Game of Thrones Season Premiere Recap: No Country for Old Women


If Game of Thrones were a Netflix show, there isnt a man or woman in all Seven Kingdoms who wouldnt have plowed right into episode two after watching tonights Season Six premiere. So many of the big storytelling beats went unresolved that the inability to binge-watch the next hour (or more) is an almost Ramsay Boltonlevel torment.

We dont get to witness the final showdown between Ser Davos and Ser Alliser. We dont see the triumphant return of Dolorous Edd leading an army of wildlings (with or without a giant or two in tow) to his black brothers rescue. Neither of Cersei Lannisters most loyal knights, her incestuous brother Jaime and her Frankensteinian bodyguard Ser Robert Strong (aka an undead Gregor The Mountain Clegane), face off against the fanatical forces of the High Sparrow. Tyrion Lannister and his buddy-comedy advisor Varys dont free the dragons chained up in the basement of their Meereenese palace. Daenerys Targaryens dragon, the black beast called Drogon, doesnt swoop in to save her from the clutches of Khal Moro and his Dothraki horde. Bran Stark, his wizardly mentor the Three-Eyed Raven, his M.I.A. kid brother Rickon, schemer par excellence Petyr Littlefinger Baelish and the neer-do-well rulers of the Iron Islands from House Greyjoy dont show up at all. Most importantly, to paraphrase Chevy Chase, Jon Snow is still dead if his psychic baby bro, his telepathically connected direwolf Ghost or the apparently ancient sorceress Melisandre are going to bring him back from beyond, well have to tune in next week, same Stark time, same Stark channel.

'Game of Thrones': Everything You Need to Know for Season 6Watch 'Game of Thrones' Star Liam Cunningham Read WTF Fan TheoriesKiss' Top 10 Albums RankedCan DNA Tests Help You Find the Best Weed?

Shit, we might not even get to find out then.

So how come The Red Woman, tonights long-anticipated comeback ep, felt so satisfying regardless? It certainly helped that the storylines that did get resolved did so as cathartically as humanly possible. At the top of the list? Sansa Stark and her unlikely ally Theon Greyjoy made their escape from Ramsay and his even more sinister father Roose with a little help from their friends, Brienne of Tarth and her sidekick Podrick Payne. Sure, you could see the towering warriors last-minute save of Lady Stark and the artist formerly known as Reek coming from a mile away, but who cares? Not since Stannis Baratheon saved the Nights Watchs collective bacon from the wildling army two seasons ago has the show served up such a fuck yeah! here-comes-the-cavalry moment.

Following in the custom of the show at its best, director Jeremy Podeswa let the visuals do the talking as much as the dialogue: All you really needed to do to understand the emotional heft of this sequence was see the shivering Stark cling to Theon beneath the roots of a fallen tree, watch him leap out of hiding in a vain attempt to throw their pursuers off her trail, bear witness to Brienne laying the sword with which she just killed a Bolton scouting party at the feet of her new liege and look at the eyes of the two women Sansas going from uncertain to steely, Briennes welling with tears of joy. This union of two of the series most complex, misunderstood and ultimately rewarding characters is unlikely to happen in George R.R. Martins source novels, which have taken them in very different directions; here, its an unmitigated delight. (Book readers in particular will also no doubt be tickled by the possibilities of a Reek/Pod team-up.)

Far to the south, developments in Dorne are equally dramatic, and just as far afield from Martins text. Rather than stand cowed by Prince Doran Martell as he attempts to maneuver the unpredictable currents of geopolitics, Ellaria Sand and her lethal daughters take matters into their own hands, slaying the ruler, his bodyguard Areo Hotah and his heir Prince Trystane in shockingly summary fashion. In a weird way, the relative two-dimensionality of the Dornish material to this point suits the sequence: Having the fall of the House of Martell take place not as a grand tragedy over the course of a season but as a black-comedy splatsick farce over within five minutes works well for the Cliffs Notes version of this kingdom the show has delivered.

Thats not to say the Dornish coup was without its problems, dramatically speaking. Ellarias offspring are distinguishable primarily by their weapons, making the so-called Sand Snakes more like the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles but without even enough individual personality to determine which ones cool but rude and which ones the party dude. Nevertheless, the storylines grim sense of humor if you didnt guffaw in spite of yourself when that spear exploded out of poor Prince Trystanes face, please watch Evil Dead 2 five times and get back to usis enough to go on for now.

Humor, in fact, emerged as the episodes chief weapon. At the very least it was amongst its weaponry, as Monty Pythons Spanish Inquisition sketch might put it said sketch undoubtedly inspiring the exchange in which Khal Moros minions list the many things in life better than seeing a beautiful woman, in this case the Mother of Dragons, naked for the first time. It takes a lot to get a laugh line out of the subtitles for an imaginary language, but damn if they didnt pull it off. A similar comedy of linguistic errors was a highlight of Tyrion and Varys fact-finding mission in the streets of Meereen: When the Imp offers a poor woman money so that her baby can eat, the Spider informs him that thanks to his poor language skills, hes just told her hes offering money to eat her baby. Even the anonymous Nights Watch members holed out with Ser Davos and Lord Snows corpse get a decent joke out at the expense of their perpetually pessimistic would-be rescuer: Its a sad fuckin statement if Dolorous Edd is our only chance.

And frustrating though the delayed gratification of so many storylines may be, their resolution is expertly teased. Will Dany be able to make believers out of the Dosh Khaleen, the forcibly sequestered widows of various dead khals to whom shes being sent by her captors? Will her own would-be resucers Daario Naharis and Jorah Mormont find her a prisoner or a leader (and will Mormont spread his greyscale infection to them all either way)? When will all three dragons roar back into action? Over in Braavos, is Arya Stark truly going to learn how to fight blind, Daredevil-style? Can Margaery Tyrell successfully convince the High Sparrow shes seen the error of her ways, in time to mount a counteroffensive against whatever the Lannisters surely have planned for her and will her husband King Tommen intervene on her side or his mothers?

Last but certainly not least, what of the episodes title character? Melisandre is touted by Davos as a secret weapon he and the rest of Jon Snows loyalists can use against his betrayers. But in the episodes striking final scene, she removes her glowing ruby necklace to reveal the body of an extremely old woman, who hobbles into bed and pulls the covers over her like any sad, scared, isolated elderly person might do. The contrast of bodies at play here actor Carice Van Houtens stunning form juxtaposed with that of the sort of crones who populate legends of witchcraft is intense, but it may be best to think of it as meaning the exact opposite of what it appears to indicate at first glance. She may be old ancient, even, or at the very least aged beyond a normal lifespan thanks to her magical abilities but the Red Woman has nonetheless steered the fates of kings and kingdoms while pulling the wool over the whole worlds eyes. Revealing her true form makes her even more formidable, not less. Theres a power in her unadorned body now that her many nude scenes and sex scenes only hinted at before. How much power? See you next week!

Find out our top 10 Game of Thrones characters of all time.