To me Game of Thrones will never be the same (S4E8 discussion)

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Fox12

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This is going in circles. You say my analysis is lacking detail, but you won't say how, and refuse to acknowledge my points, or actually debate in any meaningful way. So far your main arguments have driveled down to "prove your opinions wrong beyond a doubt." I haven't exactly seen a keen defense of Martins work from you either, friend. I admit my analysis is more of a summary of ideas than an in depth literary analysis, but since this is a chat forum, and not a 500 page piece of literary criticism, I have attempted to condense my points, which is more than you have so far attempted. Most of your admittedly weak points have been adressed, and I have given examples. If you choose to dismiss them because you can't stand someone criticizing your sacred cow, then so be it. That's a commentary on your discussion skills, not mine. I will address some of your better points, though.


BloatedGuppy said:
Chris Tian said:
So...tropes are predictable, and subversion of tropes is also predictable. And doing both is predictable.

Good to know. Sucks that writing is just so universally predictable.

Fox12 said:
This supports his nihilistic theme.
Nihilism (/ˈnaɪ.ɨlɪzəm/ or /ˈniː.ɨlɪzəm/; from the Latin nihil, nothing) is a philosophical doctrine that suggests the negation of one or more putatively meaningful aspects of life. Most commonly, nihilism is presented in the form of existential nihilism, which argues that life is without objective meaning, purpose, or intrinsic value.[1] Moral nihilists assert that morality does not inherently exist, and that any established moral values are abstractly contrived. Nihilism can also take epistemological or ontological/metaphysical forms, meaning respectively that, in some aspect, knowledge is not possible, or that reality does not actually exist.
Please explain in detail how Martin's themes are nihilistic. As a writer, this should be easy for you. Demonstrate multiple examples of how the books promote "nihilism" as the central theme of the story.

Fox12 said:
Concerning the death count in Game of Thrones, I apologize for not having my charts and graphs on hand to show the actual percentage of deaths per capita, but, believe it or not, Game of Thrones is known for having a rather large body count. My main issue with the series is its themes, though, more than anything else.
See, if I were to complain about Lord of the Rings, stating that "Most of the characters had died", and someone called me out on it, I'd look like a clown if I had a sulk about how I "didn't have my charts and graphs" on hand, because hardly any characters died, and that's actually also the case with ASOIAF.
Nihilism: yes, this is certainly the case. Characters die often, and without any real meaning or impact on the story, with a few major exceptions. Most characters also lose their purpose in life. Jaime loses his hand, and thus his fighting ability, which he spent his whole life perfecting. He also loses Cersei, who has been cheating on him this whole time. Tyrion loses his money, family, and titles. Most of his family never loved him, and the one who did, Jaime, cost him his wife. He's also scarred. Every good action he's taken has made things worse, both for himself and others. Catelyn believes she has lost her whole family, one after another, and has turned into a spirit of vengeance. Theon Greyjoy betrayed the starks, costing them greatly, before he is then betrayed by his people, who essentially turn him into a dog through months of torture. He's basically less than human. Meanwhile, the white walkers are (slowly) coming south to attack, there's not enough food to stored up for the winter, and the countryside is in ruins. Rape and murder is everywhere, with Martin actually writing the line that hardly a woman remains unravished. People die randomly in Martins world, and completely independent of whether they are good, bad, or grey people. The characters who don't die typically lose everything, and horrible things happen for arbitrary reason. There doesn't seem to be any real underlying theme or message concerning morality, it's just one disaster after another. I'm not even sure how you can post that definition, and then tell me, with a straight face, that his work doesn't have a nihilistic theme. Game of Thrones is 90% shock value, lets be real. He's also on record as saying that his novels are based on the real world and history, which means that Martin is attempting to promote a certain world view. I disagree with that world view, which is why I criticize him.

Character deaths: there are quite a few. In terms of named deaths, there are 54 in the first book, 72 in the second, and 97 in the third, ect. Are we reading the same book series? Maybe your thinking of Eragon.
 

Spaggiari

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Magmarock said:
All, because the bad guys have had one too many victories. Joffrey's death was one victory for the good guys out of a dozen for the bad guys and each season thus far has ended with a very dark and mean spirited tone.
Ned Stark's death, Black Water, Red Wedding, and now Oberyn
All those events that you mentioned happened in the ninth episode of their respective seasons. They always hit the climax on episode nine. As shocking as Oberyn's death was (and he was my favourite character when I read the books), It isn't the climax of this season by a long shot. Don't give up on the show just yet is all I'm going to say.
 

