Publicat in Albania - Primii pași în eRevollution - 30 Aug 2016 07:48 - 8
The Lion and the Rose (Season 4)
After four seasons, Game of Thrones finally gave us a wedding reception we could rejoice over. King Joffrey - a complete pain in the until the very end - choked to death while engaging in one of his favorite pastimes: Tormenting Tyrion. The young, dim brute died in agony, clutching his throat. George R. R. Martin couldn't have planned it better. Well, he did in more ways than one, we suppose, since he wrote the episode. Yes, the author who'd robbed us of so many heroes finally wiped one of the show's most foul villains off the map. And it was glorious.
And Now His Watch Is Ended (Season 3)
Jaime was forced to wear his severed hand around his neck, Margaery began her manipulation of Joffrey (much to Cersei's displeasure), Theon got tricked by Ramsay into thinking he was escaping, and Lord Commander Mormont of the Night's Watch was killed during a dastardly mu at Craster's Keep. All that and Daenerys made off with an army of eight thousand Unsullied soldiers after she turned her dragons loose on the slave masters of Astapor, leaving scorched earth and crackled bodies in her wake. DRACARYS!
The Mountain and the Viper (Season 4)
In "The Mountain and the Viper," Daenerys discovered Jorah's betrayal and banished him while a newly confident Sansa donned a striking new black dress. But what everyone remembers the most is the final, jaw-dropping -- and head-popping -- 10 minutes featuring the fight between Oberyn Martell and Gregor "The Mountain" Clegane. A fight that almost went the way many viewers hoped until the last few seconds when Oberyn got caught monologuing and paid the painful price. Proof that George R. R. Martin probably would have had Count Rugen kill Inigo Montoya had he written The Princess Bride.
Battle of the Bastards (Season 6)
Containing the most sweeping, expansive and impressive battles sequences the show's ever done -- AND some of the best CGI work involving dragons mercilessly setting enemy ships ablaze -- "Battle of the Bastards" saw Jon Snow and his undersized army of loyalists scrape and claw to retake Winterfell. It was a mive, emotional fight to the finish as Sansa saved the day with Littlefinger's smarmy aid and then fed Ramsay to his own starving mutts. And with both Dany and Jon overcoming their foul enemies (one more easily than the other, of course), this chapter gave us perhaps the most decisive win for GoT's heroes to date.
The Children (Season 4)
Stannis and his army arrived at the Wall to save Jon Snow and the Night's Watch, Daenerys chained up her dragons, and Tyrion, set free by Jaime, took a detour during his escape to grimly murder both Tywin and Shae (who he discovered in his Tywin's bed). But it was Brienne's ear-biting battle with The Hound that helped make the Season 4 finale, "The Children," excel. That and Arya's cold, silent refusal to put The Hound out of his misery.
Baelor (Season 1)
Season 1's "Baelor" was the jumping off point for the show not playing by conventional story rules. Within the delicious audience contempt behind killing off Sean Bean's Ned Stark lay the blueprints for a saga that would run circles around us tragedy-wise. The series had already been great, but this was the shocking moment that got the misery ball rolling. Elsewhere, Robb made a vow to the grotesque Walder Frey, Tyrion played a drinking game with Bronn and Shae, and Daenerys unwittingly lost her unborn child after seeking out dark magic to save a dying Khal Drogo.
The Winds of Winter (Season 6)
With one of the most suspenseful and mercilessly explosive sequences on the show to date, "The Winds of Winter" wonderfully paid off a two-season storyline that had started to drag. Cersei, choosing violence like she loves to do, purged King's Landing of just about every named character (including, unfortunately, her last remaining child) and ascended to the Iron Throne with Qyburn as her Hand. Meanwhile, Daenerys finally set sail for Westeros, with a larger force than ever now under her control. And on top of that, it was solidified that Arya's two-season arc over in Braavos was truly over via a throat slit, a gurgle, and some pies, as she returned to Westeros with a new bag of tricks and wiped out the entire Frey male line. All in all, the best season finale the show's ever done.
