Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

posted by cmn32480 on Tuesday June 16 2015, @06:45PM   Printer-friendly
from the got-books? dept.

Mike Hale writes in the NYT that after Sunday night's Season 5 finale the wildly popular show seems to have lost its way, and to be losing faith with a growing number of its viewers. After two or three seasons of coherent and satisfying action, the show is spinning in place, stalling for time as it crawls toward an ending that will be more disappointing the longer it's delayed. Sound familiar? As with "Lost," there may be a blueprint, but it's not looking very sound. According to Hale, the escalating series of shocks in the season finale was a prime example of substituting sensation for imagination, busyness for drama. "Not content to kill off a mid-major character, the episode moved on to whipping girls, putting a major female character through an excruciatingly long, nude walk of shame and, in its closing seconds, assassinating a fan favorite who was one of the few wholly sympathetic figures in the show."

Amy Sullivan says that the problem is that it's incredibly hard to craft a epic series without getting necessarily bogged down in the middle installments. "Your protagonists are usually in some long-term predicament or up against an enemy who will keep winning until some resolution is reached in the finale," says Sullivan. "So the need to throw in a few shocking moments for the sake of surprise and to keep readers/audiences off-balance is understandable." According to Hale when you look at the overall framework, nearly all the characters are where they were when the season began. "The usurping Boltons are still in Winterfell; Sansa is still on the run; Arya is still hiding in Braavos; the dragon queen Daenerys Targaryen and the sly dwarf, Tyrion, are still marooned in Essos; the Lannisters still occupy the castle in King's Landing," concludes Hale. "This can be blamed on the show's semidependent relationship with Mr. Martin's novels, but viewers (like me) who haven't read the books don't care about that. The question is how much longer we'll care at all."

 
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 2) by boristhespider on Wednesday June 17 2015, @06:39AM

    by boristhespider (4048) on Wednesday June 17 2015, @06:39AM (#197168)

    I think he knows the final ending, and a few of the events along the way, and has a few reveals - which will probably come via Bran - stored up, and is now engaged in a massive game of connect the dots. Unfortunately he doesn't have many dots but does have a lot of paper to fill up, so we've been stuck with a lot of meandering for two books' now. I'm hoping this means that The Winds of Winter will actually be back up towards the level of the first three books now we should be back on some kind of original track, but there's so many tendrils dangling loosely after the last two that it's going to take ages to deal with them.

    Or he could always do something that Stephen King admitted to doing while writing the Stand - he realised he'd introduced too many characters and too many plotlines, and rather than rewrite to remove them, he just simply killed the lot of them off in a single swoop. If Martin does something like that, we could be in for a bit more of a bloodbath in the next book...

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   2