Spaggiari

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Magmarock said:
All, because the bad guys have had one too many victories. Joffrey's death was one victory for the good guys out of a dozen for the bad guys and each season thus far has ended with a very dark and mean spirited tone.
Ned Stark's death, Black Water, Red Wedding, and now Oberyn
All those events that you mentioned happened in the ninth episode of their respective seasons. They always hit the climax on episode nine. As shocking as Oberyn's death was (and he was my favourite character when I read the books), It isn't the climax of this season by a long shot. Don't give up on the show just yet is all I'm going to say.
 

Reiper

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Clive Howlitzer said:
Minus the whole burning his own people for worshiping the wrong God, I actually like Stannis. I wish he'd get more screen time. I haven't read the books but I do feel like the show tries to demonize him for some weird reason. I like that he is mostly lawful, I liked all his screen time in season 2 and was hoping for more of him but he has mostly fallen out.
if I recall correctly he never burned anyone in the book who wasn't otherwise sentenced to death. Axell florent was burned because he tried to broker a secret peace with the Lannisters, in the show he was burned "just coz"
See this is one of the things I dislike about the show. In the books Stannis seems to not really give a damn about the red god or any god for that matter, he simply sees them as tools and a means to an end. In the show it is much less clear.

IE
Stannis Baratheon said:
I stopped believing in gods the day I saw the Windproud break up across the bay. Any gods so monstrous as to drown my mother and father would never have my worship, I vowed. In King?s Landing, the High Septon would prattle at me of how all justice and goodness flowed from the Seven, but all I ever saw of either was made by men.
or

Clayton Suggs - "A sacrifice will prove our faith still burns true, Sire."
Godry the Giantslayer - "The gods have sent this storm upon us. Only R'hllor can end it. We must give him an unbeliever."
Stannis - "Half my army is made up of unbelievers. I will have no burnings. Pray harder."
 

Loonyyy

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BloatedGuppy said:
Chris Tian said:
I never claimed he subverts tropes whenever he can, I just said when he does it its almost as predictable as the tropes themself, so the whole "its so shocking beause its the opposite one would expect" effect goes out of the window.
So...tropes are predictable, and subversion of tropes is also predictable. And doing both is predictable.

Good to know. Sucks that writing is just so universally predictable.

Fox12 said:
It's not really hindsight if I saw it coming before it happened.
That's great. You've stated already his writing is predictable because you've come to understand his "style". So I'm asking, for a third time now, for you to demonstrate your ability and predict what's going to happen. It should be easy. You know his style.
I think you're right on with the "predictable" sentiments coming from hindsight, but I'd also add that once everything's lined up we can have a fair guess based on Martin's style what's going to happen. Before the duel, it's not that much to guess that Oberyn's going to lose, before Eddard Stark loses his head, it's not too much of a stab to think that he might be betrayed. Martin understands foreshadowing, and you can pick up on that even when he layers in misdirection, and have a crack.

My beef is-how am I meant to be impressed by the ability to predict a pretty binary outcome just before it happens? Did they guess that Tyrion would be tried for Regicide? That Joffrey would be murdered at his wedding? That Oberyn would stand for Tyrion(And there's so many examples of characters who have arcs laid out that they don't fulfill, or are promised at that don't emerge [Eddard telling Jon about his mother, Jon becoming a Ranger, Robb's war and vengeance, and there's a series of killer ones coming up that unfortunately would be spoilers])? That's why they can't predict anything of substance. They're guessing at coin flips, knowing a little about Martin's style to give them a better chance(And ignoring the fact that Martin actually makes things a coin flip rather than plot armoured contrivances). Consider me unimpressed. If they can work out what the arcs are before they happen, what goals and challenges are going to present themselves, maybe I'd put stock in their cynicism, but I'm yet to see this. It is also deeply ironic that these people whinge about darkness, darkness induced apathy, about "bad guys" always winning because GRR Martin is a sadist/troll/nihilist/cynic, when their entire view is based on cynicism.

