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Wednesday, 15 May 2019
Game of Thrones - The Case of Boomerang Character Development
So, Game of Thrones has been interesting, eh? While it's been discussed in passing a few times on here, we've never delved deeply into the series. That was with good reason. I wanted to wait until either the series was finished for a full retrospective or time to sit down and properly compare it with A Song of Ice and Fire. However, the past few episodes have been such a startling cavalcade of disappointments that certain things cannot go unpunished. It would take multiple articles to cover them all, but the big one here is Daenerys. The Queen seems to have followed in the footsteps of her father and decided to lay her vengeance upon those that oppose her, which ended with her flying Drogon over King's Landing and torching everyone in sight.
This has, understandably, provoked a few interesting responses and a tidal wave of hate mail which has been directed toward the creators. David Benioff and D. B. Weiss have left some awkward comments in relation to character moments and decisions, which have ranged from lazy plotting to insulting the audience's intelligence. The big ones people keep citing is how they seem to promote "having the good guys act like the bad guys" is some dramatic and innovative twist which no one has tried before, and having the Targaryen side simply forget that the Iron Fleet exists. There are no shortage of ones which could be brought up, and there is even a good break down of why this is a let down found here. This cites creative mindsets and major differences which means that one group of creators could never quite live up to George R. R. Martin's novels.
There are many ways in which this latest move can be analyzed and considered, but the main one which needs to be fully considered is simply this: Daenerys has always had the potential for revenge in her. We had full story arcs covering this and there were multiple occasions where we cheered her on. The big ones were, of course, the fights to liberate Meereen from its slavemasters and her treatment of the rulers. She crucified hundreds of them by the roadside, and one major subject of the story was her learning to temper that rage when needed. The problem is that, with the show coming to a close, the creators have decided to loop back around to a similar song and dance that we have seen before. Worse still, it's a poor replication of that same song and dance.
In a similar manner to how her presumption and use of titles when meeting Jon Snow seemed to pretend that her development in season two had never taken place, this one just outright pretends that she has learned nothing. It doesn't take the time needed to provoke this kind of response, and instead, it is rushing through things to try and force the story to come to a key point that the writers one. It hasn't developed organically or in a semi-logical fashion as some previous events or, worse still, it's trying to ape previous developments to justify this turn. The big one is a character death provoking a harsh response, or slaying a potential ally within her circle for risking turning on her, both of which we saw done in Meereen. As such, this is less the show doing something new so much as spinning its wheels, just as the finale is upon us.
Yet there are other layers to this turn which makes Daenerys' actions feel far more bitter. How many audiences cheered as she burned slavers? How about an enemy fleet, or the Lannister army? What about her breaking her enemies through these same means? Watchers were wholly behind her the entire way and, while extreme, the show always made a point of making it seem justified. Each could be considered a possible step further down a road which made Daenerys' family name so infamous, and her fans were supporting her the entire way. Now, at long last, that rage has been turned upon someone who does not deserve it, and has shown just what she is capable of when given a target which isn't so morally black. When she desires revenge nothing will stop her, and this episode has shown what can come from that. It can make an audience feel far worse as a result of this, as if rooting for her in the first place was a mistake. There's an engaging quality to this which could work, but the rushed delivery and inability to focus upon the idea here means that it just feels vindictive as a result.
Finally, there is also the matter of the throne itself. Seeking the iron throne, fighting for it and approaching it with the desire to claim power has often been a warning in the series. It either warps people beyond recognition or leads to their downfall. Or both. Even if you ignore the war itself, look back at King Robert's tale and how miserable it made him. This could have been a theme again here, as Daenerys was always someone who seemed to be on a knife-edge in terms of whether she would be able to accomplish there, or what would become of her. However, none of that is focused upon the difficulties of governing from that role or even the pressures which can break a person. The ham-fisted delivery means that while the message itself is present, the execution and narrative devices leave it as an incoherent mess.
Even without the other issues surrounding it, this final stage of development ultimately ends up relying too much upon past trends and cannot make use of new ideas. As a result, it just ends up feeling like a hollow finale which is wallowing in nihilism, leaving you with no one that you wish to root for. Once that happens, you have to ask yourself: Why are you still watching it, and is it ever worth watching again? It's probably a question that a lot of us will be asking ourselves in the future, whenever a fan thinks of going back to watch the series from the start once again.
I think it has changed to the characters now being in service to the plot as opposed to these things organically happening. Maybe it is due to being rushed (I did see they may have wanted 10 seasons originally) but the character turns and decisions don't make sense any more.
