Nayoko-Kihara wrote:Huge thumbs up for Sansa finally trying to do something.
But is she really? She would've been smarter to leave with the Hound when she had the chance, but she let her fear of him stop her. So now, instead, she's turned to Littlefinger for help. Granted, she doesn't even know that Littlefinger is a bad guy — she's clueless about what happens at court beyond her own tensions with Cersei and Joffrey — but she's still waiting for someone to tell her what to do.
I gotta wonder what happened to Ser Dontos' storyline from the book. (He's the drunk knight whom Sansa saved in S02E01.) That would help to clarify the relationship between Sansa and Littlefinger.
Nayoko-Kihara wrote:Tywin Lannister makes it easy to see where his children got their shitty attitudes and views on people, he seems like such a bitter old man all the time.
I'm going to play the devil's advocate and say, look at it from his point of view.
Tywin Lannister's utmost concern is for his family's legacy. His kind but weak father almost ruined the family in a single generation, to the point where other Westerlands houses sworn to the Lannisters were in open rebellion, and then he turned it all around again
in a single generation. He doesn't want all of that to go to waste, and when he looks at his children, he sees that it's a very real possibility.
Jaime gave up his inheritance in order to join the Kingsguard. It hasn't been made clear in the show, but Tywin was furious with Jaime for doing that, partly because of what it meant for the family's legacy and partly because he thought Jaime just wanted to be a hero. (Tywin still doesn't know the real reason why Jaime did it, and it would make things worse if he did.) Then Jaime assassinated the Mad King, making him forever known, everywhere, as a king slayer and an oath breaker. (Again, Tywin still doesn't know the real reason why Jaime did it, and he doesn't care, either. It's all about the family's legacy.) Tywin had a glimmer of hope for Jaime when Jaime fled King's Landing and rejoined Tywin on the battlefield, but then Jaime almost immediately got himself captured by the Starks. And now the rumors of incest and Joffrey's illegitimacy? It just keeps getting worse with Jaime, as far as Tywin is concerned.
Cersei isn't much better. Tywin isn't a fool, he knows that Cersei is petty and cruel and not particularly gifted. He saw it throughout her childhood. But he also saw that she was ambitious, so he did everything he could to make her the queen and then establish Lannister control of the Iron Throne through her. The original plan was to marry her to Prince Rhaegar Targaryen, but the Mad King screwed him on that deal. He had a second chance with Robert Baratheon, but he got screwed again when Robert made Jon Arryn, not Tywin, his Hand. Tywin's last hope was that Cersei at least would be a good queen and produce a strong heir. Instead, Cersei is just as petty and cruel as ever, and she produced… Joffrey. By incest, no less, if the rumors are true, which jeopardizes their control. It just keeps getting worse with Cersei, as far as Tywin is concerned.
Finally, Tyrion. Tywin, in his own way, truly loved Tyrion's mother, so when she died giving birth to Tyrion, a part of Tywin died as well. He might have gotten over it eventually, except that Tyrion was born a dwarf. Remember that this is a medieval setting; they have no real understanding of genetics or birth defects, so dwarfism is seen as poor breeding and/or a curse from the gods. As such, Tyrion was a constant reminder to Tywin not only of how his beloved wife died but also that he, Tywin, was somehow responsible and Tyrion was his punishment. Okay, fine, life goes on. Tyrion started with that strike against him, but nevertheless, Tywin saw that he was gifted in ways that Jaime and Cersei were not. Tywin gave Tyrion chances to prove himself, and Tyrion did, but not without plenty of drinking and gambling and whoring along the way. Tywin is not wrong about that. It doesn't matter to him that it is Tyrion's way of coping with not being loved; Tywin believes that a proper Lannister can and should always do his duty without embarrassing the family. So Tywin sees Tyrion as not only physically defective but also morally defective, and he is not wrong.
Nevertheless, Tywin gave Tyrion one last chance, the biggest chance of all: he made Tyrion the Hand of the King during a time of war. That's arguably the most important position any man could have, and Tywin put only one condition on it: don't take that whooooore* to court. And what did Tyrion do? He took that whooooore to court. He defied his father. (Cersei caught the wrong whore, of course, but that's beside the point. Tyrion didn't deny it, so Cersei went ahead and told Tywin.) Even worse, he came to Tywin after the battle to demand gratitude and rewards. As far as Tywin is concerned, Tyrion did it all for Tyrion rather than for the family's legacy. As far as Tywin is concerned, Tyrion is still as selfish and self-indulgent as ever,
and he is not wrong.
There is a saying: "Good, fast, cheap — pick two." In the Lannisters' case, it's more like "Grace, talent, ambition — pick two." Jaime has the grace and talent, but not the ambition. Cersei has the grace and ambition, but not the talent. And Tyrion has the talent and ambition, but not the grace. So Tywin looks at them, his children, and thinks all three of them are lacking some part of what is needed to carry on the family's legacy.
* "Whooooore…"
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Ladies and gentlemen, Charles freakin' Dance.