And then we get gems like this "Game of Thrones subverts the archetypal knight image by having The Hound kill some people or something.". The Hound is explicitly not a knight, and does not subvert the Knight. Ser Gregor, Ser Meryn, Ser Boros Blount subvert Knighthood. The Hound says he isn't a knight because his brother is one, and because it's a load of bollocks, it's a bunch of killers pretending to be noble and making a series of promises they won't keep, and that are in contradiction to their characters. It's almost impossible not to get this. He explicitly states it several time, explicitly avoids knighthood even though he could attain it if he chose, and demonstrates it on a regular basis. This is truly basic writing and literary analysis.

"Spare me your empty little compliments, girl . . . and your ser?s. I am no knight. I spit on them and their vows. My brother is a knight"
"I like dogs better than knights."
"What do you think a knight is for, girl? You think it's all taking favors from ladies and looking fine in gold plate? Knights are for killing. I killed my first man at twelve. I've lost count of how many I've killed since then. High lords with old names, fat rich men dressed in velvet, knights puffed up like bladders with their honors, yes, and women and children too- they're all meat, and I'm the butcher. Let them have their lands and their gods and their gold. Let them have their sers."
"There are no true knights, no more than there are gods. If you can't protect yourself, die and get out of the way of those who can. Sharp steel and strong arms rule this world, don't ever believe any different"

And that's just taking from the wiki and not looking up my own references. The Hound serves as a counter to the Knights, but is not a subversion of them. If anything, the Hound subverts tropes such as "The Dragon" (Such a terrible name) by leaving his master not because of a change of heart for good, but because fuck the king, I hate fire, I'm out, and by simply being a brutal killer, not some half-assed Darth Vader, or tropes about killers and rogues with hearts of gold, being an admitted murderer who enjoys killing and violence.
 

Magmarock

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maxben said:
Magmarock said:
There are characters in GoT with grey morality, but Obreyn and Gregor were clearly as representation of good vs evil, and anyone can see that.
Since when is looking for revenge automatically making you a whitecloak? Under that Daenerys's brother was a whitecloak. What Oberyn was was charismatic, which is what people are trying to tell you. He was a violent, arrogant man who fights dirty and fathers bastards throughout the world. Essentially, he was a suave version of King Robert (who was grey as hell). Anyhow, you will later see more about his family that may or may not change your mind about them.

As for Gregor, Gregor is a blackcloak obviously but that's because he is an attack dog. Every leader has one. Technically Roose Bolton or possibly the Umbers were the Starks' attack dog before they betrayed them. That's what Daario is for Daenerys. These are men you send out to do the worst things because they are necessary. Again though, Daario is more suave so we forget that he is a heartless mercenary who would murder whatever.

By the way, I read the books and even then when I saw that scene in the show it was like a punch to the guts, so I do understand where you're coming from. But dont worry, there is always a win on the horizon. By the way, I though Blackwater wasn't the bad guys winning but the other bad guy (Stannis) losing for what he did to Renly (which I think would have been the best King, better than the Starks by far). I feel that if you really break it down there is a lot of give and take in this series and that every awful act by an actor gets a response in one way or another.
As psychotic as this might sound I am kind of a supporter of revenge in the right circumferences. Given the situation I would say that revenge is the right thing to do.

However his charisma and determination to kill the Lannisters (expect for Tywin) to me strongly sets him up as a hero.

Gorge RR Martian described Joffrey's death as a victory for the good guys so this seemed like it was going to be the coup de grace before the Lannisters were knocked off the bored and replaced by the Boltons as the main evil family. At least that's what I was really hoping for. The Lannisters are starting to get boring and I'm sick of seeing them. The Boltons on the other hand are getting more interesting.
 

Clive Howlitzer

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Reiper said:
Clive Howlitzer said:
Minus the whole burning his own people for worshiping the wrong God, I actually like Stannis. I wish he'd get more screen time. I haven't read the books but I do feel like the show tries to demonize him for some weird reason. I like that he is mostly lawful, I liked all his screen time in season 2 and was hoping for more of him but he has mostly fallen out.
if I recall correctly he never burned anyone in the book who wasn't otherwise sentenced to death. Axell florent was burned because he tried to broker a secret peace with the Lannisters, in the show he was burned "just coz"
See this is one of the things I dislike about the show. In the books Stannis seems to not really give a damn about the red god or any god for that matter, he simply sees them as tools and a means to an end. In the show it is much less clear.

