[STREAMING]Watch Game of Thrones Season 5 Episode 2 Online - The House of Black and White
   
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[STREAMING]Watch Game of Thrones Season 5 Episode 2 Online - The House of Black and White

Winter is coming. Those haunting words have been with us since the first season of HBO’s Game of Thrones (and for much longer if you’ve been reading the books since the beginning.)

Winter is coming, and yet in King’s Landing the sun is still shining—though not very brightly in the Great Sept where Tywin Lannister’s corpse is laid out in all its finery, eyelids painted open, staring creepily up to the heavens.

Winter is coming, and yet in Meereen one would never know. The slaver city conquered by Daenerys Targaryen is just as hot as ever, though now Unsullied are being murdered by a terrorist group known as the Sons of the Harpy, as a defiance to the radical queen’s upstart rule.

The only place where winter seems to be a reality is in the North, at the Wall where Jon Snow and Sam Tarly and all the rest of the Night’s Watch now share their hospitality with wildlings and the knights of Stannis Baratheon. And even here, winter can’t touch the red woman, Melisandre, who proves it to Jon Snow by placing his hand on her cheek. The light of the one true god burns inside her, she tells him, hinting at her propensity toward flame.

Stannis Baratheon saved the day at the end of Season 4, swooping in to rescue the Night’s Watch from the tide of wildlings. But Stannis has his eye on the prize, and the heroics at the Wall were just one step toward a much grander scheme. The last of the Baratheon brothers wants to persuade the wildlings to fight for him in exchange for their swords, which he’ll in turn use to dispatch the despicable Roose Bolton, now the Warden of the North and Lord of Winterfell.

To these aims, he employs Jon Snow to convince King-Beyond-The-Wall Mance Rayder to bend the knee—or die. It seems a fair trade, hardly the first of its kind. The wildlings will get some safety and some land south of the Wall, away from the undead and the White Walkers, and Stannis will get his army. Actually, Mance’s reluctance, indeed his refusal to agree to Staniss’s terms, is absurd. Would Bolton be so fair and understanding to Mance? That seems unlikely. Would Mance prefer to attempt to settle the North with Rayder on the throne or with the blessing of a beneficent king? These are reasonable terms, but Mance refuses, and Jon Snow isn’t much of a diplomat.

So it’s off to be set on fire, burned at the stake for Mance. The question I’m left with is whether the show deviates from the fallout of this fiery death, or whether what we see is what we get. I won’t spoil anything for non-book readers here, but the show has changed enough—including apparently removing Mance’s child altogether—to keep me guessing at what happens next. Jon’s bit of mercy here was a nice moment, reminding us that the bastard is as compassionate as he is defiant of authority. What a rebel you are, Jon Snow!
First Images From 'Game Of Thrones' Season 5

South By South-East

In King’s Landing Cersei pays her respects to her dead father, while scolding and chastising Jaime at the same time. At least Tyrion was man enough to kill their father on purpose, she spits at Jaime. “You killed him by mistake.”

Cersei even gets a flashback to when her and a friend visit a witch to learn Cersei’s future. She’s given some cryptic prophecy regarding her future as queen (for a time, until one younger comes) and Robert Baratheon’s infidelity. Also, child Cersei was nearly as despicable as grown-up Cersei.

Speaking of which, the HBO adaptation has really humanized Cersei in so many ways compared to the cartoon villain she is in the books. To some degree, Martin begins to do that in A Feast for Crows, and I’m curious the direction the show goes with the character."