Terez, on 03 May 2016 - 11:22 AM, said:
I am def on the Tyrion=Targ train. Have been for a while. I believe we have had this conversation before, but I just can't wrap my head around the opinion that it ruins his character arc. Tywin was his father, whether by blood or not, just as Ned was Jon's father. Any adopted child could tell you how this works. Tyrion took after Tywin in certain aspects of his personality because he was comparably intelligent and raised by Tywin. And it's not so bad for Tyrion to escape the Kinslayer title on a technicality. (Though Tywin is technically his mother's cousin and still kin.)
^^This. I don't get how it would ruin him either. It's actually a lovely character progression.
Terez, on 03 May 2016 - 12:03 PM, said:
I thought her quiet "please" at the end was to show that she was basically in the same spot as Thoros was when Beric was resurrected. Desperate, and all out of faith. She said it herself: Thoros shouldn't have been able to do what he did because of the kind of priest he was (not a good one). But maybe the resurrection power is different from the powers Melisandre has displayed so far. Maybe R'hllor's magic can be either good or evil, depending on the circumstances.
I agree with this viewpoint as well.
Melisandre is pretty broken and her belief is flagging. She is pretty much the same as Thoros was when he explained his resurrection of Beric, she just came to it from devout faith into disbelief (only to, I assume, have it restored with Jon's resurrection), while Thoros was not a believer at all, and his desire to not see his friend dead allowed the god to answer his wish and turn him into a believer. But it surely felt like a mirror image of that progression to me when I watched it. Different paths, same result.
This post has been edited by QuickTidal: 03 May 2016 - 01:20 PM
"When the last tree has fallen, and the rivers are poisoned, you cannot eat money, oh no." ~Aurora
"Someone will always try to sell you despair, just so they don't feel alone." ~Ursula Vernon