IE
Stannis Baratheon said:
I stopped believing in gods the day I saw the Windproud break up across the bay. Any gods so monstrous as to drown my mother and father would never have my worship, I vowed. In King?s Landing, the High Septon would prattle at me of how all justice and goodness flowed from the Seven, but all I ever saw of either was made by men.
or

Clayton Suggs - "A sacrifice will prove our faith still burns true, Sire."
Godry the Giantslayer - "The gods have sent this storm upon us. Only R'hllor can end it. We must give him an unbeliever."
Stannis - "Half my army is made up of unbelievers. I will have no burnings. Pray harder."
That is a pretty big difference. It'd be nice if they kept a few moments of that in the show.
 

BloatedGuppy

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Fox12 said:
This is going in circles. You say my analysis is lacking detail, but you won't say how, and refuse to acknowledge my points, or actually debate in any meaningful way. So far your main arguments have driveled down to "prove your opinions wrong beyond a doubt."
You're aware of how burden of proof operates, yes? Who made the claim, and who challenged the claim?

Fox12 said:
Most of your admittedly weak points have been adressed
Admittedly weak? Admitted by whom? Admitted by you? That was gracious.

Fox12 said:
If you choose to dismiss them because you can't stand someone criticizing your sacred cow, then so be it.
I was waiting for the inevitable "fanboy" ad hom to come out. That's very, very, very lazy of you. I'm condemning your inaccurate critique, not your dislike of the series.

Fox12 said:
Theon Greyjoy betrayed the starks, costing them greatly, before he is then betrayed by his people...
He was betrayed by Ramsay Bolton. Are we discussing the books or the show now?

Fox12 said:
Rape and murder is everywhere, with Martin actually writing the line that hardly a woman remains unravished.
Books or show? Rape is far more commonplace in the show, something it's been routinely criticized for by fans of the books and the media in general.

Fox12 said:
People die randomly in Martins world, and completely independent of whether they are good, bad, or grey people.
As opposed to...? Do people not die randomly independent of those facts in the actual world? Should characters only earn noble or special deaths in fiction?

Fox12 said:
I'm not even sure how you can post that definition, and then tell me, with a straight face, that his work doesn't have a nihilistic theme.
It doesn't, and I'm beginning to wonder if you know what a "theme" is, let alone nihilism.

Fox12 said:
Game of Thrones is 90% shock value, lets be real.
Okay, let's be real. How do you measure shock value? What differentiates 90% from, say, 80%? Is there a metric I can employ?

Fox12 said:
He's also on record as saying that his novels are based on the real world and history, which means that Martin is attempting to promote a certain world view.
...one that is based on history?

Fox12 said:
I disagree with that world view, which is why I criticize him.
...the one based on history?

Fox12 said:
Character deaths: there are quite a few. In terms of named deaths, there are 54 in the first book, 72 in the second, and 97 in the third, ect. Are we reading the same book series? Maybe your thinking of Eragon.
There are over 1300 named characters in the books at last count. And again, exactly what math are you using to arrive at "most" using those numbers?

I'm also wondering if we're reading the same book series, because you appear to be reading one where most of the characters are dead and the central theme is "nihilism".

Come on. This is getting extremely silly.
 

Fox12

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BloatedGuppy said:
Fox12 said:
This is going in circles. You say my analysis is lacking detail, but you won't say how, and refuse to acknowledge my points, or actually debate in any meaningful way. So far your main arguments have driveled down to "prove your opinions wrong beyond a doubt."
You're aware of how burden of proof operates, yes? Who made the claim, and who challenged the claim?
extremely silly.
Yes, but you don't. This is a literary discussion, not a scientific endeavor. I can't "prove" that Mozart is better than Brittney Spears. I can give reasons for why I think he is better. His work is more complex, it has passed the test of time, I personally enjoyed it, ect. It's still a subjective opinion. In any case, there are things I actually like about Martin. His dialogue is fantastic, his prose are decent, and he writes relatable characters. That doesn't excuse his literary weaknesses.

You can't say you condemn an inaccurate critique when you refuse to actually address most of my statements and examples provided. I made a claim and provided examples. You skirt around the point made, and never say anything of substance. I'm not interested in a boring flame war. When you want to have a real discussion, we can continue. Otherwise we're just going to continue this until we both get a mod warning.
 