The Rains of Castamere (Season 3)
The Red Wedding stands as one of the diabolical bloodlettings in TV history. Fans unspoiled by the books were filmed by those who'd read up, so as to preserve their shock and misery for all time. Viewers left "The Rains of Castamere" feeling hollowed out, and that was the exact intention. Writers/producers D.B. Weiss and David Benioff mentioned, at the very outset of the show, that if the series could last just long enough for them to film the Red Wedding, they'd be happy, as it was the moment in the books that made them decide that the story needed to be taken to TV.
Blackwater (Season 2)
In Season 2, many scrambled to claim the Iron Throne while many viewers sought out the person they thought would be the show's new hero (now that Ned was without head). Would it be Robb, out to defeat the Lannisters and find justice for his father? No. It would be Tyrion who'd rise up. And in the epic, impressive all-King's Landing battle episode, "Blackwater," he'd not only put into action a dangerously clever plan involving wildfire so as to wipe out Stannis' ships, but he'd be the one to rally the citizens into fight for their city after Joffrey tucked his tail and ran. Boats exploded, the Hound fled when he saw fire and Cersei prepared to poison herself and Tommen.
Hardhome (Season 5)
The way Season 5 was going -- still great TV, but not the best Game of Thrones had offered -- we don't think anyone expected it to deliver an episode as mighty as "Hardhome." What a chilling, insane final 20 minutes director Miguel Sapochnik delivered unto us as the Night's King unleashed a literal avalanche of ferocious undead minions on the last remaining frozen holdout of Mance Rayder's wildlings. It brought the White Walkers to the forefront of the series in terrifying fashion and further helped solidify Jon Snow as the show's ultimate hero. Not only proving that he was right in his attempt to unite enemy factions, but that he was, as shown in Season 4's "The Watches on the Wall," an action-ready bad.
Which is your favorite episode ?
After four seasons, Game of Thrones finally gave us a wedding reception we could rejoice over. King Joffrey - a complete pain in the until the very end - choked to death while engaging in one of his favorite pastimes: Tormenting Tyrion. The young, dim brute died in agony, clutching his throat. George R. R. Martin couldn't have planned it better. Well, he did in more ways than one, we suppose, since he wrote the episode. Yes, the author who'd robbed us of so many heroes finally wiped one of the show's most foul villains off the map. And it was glorious.
And Now His Watch Is Ended (Season 3)
Jaime was forced to wear his severed hand around his neck, Margaery began her manipulation of Joffrey (much to Cersei's displeasure), Theon got tricked by Ramsay into thinking he was escaping, and Lord Commander Mormont of the Night's Watch was killed during a dastardly mu at Craster's Keep. All that and Daenerys made off with an army of eight thousand Unsullied soldiers after she turned her dragons loose on the slave masters of Astapor, leaving scorched earth and crackled bodies in her wake. DRACARYS!
The Mountain and the Viper (Season 4)
In "The Mountain and the Viper," Daenerys discovered Jorah's betrayal and banished him while a newly confident Sansa donned a striking new black dress. But what everyone remembers the most is the final, jaw-dropping -- and head-popping -- 10 minutes featuring the fight between Oberyn Martell and Gregor "The Mountain" Clegane. A fight that almost went the way many viewers hoped until the last few seconds when Oberyn got caught monologuing and paid the painful price. Proof that George R. R. Martin probably would have had Count Rugen kill Inigo Montoya had he written The Princess Bride.
Battle of the Bastards (Season 6)
Containing the most sweeping, expansive and impressive battles sequences the show's ever done -- AND some of the best CGI work involving dragons mercilessly setting enemy ships ablaze -- "Battle of the Bastards" saw Jon Snow and his undersized army of loyalists scrape and claw to retake Winterfell. It was a mive, emotional fight to the finish as Sansa saved the day with Littlefinger's smarmy aid and then fed Ramsay to his own starving mutts. And with both Dany and Jon overcoming their foul enemies (one more easily than the other, of course), this chapter gave us perhaps the most decisive win for GoT's heroes to date.
The Children (Season 4)
Stannis and his army arrived at the Wall to save Jon Snow and the Night's Watch, Daenerys chained up her dragons, and Tyrion, set free by Jaime, took a detour during his escape to grimly murder both Tywin and Shae (who he discovered in his Tywin's bed). But it was Brienne's ear-biting battle with The Hound that helped make the Season 4 finale, "The Children," excel. That and Arya's cold, silent refusal to put The Hound out of his misery.
