He was emotionally unstable in the first few seasons. Trying to prove his worth, insecure about what people think of him as a king slayer. Also showed how Robert tortured everyone around him.
@@brettbrooks5511Theon wasn’t actually that bad in the beginning. Arrogant, yes, but this made sense given his age and standing. He did have some good qualities, such as how he went to battle with and was extremely loyal to Robb. I have no doubt that it was his full intention to get Robb his father’s support when he first arrived at Pyke but he had a whole identity crisis once he was reunited with his father.
To be fair I think he was just in a bad mood because of Robert. After Jory leaves he actually looks like he kind of feels bad for how the conversation ended.
He remembers he is Ned Stark’s people at the end. He hates Ned with how he was treated when he stopped Arys on his massacre. Rather than acknowledging the good thing on what he has done, Ned was disgusted with him on how he killed the person he swore to protect. Sometime blind honor can kill you.
@@jaeger3052 What good thing? Perhaps in Jaime pov, he did save the city from burning in wildfire, but he only served the mad king when it was conviniant. He didnt save Elia from the Mountain and didnt act sooner before when the Mad King did other attrocities like when Ned's father and brother were burned in front of him. He acted when : - Tywin was at the gates, massacred and sacked the city. - When he was the last kingsguard around the King - Sat on the Iron Throne while the city was being destroyed and the Princess was killed along with her children In Ned's pov, he saw just a man out of opportunity and served his king when it was good to serve him.
@@theberserker6000This is what people don’t understand. Perception is what is damning. I think Jaime was right to slay the Mad King but I totally understand Ned’s POV. Ned was wondering where this dedication to morality was when his father and brother were burnt alive.
Robert legit ended up crushing the iron islands, I think Balon ended up with a naked throne room with no walls(broken by siege towers)and one of the walls crushed his son and heir, he ended up kneeling to Robert crazy how merciful Robert was, he didn't execute him, kept him as a lord and Balon still stabbed Ned in the back
@@Ar1AnX1xcould be true but maybe not, the books are now unreliable since they were written by the maesters. and the hbo series shows what actually happened
Just finished watching season 1 again and was gutted when Jory died. Surely he knew that Jamie was one of the best living swordsman but it didn't stop him from having ago.
Him being the best swordsman of his time wasn't even why he lost. Jaime couldn't even bother fighting him in a sword fight and sneaked a dagger to his eye
@@Samuel.R.Jonassen Nice try in your attempt at being a c*nt but I've watched this show twice already. That's why I stated "I've just watched season 1 *again*" because it isn't my first time.
Beric Dondarrion is who wields the sword later though. Thoros is part of the same Brotherhood, so I'm not sure if he later gave Beric the sword or if this was a gaffe by the writers.
@grayden4138 no, Thoros lights his swords on fire with wildfire in the books while in the show Dondarrion just cuts his hand. In the books Dondarrion doesn't use a flaming sword he's just a badass "immortal" knight until he gives up his life to bring back Catelyn Stark as Lady Stoneheart.
@@FathersUnited-fu Yeah, I know things were different in the books. I'm referring to the show, though. I don't recall Thoros having flaming swords by the time we meet the Brotherhood, only Beric, which is why this exchange is puzzling.
@@grayden4138 It's not the sword that's unique. It's the magic. Thoros was fighting bandits and using guerrilla tactics against lannister armies, no reason to run around with a flaming sword when youre supposed to be hiding in the middle of the woods. Neither of them use flaming swords until Beric brought set his on fire against the Hound. Then when they go beyond the wall we see both Beric and Thoros set their blades aflame.
@@A_Black_Sheep94 That's the catch though. A very conflicted guy who had trained himself to be reflexively rude due to his sister and father. I am very interested to see how GRRM ends his story, hope it's better than what D and D did.
@@PGChemistry-s2yI can't imagine Martin ever redeeming Jaime fully. He is a twist on the classic knight in shinning armour trope, on surface level Jaime fits perfectly, but he's messed up and views and morals are very messed up. At best I can see him offing Cersei and then offing himself.
I think Jaime in this scene is shown as someone who likes battles more than politics, in this scene he lightens up when he’s talking about the siege and becomes friendlier to the point he seems to forget the noises getting louder, but his face closes when Stark is mentioned, bringing him back to reality.
Jaime pushes Bran and Kills Jory, both cheap shots with his left hand. Only for Locke to cut off his right hand. In all situations Jaime thought he was untouchable and nothing would happen to him because he is a Lannister. Poetic justice in true GOT style that people get what they deserve not from those who they did wrong to, but from someone they least expect it.
