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On rewatch I notice that while the wildlings were storming the horse breeder's hut, Snow hit the rock with his sword to alert the horses and thus the old man. This means he was looking to save the most unimportant person on the Crows' side, which means that he's been faking his betrayal of them the whole time. I'm a sucker for romance, so I tend to not want to this kind of betrayal, but it looks like Snow is fine with the idea. It's strange, though, because some previous scenes made it really look like he couldn't
The Freys are the McPoyles of Westeros. Also, this was a matter of revenge in the face of wisdom, and they will get destroyed because of it.
I really like the dynamic suggested at with the horse dying just after Bran wargs Hodor. Magic use costing life is a cool enough idea. I've only seen it used one other time. However, even though the editing suggests at it, they also show the dead horse with arrows or spears or something in it, so maybe they didn't mean it like that. Very strange editing if that's the case.
Watch Hound's face after he punches Arya in the back of the head and carries her away. That's the face of a very angry man. Hopefully angry enough that he gets back at those who killed his payday. Maybe it was subpar editing, but Hound really did look pissed. I want nothing more than a pissed off Hound
Looks like Blackfish was just out for a piss
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