Game Of Thrones: The Sopranos with swords or Dynasty in chainmail?

After 5 seasons of 45+ individual 1-hour episodes and counting... one of the very few bad-ass 'black guys' on the show is getting too much shine onscreen, huh? :hmm:

Ssshhheeeeiit... He probably hasn't been seen on camera (with any dialogue) for more than 15-20 minutes, out of 45 hours and counting during all 5 seasons so far. :rolleyes:

The actor who plays GreyWorm was a terrible choice. He lacks presence. His body language/acting doesn't convince me he's an elite fighter. GoT has been on point when picking an actor/actress for a particular role, but they the GreyWorm character wrong
 
[*]Theon deep in the dog house like his name is Cuddly Dudley ...is he gonna read some fan mail ?

cuddly.jpg


:roflmao::roflmao::roflmao: I can't fuckin breathe :roflmao::roflmao::roflmao:


Mr. Lenghty
 
name calling on-line, :lol:.

so tough, or were you trying to hurt my feelings, :lol:

what was he talking about then? killing his cup boy?

john went to him for advise, ameon was telling him to be the leader(a man).

'cause reguardless not all will be in agreement with decisions he makes.

kill the boy within his character(needed validation/asking others), step up and be a man.

thats what i gathered.

You're exactly right.

I didn't bother responding to that comment because I didn't feel like we should bother explaining simple shit to people.

It has nothing to do with the actual boy. Just like you said, Master Aemon is simply telling Jon to step into manhood. I think Jon's character is supposed to be only 16 years old.
 
You're exactly right.

I didn't bother responding to that comment because I didn't feel like we should bother explaining simple shit to people.

It has nothing to do with the actual boy. Just like you said, Master Aemon is simply telling Jon to step into manhood. I think Jon's character is supposed to be only 16 years old.

peace.

youre right, i shouldnt have either!
 
You're exactly right.

I didn't bother responding to that comment because I didn't feel like we should bother explaining simple shit to people.

It has nothing to do with the actual boy. Just like you said, Master Aemon is simply telling Jon to step into manhood. I think Jon's character is supposed to be only 16 years old.

you're smarter than that lol or so I thought...blkstrength was doing his stretchwallz "impersonation"
 
When the show started you never knew who would make it to the end but now it's so Obvious Kaleasey and Tyrion will at least make it there because they are such popular character. It kinda lost that unpredictable appeal.
 
When the show started you never knew who would make it to the end but now it's so Obvious Kaleasey and Tyrion will at least make it there because they are such popular character. It kinda lost that unpredictable appeal.

said the same thing too...I'd include jon in there as well even though... :lol: ...won't say the rest
 
When the show started you never knew who would make it to the end but now it's so Obvious Kaleasey and Tyrion will at least make it there because they are such popular character. It kinda lost that unpredictable appeal.

Dude, nothing is obvious. Volla Margholis is in full effect.
 
The actor who plays GreyWorm was a terrible choice. He lacks presence. His body language/acting doesn't convince me he's an elite fighter. GoT has been on point when picking an actor/actress for a particular role, but they the GreyWorm character wrong

I think he has a good screen presence in terms of his character but he lacks the physical dynamic of a fighter. His fight scene was not convincing in my opinion. He looked slow and not particularly athletic. It reminded me of those old kung fu flicks where 1 dude would be fighting a gang of cats but everyone was sitting around waiting for the other guy to fight before they stepped up.
 
That plus he needs to start using a sword in close quarters like that. I was thinking, a long ass spear isn't the best weapon in that situation. Dude should be going two swords like Gannicus!



I think he has a good screen presence in terms of his character but he lacks the physical dynamic of a fighter. His fight scene was not convincing in my opinion. He looked slow and not particularly athletic. It reminded me of those old kung fu flicks where 1 dude would be fighting a gang of cats but everyone was sitting around waiting for the other guy to fight before they stepped up.
 
That nigga touched the midget.:lol:

Sansa thought it was one way but Ramsey showed her zods will.

Zod is known as the many gape God.

That nigga reek gonna snap :lol:

That hoe in jail next week :lol:

Man I wanted someone to die at the end.
 
Half way through I was thinking that I can't wait for Queen Cersei to get hers, by the end I was like. Ramsay HAS to die! Tortured and flayed... by Theon


Mr Lengthy
 
The actor who plays GreyWorm was a terrible choice. He lacks presence. His body language/acting doesn't convince me he's an elite fighter. GoT has been on point when picking an actor/actress for a particular role, but they the GreyWorm character wrong

Why? Because he's not a big imposing guy?
 


