(+20) After that, we checked in with present-day Cersei, up to her regular old tricks ( +5 making commoners wait, +10 blaming her brother / lover for their father's death - "Tyrion may be a monster, but at least he killed our father on purpose," she sneers at the dude whose metal hand she was all up on exactly one episode ago). Little Cersei Lannister gets the unhappy news from a witch that all three of her kids are going to die, which might have been interesting to learn for whoever's got Tommen and Myrcella on their team. We know we won't be revisiting Bran and Hodor and the ancient tree babies up north this season, but it was reassuring to see Random magic stuff getting some early play, even if it was via a flashback. But after so many drastic repositionings, many of our characters were still settling back into their groove, and last night's premiere still felt largely expository. In Thronesland, a change of location is often the most demonstrative power play of all, and those characters who have made their moves also happen to be the ones expected to rack up lots of Go GoT points. Arya's en route to Braavos, Varys successfully smuggled Tyrion to Pentos, and Stannis and his army made their splashy (with wildling blood) entrance in the north. Finally, characters who had spent years on end frittering away in their own corner of the world were beginning to broaden their horizons. The fourth season of Game Of Thrones ended with one inglorious death and a battle of arguable climactic value, but its real significance was its geographical shakeups. We'll tear each other apart for sport if we want to, thank you very much
We'll tear each other apart for sport if we want to, thank you very much. What's really important is that we all have a sense of agency in this game that we're not ruled over by some self-righteous mother of dragons who thinks we're too good for this kind of debased human cockfighting. Mistakes will be what makes this season worth fighting for: misplaced trust in characters, misremembered plot points from the books, inadvisable smack talk. Our high fantasy league embraces imperfection. These words, uttered by a certain late king beyond the wall, could just as easily have been spoken by any of the brave souls at The Verge playing the Game of Game of Thrones this season. Jane revisits the past in a different way during the show's 100th episode, which is a flashback to the time he first joined the CBI."The freedom to make my own mistakes is all I ever wanted." However, his conversations with her are only imaginary, brought on when he unknowingly drinks a cup of tea laced with a hallucinogen. Likewise, Jane reconnects with a member of his family during an investigation: his murdered daughter, now all grown up. Rigsby (Owain Yeoman) also gets personally involved in a case when his father gets injured in a small town's gang war. Her info propels Jane to begin assembling a list of possible Red John suspects, while Lisbon (Robin Tunney) finds a villain of her own to vow to take down: multi-millionaire murder suspect Tommy Volker (Henry Ian Cusick). The CBI and the FBI fight over custody of the imprisoned Lorelei, who turns up several times throughout the season, and she and Jane prove helpful to one another.
The mentalist season 5 episode 1 fre dailymotion serial#
The fifth season of this crime drama picks up with Jane (Simon Baker) trying to figure out the connection between Lorelei (Emmanuelle Chriqui) and the elusive serial killer Red John.