The most frustrating thing about the Tysha/Tyrion/Shae/Jaime storyline in the show isn't the fact that the storyline of Tysha was cut, to me. The first rule of the different medium is "show, don't tell," and in the books, the story of Tysha is only ever reiterated verbally, which would have been hard for a tv show to use as motivation for so many character-defining actions. Plus it would have added a new character to a series that already has more than it can handle.
Nor is it the fact that the show is basically white-washing Tyrion to make him a more morally just character. It's a change for change's sake, but I kinda get it. Having one more character the audience can unconditionally root for is important when you're dealing with a world as dark as Westeros, and I can see why such a decision would be made on a "attract as broad an audience as possible" level.
No, the most frustrating thing about the whole ordeal is that they cut the Tysha backstory/Shae betrayal buildup, then didn't replace it with ANYTHING, and had the plot move forward as if they had included the book information. As a result, everything about what was supposed to be an epic payoff felt like it came outta nowhere. Shae went from lovingly devoted, even when no-one was watching, to treacherous and father-seducing based off of one slight, involving Tyrion wanting her to not die? I couldn't follow why any of the characters were doing any of the things they were doing, and in a character-driven epic, that's not good.
It bothers me because it could have been remedied SO easily. Even with whitewashed Tyrion, devoted Shae, and well-intentioned Jaime, they could have still set up a plot where all the characters wound up at the same finish line as the book, but still stayed true to their new guidelines. (Well, to be fair to Jaime, even with Tysha he hadn't lied out of spite, but out of fear of his dad, but still)
Tywin had threatened to kill Shae if he saw her again, Shae refused to leave when Tyrion asked her to, and snuck off the boat. Have it so Tywin finds her, tells Jaime she's connected to Joffery's assassination plot, and send him out to apprehend her, make it so that something happens when he confronts her, and she ends up dying. Then, once you get to the point where Jaime busts Tyrion out of jail, have Tyrion talk about Shae implicitly, have Jaime realize what he did and confess, then Tyrion get mad.
boom, boom, boom, Tyrion's mad at Jaime, has motivation to go out of his way to murder his dad, and Shae died without suddenly betraying her previously established character for little to no reason. I'm far from a creative guy, and even I could come up with a more smooth transition to where you wanted the characters to be than you did.
Nor is it the fact that the show is basically white-washing Tyrion to make him a more morally just character. It's a change for change's sake, but I kinda get it. Having one more character the audience can unconditionally root for is important when you're dealing with a world as dark as Westeros, and I can see why such a decision would be made on a "attract as broad an audience as possible" level.
No, the most frustrating thing about the whole ordeal is that they cut the Tysha backstory/Shae betrayal buildup, then didn't replace it with ANYTHING, and had the plot move forward as if they had included the book information. As a result, everything about what was supposed to be an epic payoff felt like it came outta nowhere. Shae went from lovingly devoted, even when no-one was watching, to treacherous and father-seducing based off of one slight, involving Tyrion wanting her to not die? I couldn't follow why any of the characters were doing any of the things they were doing, and in a character-driven epic, that's not good.
It bothers me because it could have been remedied SO easily. Even with whitewashed Tyrion, devoted Shae, and well-intentioned Jaime, they could have still set up a plot where all the characters wound up at the same finish line as the book, but still stayed true to their new guidelines. (Well, to be fair to Jaime, even with Tysha he hadn't lied out of spite, but out of fear of his dad, but still)
Tywin had threatened to kill Shae if he saw her again, Shae refused to leave when Tyrion asked her to, and snuck off the boat. Have it so Tywin finds her, tells Jaime she's connected to Joffery's assassination plot, and send him out to apprehend her, make it so that something happens when he confronts her, and she ends up dying. Then, once you get to the point where Jaime busts Tyrion out of jail, have Tyrion talk about Shae implicitly, have Jaime realize what he did and confess, then Tyrion get mad.
boom, boom, boom, Tyrion's mad at Jaime, has motivation to go out of his way to murder his dad, and Shae died without suddenly betraying her previously established character for little to no reason. I'm far from a creative guy, and even I could come up with a more smooth transition to where you wanted the characters to be than you did.