Kath wrote: Fri Mar 29, 2019 2:41 amA few points:
A bad call in your opinion is a fantastic call for others. Following the book may annoy you, but the people who made this show possible are very satisfied. (referring to all those book buyers.)
Popularity does not imply quality. Sacrificing quality for popularity might make the show more money, but it makes it less entertaining.
I am aware that many people disagree with my opinions on GoT, and would dislike the show more if the showrunners handled things my way, but their opinions do not concern me. Most people who like GoT, like it for the wrong reasons, and the showrunners listening to them has no doubt played into the show not living up to it's potential, especially in the last three seasons. Fan service for the fail.
Kath wrote: Fri Mar 29, 2019 2:41 amI agree with some of what you say, generically speaking, but earlier you said they should have left Arya behind until the end. I was explaining that parts of her journey were fantastic viewing. Don't criticize an entire character's journey because you disliked one part.
I did not say leave Arya behind, I just said give her more interesting shit to do, don't just check in for the sake of checking in, there are much better ways to develop characters. If they couldn't come up with more interesting things for her to do, then less is more. All the worst parts of her story come from the shows desire to check in on Arya just for the sake of checking in on Arya.
Kath wrote: Fri Mar 29, 2019 2:41 amDialogue is called character development, and enriches the overall story. I like delving into characters; I think that's what this show does best. Perhaps nothing but death and destruction without character development is interesting to you, but I don't think that's the norm. If someone tells me a story about how her brother went to prison for 10 years and then got shot in a jailbreak, I'd want to know how we got from his being a normal guy to the end state. Explosions need context. Go watch Michael Bay movies if all you want is the visuals.
I also think character development is a major part of what makes GoT better than other fantasy offerings, but that doesn't mean checking in with characters for the sake of checking in is the best way to do that.
Kath wrote: Fri Mar 29, 2019 2:41 amI'm not concerned about criticism about a show I had nothing to do with, except be a consumer. Perhaps it's just your style to sound absolutely as angry as possible about things you supposedly love. Maybe you think it makes you look insightful; dunno.
If you can find no faults in even the best television shows, you simply aren't looking hard enough, no TV show is perfect, Game of Thrones is no exception. I can and do in fact shit on all my favorite tv shows, it is in no way an indication that I do not like them, I just have a knack for dissecting what are the best and worst parts of a television show, and yes that does make my opinion insightful, whether you can see it or not.
I can sell people on what makes Game of Thrones best qualities are far better than any Game of Thrones fanboy, and I can shit on Game of Thrones for it's worst habits better than any Game of Thrones hater. That's insight, right thur, blind cheerleading and blind hatred can't hang with me.
Kath wrote: Fri Mar 29, 2019 2:41 amThey have six episodes, but have said that some of them will be full feature-length films. It may actually end up being more than 10 episodes worth of stuff; wait and see. I highly doubt they destroy the ending like Lost. Every new season in Lost brought evidence that they weren't going to close out all the loops they started in earlier seasons. I've never felt that way about GoT, even if some parts of some journeys were slow. With Lost, by the time we got to just before the last episodes, it was rather obvious that the ending wasn't going to be satisfactory. I see no such evidence that GoT ending will get the Lindelof/Cuse treatment. Those two simply gave up when they realized they had no answers to the questions they posed back in season 1.
I am aware of the extra run time on the episodes, I still worry about them nailing the ending, because endings are hard, especially when you build up hype by saving too many explosions for the end at the expense of the last three seasons. Seems like too many loose threads and not enough screen time to satisfactorily resolve them, and with a show like Game of Thrones, they have to try and resolve them, leaving things hanging won't really work.
The problem with Lost wasn't that they didn't answer all of the questions by the ending, it's that they answered too many of them in unsatisfactory manner. Lindelof learned from that mistake in The Leftovers, which didn't milk the concept past the expiration date, and didn't try to answer questions that didn't need answering, because mystery is huge part of what made the show so great.
The Leftovers ending was fantastic, the series was short and sweet, went out on top, with exceptional showmanship, what a final season. Unlike Lost, which was too long, ran out of steam, solved too many mysteries and had a lame final season. But GoT can't do what The Leftovers did, because that kind of ending doesn't fit with GoT style of storytelling, and they have to try and wrap everything up in a neat little bow with tons of moving parts, which is why I have my doubts, because that is the exact path that lead to Lost's shitty final season/ending.
I hope GoT sticks that landing and gets back to it's old form, or even has it's best season yet, but that's a big ask.