I disagree wholeheartedly with every point, and now think you have absolutely no imagination and possibly have never read a book before.
have a nice day
have a nice day
As someone who watched the show first and only recently read the books I have a similar observation to make..Callate said:Actually, the largest factor provoking Tyrion to shoot his father was Jamie's revelation that his former wife wasn't a paid prostitute at all, had in fact married him for love, and that his father had engineered to have him divorce her and participate in her gang-rape.
Which the show's writers, in their incredibly finite wisdom, decided to leave out, deciding that five minutes of Tyrion and Jamie talking about beetle-smashing was a better use of their time.
That bothered me greatly, because they introduced the Tysha storyline very early than promptly dropped it, to the extent that I don't know if it was even mentioned after the first season. I know a lot of show fans who don't even remember it beyond, "Oh yeah, Tywin was mean to Tyrion's girlfriend or something." It really hollowed out their relationship, and the writers didn't do a great job filling it in.Callate said:Actually, the largest factor provoking Tyrion to shoot his father was Jamie's revelation that his former wife wasn't a paid prostitute at all, had in fact married him for love, and that his father had engineered to have him divorce her and participate in her gang-rape.
Which the show's writers, in their incredibly finite wisdom, decided to leave out, deciding that five minutes of Tyrion and Jamie talking about beetle-smashing was a better use of their time.
I strongly disagree with the idea that the books were subtle in their presentation of Loras and Renly's relationship. Olenna didn't need to say that Loras was a 'sword swallower' for people to know that he and Renly was gay, the books were filled with people saying things like Margaery was like to die a maid in Renly's bed, that the servants knew to be blind and mute... one of Ser Gregor's men even calls Loras a bugger!TravelerSF said:Loras' line about Renly's passing, ""When the sun has set, no candle can replace it," was probably the most solid confirmation of their relationship that the book offered, which could've easily been interpreted as a knight's loyalty towards his former king.
Fixed that for you...TravelerSF said:6 Ways Game of Thrones Surpasses Its Source Material
Movies or TV shows based on books tend to disappoint, but here's how Game of Thrones uses its format to do just that.
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