronicled among others by William Shakespeare in
Henry VI parts one through three. Miller does a nice job of
pointing out some of the analogues: the womanizing and ultimately dissolute
King Edward IV for Robert Baratheon; the cold and scheming Margaret of Anjou
for Cersei; but she ignores what is to me the most obvious—and most interesting
and subversive—parallel.
Well … I say obvious, but it didn’t occur
to me until Tyrion hears a street preacher charge that the king dances “to the
tune of a twisted demon monkey.” As I said, that rang a bell in my head:
Grim-visaged war hath smooth'd his wrinkled
front;
And now, instead of mounting barbed
steeds
To fright the souls of fearful adversaries,
He capers nimbly in a lady's chamber
To the lascivious pleasing of a lute.
Recognize it? It’s from the famous Winter
of our Discontent speech at the beginning of Richard III, a
play near and dear to my heart because it was the first one I ever directed (in
fact, now that I think of it—Nikki, you came to the closing night! The guy
I had playing Richard took your mom up on stage during one of his soliloquies).
Ahem. Sorry, memory lane and all that. The
key part comes just after those lines:
But I, that am not shaped for sportive
tricks,
Nor made to court an amorous looking-glass;
I, that am rudely stamp'd, and want love's
majesty
To strut before a wanton ambling nymph;
I, that am curtail'd of this fair
proportion,
Cheated of feature by dissembling nature,
Deformed, unfinish'd, sent before my
time
Into this breathing world, scarce half made
up …
Is Tyrion a Richard III character? The more
I think of it, the more it makes sense to me. Not a Shakespearean Richard, who
is implacably and delightfully evil, perhaps, but a shrewd and at times
ruthless man whose physical disadvantages force him to be smarter than everyone
around him.
What do you think, Nikki? Am I off base
here?
Nikki: Wow, I think
you’re right on home plate, actually. Brilliant observation. Like Richard III,
Tyrion is a intelligent character who is held back by a physical “deformity,”
and while we root for him, we know many of the things he does is wrong. I think
Tyrion may follow a more ethical code (“Man’s gotta have a code…” Total sidebar
here: Tell me you watched Community last week! It was
brilliant) but I think you’re dead on with the comparison.
I see a Pop Culture Association paper
brewing.
Now, as for the other thing (my likening
you to the guy I like to spell Jackenheier, because I have to check the real
spelling about six times to get it right…), it’s seriously in the eyes, dude.
When he turned to the side, and looked sideways at Arya, I actually said aloud,
“WOW, he looks like Chris Lockett!!” As I said in my email, we need to get you
a wig with a white stripe in it.
And on another sidebar, Chris sent me this
photo he found a year ago, taken back in 1999 (!) and I’ve been looking for the
right time to post it, and I say now! Look for yourself and see if you can see
the resemblance. (OK, maybe I needed one less smiley and moodier…)
Which of these scenarios do you think is
pictured here?:
A) Chris and me on our wedding day
B) the two of us backstage after we
appeared in a Shakespearean comedy together (one that ended in a wedding)
C) the two of hanging out at school, where
we both decided to get unusually dressed up for the day to see if people would
notice
D) a picture of Chris on his wedding day,
and I just showed up a little overdressed (and pissed off the bride)
Oh wait... I have a better way of doing this. Behold:
They have the same way of looking at you... I know I'm not imagining this.
OK!! Back to Game of
Thrones! We haven’t yet talked about Daenerys, who
finally seems to have a substantial scene in the episode.
Just before she’s propositioned by Xaro Xhoan Daxos (an offer that actually
might be a shrewd political move for her) she walks through the courtyards in
Qarth. A guy who represents the Lollipop Guild Warlocks of
Qarth comes up to her, looking like Uncle Fester after a major diet, and creeps
the hell out of her (and me) before he seemingly splits himself and appears
behind her. They’re definitely ramping up the supernatural aspects of this
show, what with that and what happened at the beginning.
There are tensions building among the women
serving the Khaleesi, and we see one of the lovely dragons again (LOVED that
scene) whose mommy is teaching him to breathe fire to cook his own steak.
(Sniff… I remember when my firstborn used her fire-breath to cook her own steak
for the very first time. They grow up so fast…) But the best part of the
episode is where Daenerys returns to her chamber after being told that Ser
Jorah is in love with her. She blew off the comment, laughing and saying it’s
ridiculous, because he’s her advisor, and nothing more. But when she returns to
her room and tells him of the offer, he’s defiant, telling her she should be
ruling the world herself, not settling down elsewhere. “You would not only be
respected and feared, but you would be loved… I still can’t believe you are
real.” As he walks away, Daenerys struggles to catch her breath, realizing he
really is in love with her, something she’d never noticed before.
Christopher: That was a
lovely moment, and doubly painful to watch as, not only do we see Jorah’s
desperate love, we see him fail as a councillor and advisor. Xaro is obviously
self-interested, but he’s also a pragmatist—he might be seeking to enrich
himself, but he’ll also give Dany what she wants and needs. It’s a moment that
evokes Robb’s reluctant agreement with the Freys—marrying a daughter to cement
an alliance—and Tyrion’s argument with Cersei about her daughter. We have such
a romantic conception of marriage that we forget that for the larger portion of
human history, marriage was a practical, economic, and political contract. Love
was secondary. In fact, the preoccupation with love as the central necessity in
a marriage is an extremely recent one … and so Xaro’s proposal actually makes a
whole lot of sense, which Jorah must know.
