Your reviewer,
who is me, and your other favorite reviewers, which does not include me, will
write that the second episode of the season continues to set up storylines,
establish relationships, introduce new locations and new characters, and that
once things have been established and set up, the crazy stuff that’ll allow
click-bait sites, which is every site but mine, to generate the most
click-baity headlines. “WHICH GAME OF THRONES CHARACTER MET A SHOCKING AND
BRUTAL END?!?” David Benioff and D.B. Weiss hate book report style reviews in
which the reviewer targets a theme and writes about the whole episode through
that lens. It’s similar to a beat writer or sports columnist writing on
deadline and snatching the easiest storyline from the game that night. “Felix
Hernandez ate a cupcake before the game and knew he’d strike out 15 batters”
and I don’t know; that’s nonsense. TV reviewers, professional and amateur,
quickly write reviews to beat the utter deluge of reviews. So, you may read,
“This was about power” or “this was about identity” or “this was about gender
dynamics” or “this was about the Marxist idea of nonsense” which is fine. I’ve
done it, you’ve done it, Ross Perot has done it, and I note it because I will
not bloviate about the annual setting up of storylines for the season or that
this episode was about anything at all.
Arya made her
first season five appearance on a boat to Braavos. Her ultimate destination is
The House of Black and White. A Feast for Crows had too little Arya and too
much Cersei, but the Arya chapters show George R.R. Martin at his finest. The
small alleys of Braavos that Arya walks, the docks she observes while riding in
on the boat, and that house she’s taken to by a good Bravoosi man, are
wonderfully described and made alive in the Arya chapters. I’m delighted season
five will add more to Arya’s time at the House of Black and White. She doesn’t
enter until near the end of the episode, and we don’t enter the house with her.
A man denied her entrance after looking at her coin and stating that a Jaqen
H’gar never lived at the house. Arya said her daily prayers before wandering
Braavos. The man returned to her as she engaged three brutes over a dead
pigeon. Arya learned that Jaqen doesn’t exist, but she saw the man change his
face from old to who she knew as Jaqen. I dig this story a lot when it’s
supernaturally weird, when shadows with the faces of kings kill potential
kings, when Melisandre delivers a shadow demon from her body, when Sam sees
white walkers, and Bran’s warging and seeing what he can’t see because he no
longer walks.
Cersei’s
increased paranoia and insecurity in King’s Landing led to Jaime’s decision to
head south for Dorne, as a diplomat, for the purpose of bringing Myrcella home
to her mother. The Dornish leader, Doran, who Ellaria scolds for allowing the
Lannister girl to walk freely, eat freely, and breathe freely, is sedate, neutral,
accepting of his brother’s death. The law is law, he more or less feebly says
to Ellaria. Dany uses ‘the law is the law’ when scolding a former slave for
killing the son of the Harpy before a trial, too. The viewer sees Doran and
knows he’s not like his brother; he’s without passion, without fire, and he’s
stricken to a chair. Cersei worried Dorne will murder her in retaliation for
Oberyn’s gruesome death. Jaime went to Stokeworth for Bronn’s assistance in
bringing his “niece” back to King’s Landing. The Jaime/Bronn partnership was
the best part of the King’s Landing scenes. Kevyn’s sharp opinions about Cersei
also delighted me. He’d rather return to Casterly Rock than be the Queen’s
puppet. The council seems weak and comical with Mace Tyrell as master of coin
and ships, and Qyburn’s sadistic self as Cersei’s most trusted councilmember.
The Night’s
Watch elected Jon Snow as the Lord Commander. Sam spoke for Jon. His monologue
was great character work. Timid Sam wouldn’t speak for anyone before he met
Gilly and before he slaughtered a white walker. Sam may take jabs at the men
who jab at him. Jon’s still dour, honorable, brooding, but Sam is Sam. His
presence lightens the dark and dour Castle Black. Jon’s burdened by
responsibility. He’s the secret hero following the hero’s journey. He’s Frodo,
and Sam’s Sam. Heroes need a Sam. Stannis wanted Jon to become Lord of
Winterfell, but Jon reasons a man who breaks his vows’ word would mean nothing.
Stannis also repeats that the law is the law. The line echoes in “The House of
Black and White.” Now there’s a Lord Commander and a self-righetous and deluded
King sharing a castle.
Finally, Dany
continues struggling to rule Meereen. Ser Barristen explains the history of her
father, the mad king, who acted because he loved power. He loved the screams of
burning men and women that disobeyed his rule. Barristen does not want Dany to
become her father, to rule with fire, to rule with murder, to instead let the
law be, and to deal out justice by the law and only the law. The suggestion is,
throughout the episode, that rulers make the law. Whoever is King is the law;
however, Dany begins to change that. The law, for her, exists separate from
her. The final 10 minutes of the episode shows Dany executing her new justice
by executing the former slave she saved who killed the son of the Harpy before
the trial determined his guilt or innocence in Dany’s Meereen. I noticed a
particular thing during the scene, which was that Dany wouldn’t look at the man
about to lose his head, because Ned Stark would never take the life of a man
without looking him in the eye and swinging the axe himself. Winterfell was
mentioned three times, if I remember, in the episode. Bear Island wouldn’t aid
Stannis because the only true King of the North is the Stark.
All that’s dead
is not lost.
Other Thoughts:
-I liked "The House of Black and White" quite a bit more than "The Wars to Come."
-I liked "The House of Black and White" quite a bit more than "The Wars to Come."
-Drogon said
hello to his mother at the end of the episode before flying away into the
Meereenese night. I loathe the use of “Chekhov’s gun.” Read a story of his before copping something he wrote in a letter which he may not have meant (I
liked Nabokov’s opinion about the “Chekhov’s gun"). However, ending the episode
with Drogon flying away seems significant.
-Tyrion and
Varys held for Volantis. Cersei put a bounty on Tyrion’s head. She received the
wrong head. She’ll probably receive more wrong heads. Tyrion dropped a line in
his conversation with Varys that one may want to remember.
-Sansa rejected
Brienne’s offer for protection, opting to remain with Littlefinger. The tavern
scene led to a great action sequence with great fight choreography and horse
work. I love Pod and Brienne together. I do not like Sansa with Littlefinger.
Littlefinger, though a criminal mastermind, has a dramatic flatness to him that
can span seasons. He needs Varys.
-Ellaria
mentioned the Sand Sisters. The Meereen citizens hissed at Dany like snakes. I’m
looking forward to seeing the Sand Sisters and more of Dorne. I love Dorne.
-D.B. Weiss and
David Benioff wrote the episode. Michael Slovis directed.
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