I'm praying for an Arya/Jon reunion this season.
So happy to see the Stark family coming to their power now, each in their own individual way: Sansa with Brienne, Arya with her new skills, Jon with his new freedom, Bran with his knowledge, and well, hopefully Rickon gets a lesson of his own too.
I really hope Rickon Stark won't get murdered or tortured by Ramsay Bolton now that he's back in Castle Black, or Osha will protect him until otherwise. Maybe Jon Snow will return and murder people. Also, so happy to see Olenna Tyrell back. I miss that wise old lady.
Before this I was praying for Olli to die but I think I finally stopped and assessed the situation unbiased and realised that he's just a fucking impressionable kid who's parents got killed and eaten by wildlings, of course he did what he did. Also I'm a bit uncomfortable with Jon killing kids. He's supposed to be the good guy, the rare unicorn of this show. But I'm really fucking happy that he left the watch, totally saw it coming too. Will be awkward when Sansa arrives there though. Starks keep missing each other. Meanwhile Arya is finally becoming a proper Daredevil, hopefully she'll kick some major ass soon. And man, they are doing the tower of joy thing, we all fucking know what's in there, so just hurry up and confirm it. Poor Shaggydog. Ffs, stop killing Starks and their direwolves.
So far, THE BEST EPISODE of the season.
Good job Jon Snow.
My watch has ended ... Jon Snow is the Oathbreaker.
After all, it is absolutely understandable for Jon to leave the Night's Watch. He even died... So he kept his oath.
"My watch has ended...." - Jon Snow
Don't rate this before the episode releases!!
...unless you are rating it a 10/10. Then, by all means, rate away because we all know that this is gonna f'n rock ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
And after seeing it, 10/10 confirmed because... F*CK YOU, OLLY!!
Decent episode, loved the Tower of Joy scene along with the final scene, a lot of dialogue that didn't grip my attention with certain chracters though unfortunately, but I know it'll all lead to something great in future episodes! 8.4/10 from me :)
My watch has ended.
- Jon Snow
That last scene! -
I can't wait for the next episode!
Pretty mediocre episode. Half of the story lines were redundant - nothing happened.
Why wasting screen time to watch Samwell puking on a boat?
New news from Tyrion aren't any new news at all and are rather boring.
Everybody got mad in King's Landing, but still NOTHING HAPPENED.
Daenerys getting threatened? Who cares, we know she won't be there forever.
Arya's plot is so stupid since season 5. She will now either become a regular No One - Assassin an kill random people for the Many Face blabla, thus being a uninteresting character. Or she will rebel against the Assassin cult. We'll see.
Jon should have stayed dead for the sake of the motto of the show: Valar morghulis.
Guild chat - Jon Snow: /ragequit!
BINCH... TF you mean "my watch is ended" boy you got me fucked up
GoT S06E03
General Plot: 6/10
Single Plots:
King's Landing (4/10)
Daenerys Targaryen (3/10)
Tyrion Lannister (6/10)
Jon Snow (7.5/10)
Arya Stark (6/10)
Ramsey Bolton (8/10)
Bran Stark (7/10)
Samwell Tarly (3/10)
Everything that's happen with Jon Snow, I feel like I've read in some fanfictions before but still the shock factor is epic.
DAMN IT.....Now I can't wait for the next episode. Should have waited until there were like 4 episodes before watching. I can't handle the cliffhangers.
gave it a 9 because of Arya and Jon's storylines. everyone else was fairly boring in it
King Timmons is like a kid that has been given a crown he doesn't even sound scary
Nah that nigga olly was on thin ice, he deserved it R.I.P. Bozo :fire::fire::skull::pray_tone1:
Smalljon Umber: "Your father was a cunt, and that's why you killed him. I might've done the same to my father if he hadn't done me the favor of dying on his own."
Only the last 10 minutes were great.
I am quite enjoying Bran's visions, though he doesn't seems to understand the nature of time-travel fully, the Doctor would also have warned him against staying too long in his past and maybe wanting to change something; overall, the episode was quite good with lots of conversations and character development instead of gratuitious sex. Tommen seems to develop as a character too.
Damn, that ending! What will he do now since "His watch is ended?"
