Holy crap!
The eighth and final season of Game of Thrones has finally arrived.
How long have we waited since the last season of this show? I’m not
great with numbers. One year? Nine years? Whatever it really was, it
feeeels
long. My memories of last season are pretty sketchy and I guess I could
have rewatched it before this season started, but honestly, I’m not
even sure I’ll have time to watch these six episodes and I have agreed
to recap all of them for a major online publication! There’s a definite
chance I will write one or more of these without having watched the
episode. We’ll see if you can tell.
But I watched this one! For serious I did.
For
starters, one thing I do remember about last season was that it ended
with that zombie ice dragon making very short work of the mighty “wall.”
After seeing that
I went on record with the prediction that humanity wouldn’t last for more than five minutes of the new season.
Well, I guess the Night King and his dragon went on a quick spa retreat
or something because I was wrong. Those guys are not even glimpsed in
this episode, which concerns itself mainly with complicated romances,
troop movements, and burning children. Let’s get to recappin’!
The season starts
with a child pushing his way through a crowd to watch an army of —
again, not a numbers guy — a million soldiers(?) marching to Winterfell.
All of your favorites are here: Arya Stark, Daenerys, Jon Snow, that
blacksmith who I think was an illegitimate son of the king who got gored
by the wild boar. Or not. I don’t know. Then we see Tyrion and Varys
riding in a coach having some good-natured repartee about the fact that
Varys was castrated as a child by a wizard. Ha ha! That Tyrion is a wit!
Right after that,
Game of Thrones, cheekily
reveling in the great number of characters on this show who have had
their genitals removed, cuts directly to Grey Worm, who’s riding
alongside, and flirting with, Missandei (Yeah, I looked up some of these
characters’ names. I’m taking this seriously!). Then a hundred dragons
swoop down and everybody freaks out, including me.
Then we have a little scene where Jon Snow is psyched to see Bran and the newspaper editor from
Downton Abbey
is there and we have some nice introductions and then Bran throws cold
water on everything and basically says what I was thinking: WE DON’T
HAVE TIME FOR ALL THIS CHIT CHAT! BECAUSE MONSTERS ARE COMING! At that
point in the episode, I honestly thought the zombie dragon was about to
blot out the sun and destroy everything but no — it’s time for a big
meeting!
Yep,
it’s another one of these Winterfell meetings where everyone is
grousing at the Starks and being completely unreasonable and
ill-informed. It’s like any small-town council meeting pretty much. As
usual, that one incredibly ballsy little girl sticks it to Jon Snow
hard. That little girl doesn’t give a fuck about anything. She will
knife you to your face. I’m not sure she’s ever actually won one of
these arguments she’s constantly initiating but she goes all in every
time and you have to respect it. I always look forward to the choruses
of rustic people mumbling agreement through their beards in these
scenes, and this one did not disappoint. This meeting ends with Sansa
pointing out that people and animals require food, and it’s apparently
something that no one else considered up to then. How are these
dumb-dumbs supposed to defeat a zombie army? It is not looking good.
Then
we see some dragon glass being loaded off of some wagons, which is a
little reassuring. There’s a plan it place. Kind of. Then we have a
little scene between Sansa and Tyrion. Mostly old business, except,
correct me if I’m mistaken, but I don’t believe these two were ever
officially divorced. So they’re going to want to either take care of
that or figure out how to live together. I’m fine with either thing.
Next
up, a tree with a face. Seems to be sleeping. If we’ve seen this tree
with a face before, I don’t remember it. What’s up with that? Is it
always sleeping? Does it get pissed off when you try to pick its apples?
Am I thinking of a different tree with a face? Jon and Arya have a nice
reunion and she’s all coy about the fact that she’s the most
frighteningly trained assassin in the world. Arya claims in this scene
that Sansa is the smartest person she’s ever met and, well, she did
remember that people eat so maybe?
Then
we pop in to King’s Landing, where that creepy old dude who brought the
Mountain back to life (Or was that a different guy? Who cares.) tells
Cersei that the dead have breached the wall and she says “good,” so
first-time viewers know right away that this lady is bad news. I’m not
sure why she thinks it’s good that the wall has been breached. She
thinks the zombies are going to defeat the armies of the north and then
come to King’s Landing and she’s going to stop them there? How? Seems
like half a plan at best. So far, Sansa is looking like the smartest. Arya’s right.
Then
we head out to a boat where Yara Greyjoy asks her brother (or cousin or
uncle?) why she’s still alive and the answer is, honestly, not great.
Euron Greyjoy says he likes having her to talk to because he has a crew
full of mutes. Is that literally true? Are they like the Unsullied
except with vocal chords? It’s not a bad idea I guess. Nobody wants a
chatty navy. Also, it would be a rare instance of budget consciousness
on the part of this TV show. They don’t have to pay anybody in the whole
Iron Islands navy for a speaking role. Good thinking!
