Game of Thrones "No One" Review: What's Qyburn and Cersei's Secret?
"No One" appears to be that episode where most people have reached their limit with being strung along, and I get it!
There were some great character interactions, some big developments (even if they crushed some hopes), and two people got their heads cut off or ripped off.
Game of Thrones has the unfair burden of living up to expectations, and to be honest, some people's expectations of the show are a little much.
All I ask is to be immersed in a world that allows me to forget about my real life, develop a few crushes on some fictional characters, and watch a few beheadings.
Leave the airtight storytelling to Zoo and the believability to Grey's Anatomy.
Tommen (Dean-Charles Chapman) continued his march right up the list of Game of Thrones' worst people when he decided to change the rules of tradition and eliminate the idea of trial by combat, thus crushing hopes for the much-hyped Cleganebowl, the theorized fight to the death between Sandor (The Hound) and Gregor "The Mountain" Clegane (Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson) with Cersei Lannister's (Lena Headey) life on the line.
What were naughty necromancer Qyburn (Anton Lesser) and Cersei talking about when they mentioned the rumors that the "little birds" discovered were true?
Was it the size Pod's "magical" endowment?
None of that house loyalty to bog them down, no kings or queens to answer to, just grown men out in the woods discussing the merits of hacking prisoners to pieces versus hanging them.
Beric asked the Hound to join them as they travel north to deal with the "cold winds rising in the North," a.k.a. the White Walkers a.k.a. the real problem.
Richard Dormer, who plays Beric, also provides the voice for Lily's dad in Lily's Driftwood Bay, an adorable Irish children's show.
Not going to lie, I half wished that Edmure would say, "I call your bluff!" and then a scene later we watched a baby careen through the air and smash open like a watermelon.
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