The earlier quibble about Viserys' death by molten gold.I'm confused. What's the difference between fire-proof and burn-proof?![]()
The earlier quibble about Viserys' death by molten gold.I'm confused. What's the difference between fire-proof and burn-proof?![]()
Yup, and that bones grow into space stations.Transition shot from shot to Jon with the exact same framing made it pretty clear. I think audiences are smart enough to know children's hair can change colors while growing up.
I think it is safe to say that in the show at least, her tissue is non-combustible by extreme heat in any form as well as able to survive on inhaled gas and smoke that would be toxic or even deadly to other humans.I'm not trying to separate the two. I'm trying to broaden the scope or rather broaden our view of the scope. Fireproof keeps being cited as the defining attribute and I'm suggest maybe it's not that finite, i.e. heat overall and not just fire.
Of all the things for which I can suspend my disbelief, it is the hair that gets me. She should come out utterly hairless and looking like the scientists from Andromeda Strain after Level IV sterilization.
In the books, her hair was burned off after the birth of her dragons. I guess that was considered to not be visually ideal by the showrunners, allthough they later went with a very shorthaired Cersei.Of all the things for which I can suspend my disbelief, it is the hair that gets me. She should come out utterly hairless and looking like the scientists from Andromeda Strain after Level IV sterilization.
In the books, her hair was burned off after the birth of her dragons. I guess that was considered to not be visually ideal by the showrunners, allthough they later went with a very shorthaired Cersei.
Surviving the pyre was also meant to be a miraculous event, though I don't mind the show seems to have changed this into permanent immunity from heat.
No, actors just aren't committed enough to their roles these days. It's in Peter Dinklage's contract - no surgery.In the books Tyrion's nose got cut off at the Battle of Blackwater Bay but in the show it's only a long scar across his face. Maybe it's because of budget or aesthetic reasons but the show is not shy about changing details, especially inconsequential ones like hair or facial disfigurements.
Westeros seemed destined to be ruled by Blonde short haired rulers with Lannister blood.
So my theory about Jon, yes L & R = J but why? All accounts was the R, was very happy man with his wife and children. Why would he go after L, so vehemently all of a sudden.
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