Damn, really until the last moment I thought Jon would do things differently this time. Too bad. Also, I really kind of would have liked to see Daredevil!Arya.
Thankfully my Jon returned !! unmercifully the Traíras ameii
What kind of horse-shit puke was this?!
Directed by a 4th-grader, first test of the script?
Edited by an amateur?
(The opening scenes, after story-lines shifts 10-12minutes in, slow passages of pure nothing, close-ups of irrelevant objects? For minutes!)
Advancing history and a great swordfight
God I'm so glad this TV Show is back.
Later I'll watch all seasons again, and again, and again.
Great episode again.
So glad to have Jon back. "I failed. Good. Now Go fail again" Really liking Davos this season :D
Lot of interesting stuff this episode. Learning who's funding the sons of harpy. With Astapor, Yunkai and Volantis shit's going down. The only way I see them surviving is with the help of the Dothrakis. That scene with Tyrion, Messandre and grey worm was so awkward xD Did like how Varys gets the information from her :D
I'd wish we'd get more flashbacks of Ned stark. I really enjoy watching those scenes ^_^
Pycelle's fart cracked me up. That was so unexpected, hahah xD
Glad Arya's not blind anymore but I really don't want her to become no one :(
Meanwhile Rickon gets captured at Winterfell. The starks. Why is it always the starks to be in such shitty situations. And poor Shaggydog :'(
Back at castle black, that first dude who was going to be executed. Is he for real? "You shouldn't be alive. It's not right" HE DID NOT JUST GO THERE. It was so satisfying to see that little shit Olly die :p Did like Ser Alliser though. I do respect him. He did what he thought was right.
Shout out to Jon on giving the"Fuck this, I quit" speech. Best mic drop in this series. Ever xD
Giving this week a 9/10
Fair describes it pretty well, lots of sections that are above average, a few okay, a few bad. GOT usually follows a great episode with one or two of these.
Pros
+Tower of Joy fight was good, however, it should have been amazing. I like that they didn't show what happened in the Tower yet, I hope they don't show that until the book shows us and I liked how Howland Reed fucked up Dayne, pretty much exactly how I thought it happened after Ned says that Reed saved his life from Dayne. However, Arthur Dayne using two swords looked absolutely ridiculous, he's known for using a big ass white great sword that is passed down through his family only to the best warriors, kind of weird for them to not give him a great sword regardless of color. Dual wielding really doesn't make any sense. They also cut some of the dialogue with the Kingsguard along with not mentioning that the Lord Commander of the Kingsguard was there too, instead it just seemed like it was Dayne and Whent without Hightower. I also like how Bloodraven is essentially confirming that Bran will not stay and be a watcher over the world like BR is but will go out and actively change things but he has to learn more before that point. We get closer and closer to confirming God Emperor Bran as the show and the book series' go on.
+The Umbers turning in Rickon to Ramsay is one of those things that angered me in a good way. It makes sense in the context of what is going on with the Umbers being mad that Rickon's brother is letting in the Wildlings, it brings a new Reekening into the story which in my opinion was by far the best new content the show runners added when they did it with Theon. Let's see if they can reproduce those results. So although I'm pissed it's happening, it is a good sign that they are able to piss me off for something that is going on rather than how it doesn't make sense.
+The King's landing sections were noticeably better today, Jaime's involvement always makes a scene better. He's quietly become the best character in the show.
+Arya stuff is getting better
Okay
*More background with the Dosh Khaleen, we all still know that nothing is going to happen but whatever, they've already committed themselves so they have to sort this stuff out before she returns to Meereen with a large contingent of cavalry at her back just in time for Victarion (or whoever will do it in the show) to pick her up and carry her to Westeros (or possibly Asshai according to one of the million prophecies)
*Jon leaving the Night's Watch. This is really only here because I don't exactly know what to think about it, it depends on what it tells us about Jon. It's understandable that he wouldn't want to lead the people that killed him, but he is sort of setting up one of his closest friends to meet the same fate and abandoning the order that obviously meant a whole hell of a lot to him. I don't think it would be in Jon's character to just ditch like he did. I mean, even when he ditched the order for the Wildlings he was always intending to return to the Night's Watch. The only moment he truly thought of deserting was in the cave with Ygritte, but she's long gone and he doesn't have much else aside from Bran (who is on the other side of an army of Others), Sansa (who is frantically running for her life), Arya (who is no longer really Arya) and Theon (who betrayed the rest of his family). the rest of his closest friends/family are dead or part of the Night's Watch. What may have happened is that it isn't exactly Jon that came back. Beric Dondarrion lost a bit of his memory every time he got revived, and what are we but our memories. I think it is very possible that Jon lost some crucial part of himself when he was brought back but we will have to wait to see.