Then
Euron and some guy named Captain Strickland of the Golden Company(?)
have an audience with Cersei. Has Captain Strickland ever been on this
show before? Because he did not ring any bells. And I don’t think we’ll
need to get too used to him either because apparently
he promised Cersei Lannister elephants
and did not deliver. And she was NOT HAPPY. There was a period of
several months when the elephant habitat at the L.A. Zoo was under
renovation and visitors couldn’t see any elephants, and my children got
over their elephant disappointment quicker than Cersei Lannister can.
Much later in this episode, we find her still ruminating about these
damned elephants. It makes me think that as long as the Night King shows
up with a couple of elephants, she’ll just hand over Kings Landing
without a fight. In fact, that’s my new prediction for how this season
is going to end. Mark it down. The last scene of the season will be
Cersei Lannister frolicking with elephants on the beach while everyone
else in King’s Landing gets slaughtered by zombies, and a string
ensemble plays a mournful version of Henry Mancini’s “Baby Elephant
Walk.” Count on it!
After that, we have probably the worst sex scene in the history of Game of Thrones and
then Bronn gets hired to kill Tyrion and Jamie and he pretty much seems
to kill whoever he sets out to kill so I guess that’ll happen. Oh well,
I’ll miss those guys.
Euron
says he’ll put a prince in Cersei’s belly (presumably by way of
fucking, but he doesn’t specify), Reek rescues his sister from the Crew
of Mutes, she announces her plan to take back the Iron Islands, and Reek
says he’s headed to Winterfell to bring his trademark occasional
bravery to the zombie fight. All sounds good.
Then
we’re back to Winterfell for a Council of Schemers meeting between
Tyrion, Varys, and Davos, who suggests a Joe Biden–Stacey Abrams
arrangement with Jon Snow and Daenerys, and then we join those two
lovers for a bunch of flirty chit chat that Bran would say we DON’T HAVE
TIME FOR and he would be RIGHT!
After that, Game of Thrones takes its season eight CGI budget for a spin and gives us an early glimpse at what the eventual Game of Thrones
theme park ride will be like as Jon and Daenerys ride dragons through a
winter wonderland then make out by a water fall like they’re in a
commercial for mink coats. Oh and hey, don’t forget they’re also brother
and sister!
Then
Arya and the Hound have a tête-à-tête, and this brings me to my next
big prediction for season eight: At some point, the Hound and the
Mountain are going to have their big fight the way everybody wants them
to and we’re all going to assume that the Hound will ultimately prevail
because he’s the less awful of the two but no! In a dramatic conclusion,
the Mountain will kill the Hound and everyone
all over the world will gasp in horror. And then! the Mountain will take
off his helmet and then … he will take off his FACE and reveal that he
has been Arya Stark throughout this whole fight because Arya Stark
killed the Mountain and then became the
Mountain in that way that she knows how to do. Again, we’ll hear the
mournful “Baby Elephant Walk” because why not? Count on it!
Sam
learns that his asshole father and his brother (who I don’t remember
but was probably a dick) were killed by Daenerys. He runs into Bran, who
says he’s waiting for an old friend, who I’m thinking is probably the
Night King but who knows with Bran? He’s so cryptic and weird. Sam goes
and tells Jon Snow that he (Jon) is the true heir to the Iron Throne,
which is awkward and messy. His real name is apparently Aegon, which is
also awkward and messy. Stick with Jon, my two cents.
Then
we see a bunch of guys who I thought would have died in that big ice
dragon attack last season but whatever, it’s nice to see them. They
stumble upon the dead body of a child impaled on a wall and surrounded
by, I don’t know, giant crab legs? They hatch a plan to beat the zombies
to Winterfell by riding horses (smart!) and then the boy comes back to
life as a zombie and gets burned alive (dead) by that eye patch guy’s
flaming sword. Fun stuff.
And
finally, a bearded Jamie Lannister arrives at Winterfell and we’re
invited to imagine how awkward it would be to run into a kid you tried
to murder by pushing him out a window because he saw you and your sister
having sex. Pretty awkward, I say!
Well all right, I would say that I have successfully recapped this episode of
Game of Thrones and now, as my reward
I will watch Veep which, in my opinion, is even funnier than
Game of Thrones. And unlike
Game of Thrones, Veep had the good sense to put me in it this season. Seriously, not even one episode of
Game of Thrones for Andy Daly. Can you believe that? Here, this’ll be fun. For each episode of
Game of Thrones this season, I’ll tell you the guest role I would have been good for. This episode: sleeping tree.
Okay, thanks for reading! See you next week!
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