28.06.2015, 14:11
Das kann ich so unterschreiben, der Artikel trifft es sehr gut, vor allem natürlich das hier:
Nur auf den Jon-Snow-Storyarc gemünzt beschreibt er auch, was sich in Staffel 5 als meiner Ansicht nach zentrales Problem der Serie herauskristalisiert hat
Zitat:Stannis, as he is characterized, does anything to get the job done. He holds out for months in a castle, starving, because his brother and king told him so. He kills his own brother because he defied him and challanged his claim for the Iron Throne. Once he has his mind set on something, he does it. That's who he is. He's iron-willed. But he's also a skilled leader and commander, arguably the best in Westeros, and not a religious zealot. That's why no part of his decision to burn his only child makes any goddamn sense. Anyone with half a brain would realize his soldiers wouldn't stand behind him.
Nur auf den Jon-Snow-Storyarc gemünzt beschreibt er auch, was sich in Staffel 5 als meiner Ansicht nach zentrales Problem der Serie herauskristalisiert hat
Zitat:At the end of the day this was of the better stories this season but suffered a lot from being condensed immensly, thus being forced to make jumps in logic.
There is all the difference in the world between treating people equally and attempting to make them equal (Friedrich August von Hayek)