Cons
-Tyrion gets more camera time for no reason other than they need to fill the fan service quota.
Review by Andrew BloomVIP 9BlockedParentSpoilers2016-05-09T21:11:21Z
"I fought. I lost. Now I rest...You'll be fighting their battles forever." Stories both eschew and crave finality. A good journey has a beginning, a middle, and an end, but when we're truly invested in it, we don't want the ride to stop. We crave the spills, chills, and surprises. So heroes come back from the dead, siblings thought long lost reappear, and like the white walkers headed toward the gate, the story marches on.
Thorne's last words are one of the few little quotations that echo through the episode. Throne dies with his head held high, a man who knew what he was and what he did, and lays out his actions in firm but understandable terms. I never particularly cared for Throne--he always seemed to hate Jon almost irrationally--but in his bravery against the Wildling attack on Castle Black and his honest defense of his principles, he showed himself to be a man who made a choice and accepted his fate. He takes comfort in the certainty of that.
Jon is thrown into the most uncertain waters from the getgo. He arises from the dead, knowing that it shouldn't be, feeling the scars where the knives entered his body and knowing that something unnatural has happened. He has been drafted into this war, at some points making conscious actions because of what he believes in, but at others simply swept along by the current of what was required of him. Thorne tried to do what he thought was right and is hanged for it. Jon did the same and yet gets to return from the land of the dead, left to wonder if it's all worth it, if he can stand fighting these same battles over and over again, if he can suffer the betrayal, the knives piercing his flesh that seem to come in one form or another whatever he tries to do.
When he swings a blade of his own, slicing the rope keeping his betrayers in place on the makeshift gallows, it's a visual echo of deserter from Castle Black that Ned Stark executed in the beginning of the show. That opening scene, about the responsibilities of being a leader and accepting the uglier parts of the job, and of "honor" has come back in several forms over the course of the show. From Rob executing Lord Carstark, to Theon's botched execution during his reign of terror, to Jon himself having to execute a former member of the King's Guard. It's the burden of command.
But this time, Jon has to look into the eyes of a child. He has to cut that rope and see the very sort of innocent he was trying to save, resenting him to his very last breath. This is his reward for all his service and commitment. This is his reward for making the tough decisions. This is his reward for effectively giving his life in order to save thousands, maybe hundreds of thousands, of lives. It's ugly and harsh and compounded by a hatred from people like Ollly who will never understand, no matter how many warm embraces from his brothers he may receive.
It's particularly harsh because, as Varys puts it, children are innocent. The Spider works his magic on a sympathizer for the sons of the harpy, and he's a presence of Machiavellian perfection. The arch manner in which he probes his resistant witness, his iron fist in the velvet glove that gets him the information he wants, is another boon from one of the show's most entertaining characters. But the futility of it all comes through in what he learns as well.
The lands that Dany liberated, the ones that made her the "breaker of chains," have not only returned to slavery, but have been funding the sons of the harpy and setting the whole of Slaver's Bay against her. Preceded, though it may be, by a hilarious seen where Tyrion tries to make conversation with his much more subdued companions, it's a dispiriting revelation. Dany too tried to do the right thing, to live by her principles and make herself worthy of being called a queen, but parts of the old system are as resilient as they are malignant, and it's exhausting to have to constantly fight to keep whatever meager gains you've managed to make.
