Now that it's in its
fourth season, the fantasy series could be excused if it started to show
wear and tear. After all, we've seen programs with simpler plots and
fewer cast members lose their edge in less time.
But Sunday's premiere, "Two Swords," proved that creators David Benioff and D.B. Weiss are just getting started.
(In fact, the only real
letdown for fans didn't have anything to do with "GoT" at all, but HBO's
mobile platform HBO Go, which crashed due to an overwhelming demand for
Sunday's premiere.)
Adapted from George R.R.
Martin's "A Song of Ice and Fire" book series, "Game of Thrones" is at
its heart a bloody race for power between competitive houses in
Westeros. After the third season left avid watchers in a state of shock
thanks to a gruesome wedding ceremony, they returned on Sunday to find
the "Game's" major players repositioning themselves on the board.
With the famous Stark
Valyrian steel sword split in two by Hand of the King Tywin Lannister
(Charles Dance), viewers were made keenly aware of the fissures that
abound throughout the Seven Kingdoms.
Daenerys Targaryen
(Emilia Clarke) is building an army while trying to keep a handle on her
still-growing dragons, and Arya Stark (Maisie Williams) has begun to
cross out names on her list of vengeance.
In the North, the Free
Folk -- or the Wildlings as they're called -- have their eyes trained on
breaching the Wall where the men of the Night's Watch, including a Jon
Snow (Kit Harington) ready to pay for his broken vows, stand guard.
And in King's Landing,
where the precious Iron Throne sits, the ruthless and rich Lannisters
are not as secure as they'd like to believe. With a grand wedding
approaching for the young King Joffrey, there are visitors from Dorne
afoot -- and they, too, like to pay their debts.
"Right off the bat, season four sends the viewer a signal: Forget the Westeros you knew," warns the A.V. Club's Erik Adams,
who gave the episode a B+ grade. "Forget where on the board you've
mentally placed any of 'Game Of Thrones'' chess pieces. It's not a
reboot, but 'Two Swords' is a starting place that feels distinct." While
"fortunes have risen and fallen while we were away, and the awful power
of King Joffrey seeps deeply into the Seven Kingdoms," the episode
"stealthily belongs to the Starks -- who are down, but not out. That's
an enticingly rich way to begin a season."
Time magazine's
Eric Dodds agrees that while "the Lannisters appear strong and
unchallenged with the Starks out of the picture and Jaime returned home
only slightly worse for wear, the cracks are readily apparent. ... By
all accounts, the season-opener was setting the table for what promises
to be a season filled with violence and intrigue. For now, the fear is
only creeping in along the edges. Once it arrives in full, that's when
the real fun is likely to begin."
It's true that not much
happened in the way of action -- by "GoT" standards, anyway -- but it
was rich in character development, says The Daily Beast's Andrew Romano.
"(A)nd character,
ultimately, is what 'Game of Thrones' does best," he observes. "Some
viewers might even complain that there wasn't enough sex or
swashbuckling in 'Two Swords' -- that the episode was 'slow.' But it is
in these slow moments -- the moments between each big plot twist, when
showrunners D.B. Weiss and David Benioff decelerate the narrative to
linger over the nuances of character -- that 'Game of Thrones' truly
distinguishes itself from other epic television series."
Even better, The Hollywood Reporter's Tim Goodman says that the next two episodes should be just as good.
"The consistent
excellence in 'Game of Thrones' is truly something to behold," Goodman
says in a review. "Even in three episodes, viewers will sense things
tightening up -- that winter and war are coming and they are coming on
full-stop. If there's anything to complain about with 'Game of Thrones'
it's the 10-episode seasons, which cry out for 13 episodes given the
immense world that 'Thrones' inhabits."
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