SummaryMoiraine (Rosamund Pike), a member of a powerful all-female organization and five young people, one who is prophesied to be the one who could save or destroy the world, begin a long journey in this adaptation of the Robert Jordan's novel series of the same name.
SummaryMoiraine (Rosamund Pike), a member of a powerful all-female organization and five young people, one who is prophesied to be the one who could save or destroy the world, begin a long journey in this adaptation of the Robert Jordan's novel series of the same name.
What can I say the ways are great, if seen too shortly. There definitely is a lot going on in this episode and it is a fun one. It's another episode that slightly suffers from how short the season is. They clearly could have and should have spent more time on the ways.
O episódio surpreendeu já no começo, e todo o desfecho de uma narrativa que estava nos sendo mostrada, gosto muito da personagem Nynaeve, ela é orgulha sim.. mas é uma defesa da personagem.
As with the less-crucial Cauthons, Agelmar Jagad is depicted to be literally the polar opposite of everything he was in the books. Arrogant where he was deferential. Obstinate where he was helpful. Resentful where he was respectful. Macho where he was gracious and poetic.
While Mat's omission was necessitated by real-world events, they did it in the most idiotic way imaginable. If only Mat had, say, been suffering from some illness that he needed to stay in Tar Valon to be Healed of or recuperate from... It's not like they could have just removed a scene and re-shot two other scenes to fix this. No, Mat stays behind because he's inherently evil. Mother's milk in a cup!
Another fan favorite character finally appears. She's about twice her book age, born in a different nation than in the books, and living in yet another different nation for no real reason. More importantly, her personality is completely changed. The enthusiastic, mischievous tomboy is replaced with a bitter middle-aged coward with less personality than a Zomara.
Lan gets even more character assassination by sleeping with a woman and rejecting her immediately afterwards.
**** characters travel through something that looks like it was stolen from a game (Hall of Echoes, Divinity Original Sin 2), where they are accosted by a terrible entity that says mean twitter things to them. Luckily we have two Mary Sues in the group, who are able to to get them out and to their next destination. There they argue over who wants to be the dragon reborn, and a CW YA love triangle is revealed to the shock of book readers everywhere. Later the actual dragon reveals himself through a 30 second montage that shows scenes from previous episodes but now altered (I know, crazy isn't it?) to prove that the person is indeed the dragon reborn. The writers seem to get lazier and lazier the closer we get to the season's end.