BloatedGuppy

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Because you're going to claim I didn't give your rigorous analysis a fair shake, let's look at one. Let's look at Ned Stark.

Fox12 said:
When Eddard was taken captive, there was little chance of him surviving. His province was in open rebellion
The North rebelled after he was taken, but I suspect you're just condensing timelines.

Fox12 said:
Martin uses narrative misdirection by saying that he can be sent up north to the wall if his son stands down. Unfortunately this is incredibly stupid. First of all, it's out of Cersei's character to spare someone who may be a threat, or knows about her incest.
1. Cersei didn't kill Jon Arryn
2. Cersei chastises Jaime for attempting to kill Bran, calling it stupid and reckless, and suggesting she could have convinced him to remain silent
3. The Lannister's eventual reaction to Stannis sending out word of the incest is to smear him in return. Nothing happens as a result of Stannis's revelation. NOTHING.

Fox12 said:
She's paranoid and ruthless, so her offering to spare Eddard makes zero sense in that context.
Killing Eddard ignited the war with the North and threw the seven kingdoms into Chaos. Not killing Ned would've meant a sworn traitor knew an ugly secret, one that he was not likely to repeat as long as she held his daughters as wards.

Fox12 said:
It was a betrayal of character for her to do that.
No, it wasn't. You haven't established that.

Fox12 said:
Second, for Eddard to go to the wall, he would have to be sent past HIS OWN LANDS, which are currently in open rebellion.
An open rebellion which would have ended the second he agreed to take the Black. Is he going to plot an escape and allow Sansa and hypothetically Arya's heads to roll? Does that sound like Eddard Stark? His brother is at the wall. His "bastard son" is at the wall. He views the Night's Watch as an honorable institution. Why would he not go to the wall?

Fox12 said:
That's not even an option.
Why?
 

Chris Tian

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BloatedGuppy said:
Okay then. Predict what will happen. Not in this season, you could Google that shit. Tell me what will happen in Winds of Winter. Tell me what will happen in A Dream of Spring. It's predictable. It should be easy. What's the end game? Who lives or who dies.
Do you even read what I'm writing or are you just randomly ranting?

I repeatedly and specifically statet that I could see the shock moments comming and that GoT lacks a overarching storyline and/or direction and now you ask me to predict how the story will unfold longterm to make my point?

That makes very little sense, since the predictability of the overarching narrative was never one of my points, mainly because there is none. I did not say I could see the Red Wedding or Oberyns fate and the like comming seasons before, just too soon.

I'm pretty sure Martin himself doesn't even have a clue what is going to happen in his comming books and what "the end game" is supposed to be, thats the problem.

Loonyyy said:
That's why they can't predict anything of substance. They're guessing at coin flips, knowing a little about Martin's style to give them a better chance(And ignoring the fact that Martin actually makes things a coin flip rather than plot armoured contrivances). Consider me unimpressed.
First of, nobody tried to impress you so calm down. All these tropes and cliches exist for a reason, because they have a function within a narrative. The protagonist always survives because if he dies there not much left to do with that particular storyline. When you get rid of that cliche and kill the protagonist you create a void and you have to fill that void with something. Just subverting the plot armored hero trope is not enough and when you killing the hero is even predicatble it looses the little effect it had to begin with and is a completely useless narrative device.
 

BloatedGuppy

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Fox12 said:
Yes, but you don't. This is a literary discussion, not a scientific endeavor. I can't "prove" that Mozart is better than Brittney Spears. I can give reasons for why I think he is better. His work is more complex, it has passed the test of time, I personally enjoyed it, ect. It's still a subjective opinion.
"Most of the characters are dead" is an objective statement. "His work is predictable once you know his style" is an objective statement. "I do not like George R.R. Martin or find his work too dark for my tastes" would be a perfectly subjective statement.

Fox12 said:
You can't say you condemn an inaccurate critique when you refuse to actually address most of my statements and examples provided. I made a claim and provided examples. You skirt around the point made, and never say anything of substance. I'm not interested in a boring flame war. When you want to have a real discussion, we can continue. Otherwise we're just going to continue this until we both get a mod warning.
In order for this to be a "flame war" there would need to be flames occurring, and short of you suggesting I was a fanboy in a moment of agitation nothing of the sort has happened. I've been highly critical of your statements, at least one of which is objectively and measurably false. Criticizing arguments is not verboten.

