Game of Thrones Season 4 Episode 8 (The Mountain and The Viper) - Falls through the ashes
Game of Thrones Season 4 Episode 8 hyped many audiences as "The Mountain and the Viper" episode burst bloody violence.
Actors of Game of Thrones' showed realistic combat as revenge took place. David versus Goliath battles to death. Vengeance of Prince Oberyn after the Mountain raped and murdered her sister overflows.
After the long wait of confrontation that would put an end to the trial for the wrongly accused Tyrion Lannister, between the Red Viper and Gregor Clegane known as the Mountain, professional editing and well-rehearsed battle made a powerful impact on the viewers.
Prince Oberyn Martell stood up almost giving the final blow until Ser Clegane confesses.
Sansa Stark believes, still, in fairy tale-like happy endings as she stills continue her desire off to wed his handsome prince.
Heading back to the past events, Sansa's first husband was King Joffrey Baratheon. The king's mother, Cercei Lannister, ruined the Stark daughter's dignity. Some of Sansa's bloodline and relatives were killed in the past episodes.
"When you play the game of thrones, you win or you die," as said by Sansa's dead father, Ned Stark. She treasured the quotation of Ned that led her into dying her hair as a form of rebirth. Sansa evolves into a player.
Ramsay Snow uses Reek as a Trojan horse to imprison Moat Cailin. As a reward, Roose Bolton bestow on the family name on his bastard son.
Indeed, more bloody battles and mysteries are yet to come.
Four Women, Four Personas - something we looked FOURward
Prior to the 4th Season, these women had told the press of what they'd showcase. Brienne, Sansa, Cersei, and Arya played well on their roles that all of what they'd spoken was legit.
"She's clean. And Brienne is someone - that level of cleanliness is not important to her. The world of Kings Landing is not a world that Brienne is used to. It's a world of words and of whispers and secrets. And it's a sort of intellectual fencing that Brienne is not used to, that's she's unfamiliar with. So seeing her attempting to navigate that world and some of the treacherous characters that make up its foundations is certainly a little bit heartbreaking," said by Gwendoline Cristie who plays the 6'3 tall Brienne of Tarth
Sansa, the daughter of Ned Stark has expressed a lot of emotions during the past seasons of Game of Thrones. Despite all the lines she has thrown which seems to represent the weak side of women at the setting of GOT. "I think people are definitely rooting for her more and at the end of this season, I think she'll have a lot more fans on her side because she becomes really cool." To round out her character, Sophie has been referring to some of Sansa's POV chapters in the books. "It just gives you the internal monologue and it gives you the background on the characters that you might not get from the script. It gives you all the necessary things that you need to build up the character," according to Sansa Stark who has been close with Maisie Williams and Isaac Hempstead-Wright.
Queen Lannister, Lena Heady told on an interview on what to see in the whole Season 4, "She's trying to reestablish her relationship with Jaime, but it's changed beyond repair. Like I always say, she envies her brother. She believes he can protect her and do what she's not allowed to as a woman. So, I think when he returns with [his sword hand having been cut off], she's like: That's the thing I didn't have and now you now don't have it so what do I want you for?"
The favorite Stark girl from Season 1 up to now, Arya, Maisie Williams, stated on the interview prior the the 4th Season, "I'm not sure how fans are going to react because she's not the same Arya she used to be. I feel like Arya in season four has given up on trying to control her future. She's definitely not given up on the game, nor does she want to die. But she feels like she's one step behind the whole time, and anything she tries to put right goes even worse."Maisie's journey on Game of Thrones has been quite different from some of her co-stars, as she doesn't get to share scenes with the same actors for very long. "It's fantastic because I get to meet so many people, but it is unsettling. There is no routine for Arya, and there is no routine for me because it varies so much. It keeps you on your toes,".
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