And Dany herself is once more reduce to something less than she ought to be. She's accomplished a great deal, and yet she is just the latest victim of this cycle. She stands surrounded by women who, as the one who speaks for them all explained, once imagined that their great Khals would rule the world with their distaff counterparts at their sides. Instead, they are each left to play out the string as something lesser and compartmentalized, with Dany potentially being punished for having dared to do anything but submit. Maybe when she speaks to the council that decides her fate, she will convince them to free her, or at least to let her help them lead a horde of Dothraki to Slaver's Bay as an antidote to the Sons of the Harpy. But one could easily forgive her for, like her raven-haired counterpart at the wall, growing tired of this neverending battle, that seems to leave you back where you started no matter what you've tried to do.
They're not the only ones who end up back where they started. In a surprise reveal, we see Osha and Rickon back in Winterfell for the first time since they departed from Bran & Co. While I fear that their reappearance will be another excuse to give Ramsay a new pair of torture toys for a while, there's a similar theme running through the preceding exchange between him and the rebel bannerman who delivers the youngest Stark. He refuses to swear oaths or kneel or pledge fealty. He's seen what oaths are worth: the Boltons turning on the Starks, Ramsay turning on his father, the Carstarks joining Ramsay even though their share blood with Ned's brood. What good is an oath, whether it be a bannerman's to Ramsay or Jon Snow's to the watch, if people break them so easily. Maybe they're just a way to keep people in line, to keep them from looking out for themselves or upsettng the usual order, and those lines can only be crossed so often before people begin to wonder if they were illusory in the first place.
The High Sparrow figures out how to keep Tommen in line, another innocent child tainted by the movements of the larger forces at work, through his mother, who is facing challenges of her own with the small council. The soft machinations of the High Sparrow, seeming to constantly yield and yet simply redirecting forces like anger to his own ends, allow him to use Tommen's connections to his family to help keep him cowed. Arya is kept in line by trying to break those very connections, but trying to teach her to sever her ties with her siblings, with the names on her list, with the relationships that kept her a part of her old life. As I've said before, the montage that shows her developing her skills as an assassin is a bit too Karate Kid for my tastes, but by drinking the bowl full of poison, Arya follows her brother in accepting a dividing line between an old life and a new one and changing her manner and methods accordingly.
But those sorts of connections are the one warm thing for Jon as he returns to the living. The joking embrace of Toramund, the similar ribbing welcome of Edd, make it feel as though there was at least something for Jon to come back to. And then there's the one connection that's absent -- Sam, who is bringing Gilly and Sam Jr. back to where he started, a likely unwelcome homecoming he undertakes for the good of the people he loves and who, as Gilly conveys by calling him the father of her child, love him back. He set off on this journey to help Jon and to protect his loved ones from the rapists and criminals at Castle Black, and though his pleasant moments are punctuated by unhappy (if amusing) bouts of nausea, he knows what he has to do, and is buoyed by the affection of those he feels that familial connection to.
The same familial connection drives a young Ned Stark in the show's flashback to the Tower of Joy seen through Bran's eyes. He intends to rescue his sister, but the methods used fail to live up to the man Bran imagined his father to be. This too, is a broken oath, of sorts. Bran has heard this story a thousand times -- he knows how it's supposed to end. But instead, even honorable Ned, covers up the fact that his bannerman, Mera's father, stabbed the opposing swordsman in the back to win the day. Again, honor is shown to be a fairytale in Westeros, one where the show's only paragon of virtue this side of Brienne will invent lies in service of a more important truth. We don't get to see all the details of that truth just yet, but Bran, and the audience, are learning that there's more to the story.
And there's more to Jon's story as well. After seasons that left Jon concerned with the affairs of The Wall, whether at Castle Black or in the Wildlings' territory, he is headed elsewhere. But he remains stung by the futility of his actions, that he cannot try to serve the greater good, cannot try to live up to his father's honor, cannot even die without being pulled back into what he was trying to move on from.
Only Alliser Thorne could make it sound like a failing to have the temerity to come back from the dead, but he's right. Jon will continue the struggle; he will continue to suffer losses, and he may never have the chance to rest. He has fought these battles, many other people's battles, for so long. Who can blame him for seeing someone like Olly kicking in mid-air and deciding that he's had enough? Once, Jon pledged, like all of the Brothers, that his watch would "not end until my death." Well, he died, and now his watch has ended, and the closest thing to a traditional hero left on Game of Thrones has earned the right to go fight his own battle, to go fail again, or perhaps not even fight at all.