Rebellion. Game
of Thrones is like an Anti-Flag record at the beginning of season five. Folk
don’t want to be ruled by whoever’s ruling them. Dany experienced the initial
sparks of rebellion in a city she recently took by force. The people proclaimed
“Mother!” at her. The Unsullied ripped down the golden statue atop Meereen.
Still, an unsullied’s throat is slashed at a brothel. Tyrion rebelled against
parental authority in an overtly brutal way. Mance Rayder rebelled against a
kingdom. Blah blah blah rebellion. No one wants me to belabor the point through
the tedious listing of the various rebellions throughout the seven kingdoms.
Sadness, depression, and a sense of no direction is the other uniting theme of “The
Wars to Come.” Don’t rule me, but find me purpose. Who should the characters
trust? No one.
The Seven
Kingdoms are unsettled. Stannis had a plan to act fast and overthrow
Winterfell. Roose Bolton’s ally, Tywin Lannister, suffered death-by-arrow-by-privy
and is there for the taking-only Stannis needs more men. Mance refused to bend
the knee and died. Jon saved him from an agonizing death by shooting an arrow
into his heart. Mance told Jon he only wanted the freedom to make his own
mistakes. Stannis, the character that represents order, sternness, stolidity,
and coldness, a contrast to the warm fire of R’hllor, won’t spare Mance’s life
without the bended knee. Fealty precludes rebellion; it is order and loyalty.
Order and
loyalty is not widespread in King’s Landing. Cersei and Jaime stand before the
corpse of their father. Cersei cursed Tyrion for killing him. She cursed Jaime
for freeing him, his stupidity in freeing him, which lead to his accidental
role in the death of Tywin. Jaime warned Cersei about the line of people
waiting to enter The Sept, confirm to themselves that Tywin really died, and
will then plot an overthrow. Tommen’s a weak king. Cersei watched queasily her
son’s dazzled expression after Margaery left him. Tyrells populate King’s Landing.
Loras remains a proposed husband for her. The Tyrells’ ascent to the throne of
King’s Landing seems imminent. Season five opened with a flashback to Cersei’s
early teenage years on a day when she secretly went to the fabled witch in the
woods to hear about her future. The witch tells her three truths. Young
Cersei’s reaction transitions to Cersei’s present day pensiveness as she rides
in a carriage to the Sept. The body of her father lies inside. Her son is dead,
her king-husband is dead, and perhaps she reflected on the witch’s warning that
she’d not like what she’d hear. Ah, witches. Witches would not thrive in
advertising.
Cersei loathes
Loras, Margaery, and the rest of the Tyrell clans. She looks as sick as Tyrion
gets on Illyrio’s palace floor watching Margaery and her son. Lancel approached
her at the memorial dinner for Tywin (one assumes it was a memorial dinner).
Lancel, the cowardly cousin from season one, who couldn’t bring anyone a goblet
of wine without spilling the wine, because he shook from nerves. Lancel became
slightly braver in season two. I remember he slept with Cersei, stood up to
Tyrion in a pompous, arrogant way, and disappeared into the Sept. Lancel’s a
holy man and repents killing King Robert on behalf of his Cersei, and he also
repents that she was his. Lancel’s yet another person Cersei destroyed.
“The Wars to
Come” doesn’t belong to a single character, which is consistent with every
prior episode of the series. Benioff and Weiss prefer to establish storylines,
themes, motifs, and new locations in season premieres. The story doesn’t go to
Dorne, but it establishes the aforementioned rebellion and lack of order and
loyalty throughout the seven kingdoms. The best of the storylines involves
Tyrion’s suicidal drinking binge in Illyrio’s stately Pentosi palace. Varys and
Tyrion belong together. The writing shines and is as fine as Dornish and
blackberry wine. Varys’ and Tyrion’s exchange about the powerful and the
powerless is wonderfully eloquent. Varys’ masterful transition to the reason he
saved Tyrion’s life turns Tyrion’s story to the mother of dragons, far north of
Pentos. Varys won’t condone Tyrion’s actions; neither will Tyrion. He hated his
father, but he loved Shae. Varys won’t apologize for keeping him in the crate
while crossing The Narrow Sea and, really, Tyrion only felt bothered by process
of putting his shit through small holes for Varys to then throw overboard.
