It is pretty disturbing that the actual writers and director didn't realize they were making a rape scene when, on screen, it very obviously was.
Yep. Woman says no multiple times, man doesn't stop. Pretty damn unambiguous.It is pretty disturbing that the actual writers and director didn't realize they were making a rape scene when, on screen, it very obviously was.
Anyway, I think that the writers are generally having trouble with the Jaime/Cersei relationship this season and that they way it's presented in the show (as opposed to the book, where Cersei doesn't immediately reject Jaime just because he has lost his hand) does a huge disservice to both characters and their arcs. NCW says that their relationship is "extremely complicated", but so far it doesn't seem like that on the show.
Yep. Woman says no multiple times, man doesn't stop. Pretty damn unambiguous.It is pretty disturbing that the actual writers and director didn't realize they were making a rape scene when, on screen, it very obviously was.
It is pretty disturbing that the actual writers and director didn't realize they were making a rape scene when, on screen, it very obviously was.
It is pretty disturbing that the actual writers and director didn't realize they were making a rape scene when, on screen, it very obviously was.
It's not the first time a scene in a show or movie has been taken completely different than the way the creators intended.
It won't be the last.
I'm starting to agree that the rape scenes are becoming overused as a shock plot method. We get it - during mid evil times women got raped a lot and were second class citizens. Lets move on writers.
It is pretty disturbing that the actual writers and director didn't realize they were making a rape scene when, on screen, it very obviously was.
It's not the first time a scene in a show or movie has been taken completely different than the way the creators intended.
It won't be the last.
It is pretty disturbing that the actual writers and director didn't realize they were making a rape scene when, on screen, it very obviously was.
It's not the first time a scene in a show or movie has been taken completely different than the way the creators intended.
It won't be the last.
It is pretty disturbing that the actual writers and director didn't realize they were making a rape scene when, on screen, it very obviously was.
It's not the first time a scene in a show or movie has been taken completely different than the way the creators intended.
It won't be the last.
Well to be fair in this instance, I think the writer was simply trying to make clear just what sick fucks these guys were in comparison to the usual Nights Watch. So when Bran and the others get captured later we have even more reason to fear for their safety.
That wasn't the case of the director or the actors taking anything farther. It was written as an attempted rape, referenced as an attempted rape (with the word even explicitly used in the very next episode by Xander), the characters reacted to it as an attempted rape, and it was intended to be something that Spike would feel so guilty over that it would make him decide to go and fight to get his soul back so he would be a better man.It is pretty disturbing that the actual writers and director didn't realize they were making a rape scene when, on screen, it very obviously was.
It's not the first time a scene in a show or movie has been taken completely different than the way the creators intended.
It won't be the last.
Spike's attempted rape of Buffy comes to mind. Marty Noxxon wrote it to reflect an experience she had where she was trying to reconnect with a man who had rejected her by assuming he'd come around once she started hugging and kissing him. In her real-life experience, he pushed her away and she was crushed. This is how she envisioned the scene with Buffy and Spike when she wrote it, but the director took it farther, the actors took it farther, and the final scene comes off as Spike trying to rape Buffy, much to everyone's discomfort.
Well to be fair in this instance, I think the writer was simply trying to make clear just what sick fucks these guys were in comparison to the usual Nights Watch. So when Bran and the others get captured later we have even more reason to fear for their safety.
In last night's show, "....fuck these bitches until they're dead.." is harsh even for GoT. Robert Maxwell is right - the rape scenes are getting way overused for their shock value.
Well to be fair in this instance, I think the writer was simply trying to make clear just what sick fucks these guys were in comparison to the usual Nights Watch. So when Bran and the others get captured later we have even more reason to fear for their safety.
In last night's show, "....fuck these bitches until they're dead.." is harsh even for GoT. Robert Maxwell is right - the rape scenes are getting way overused for their shock value.
They could have made it clear that the women were being brutalized without actually showing it.
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