The
final act of Season 3 kicked off with several major plot points and some
wonderful dialogue, making for another terrific episode in – I think – the strongest
season of the show yet.

*The
main plotline of the night took place in King’s Landing, specifically the
utterly joyless forced wedding of Tyrion Lannister and Sansa Stark. So
many fantastic character moments leading up to, during, and after the nuptials,
which went off with only a slight hitch when scumbag Joffrey
removed the stepstool necessary for the cloaking ceremony (the Westeros equivalent of exchanging rings) for the sole
purpose of humiliating his poor uncle. That scene in the book is more contentious.
Book Sansa deliberately ignores Tyrion’s
request for her to kneel, and later Tyrion is less
gallant about their wedding night. The show has been working to make Tyrion less morally ambiguous and more straight-up heroic,
while softening Sansa’s less-likable qualities
(although most of those have been literally beaten out of her at this point),
making for an oddly sweet pairing. Meanwhile, the show is taking great (yet
silent) pains to establish Shaye’s feelings about
this whole mess, and it won’t be long before that whole situation
goes very, very sour.

Speaking
of sour, there were a few uproarious wedding-related scenes with the Queen of
Thorns figuring out the complicated family trees that will result from all of these
Lannister weddings, and poor Loras
awkwardly trying to start a conversation with his de facto betrothed, Cersei, before getting spectacularly shot down. The Loras/Cersei stuff was never part
of the book, so I’m loving seeing that (and Loras has become a reliable punchline,
which this show will increasingly need as it gets darker and darker). And Peter
Dinklage should get another Emmy nod for his drunken
yet heartfelt performance throughout the episode. Really
terrific work.

*Elsewhere,
the Mother of Dragons met with the captains of the Second Sons, the group of sellswords currently working for the slave masters of Yunkai. Daenerys offered their
leader, a super hot but totally sexist piece of shit,
a ton of gold and titles if they abandoned the Yunkai
and worked for her instead. He and one of his lieutenants weren’t interested,
but the other – Bravosi Daario Naharis
– was persuaded not only by Dany’s words and money,
but also her beauty. So he beheaded both of his comrades, dumped their noggins
on the floor of Dany’s tent, and pledged himself and
his 2000 men to Dany’s service. To be honest, I was
less than pleased to watch this play out. First, by giving the viewers Daario’s point of view, the
show ruined one of the more dramatic moments from the books, when Daario visits Dany’s camp in the
night. Secondly, Ed Skrein is not even close to how I
pictured Daario. He’s supposed to be swarthy and
impossibly sexy – the definition of masculinity. Skrein
is blandly pretty, practically androgynous, and in this episode demonstrated
very little magnetism. The disgusting pig of a leader he beheaded commanded the
camera far more convincingly. Daario should be
undeniable, for Dany and the viewer. I’m not seeing
that in this casting at all.

*The
Melisandre/Gendry plotline,
which was arguably the show’s biggest departure from the books, was brought
more or less back to the source material this episode. Stannis
had a frank conversation with Davos, who correctly argued that Stannis was obviously wrestling with the idea of
sacrificing his bastard nephew to please the Red Priestess. Stannis
released Davos (and bonus: Davos is now literate, thanks to the Westerosi “Reading Rainbow” that went down in his prison
cell) in time to walk in on the aftermath and Melisandre
seducing poor Gendry, dry humping him, and then
leeching his chest and junk to get at his “king’s blood.” Note that it was
slightly unclear, but Melisandre explained that the
leeches were used because Stannis required proof that
the “king’s blood” was important – Gendry is still
very much in danger of being totally sacrificed. (That is, if he doesn’t die of
blue balls first. That was brutal, Mel.) There is a scene in the books that
features Mel throwing king’s-blood-filled leeches into the fire, which produces
godly visions for Stannis. We didn’t necessarily get
that here, but this does seem to be ending up back where the plot originated. I
also liked that Stannis and Davos talked about what I
consider to be one of the more interesting debates in the book. It’s easy to
look at Melisandre as a villain,
or at best a zealot. But you can’t deny that her power – and by extension her
god – is very real based on what we’ve seen her do. So if you accept that at
least part of her belief system is right, how can you doubt the rest of it? My interpretation remains that Mel is actually working on the “good”
side (and that Dany, the dragonglass,
etc. is all a part of it). Her methods are just massively skewed.

*On
the dragonglass tip, the Sam plotline finally ignited
as he, Gilly, and Gilly’s
wee babe came face to face with a White Walker north of the Wall. I appreciated
the show explicitly arguing that the creature appeared to them because it
wanted Gilly’s baby, which Craster
had promised to them along with all of his other sons. I honestly didn’t pick
that up while I was reading the books, I just figured
it was Sam’s shitty luck to run into one of them. With Gilly
and the kid in danger Sam stepped up and attacked the wight.
That didn’t work out too well as it shattered his sword and sent Sam flying. He
instinctively grabbed the shard of obsidian he found at the Fist of the First
Men, stabbed the creature in the back, and it shrieked and split into teeny
tiny pieces. And of course Sam, being Sam, grabbed Gilly
and the kid and ran – leaving behind the very item that saved him. All in all I
thought this was a well-executed scene, and I loved the attention to detail,
with the crows swarming the tree and the wierwood
crying. I’m not sold on the actors playing Sam or Gilly,
though. Please know that I will always love Hannah Murray because she was my
darling Cassie on “Skins,” but both she and John Bradley are giving me too much
slack-jawed mumbling and awkward sulking. Neither of those characters is
terribly likable, and that’s very strange, because I was instantly into them in
the books.

*Finally,
The Hound carted Arya around the River Lands in what
looked like the most uncomfortable pony ride ever. Their brief scene served
only to remind us that The Hound did in fact save Arya’s
sister, so he’s not all bad, and to set up the fact that he’s taking her to The
Twins for the impending Tully/Frey nuptials. And if you thought this episode’s
wedding scene was memorable yet awkward, just you wait.

NEXT:
We have a week off for Memorial Day, and also for the Liberace movie starring
Michael Douglas and Matt Damon. Between all the gold, jewels, and simulated
sodomy it won’t be that dissimilar from the goings on in King’s Landing. And
then come back on June 2 for more tragedy and buttocks. And I’m not just
talking about that ratty fur-fringed frock they forced on Brienne.

One reply on ““Game of Thrones” Season 3, Episode 8: An Imp-ulsive wedding”

  1. Fabulous review.. Spot on Sir/ess/, I have come to Game of Thrones in a very circuitess (?) way. Don’t have Sky, wanted to watch it but couldn’t. Picked up the book 2nd hand, enthralled/ Had deep conversation with someone who had watched the tv production, then found out about how to watch online. Can see inconsistencies even though I have not read the other books, dramatic license & all that.. But what a hoot! Tyrion seems to be the only american actor & he puts us all to shame.. I absolutely adore his portrayal. Yummy. Is this as big as I think it is in the States? So many fantastic (& shit) british actORS.. In fact, seems totally UK staffed.. It is a bit buttocky, in the same way the Tudors was, but commendable. Tasteful buttocks, greedy dragons. I like the fact that it can make me laugh even when I’m grimacing. So many programmes are entirely up their own backsides without even knowing it. This production is nigh on pornographic in its shameless self love. It’s such a shame that the north/south divide has to be won. As if..

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