Game of Thrones *NO BOOK SPOILERS* |OT| Season 3 - Sundays on HBO [Read the OP]

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One of my favorite Robert lines actually comes from one of the animated history & lore videos from the S1 blu ray set

http://youtu.be/K7PWBph1sWQ

I'm sitting there watching these histories one by one and then all of a sudden Robert drops the "sisterfucking" line on me and I had to pause the video because I couldn't stop laughing
 
I'll help!

tumblr_mklj6kEACN1qaa8d1o1_500.gif

goddamn this is the most beautiful woman in the show
danny is close second
 
One of my favorite Robert lines actually comes from one of the animated history & lore videos from the S1 blu ray set

http://youtu.be/K7PWBph1sWQ

I'm sitting there watching these histories one by one and then all of a sudden Robert drops the "sisterfucking" line on me and I had to pause the video because I couldn't stop laughing

The first episode did a great job of introducing the character. One of my favorite lines:

Remember me at 16?
 
first post and already causing a ruckus. hahahh damn story of my life.

between this and NHL gaf giving me shit.... been an interesting first day of gaf.
 
first post and already causing a ruckus. hahahh damn story of my life.

between this and NHL gaf giving me shit.... been an interesting first day of gaf.

Don't worry overmuch. Just keep to the basic rule of don't be a dick, don't spoil anything, and don't have a melt down, and you should be fine :)
 
When I first saw Robert Baratheon on screen, I thought the character was miscast since Mark Addy was usually so mild-mannered in his characters.

His portrayal definitely grew on me as the show progressed, and I absolutely loved him by the end.
 
realistically, what are the chances next season can get a bump to 13 episodes? the show keeps getting more and more popular but I'd imagine it is still too expensive.

at this point.... I'd even take 11 episodes.
 
realistically, what are the chances next season can get a bump to 13 episodes? the show keeps getting more and more popular but I'd imagine it is still too expensive.

at this point.... I'd even take 11 episodes.

The way the producers explain it, it's mostly a matter of time that constrains them rather than money. So, since they insist that they can't find the time in the schedule to do more than 10 episodes per season, I think it's unlikely they'll expand the order.
 
An episode of this show probably costs a lot of money.

They even cut Rome down to 10 episodes after its 12 episode first season.
 
damn. was just watching six feet under and noticed there were 13 episodes.... just made me imagine what GoT can do with 3 more episodes. would definitely help the pacing.

speaking of six feet under.... it's great. can never look at dexter the same ever again lol. I don't mind though, David>dexter
 
damn. was just watching six feet under and noticed there were 13 episodes.... just made me imagine what GoT can do with 3 more episodes. would definitely help the pacing.

speaking of six feet under.... it's great. can never look at dexter the same ever again lol. I don't mind though, David>dexter

Yeah, it would be a lot better with a few more hours per season to let all the storylines breathe a little bit. 12-13 episodes would be ideal. I really wouldn't mind waiting a few more months every year for them to be able to produce 13 episode seasons like pretty much every other show gets
 
The extra time amounts to what would be an extra episode.
If they were an 11 episode season the extra episode would be used to go further in the storyline, extending the episodes by a few minutes just means they're spending more time on certain scenes.

I think 10 episodes is perfect, the wait in between seasons is killer though.
 
season 1 episodes were just as long as season 3.
season 2 had a bit shorter ones. but only by 2-3 minutes not much.
 
If they were an 11 episode season the extra episode would be used to go further in the storyline, extending the episodes by a few minutes just means they're spending more time on certain scenes.

That depends. 5 minutes could be used for an extra scene. So (for instance) you would have 11 scenes instead of 10. A total of 110 vs 100 would effectively mean 'an extra episode' worth of material.

However I don't know if they indeed just extended scenes amounting to more time or added more scenes.
 
Yeah, it would be a lot better with a few more hours per season to let all the storylines breathe a little bit. 12-13 episodes would be ideal. I really wouldn't mind waiting a few more months every year for them to be able to produce 13 episode seasons like pretty much every other show gets

Yeah, but waiting a few months more puts them at not a yearly schedule. The release schedule of the show would change every year if it took something like a year and 3 months to do rather than a year.
 
I had a weird dream last night that I (partially) blame on this thread. For some reason it was a BBC World production called Game of Thrones: Clans that aired in place of the 9th episode. It had multiple parts but I blame the Fire Emblem style castle courtyard battle with Robert Baratheon (Mark Addy with a two-handed battle axe) and Cersei against a bunch of wights on you.
 
You guys are making me want to rewatch season 1.

This is probably something I should have done while I was on my vacation over these past few days. I have Go and a tablet. What the hell is wrong with me?

Will definately do this tonight when I get home.

I've been rewatching with friends who haven't seen it. it really is great.
 
The death of Robert Baratheon, and his goring by the boar that lead to it (both offscreen) caught me totally off-guard. It seemed at the time like this terrible thing he didn't deserve, and landed everything in utter turmoil. I hadn't read the books at that point, and expected it really was mostly this "whodunit" with a bit of the supernatural sprinkled in.

I watched the first two seasons of the show barely understanding what was going on, wondering if Dany's experiences in Essos (not that I knew it was called that) would ever cross over in any significant way in Westeros. Then I finally understood all of the relationships, why this white-haired chick was trying to get back to her home (which I originally thought was Valyria and NOT Westeros), why Ned's death -- while horrifying -- was an event that really drove the narrative in ways I couldn't appreciate when the loss was still so raw.

So, in looking back, I found the subtext. I re-watched the scenes between Robert and Cersei, and the implication that she had him poisoned really was there all along. Robert's poor treatment of Lancel and the fact that he was the one who always fetched the wine. Or that Lancel and Cersei were getting it on in Season 2. (I barely realized he was the same guy.) It all clicked in a way it never had on the first viewing.

I won't say nothing ever comes out of nowhere, but I gained an appreciation for the slow burn of the plot, and eagerly anticipate watching this season again (and perhaps earlier) once it's all over in a couple of weeks.
 
Poisoned? I'm pretty sure it was implied that Cersei had Lancel keep giving Robert too much wine (which in turn made him drunk/unable to hunt the boar properly and got himself fatally wounded).
 
Didn't they find out that something was put in the wine or am I imagining that?

I don't think that happened. I always thought Renly was responsible but it's been so long since I've seen the first season that I don't remember why I thought that. Maybe it was just how jumpy he got at taking the throne.
 
Cersei insisted that Lancel be Robert's squire. Then, during the hunt, he gave Robert exceptionally strong wine to dull his senses so Robert would do something reckless and dangerous. Ultimately, he got himself killed because of that.
 
Ok I just finished watching season 2 .... would someone tell me how the hell Stannis got back to Dragonstone, when he was at King's Landing... and lost..
 
Ok I just finished watching season 2 .... would someone tell me how the hell Stannis got back to Dragonstone, when he was at King's Landing... and lost..

Stannis is stubborn and never gives up, hence why his men had to carry him away when the battle was clearly lost. He got back to Dragonstone on one of his remaining ships. If the men were Lannister men, they probably would have just stabbed him.
 
I have half a mind that something was done to the wine, but I can't pin down whether it was just serving Bobby B strongwine or if they 'spiced' it up somehow.

Ok I just finished watching season 2 .... would someone tell me how the hell Stannis got back to Dragonstone, when he was at King's Landing... and lost..

Those dudes who grabbed him after the wildfire nuke were his men, dragging him away from a lost battle.
 
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