By Professor Doom
It’s obligatory to
put “spoiler alert” in front of discussion of Game of Thrones; I’m going to be
discussing one episode in detail, “Battle of the Bastards,” so if you haven’t
seen up to that part, fair warning to stop reading now.
--it's a great shot, but this was a throwaway, a desperate attempt by the producers to do something with what little they had. Read on to find out why...
It’s no secret
that once Game of Thrones the HBO series went past the books it’s based on, the
quality dropped, sometimes precipitously. Instead of fairly deep political
machinations and a somewhat realistic action/consequence narrative in a
pseudo-medieval world with a touch of magic, the series turned into standard
Hollywood fare. The fantasy aspects of the show were light: before about the 5th
year of the show, the most powerful magical effects most of the world had seen
were dunking a sword in oil and lighting it, and the bones of long dead
dragons. Past that, all things magical were considered “north of The Wall”
stories nobody in the world really believed.
But, even as the
sexposition trying to explain the complicated backstories finally died down (at
least one actress renegotiated her contract for fewer nude scenes), the more
recent years began to disappoint, and it’s clear now the “epic battle” at the
end is going to be yet another “Kill the
Alien Queen” trope little different than the last few dozen similar
stories out of Hollywood.
My own personal
peeve is how crude the military tactics are in the show. Every battle is
determined by a “surprise attack,” because at no point in the multi-thousand
year history of this fantasy world has there been a general with enough insight
to understand how scouts work.
A classic
example of how ridiculous the world is (or has changed since Hollywood writers
took over from the novels) is this one harbor town built at the base of a
cliff, next to an ocean. It leads to a
great scene where an attacking army of monsters literally jumps off the cliff
to attack the city. It’s a cool visual but…why isn’t there a watchpost at the
top of the cliff? Being next to an ocean like that, you could probably see for
miles, and Earth’s ancient world certainly knew the usefulness of lighthouses
and the like. The town is walled, but there are no sentries, so the inhabitants
literally have to peek through cracks in the walls to see if an enemy is
approaching.
Seriously, this
is not clever writing, even if it’s cool to watch.
One of the big combat
scenes was “Battle of the Bastards.” A quick summary:
1) Like most
battles in the show, it’s shameful, with the commander literally running out
into the open between the two armies, all alone. It makes for a nice visual of
the lone idiot standing in front of a full on cavalry charge, although in the real world, an army could rout at the sight of their commander acting like such an idiot. For some reason,
the Evil cavalry flat out disappear after the charge and aren’t seen again.
2 2) The battle
goes badly for the heroes, with a lame scene where the Evil commander orders
his archers to fire into the general melee—probably killing his own men, since
he’s winning and outnumbers the Good guys, of course. Because the writers have
no respect at all for the viewers, they make a point of showing the Good
captain not doing the same (this is Hollywood’s best understanding of morality:
the good guys don’t kill their own troops). Again, I’ve seen this countless
times in other equally poorly written shows.
3) Despite the
Evil commander’s idiocy with the archers, he somehow manages to expertly train
his infantry in ancient Greek phalanx-style tactics, and thanks to a strange 20’
pile of bodies that appears on the field, he envelopes the Good forces,
slaughtering many of them (note: these very specialized tactics are never used
before or since on the show or in the books).
4) The
battlefield turns to a field of mud, but a surprise charge by a huge force of
Good cavalry (in mud!) turns the tide, and saves the Good guys. The Evil
cavalry and archers probably could have helped, but they went home…or
something.
5) The Evil
commander retreats to his well-defended castle. The Good commander’s forces smash
down the castle gate in a surprise attack-- while the inhabitants of the castle
knew an enemy army was in the area, they didn’t even know they were being
attacked until there was pounding at the
main gates! There’s probably not a castle on Earth where you can march an
army up to the front gate unseen…
There are other
issues of stupidity in the battle, but the above are the highlights of just how
weird and incomprehensible the scene was.
Despite the
serious issues with the battle, I don’t criticize the actors or producers here.
