Interesting that Great-Uncle Bevan refused to see Cersei. The AV Club newbie write-up pointed out that Lancel is Bevan’s son, and that perhaps Lancel was acting at his father’s behest. So perhaps this was Bevan’s way of eliminating competition from Tywin’s family?
And the list of crimes mentioned by the Sparrow included incest, so is Tommen’s legitimacy going to come under question?
I thought the wight walkers could be killed by fire, but the one Jon was fighting was awfully cavalier about walking around the building that was on fire.
My take on what we have seen on the show is that the White Walkers turn people into wights or zombies but they turn infants into other White Walkers. Granted we could find out later that they can turn older humans into more WW’s but it seems to me if they were capable of that they would do it more often because the WW’s are stronger and more indestructible.
Great episode. A very effective sense of impending doom in Hardhome, and a very well-done battle scene at the end. I’ve been missing that all season. Everyone has been asking why it was taking so long for the frozen bad guys to show up again… well, here they are!
Creepy kids, too. Brrrrr.
I liked seeing Arya on the Braavosi wharves, selling her oysters. Nicely done. Was the thin man a ship insurer? Why wouldn’t he take the account of the captain who’d had so many successful cruises - did he figure the guy was maybe overdue for trouble?
Nice for Sansa to know two of her brothers maybe aren’t dead after all (they got better).
And what’s Ramsay’s plan with just 20 horsemen? Hmmm.
I wondered that, too. The person at the tiller just sat there. And the men at the oars should keep rowing, dammit! I almost expected the boss WW to silently order all of his minions to swim after the boats.
Anyone notice the seas getting quite choppy around Jon’s fleet? The waters were calm when he arrived.
Heh. “…while you can still form complete sentences.”
This episode, we were shown wights being “killed” by head shots (mostly arrows) or massive damage/dismemberment (mostly axes and size 100 boots). Even then, it’s possible that many of the ones that went down were still animate, but not able to fight effectively, and not shown.
IIRC, when Jon fought that one at Castle Black, he stabbed it, but didn’t hack it into pieces. These wights were not as “meaty” as that relatively fresh one was, so they are probably easier to chop up like firewood.
This is going to sound like a really stupid question, but here goes: How may different types of “being” were there in that crazy army? I get that there were White Walkers and Zombies (or whatever they are), but there seemed to be some “regular folk” as well. Or were they just in the early phase of being Zombies or WWs? The battle scene was a bit confusing, at least for me. What is the relationship between the zombies and the WWs? Do the zombies get killed (ala Walking Dead) if you shoot them in the head or rip their heads off?
Dragonglass arrowheads might also be useful. That White Walker at the end was just standing there on the beach. A good shot with a bow could have taken him out.
They really need to scour the countryside for as much dragonglass as they can find.
What continuity error? We saw in this episode that Wights could get arrows through the head with no ill effects, so the traditional zombie head-shot kill does not work on Wights. We saw, in (as I recall it) Jon’s first fight with Wights, that cut-off body parts will keep on trying to attack. It’s been pretty clearly established that fire is the best way to kill Wights, and - apart from being stomped to dust by a giant - may be the only thing thing that effectively kills Wights.
I thought it might be that you can incapacitate a wight with headshots and body damage but the Snow Miser can just reform them with magicks unless you burn them. That added to the horror of the last scene for me–not only had they lost all those people but it was all for nothing as they only strengthened the army of the dead.