And as it happens, I'd already set out to address one of your examples. If I find time, I'll go back and address the other.
 

BloatedGuppy

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Chris Tian said:
I'm pretty sure Martin himself doesn't even have a clue what is going to happen in his comming books and what "the end game" is supposed to be, thats the problem.
He had his plot mapped out when he started the series in the 90's. His much ballyhooed delay/bloat came as a result of him trying to fill in his self-inflicted 5 year gap. While it's cute to claim he has no idea what's happening, and I approve of taking the piss out of the old coot for his abominable slowness in getting the books out, it's not really accurate. FFS you can hop on Google right now and read articles where the showrunners talk about sitting down with Martin and getting the outline for the entire remnant of the story just in case he dies before he finishes.

Chris Tian said:
All these tropes and cliches exist for a reason, because they have a function within a narrative.
A "trope" is not a fundamental narrative device. It's an overused/hackneyed story element. That is what the word means.

His books have something on the order of 20+ "protagonists", all but ONE of which are still very much alive.
 

Chris Tian

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BloatedGuppy said:
He had his plot mapped out when he started the series in the 90's. His much ballyhooed delay/bloat came as a result of him trying to fill in his self-inflicted 5 year gap. While it's cute to claim he has no idea what's happening, and I approve of taking the piss out of the old coot for his abominable slowness in getting the books out, it's not really accurate. FFS you can hop on Google right now and read articles where the showrunners talk about sitting down with Martin and getting the outline for the entire remnant of the story just in case he dies before he finishes.
I can obviously not know if he has the story mapped out and an endgame planned or not. The whole show just feels like he doesn't because its going absolutely nowhere until now.

BloatedGuppy said:
A "trope" is not a fundamental narrative device. It's an overused/hackneyed story element. That is what the word means.
Yes exactly and why are they overused? Because most of them serve a very specific function. For Example: The Red Shirt is used to be able to create immediate danger to life without having to kill an important character.

BloatedGuppy said:
His books have something on the order of 20+ "protagonists", all but ONE of which are still very much alive.
And only one of those does anything remotely interesting, exactly my point.
 

BloatedGuppy

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Chris Tian said:
I can obviously not know if he has the story mapped out and an endgame planned or not. The whole show just feels like he doesn't because its going absolutely nowhere until now.
You have to appreciate the show is experiencing pacing issues that further aggravate already ponderous novels. The showrunners, in their infinite wisdom, have chosen to juggle timelines in order to cluster events in certain episodes for dramatic effect. This leads to a lot of "bonus" off book storylines that go nowhere, and characters sitting in place spinning their wheels.

Chris Tian said:
Yes exactly and why are they overused? Because most of them serve a very specific function. For Example: The Red Shirt is used to be able to create immediate danger to life without having to kill an important character.
Because the monomyth is easy to write, easy to digest, and authors are lazy? This is honestly the first time in my entire life I heard someone arguing for "more formula" in fiction. I've got to hand it to you.

Chris Tian said:
And only one of those does anything remotely interesting, exactly my point.
I cannot speak as to what you personally find interesting or not interesting. That the books were bestsellers and the show one of the more popular and widely watched on the air seems to imply someone is finding it interesting, even if you do not. It's possible there is a more formulaic, heroic show out there that will closer fit your parameters of what constitutes an "interesting" narrative.

http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/StrictlyFormula

You can look for ideas there. I wish you good fortune.

PS - I AM GOING TO BED GUYS YOU CAN YELL AT ME SOME MORE ABOUT HOW THE SHOW SUCKS TOMORROW. HAVE A GOOD NIGHT.
 

Chris Tian

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BloatedGuppy said:
Because the monomyth is easy to write, easy to digest, and authors are lazy? This is honestly the first time in my entire life I heard some arguing for "more formula" in fiction. I've got to hand it to you.
I never argued for "more formula". My point is if your not doing that, you have to do something else. Not doing what everybody else does is not inherently a good thing or makes for good writing just on its own.


BloatedGuppy said:
I cannot speak as to what you personally find interesting or not interesting. That the books were bestsellers and the show one of the more popular and widely watched on the air seems to imply someone is finding it interesting, even if you do not. It's possible there is a more formulaic, heroic show out there that will closer fit your parameters of what constitutes an "interesting" narrative.
I whatch the show too remember? My working theory is, everybody is just like me waiting that thing finally takes of and goes somewhere.
 

