Ouchie-Z-Clown
I'm better than Mulli!
Surprised no one has posted about this on Netflix. Pretty entertaining thus far.
I never read the books either. It took some work for me to fully understand what everything was and who’s who. But I grasped it, it all became much easier to watch.Watched the first episode. I never read the books and when I watched it, it was the first time I ever considered subtitles. I think I missed a lot of the names and jargon.
Does it get better? First episode was okay but I need others to tell me it’s worth watching further.
Watched the first episode. I never read the books and when I watched it, it was the first time I ever considered subtitles. I think I missed a lot of the names and jargon.
What’s “YA?”It was okay. Tried and failed to be GoT. Some compelling world building, great effects, good acting, questionable writing, especially when secondary characters are dealt with ruthlessly to show there are consequences but there aren't equal consequences for main characters because PLOT ARMOR. Mom liked it, so that's a bonus. My biggest gripe isn't really a fair one--the YA shone through IN SPADES. Which it should, because it is, after all, YA. Like, not every single main character needs a romantic sub-plot. Still, it was fun to pass the time with.
Young Adult. Genre of fiction.What’s “YA?”
What’s “YA?”
Guess I’m YA. Other than twilight I’ve enjoyed all of that.
Don't worry, I've turned in my man-card for this: I enjoyed the Twilight books. My wife got me into them.
And yeah, I guess I'm YA as well, lol. I even read every Hunger Games, Divergent and Percy Jackson books and enjoyed the movies as well (NOT the Twilight ones, as far as movies), along with the rest of the list cited.
The part that cloys me though is the excess need for romance and especially romantic triangles.
I get why there’s romance with YA, raging hormones and all, but doesn’t it really rear it’s head in virtually all entertainment? I’m unsure why it’s considered YA.
Yeah I guess the pining would be the difference right? But GoT still had romance. Look no further than a major plot line of Daenerys and whatshisface. Or as you mention Arya and gendry, or the chubby dude and the pregnant wildling.It does, but is especially prevalent in YA, and it usually a core theme/plot. Like, if GoT were YA, Arya would probably have a will they/won't they love interest, where she may constantly pine for Gendry, for instance.
Yeah I guess the pining would be the difference right? But GoT still had romance. Look no further than a major plot line of Daenerys and whatshisface. Or as you mention Arya and gendry, or the chubby dude and the pregnant wildling.
When I watched Game of Thrones, I didn't get the sense that romance always drove the plot; when I watched Shadow and Bone, it was hard to think it wasn't. There's romance in any story, but damn, every single person in Shadow and Bone had something going on, and I mean every last one! I think only the mob boss was left out lol
Huh, Mal & Alina for sure & maybe Nina & the slaver or whatever he is but that's about it.
There’s not a lot of human beings that don’t want to bone. Seems true to life.When I watched Game of Thrones, I didn't get the sense that romance always drove the plot; when I watched Shadow and Bone, it was hard to think it wasn't. There's romance in any story, but damn, every single person in Shadow and Bone had something going on, and I mean every last one! I think only the mob boss was left out lol
Yeah I guess the pining would be the difference right? But GoT still had romance. Look no further than a major plot line of Daenerys and whatshisface. Or as you mention Arya and gendry, or the chubby dude and the pregnant wildling.