I agree, the scene itself was well done, but was pretty contrived. I would've accepted it if it had taken place after Aegon's crowning but before the finale -- when there was the potential for reconciliation. Now, Luke is dead, Jaeherys is dead, the Riverlands are at war... I'm not sure what Rhaenyra hopes will happen, even if Alicent was 100% on board. It was an interesting scene, but felt like a late GoT move of pushing two characters together without regards for the rest of the plot.Rhaenyra managing to sneak into King's Land and successfully speak to Alicent was pretty silly
Thank you for that.The woman is supposedly Alys (Alice) Rivers.
Can we please spoiler tag book spoilers.If we follow the book,
If we follow the book, Aegon II will survive the battle. It is that he would out of action for some time. Aemond might have ambition for the throne or he is just pissed at his brother's bullying of him.
It's all directed by Alan “Thor: The Dark World” Taylor, a Game of Thrones alumnus who also directed the season two premiere. He finds the grace notes to play here, and does a good job of shifting between political machinations and outright warfare. He’s also tapped into the malevolent sides of Daemon, Larys, and especially Aemond.
You have a dragon. Your enemy is gathered in a forest. Why don't you set the damn forest on fire?
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