Loonyyy

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Chris Tian said:
That makes very little sense, since the predictability of the overarching narrative was never one of my points, mainly because there is none. I did not say I could see the Red Wedding or Oberyns fate and the like comming seasons before, just too soon.
Which is my point. Whether you can predict the outcome of a duel says nothing about the predictability of the show. As you've just admitted, you can't predict these elements coming, you can't predict arcs. They're UNpredictable.

That's a falsification of your claim in it's entirety. So what, you can predict the outcome of one event. That's predicting the outcome of one match in a sports season, not even the overall winner, let alone the fates of the players, with injuries and trades etc.
I'm pretty sure Martin himself doesn't even have a clue what is going to happen in his comming books and what "the end game" is supposed to be, thats the problem.
He may, he may not. Judging it to be a problem with no knowledge of what Martin has outlined is silly (And we've got more than good reason to think he has a plan and an outline, particularly as he's let the showrunners in on details).

How is this not just pointless mud slinging at something you don't like, which as we've seen, you also don't get?
Loonyyy said:
That's why they can't predict anything of substance. They're guessing at coin flips, knowing a little about Martin's style to give them a better chance(And ignoring the fact that Martin actually makes things a coin flip rather than plot armoured contrivances). Consider me unimpressed.
First of, nobody tried to impress you so calm down.
Let's start by poisoning the well.

Of course you didn't try to impress me. If this is your reading comprehension we won't get far, and I'm seeing why you don't get the topic.
All these tropes and cliches exist for a reason, because they have a function within a narrative.
And continues with bullshit.

The reason tropes and cliches exist is because certain things are repeated, and particularly in some media, utilising known elements like tropes and cliches is a matter of efficiency, where less important characters can be replaced by caricatures.

That's not to say that tropes individually, or cliches have any good reason, or why utilising them or subverting or ignoring them is any better.
The protagonist always survives because if he dies there not much left to do with that particular storyline.
Who is the protagonist in Game of Thrones or ASOIAF? See, you don't even get that bare minimum understanding of the story's structure, and you're attempting to judge it using a completely irrelevant framework and TVTropes.

And don't even bother answering that the narrator is the protagonist. You should be aware that narrators who aren't the protagonist exist, and that having POVs of characters who die is not uncommon.
When you get rid of that cliche and kill the protagonist you create a void and you have to fill that void with something.
Actually, you don't. GoT is about drama, it's about politics. It's not about any particular plotline, it's about characters, and how they interact. There's a reason there's so many connivers and manipulators. It's because that's what the show's about.

Never mind that there are always several characters with different goals doing something at any one time, so complaining that they "killed the protagonist" (Which is just embarrassingly wrong. This isn't LOTR. Stop it). One character dying a tragic or brutal end is the payoff for that character's story, because their goals don't really matter. It's their character, and how they interact with other characters that are important. Oberyn's death, Ned Stark's death, Robb Stark's death, all have lasting effects on the history of Westoros, but also on the other characters. And, most of these deaths (Ned Stark, Robb Stark, and Oberyn) all were a result of their actions, beliefs and choices. They were conclusions to their arcs, particularly in the tragic sense.

Again, this is just people picking a hero (Whoever they think is the most noble or charming usually) and then getting mad when we don't lope off for Joseph Campbell. It's fine to not like this sort of story, but please, don't like it because you don't like that sort of story, not because it fails as a different kind of story. You're judging a car on how well it flies.

Every time the fan's new favourite dies, they flip their shit and say they're not watching it anymore. Good. Screw those people. They don't get it, and the show servicing them means more blandness and avoiding of the things which make it special. When these events happen, there's so much else going on. It's not the end of the narrative, it's the end of a character, and their arc. Hell, while Oberyn dies, we have Arya and the Hound discovering that Lysa is dead (And maybe there's no-one to recognise and pay for Arya), Brienne looking for Arya and Sansa, Danerys banishing Jorah and still unable to control her conquest, a filler romantic plot between Grey Worm and Missandei, the Wildlings advancing on Castle Black and the Wall. There's no void, there's so much still happening(And the climax happens on Monday). Hell, look at it from the POV of someone who's more interested in the Hound and Jon Snow, and couldn't be arsed about Tyrion and Oberyn. Would you seriously tell them that the show is now an empty void?