Jorry immediately answered "4" because he knew that's how many there were by the voices. He's a trained scout and Ned's most trusted man. He's accustomed to gathering as much info about his surroundings as he can as quickly as possible. It's just second nature to him. Either that or...
@@anon4854 He says 2-3 unbothered, Jaime tells him that he thinks there are more and asks him to make a new guess. So he says 4. But it's clear in the show that he doesn't want to engage in such conversation about the king and his whores and therefore the queen as well who's Jaime's sister. He's just answering an unrelevant question out of kindness or at least he doesn't want to be rude towards queen's sister, a kings guard member and an old ally, so he changes the subject to the time they fought together. There is no mention of Jory's scout skills earlier in the show.
@@wariyoshidirector It's not the arrest scene, it happens earlier than that. Jaime confronts Ned about the capture of Tyrion when Ned comes from a conversation with Littlefinger and has his men killed.
@@jordias6436 That's probably true, I can't think of any instances in Season 1 where there was notable plot armor. But there was just so gods damned bloody much of it in the later seasons.
This actually feels like if GRRM wrote a Jamie chapter for the first book, cut it, then brought it back for the TV series. Some of the show only scenes in the first few seasons were amazing; especially when there was material to go off of.
One of the best stories in the show.. Jaime, the cocky cnt, humbled, fights for what is right, then returns to his Love. Hyperbolic, but he is the most relatable character of the show. Brienne finishing his story made my eyes water.
I think Jaime is one of the bigger plot holes in ASOIF, because why is the reason for his betrayal of the Mad King a secret? Why is Brianne the first person in 15 years, who he tells the truth? Everyone should know it.
@@MrBell-iq3sm because all those who could vouch for him were either dead, didn’t care, or thought it was in their best interest to let Jamie take all the blame. Ned could have easily found out, but like Jamie said, he was pissed and for some reason, placed an inordinate amount of blame on Jamie for what happened to his father and brother.
@@Crescentknight8189 Vouch? Everyone in the Kingdom should know at this point. Everyone knows Aerys was mad, cruel and obsessed with wildfire. His last hand has a pyromancer. Why didn't Jaime simply tell the story? It makes sense and improves his status. Suddenly there isn't a story about an opportunistic, treasonous knight, but a story about a knight, who was forced to make a difficult decision to save a city and his own people, the Lannisters. This entire Ned Stark aspect makes no sense either, because Jaime made it clear that the Starks are nothing to him.
@@MrBell-iq3sm Jamie probably could have told his story…if Tywin hadn’t already been in the midst of sacking the city. Even if Jamie told everyone in king’s landing, No one would have believed he had noble intentions after that. The Ned aspect was simply Ned needing someone to blame for his family’s death. He blamed Jamie for not doing it sooner and strangely enough, for breaking his oath. He believed that Jamie should have went taken the black.
Well he just said the king his brother in law puts extra effort on cheating on his sister when he's on duty. Plus he always puts up a front when Ned is involved even though he desperately wants his approval
Well, because he sacrificed his honor and reputation (treasures, for a knight) in exchange to kill the mad king and save kingslanding, only to be seen as a traitor, coward, kingslayer in the eyes of the great lords he’s sworn to protect. He is frustrated and arrogant as an armor.. like “fuck everyone and everything, I only care for my siblings”
@@maximumpotential3796Which is crazy, but in character for disillusioned Jaime, since Ned has every reason to believe it was just another part of the coup attempt
@@samphillips8188 yea Ned has all the reasons to believe that because Tywin actually betrayed the mad king and joined Roberts Rebellion, also sort of mercilessly sent his goons to kill Elia Martell and her children.
That last frame. Little moments like that really sells that there’s more to Jaime we had yet to see. The realization that Jory didn’t deserve his petty anger, Jaime resented his life and was resentful of becoming disillusioned with the idea of nobly serving someone, he’s cursed to serve people he detests, he hated serving Robert, he was resentful of Ned, and for a moment was resentful of how much Jory respected and gladly served Ned, maybe even envious of Jory, serving someone worthy of serving.
I lived in the first season how the showrunners would give this exposition by having character meet and recount old battles. It taught us their history and would show us what kind of people they were at the same time. Man, why were they only this good when they were adapting from the actual source material?
He doesn't hate House Stark, in many ways Jaime admires Ned. Jaime is self loathing, he is bitter and the contempt from Ned just pulls it all up the surface. Jaime always coveted honor, and being looked down by a man known for how honorful he is just twists the knife even more.
