âJohn le Carre, but with dragons.â
âThe ill-fated Robb Stark put it well back in season three when he noted, âIâve won every battle, yet somehow Iâm losing the war.â The great warriors at the heads of noble houses displayed a profound tendency to find themselves deadâNed Stark (and later his son Robb), Robert Baratheon (and later his brother Stannis)âor at the very least unmanned (Jaime Lannister).â
âThe strongest fighters who remain on the show at this point are not noble knights but cunning swords for hire (Bronn, Daario Naharis) or fallen giants who have been literally or figuratively raised from the dead (the brothers Clegane).â
âFrom the beginning it was the plotters and connivers who held the true power: Tywin, Tyrion, Cersei (even if she was not as good at the game as she presumed), Varys, the Queen of Thorns, Margaery, and above all, Littlefinger.â
âIt was Littlefinger who essentially created the Westeros we know, sowing the seeds of the War of the Five Kings by having Jon Arryn killed and persuading the Starks that the Lannisters were behind it.â
âBut what have these plotters accomplished in the last two seasons? With one notable exceptionâboom!âremarkably little.â
âCersei, at leastâand at last!âbrought us a satisfying and dramatic conspiracy in the finale, when she and Qyburn went all Guy Fawkes on the Sept of Baelor. It was a great moment, even if a heavily foreshadowed one. But to some degree, the thrill it provided was a reminder of just how rare such moments have become.â
âMartinâs novels are extremely careful about character motivation, and thatâs another area where the show has skimped of late.â
âWhich is all another long way of saying that over the last two seasons, Game of Thrones has become a different show from the one it was over the previous four: more careless in its plotting and motivation, hinging on major developments that are inadequately set up or explained, tending to favor dramatic shock over internal logic, and so on.â
âButâand please read the rest before flaying me in commentsâthis was almost certainly inevitable. Why does Game of Thrones lately feel as though itâs made up of crucial plot twists without all the details filled in precisely? Because thatâs exactly what it is. For the showâs first four-plus seasons, Benioff and Weiss could pick and choose from the very best of Martinâs extensive plots and scenes and dialogue. Now, they are working off of a rudimentary blueprintâand unsurprisingly, it shows.â
âMoreover, the question of whether Game of Thrones is as good as it used to be isnât even the right question. A better question is: âIs it better than Martinâs relevant source materialâ? And here the answer is far less clear, and will remain so until Martin finishes his oeuvreâif in fact he ever does so. The authorâs fourth novel and (especially) his fifth were sprawling messes, introducing new and frequently dull characters by the fistful and sending them on peregrinations across Westeros and Essos so pointless and interminable that it almost seemed as though they were trying to Google-Map the two continents, city by city and block by block. Even if Benioff and Weiss were still working from Martinâs direct text, itâs likely theyâd have to alter much of itâas they already did a great deal last season.â
âAnd so in place of Martinâs aimless wanderings, we get Benioff and Weissâs reckless velocity. Say what you will about this seasonâs flawsâand obviously I have, at lengthâit moved.â
âWhich is why, to my mind, âThe Winds of Winterâ was not only a tremendously satisfying episode, but more importantly a paradigm for what Game of Thrones can be at its best moving forward: thrilling, vivid, and proceeding with determination toward its ultimate climax.â
âThis will probably entail further narrative corner-cutting and occasional lapses in logic. But so be it. If you werenât stunned when Tommen went out the window, or moved when Dany made Tyrion her Hand, or thrilled at the sight of her finally(!) leading a fleet back toward Westeros, youâre made of sterner stuff than I.â
âGame of Thrones may be a different show now, and in meaningful ways a less rich one. But it has an urgency that has been missing from the books (and sometimes the show, too) for a long while. I confess that Iâm as excited about the next season as I have been in years.â
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