ReplyDeleteThe characters are being pushed into decisions so that certain scenes happen (It reminds me of a youtube video I watched where a screenwriter planned out certain plot points, scenes and lines and wrote the story around that. In the end, everything he wrote felt contrived). They had a visual they wanted of Kings Landing being sacked by dragon fire so they did that, regardless of it making any sense on the logic of the show (the Iron Fleet should've taken out an unsupported Drogon easily coming straight towards them; bombers I believed learned this lesson against AA fire). Instead, only 1 shot apparently happened and it missed despite how laser guided it was.
To quote Reddit:
TabaxiTaxidermist33 points1 day ago
Patch Notes for Episode 5
Scorpions got nerfed. Significantly reduced accuracy. And the hero character Euron no longer gives a bonus to Scorpion accuracy.
Dragons got buffed. Speed and stealth have both been increased. They can now take the hide action while flying.
Dothraki have been added back to the game. Fans were upset about their removal, so they’re back now.
Battle Times have been shortened. Complaints that the Battle of Winterfell lasted too long have been heard, so now battles last no longer than 5 minutes.
Northerners and Unsullied both have reduced honor and morality meters. It is now possible for them to commit war crimes with little to no provocation.
Cersei’s speed has been reduced. She now moves sluggishly, if at all.
Euron’s plot armor has been removed.
The Mountain’s loyalty has been reduced for the introduction of the Cleganebowl game type.
Arya’s conviction has been reduced after complaints that she was too OP. Her plot armor has been significantly increased to compensate.
For the vast majority of series I typically wait for it to be complete before jumping into it, and for the most part I did that with Game of Thrones. In a way this helped as it means I don't have years in between the last season and this current one to fog my memory. In another way it sucks because it makes it so much easier to see how far down the series has gone until it became the pile of shit that it is today. Every time I think it can't get worse, they either shovel more shit on it, or they light the shit on fire.
ReplyDeleteI agree with everything here, and honestly I feel that it applies even more so to Jaime Lannister than Daenerys. Let's have a character go on a long journey and finally realize that he can no longer stand by the woman he loves because of how far gone she is, only to turn around and just go back to her. After she tried to have him killed. While knowing full well that if she sent an assassin after him she'd have ordered her guards to kill him on the spot. While a major part of his character was sacrificing his honour, one of the most important things to him (and something he also ended up valuing more than her), in order to protect the people and going back to her and trying to have her escape which, if successful, would endanger a far greater amount of people. His final line, that they are the only thing that matter, really spit on his character as it ignores everything else about him (as an example, I guess he killed the mad king for fun) as well as the journey his character went through.
Getting back to Daenerys, people try to claim she's always been mad by pointing to acts of violence and cruelty that she's done, but neither of those are mad things. You don't have to be mad to be ruthless and cruel to your enemies, and that also ignores how she's always tried to save the women and children, even chaining her own dragons when one child was burned (and she didn't even know if her dragon did it or not). You don't have to be mad to make examples out of people or to rule through fear, neither of those are signs of madness, and I don't get how people don't get this. If they want to see what madness looks like, all they need to do is look at her father, or the book version of both her father and her. Madness is thinking you'll turn into a dragon if you burn your city down, or thinking you hear the grass speak, it is not crucifying slavers after you came across crucified children who they murdered to send you a message. Anything she's done in the past is madness to the people claiming she's mad when if somebody like Tywin did those things they wouldn't bat an eye.
Lastly I want to address the picture you used. People are trying to retroactively claim that her vision showed her destroying the city and that the white stuff is ash, however if you actually look up the script it makes it very clear it's snow. Any of these attempts to claim there was foreshadowing to this event are either revisionist or they try to claim insanity is something it isn't.
As far as watching this again, I'm going to be busy pretending the series was never finished.
For me personally there is a lot to unpack here. But lets go over it. Game of thrones in my opinion is a show where the writers fundamentally don't understand the material they are working with. All they see is fans like this lets repeatedly jingle those keys. Daenerys burns things and is impulsive therefore mad queen by bells. People like arya stabbing things so she holds onto neexle for revenge rather than her last link to her family and more innocent times. People like Sandor as an angry fatalist so lets keep him that way. And on and on it goes. But well you can only do one trick so many times before it gets boring. Before the initial magic wears off. But these writers don't seem to understand or care. Another aspect of this is their thinking we need a twist and a spectacle. This is seen all throughout later seasons. Where there are typically a few conceivable choices and the worst one is picked to shock you... only this doesn't really work as it just leaves you more disappointed as good twists work better than the obvious solutions but are not ones most people immediately think of. Both of these result in characters acting utterly out of character and events happening this way simply because the writers said so rather than proper underlying logic. With that in mind I don't believe it being slowed down would save the series as the writers are simply not even on the same wavelength as their show.
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