When Littlefinger gave that blade to Bran I figured that was going to cause Bran suddenly get visions of Littlefinger's schemes including his betrayal of Ned Stark and the role he played in that attack on him with that blade. But nothing happened. Maybe Bran already knows and doesn't care? What gives?
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Réponse de RoidDroidVoid
le 7 août 2017 à 02h25
There is no character called Bran. Why would the three-eyed raven care about past events which led to Ned Stark's demise? Seriously though, I think Bran's no longer in there or he's experiencing one hardcore dissociative delusion.
Réponse de TheCheetahPeach
le 7 août 2017 à 03h42
I thought he could only see what the weir wood trees saw or the Ravens? There was no Raven or weir wood tree in the throne room so maybe that's why or he's still hasn't received all the information yet?
Réponse de RoidDroidVoid
le 7 août 2017 à 09h30
Actually, his comment to Littlefinger which included quoting his "Chaos is a ladder." statement eluded to him knowing exactly what took place.
Réponse de pit2001
le 7 août 2017 à 10h31
Yes. I don't remember the Episode but there is a time he and Varys are in the throne room at Red Keep and they are discussing how much they admire, or despise each other I don't remember which as their exchanges were always meandering and weird. They are also discussing their allegiance I think and Vary implies he has no choice but to support status quo otherwise it's all chaos then Littlefinger says "chaos is a ladder", alluding to the fact that he is an opportunist, that a chaotic situation is the best time to capitalize on getting what you want, which for him is the iron throne. It was a very long and interesting speech, sounded like a poem I remember rewatching it multiple times and thinking no-one speaks that poetically in real life not even back then, it was too well crafted and smart! The scene was immediately followed by the wildlings and Jon's climb up the Castle Black wall (ha ha the irony - a ladder). So yes, I think from that reveal (Bran's comment ) we are to assume Bran knows it all.
Réponse de mav100000
le 8 août 2017 à 10h19
Thanks for clearing that up, Pit! I noticed right away that camera angles switched to basically POV between the two at that line, and that has never happened on GOT to my knowledge, so I figured it meant something like that.
Réponse de pit2001
le 8 août 2017 à 12h38
Mav100000. What does this mean exactly? Never understood the whole POV deal with the books.
Réponse de mav100000
le 8 août 2017 à 21h32
Forgive me. I am speaking only of the episode and the cinematography. The books focus on specific characters per chapter. But what I am referring to is in that scene, when Bran says his line in question, the camera looked straight at both characters and both characters stared back at the camera. The camera was clearly mimicking a first-person point of view of each character staring at the other. It was clearly done to signify that the line was important, but I had forgotten the scene described by Pit.
I hope this helps!
Réponse de Heisenberg12
le 8 août 2017 à 21h42
I remember that scene well. I just recently binge watched the whole thing. Think it was at the end of season 3 or 4 The Climb. Varys reveals he wants the throne at the end. Think they respect each other but don't like each other. It's a grey relationship.