Tyrion looks like his soul-dirty, grimy, mixed with chunks of vile vomit, but
he’s not a monster. He’s a man, powerless and forced to act against the
powerful to save his life. Of course he’ll travel to Meereen to the meet the
Queen of Dragons.
The Queen’s
dragons, too, rebel in their dark chamber as ‘her people’ rebel against her.
The would-be murders will continue to covertly murder her Unsullied soldiers
unless she restores the fighting pits. A diplomat, speaking on behalf of the
rebels, asks for political negotiations and hears back from her that she’s not
a politician but a queen. If Dany returns the fighting pits, what’s next?
Daario tells Dany about his experience fighting in the pits. His story is
essentially a football coach’s wet dream. The brutal fighting helped build
Daario’s character. His master gave him his freedom before he died because of
the money he made off Daario beating everyone in the pits. Daario remembered
10,000 people chanting his name. All of it led to his freedoms and to the
second sons and to Dany, the Queen of Dragons-but he asks her what is she
without her dragons. Dany remembered the charred bones of a child. Her dragons
greet her with fire and screams. The dragons would quell the rebellion, but
they’d kill more children. Dany’s storyline is still great and engaging,
complicated and conflicted, and more so after she sent Jorah away. Daario’s not
an ideal character to rely on for sage, practical advice. Ser Barristan offered
his opinion after the murder, but Dany simply wants to cut the heads off of her
enemies’ bodies.
Acting on
emotion always fails against those who act on thought and premeditation.
Littlefinger told Sansa, when Sansa asked why he’d trust Lord Jawn’s (I forget
his name) soldiers and carriage drivers as they make their way to a city
westward from The Eyrie, that he doesn’t; he thinks, he premeditates, and he
gives money for loyalty. Money-it’s equal to power. Varys and Tyrion, think,
plan, and plot. Roose Bolton too. Stannis needs Davos to match the thinkers in
the Seven Kingdoms. George R.R. Martin, the creator of this story, titled his
epic fantasy series A Song of Ice and Fire. Westeros is mass chaos and
confusion. The combination of ice and fire, for they’re not separated by a
comma but held together by the conjunction and, will bring about peace
throughout Westeros and Essos. A song is melodious and harmonious, composed of
different sounds that become music.
Games of Thrones
has reached A Feast for Crows and A Dance of Dragons, the last two books in the
series before the as-yet-unpublished The Winds of Winter and A Dream of Spring.
Benioff and Weiss may have to unknot storylines and re-thread in the tapestry.
The story of the Seven Kingdoms has reached its crescendo, I think, and now it
begins the long and slow decrescendo towards the denouement. What is the song
of ice and fire? It’s what we’re watching: the brutality, the betrayals, the
twisted relationships, the love, the loyalty, the…everything…yes…the
everything. It’s a confused mess, too, and as confused and messy as the
rebellion, disorder, and conflict in “The Wars to Come.”
I know every fan
has his or own theory about ice and fire, the who and the why. I think that’s
how the story begins to come together now, though there are so many stories
separate from that. It’s a gigantic fictional word and I think it’s almost
impossible to neatly weave the threads in a beautifully patterned tapestry.
Other Thoughts:
-The series
should finally pass A Dance of Dragons in season six. I look forward to not
knowing where the story goes after x happens and y happens and z happens at x,
y, and z place in A Dance of Dragons.
-It would’ve
been great if Benioff and Weiss decided to faithfully follow A Feast for Crows
and leave out Tyrion, Jon, and Dany.
-I didn’t write
about many of the small character-based scenes in “The Wars to Come.”
Melisandre cozies up to Jon Snow; Sam swears he’ll go wherever Gilly goes; the
Night’s watch will vote for a new commander; Robin trains as a fighter, and it’s
funny; Missandei asks Grey Worm why the Unsullied visit brothels. Grey Worm doesn’t say, but it’s because they’re lonely and need a mother’s nurturing. I
suppose that’s an irony.
-Boy I hope we
see the witch again. One may not recognize tone when reading text.
-No Bran for
season five. Benioff and Weiss said they would have passed A Dance of Dragons
for Bran if they included him in season five. Sigh. I like Bran’s story in A
Dance of Dragons. There’s a part (really a moment), which I doubt the series
would ever repeat, that’s really sweet and moving. The Stark kids will always
rock.
-Michael Slovis
directed the episode. D.B. Weiss and David Benioff wrote the episode.
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