Any last thoughts, Nikki?
Nikki: This episode
began as one about pragmatism winning out over emotions. Where, as we both
agree, marriage to Xaro would actually be a good thing for Daenerys, earlier in
the show Catelyn explains to Brienne that she must be practical and flee, for
she can’t avenge Renly’s death if she’s dead (a line Margaery later repeats to
her brother). It’s about setting emotions aside and thinking instead.
Tyrion’s way of thinking got him a spy in
Cersei’s camp in the form of his insipid cousin, who tells him that Cersei is
stockpiling something called Wildfire (I loved the scene of the doors opening
and seeing the rows and rows of the stuff) and Tyrion, now caught on to his
sister’s dastardly plan, tells the man he’s no longer making this stuff for
Cersei; he’s making it for Tyrion. Great scene, and once again, the smallest
man casts a large shadow.
A couple of last bits:
-Haven’t the Night’s Watch men ever heard
of toques? Seriously, guys, I can’t believe they haven’t all lost ears to
frostbite. When it showed them all standing there swaying in the winter cold,
it was like they were extras in a human version of March of the
Penguins
-seeing the smokey Stannis kill Renly, I
couldn’t help but remember that the smoke monster was conceived when Melisandre
and Stannis had sex on a map of the armies, and in doing so, knocked Renly’s
wooden army right off the map, which is symbolic of exactly what that act
achieved.
-poor Bran has been left behind to play
referee, and he’s had to do one boring thing after another (his younger brother
is so bored he’s smashing nuts… in fact, he was doing so in such an imbecilic
way I actually thought it was Bran’s cousin Robin)
-I will admit, I wanted to see Tyrion
really upset about what happened to the prostitutes last week, but instead he
was all, “Huh. That’s too bad.”
Looking forward to next week!
6 comments:
@ CHRISTOPHER: "If she doesn’t get a nomination for an Emmy this year, I say we go all Khal Drogo on their asses." LMAO! Agreed! We'll melt all of the Emmys down into molten gold and get medieval!
The scene between Daenerys and Jorrah was a painful one to watch (in a good way). They're my favorite characters on the show, and I always thought it'd be nice for those two crazy kids to get together. And that scene with the dragons might very well be the first time we've ever seen Dany in an outfit that covers her shoulders.
So there's a smoke monster now, huh? Okay, I think I know what's happening here: Melisandre/the Monster is the sister of a man named Sir Jacob, who lives inside a ginormous statue of one of the Elder Gods. Sir Jacob is the leader of the White Walkers, although none of them have ever seen him in person, instead relying on their hunky, ageless intermediary, Sir Rickard Alpernon (whose sigil is a black mascara wand applicator on an indigo blue flag). Also, Melisandre can only be killed if you turn off a magic light under the Haunted Forest that's powered by love & honor, so the Knights' Watch guards the light at the Wall with a giant frozen donkey wheel that...wait a minute...
@The Question Mark awesome, your last paragraph made me lol...
That scene between Tywinn and Arya was just pure aces and it amazes how well her acting chops was on par with Charles Dance.
The stuff in Qarth is very interesting to me, even moreso then when I read them as I have very little recollection of what happened with Dany in ACoK other then where she ends up...
I have been watching GoT from the get-go but this is the first episode that had me seriously hooked. The best one yet in the whole series, in my opinion. I am almost Lost-level of excitement for the next episode (it helps I have my husband to watch them with as he has read the books and so I can pause and go "Wait, who the hell is that? Why are they there?" and he sighs and says "That's ROBB. Rah-Ob." and "We are at the wall, do you see that large wall there?")
Nikki - you look so unbelievably cute in that picture but I am confused about who is in the pic with you...
For what it's worth, I think Brienne is a stone cold fox. She may be my new Sayid...
Joanie: The guy in the pic with me is Christopher, the other guy who writes these posts with me (yes, we've known each other forever...). ;)
And OMG we must get Brienne in a torcha scrunchie!!!
Go Arya. Go Arya. Go go go Arya.
I've had almost a week to process Renly being stabbed by Stannismoke and it's still surprising me.
Since Mellisandre had to be smuggled ashore, should we assume that magic black smoke can't travel across water on any TV show?
I can't decide if Brienne is Laurie Holden of Walking Dead mixed with a little Tilda Swinton and Janet McTeer in Albert Nobbs or the biggest, baddest damn Olsen Twin you've ever seen. But there's something about the way her wide eyes and usually blank demeanor mix with her size that creates a real feeling of vulnerability just waiting to break through her imposing, impassive mien — which, of course, it did when Renly was killed.
Tyrion: "What? 'Demon monkey'?"
Littlefinger: "Do you want to be a queen?"
Margaery: "No. I want to be the queen."
Arya: "They say he rides into battle on the back of a giant direwolf. They say he can turn into a wolf. They say he cannot be killed."
Tywin: "And do you believe them?"
Arya: "No, milord. Anyone can be killed."
The Force is strong in this one. I half-expected Tywin to start choking after that stare.
SP needs to go back to the Game of Thrones well; am I the only one picturing Hodor carrying Timmy on his back?
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