Just subverting the plot armored hero trope is not enough
If subversion was the point, this would matter. While Martin does subvert tropes and memes, that's not his overall goal, it's a tool. This isn't Terry Pratchet, this isn't Douglas Adams.
and when you killing the hero is even predicatble
And we're back to the start. There is one important thing to note in the subversion. There is no hero. All men must die.(And spare us a rant about that phrase, I can just sense it coming as a bit about how Martin kills all his characters [Jon, Arya, Sansa, Bran, Rickon, Tyrion, Tywin, Cersei, Jaime, Brienne, Pod, Sandor, Dany, Jorah, fuck we could do this all day] And yes, you can predict Stark's death when he's on the block. Can you predict it at Winterfell at the start? Can you predict that Arya will be on the path to becoming a master assassin?

It's guessing the outcome of a coin flip. Which, as I said, isn't particularly impressive. To rephrase that so you parse my meaning: It's not only not impressive, it's missing the point and crowing about what everyone else is able to do as if it's some insight.
it looses the little effect it had to begin with and is a
As has been pointed out: You suck at math.

Gee, I hated it when Drogo's blood rider killed Jorah Mormont and gutted Dany.
Gee, I hated it when the White Walker killed Sam and Gilly.
Gee, I hated it when the mountain men attacked and killed Bronn and Tyrion.
Gee, I hated it when Tyrion was assassinated during the Battle of the Blackwater.

You're complaining about nonsense, something which never was, and never will be. Martin has not replaced "Heroes always live" with "Heroes always die". And again, that's still thinking in terms of heroes. Which for all your talk of subversion, you've managed to miss the one insight on stories Ned Stark's death had to offer.
completely useless narrative device.
It's not a narrative device. That doesn't mean what you think it does. And considering you've defended the hero always surviving, why shouldn't we dismiss that as a useless "narrative device" as you have this (Made up) "narrative device" of Martin's?
 

Magmarock

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Spaggiari said:
Magmarock said:
All, because the bad guys have had one too many victories. Joffrey's death was one victory for the good guys out of a dozen for the bad guys and each season thus far has ended with a very dark and mean spirited tone.
Ned Stark's death, Black Water, Red Wedding, and now Oberyn
All those events that you mentioned happened in the ninth episode of their respective seasons. They always hit the climax on episode nine. As shocking as Oberyn's death was (and he was my favourite character when I read the books), It isn't the climax of this season by a long shot. Don't give up on the show just yet is all I'm going to say.
Oh I'm not giving up by a long shot, I'm just disappointed in the long run and have learned that not only are all the characters not safe, but the build ups aren't safe either.
 

Chris Tian

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Loonyyy said:
Which is my point. Whether you can predict the outcome of a duel says nothing about the predictability of the show. As you've just admitted, you can't predict these elements coming, you can't predict arcs. They're UNpredictable.

That's a falsification of your claim in it's entirety. So what, you can predict the outcome of one event. That's predicting the outcome of one match in a sports season, not even the overall winner, let alone the fates of the players, with injuries and trades etc.
How is it a "falsification of my claim"? My claim is that specific events that are clearly supposed to be shocking did not shock due to predictability.

I never claimed to be able to predict "overall winner". I repeatedly statet that GoT lacks any kind to overarching storyline to even be able to say what there is to win and how to win it. GoT doesn't have unpredictable arcs, it barely has any at all.

For some reason you try to disprove a claim I never made and make a counterpoint that has nothing to do with my original point.

The whole rest of you post is just mindless ranting and insults that don't even merit a response. I'm really sorry I hurt your feelings with my criticism of GoT.
 

Anomynous 167

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Silvanus said:
BoogieManFL said:
There is really only one "good guy" left and he just got sentenced to death. I think he'll get taken to safety, but still that just leaves one.
What did Jon Snow and Sam Tarly do to lose their good guy cards? :(
John Snow is a traitor's son, who twice betrayed the Night's Watch. The first time he defected was to take part on the usurper's side of a war, the second he collaborated with the enemy. Finally John betrays "the side that fights for the living", demonstrating that not only a man of no loyalty but that he is also willing to sell out humanity.