humanrefutation wrote:WRau1 wrote:I find it hilarious that in a show about dragons, magic and undead, people draw the line at realistic travel times.
This is such a red herring. People are objecting to story where an established narrative and understanding is being upended by the way the plot is being moved towards its resolution.Spoiler:If it was established that people could travel through Westeros this quickly, then fine. If it was established that ravens could fly thousands of miles southward to Dragonstone in the manner of a few hours, fine. If it was established the map is actually smaller than it has been depicted, fine. But none of that has been established. In fact, what is being critiqued is that all of that intricate detail is being unraveled by silly plot contrivances.
If you don't have a problem with it, fine. But don't belittle people who do.
Spoiler: 
Yep, that's pretty much the problem. 
It feels like the writing is hampered by the fact that they don't have enough time (in real life episode terms) to resolve all the various threads, but they have these predetermined plot points they need to get to that they're struggling to arrive at in organic ways.
There were definitely better and less ridiculous ways to get the dragons there and kill one of them without the whole deus ex Daenerys thing that's been happening this season, and yes the fault lies with the writers of the show, but it also lies with GRRM for taking so damn long to finish the series himself.
I don't think the writing has been flat out bad (even if it's been in slow decline ever since they left the source material), but it's reached the point where it's undeniably on a lower tier than earlier episodes and the books, where Martin was totally unafraid to kill strong and beloved characters like Ned, Rob, Tywin, etc. where it made sense and you didn't feel the heavy hand of the author intervening at every step. In a sense the reversal of that sense of danger is the worst thing that could have happened to the show and the most disappointing thing about the post books GOT show. You never really felt Dany or Jon Snow was under any real threat in that last episode, even when they were being overwhelmed by white walkers and Jon was essentially left to die. It takes so much of the potential tension out of these scenes when we sort of know Jamie isn't going to get killed by the Dragon, Dany isn't going to get shot out of the sky by the ice spear, and Jon isn't going to get zombified.
The moment you don't believe Cersei can win in the end or Daenerys could just die is the moment this show has gotten away from what made it great and started defaulting to generic fantasy tropes.
I still trust they aren't going to do anything truly awful to this series, but this season has been a mixed bag and I can't really fault anyone for being a tad disappointed with some of it.
It feels like the writing is hampered by the fact that they don't have enough time (in real life episode terms) to resolve all the various threads, but they have these predetermined plot points they need to get to that they're struggling to arrive at in organic ways.
There were definitely better and less ridiculous ways to get the dragons there and kill one of them without the whole deus ex Daenerys thing that's been happening this season, and yes the fault lies with the writers of the show, but it also lies with GRRM for taking so damn long to finish the series himself.
I don't think the writing has been flat out bad (even if it's been in slow decline ever since they left the source material), but it's reached the point where it's undeniably on a lower tier than earlier episodes and the books, where Martin was totally unafraid to kill strong and beloved characters like Ned, Rob, Tywin, etc. where it made sense and you didn't feel the heavy hand of the author intervening at every step. In a sense the reversal of that sense of danger is the worst thing that could have happened to the show and the most disappointing thing about the post books GOT show. You never really felt Dany or Jon Snow was under any real threat in that last episode, even when they were being overwhelmed by white walkers and Jon was essentially left to die. It takes so much of the potential tension out of these scenes when we sort of know Jamie isn't going to get killed by the Dragon, Dany isn't going to get shot out of the sky by the ice spear, and Jon isn't going to get zombified.
The moment you don't believe Cersei can win in the end or Daenerys could just die is the moment this show has gotten away from what made it great and started defaulting to generic fantasy tropes.
I still trust they aren't going to do anything truly awful to this series, but this season has been a mixed bag and I can't really fault anyone for being a tad disappointed with some of it.



