This is just extraordinarily bad writing, even if the rest of the film crew is
good at what they do.
It turns out,
there were long, arduous discussions between the writers and the producers, the
people actually creating the show. They were given less than two weeks by the
writers to shoot a scene that the professionals (i.e., non-writers) said would
take more like six weeks to film. Making things even worse, there were three
days of solid rain, turning the field into a pool of mud. It was impossible to
film any battle scenes after that, so all the great mud scenes were throwaway
shots, where they simply try to make lemonade from the all the rainwater (and
doing a fine job of it).
There was supposed to be a
different ending to the Battle of the Bastards, but they
had to show crud instead because what the writers wanted just wasn’t possible.
The big main issue
was the scene had 70 live horses, and simply training those horses is too
time-consuming for what the writers wanted. The writers based their scene from
an awesome Japanese film, Ran. It’s a
great movie, but its wonderful cavalry battle scenes have real horses being
killed and maimed…it’s inevitable when you have a bunch of horses and men with
pointy things running full speed, even on a fake battlefield.
We won’t stand for
killing horses onscreen today, and there are very strong rules for how you can
use horses in shows; a movie like Ran simply cannot be filmed now with
real horses because our culture no longer allows for animals suffering for our
amusement.
But that’s what the writers wanted, they
wouldn’t let reality interfere with their vision, and so we get a hot mess
here. Along with the other hot messes in the episodes, it really takes the
shine off a series that, thankfully, will end in one more season, hopefully
before embarrassing itself beyond any chance of forgiveness.
Anyway, I’m ok
with the battle scene not being as glorious as it could have been, for the sake
of safety issues for the horses.
So what does this
have to do with college football?
Here’s the thing: college football is completely
corrupt on every level (above and beyond Penn State). We’ve known it’s completely
corrupt on every level for over 30 years now…and absolutely nothing has
changed.
One example
(amongst legion) is the exploitation of the football players. They’re paid
nothing. They risk life and limb on the battlefield (if you will), and we
tolerate it, because, hey, only a few get seriously hurt, and a few move on to
the NFL and make huge bucks. Yes, most just waste their time, but that’s little
different than the time horses waste when they’re on movie sets instead of
frolicking in some pasture.
In Dr. McKee’s sample, the incidence of CTE for
players who stopped at college was 91% (48 out of 53). Fifty-six percent of
those displayed severe pathology. The more football one plays, the more damage
is sustained, but ending short of the pros doesn’t seem to give players a pass
from the risks of the disease.[1]
--CTE is an acronym
for Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy. I.e., serious brain damage.
The gentle reader
needs to consider: this study provides real evidence that 90% or more of
college players suffer severe brain damage from their play. Now, sure, it’s
just one study, so it might not be accurate. Maybe only 80% of college players
suffer permanent brain damage for our amusement. Maybe it’s 70%...but the point
is many of these kids pay dearly for that time on the field, suffering lifelong
injuries for a game.
Wait a second
here. We won’t even tolerate a single horse suffering for our on screen
amusement. Not even one suffering horse of a hundred onscreen is tolerable.
This study shows
90 kids out of a 100 will be debilitated by college football. Why do we put up
with it? We shouldn’t even let children play this game, as the evidence is very
strong that quite a bit more than one in a hundred is going to suffer severe
injury.
We tolerate
horses being used as slave labor, and living in harsh conditions. We tolerate
our college football players being used as slave labor, and living in harsh
conditions.
We don’t tolerate
our horses being abused, maimed, or killed for something so trite as pure
amusement. Why should we tolerate it in our college students? We can no longer
argue that college kids being abused, maimed, or killed on the football field
is such a rare event that it’s only wussies who worry about it. We know that most of those kids will suffer with
lifelong injuries.
For our amusement.
Maybe the
widespread knowledge of just how devastating this game is will finally end
college football. I grant none of the other chamber-of-horrors-type revelations
have put a dent in college football but…
I sure hope that
someday we’ll treat our college students as well as we treat horses. It’s not
that high a standard, honest.
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