Game of Thrones Season 5: Inside the Episode #6 (HBO)





Game of Thrones Season 5: Episode #6 - A Father's Death (HBO)










 
Game of Thrones Season 5: Episode #6 - House of Black and White & the Hall of Faces




Game of Thrones Season 5: Episode #6 - Arya & the Hall of Faces

 
this nigga ramsey went balls deep 1st stroke!

knew they was playing majories ass!

i needed someone to die this episode!
 
Game of Thrones producer explains Sansa's wedding night horror

sansa-thrones.jpg


Warning: Contains a major spoiler about Sunday’s Game of Thrones

Twitter erupted with Game of Thrones fandom angst Sunday night as Sansa Stark was brutally attacked and humiliated on her wedding night by her sadistic new husband Ramsay Bolton. Across five seasons, audiences have watched as the character—played Sophie Turner—grew up on screen, with Sansa shifting from a naive innocent pining for a storybook marriage to gradually evolving into a hardened survivor. But on Sunday night, the character lost her virginity in just about the worst way imaginable—at the hands of the psychotic son of her mother’s killer, while her former childhood friend Theon was forced to watch.

We heard about this scene while on the Thrones set in October and were able to briefly discuss it with producer Bryan Cogman, who also wrote the episode (in addition we have an interview with Turner where she gives us her thoughts about the scene).

My first question to Cogman was what would he say to fans who ask: “How could you do this to Sansa?”

Cogman seemed to take this question very seriously and took a moment to consider his response. “This is Game of Thrones,” he said soberly. “This isn’t a timid little girl walking into a wedding night with Joffrey. This is a hardened woman making a choice and she sees this as the way to get back her homeland. Sansa has a wedding night in the sense she never thought she would with one of the monsters of the show. It’s pretty intense and awful and the character will have to deal with it.”

I also asked whether the scene would be as sadistic as the version in George R.R. Martin’s A Dance With Dragons, where Ramsay’s bride is played by a different character who is not in the show. In Martin’s novel, Ramsay forces Theon to sexually interact with his bride. Cogman looked somewhat horrified at that idea. “No!” he said. “Lord no. No-no-no-no-no. No. It’s still a shared form of abuse that they have to endure, Sansa and Theon. But it’s not the extreme torture and humiliation that scene in the book is.”

Cogman added that the scene is also “an important turning point” for Sansa. “She’s seen Theon and hated him and thinks he killed her brothers and betrayed them but she’s very conflicted by what she’s seeing there,” he said.

The writer producer also confirmed that, for those suspecting Littlefinger might have known about Ramsay’s sadism, that Baelish was definitely ignorant of the situation. “The difference between the Ramsay Snow of the books and the show is the Ramsay of the show is not a famous psycho,” he said. “He’s not known everywhere as a psycho. So Littlefinger doesn’t have the intelligence on him. He knows they’re scary and creepy and not to be folly trusted and it’s part of a larger plan.”

We also spoke to actress Sophie Turner about Sunday’s scene. That interview is here.
And previously, EW exclusively revealed the showrunners’ reasons for departing from the books by marrying Sansa and Ramsay. That story is here.

Our recap will have plenty of thoughts about the scene as well. The recap introduction is here. The full version will replace it in a couple hours.


http://www.ew.com/article/2015/05/17/game-thrones-sansa-ramsay-interview
 
The writer producer also confirmed that, for those suspecting Littlefinger might have known about Ramsay’s sadism, that Baelish was definitely ignorant of the situation. “The difference between the Ramsay Snow of the books and the show is the Ramsay of the show is not a famous psycho,” he said. “He’s not known everywhere as a psycho. So Littlefinger doesn’t have the intelligence on him. He knows they’re scary and creepy and not to be folly trusted and it’s part of a larger plan.”
Im calling bullshit here. It goes against everything that Littlefinger is. He is a manipulator and opportunist. He also prides himself of knowing everything there is to know about those he engages or interacts with. Im of the mindset that he knew exactly what kinda sick fuck the bastard was.


Also, they revealed that Arya didn't leave the hound to die...she just didn't want to kill him.
And that she actually grew to like him.


Did anyone go to HBO Go to get more info on the face room? Wouldnt mind reading/seeing more backstory on that.
 
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