Baelor (Season 1)
Season 1's "Baelor" was the jumping off point for the show not playing by conventional story rules. Within the delicious audience contempt behind killing off Sean Bean's Ned Stark lay the blueprints for a saga that would run circles around us tragedy-wise. The series had already been great, but this was the shocking moment that got the misery ball rolling. Elsewhere, Robb made a vow to the grotesque Walder Frey, Tyrion played a drinking game with Bronn and Shae, and Daenerys unwittingly lost her unborn child after seeking out dark magic to save a dying Khal Drogo.
The Winds of Winter (Season 6)
With one of the most suspenseful and mercilessly explosive sequences on the show to date, "The Winds of Winter" wonderfully paid off a two-season storyline that had started to drag. Cersei, choosing violence like she loves to do, purged King's Landing of just about every named character (including, unfortunately, her last remaining child) and ascended to the Iron Throne with Qyburn as her Hand. Meanwhile, Daenerys finally set sail for Westeros, with a larger force than ever now under her control. And on top of that, it was solidified that Arya's two-season arc over in Braavos was truly over via a throat slit, a gurgle, and some pies, as she returned to Westeros with a new bag of tricks and wiped out the entire Frey male line. All in all, the best season finale the show's ever done.
The Rains of Castamere (Season 3)
The Red Wedding stands as one of the diabolical bloodlettings in TV history. Fans unspoiled by the books were filmed by those who'd read up, so as to preserve their shock and misery for all time. Viewers left "The Rains of Castamere" feeling hollowed out, and that was the exact intention. Writers/producers D.B. Weiss and David Benioff mentioned, at the very outset of the show, that if the series could last just long enough for them to film the Red Wedding, they'd be happy, as it was the moment in the books that made them decide that the story needed to be taken to TV.
Blackwater (Season 2)
In Season 2, many scrambled to claim the Iron Throne while many viewers sought out the person they thought would be the show's new hero (now that Ned was without head). Would it be Robb, out to defeat the Lannisters and find justice for his father? No. It would be Tyrion who'd rise up. And in the epic, impressive all-King's Landing battle episode, "Blackwater," he'd not only put into action a dangerously clever plan involving wildfire so as to wipe out Stannis' ships, but he'd be the one to rally the citizens into fight for their city after Joffrey tucked his tail and ran. Boats exploded, the Hound fled when he saw fire and Cersei prepared to poison herself and Tommen.
Hardhome (Season 5)
The way Season 5 was going -- still great TV, but not the best Game of Thrones had offered -- we don't think anyone expected it to deliver an episode as mighty as "Hardhome." What a chilling, insane final 20 minutes director Miguel Sapochnik delivered unto us as the Night's King unleashed a literal avalanche of ferocious undead minions on the last remaining frozen holdout of Mance Rayder's wildlings. It brought the White Walkers to the forefront of the series in terrifying fashion and further helped solidify Jon Snow as the show's ultimate hero. Not only proving that he was right in his attempt to unite enemy factions, but that he was, as shown in Season 4's "The Watches on the Wall," an action-ready bad.
Which is your favorite episode ?
Sustine
Comentarii (8)
Skam pa asni epizode te GoT!? A po humbi diqka teper-te-mire apo eshte over-hyped?
Mbas BreakingBad edhe TrueDetective jam llodh, pak pushim prej serialeve )
Telenovele Turke. :p
solar : seriali me i bukur
@TEPELENA: Sot i pash 4 episodet e para edhe teper po me pelqen, spo me besohet qka kom humb. Serial fenomenal , sdi a bon HBO diqka te keqe ) tash pe di prej ka je inspiru per avatarin xD
vlla un i kam pa te gjitha sezonet(6) nga 2 here
Po ta besoj vlla, edhe nuk ke faj se super Show. tash deri sa del sezoni i ri, i shof maraton krejt episodet deri tash )
hahah un pash sezonin e 4 dhe te 5 per 3 dite, 2 dite me vone filloi i 6ti tani duhet me prit qershorin per sezonin e ri
uaaa seriozisht? po ku pritet deri Qershorin e ardhshem per episode te reja