@@alexandertsamourlidis646 I think there's also a bit of resentment at the fact that Robert holds Ned in such high regard and trusts him, but Jamie can't stomach Robert so he can't stomach Ned by proxy. Not to mention that the South see the North as backwater/rural/country folk.
Ned was the one that found Jaime right after he had just killed the Mad King. Jaime hates the fact that Ned was the one to see it without hearing his side of the story. Jaime thought that he was saving others by doing so, while Ned thought Jaime had just broken his oath to save himself from Robert’s siege. Behold the Kingslayer.
Jamie's actor did a lot of A tier to S tier acting, some of the very best acting in any Fantasy/Medieval movie/show, definitely top 5 on the show which is crazy because most of the actors/actresses killed it
@@codranine6054 "to be honest, I never really cared much for them, innocent or otherwise." just really poor writing, especially since he had that speech in season 3 about stabbing the Mad King to save the whole city.
And here we have one of the best dialogues of the entire show. It starts here, but ends only when Jamie finishs it taking Jori's eye... Showing us that he always had remember him. Jamie hid his emotions and thoughts behind this hateful arrogance. The look in his eyes at the end of this very scene proves my point ❤❤❤
Jaime pushes Bran and Kills Jory, both cheap shots with his left hand. Only for Locke to cut off his right hand. In all situations Jaime thought he was untouchable and nothing would happen to him because he is a Lannister. Poetic justice in true GOT style that people get what they deserve not from those who they did wrong to, but from someone they least expect it.
every time two war veterans start sharing stories in this show it’s always an amazing little scene (and basically forshadowing someone dying a horrible death)
This was the first time that Jaime seemed like there was more to him, like there was good in him despite the arrogance. Also that "I'll remember that until the day that I die" line...sad with how he dies.
Most heartbreaking part of this scene. When Jamie remembers Pike, just forna second he slips into his real self when he talks about Thoros and it just becomes two warriors sharing tales of a shared battle and just for a moment there is Jamie showing respect, then his guard comes back up and you can see the regret in his face when Jory leaves after he snaps at him
Jaime's bitterness in the early seasons, when he feels apart from people, and lashes out at anyone who tries to be earnest with him, is such a sad reflection of who he becomes later. You can see how much he just wants to be normal, to relate to people, to have adventures, and to live free, but he's just miserable where he's at.
I love how everybody remembers that battle because of Thoros of Myr charging through with his flaming sword. They talk about it in this scene and another scene where Barristan Selmy and Jorah Mormont laugh about it
Jaime went through 5 different moods in this one scene.
He’s definitely one of the more complicated characters
He was emotionally unstable in the first few seasons. Trying to prove his worth, insecure about what people think of him as a king slayer. Also showed how Robert tortured everyone around him.
“Four” with no hesitation is wild 😂
And the RGGGH sound from Robert when hoe exits the room😂
@@igorserkov7296 LOL
The unedited line is even funnier.
"... Three. FOUR."
Jory actually corrects his first guess! 😂
@@MrDibara Jory is a man of Culture. He only heard three at first, but then heard the fourth&knew he mustn’t sound uncivilized!
He was thinking If I was king it would be four
Ah, two fellow veterans, devoted to their lords. Surely nothing terrible will happen between them
You should keep an eye out for how it develops!
@@gabem3251that's brutal lol💀
@@gabem3251 Gotta say, eye didn't see that coming
@@vexn3699foreshadowing hey. An eye for hand???
@@whokilledjr3719 gotta hand it to you, that was eye opening
ah the love and respect they have for each other, can’t wait to see their friendship blossom throughout the seasons
I’m sure they’ll be the best of friends 😂😂
I’m pretty sure Jaime even gives his new best friend a knife as a present. It’s a pretty nice gift.
Jaime sure helped him blossom, by putting a dagger in his eye.
@@downup-fx7wr see I love the way you worded it, they’re love was so strong it was like a dagger to the eye with how encapsulating it is.
He will remember that till' the day he dies
He was right about Theon.
Not at this time. Theon was still his regular little shit self until Ramsey had his "fun" with him.
@@brettbrooks5511Theon wasn’t actually that bad in the beginning. Arrogant, yes, but this made sense given his age and standing. He did have some good qualities, such as how he went to battle with and was extremely loyal to Robb. I have no doubt that it was his full intention to get Robb his father’s support when he first arrived at Pyke but he had a whole identity crisis once he was reunited with his father.
@@emperorconstantinexipalaio4121 yep, and Robb's "It's not your family" didn't helped either :P
They both were.
Damn who's theon i only know reek
Just for a moment, Jaime drops the arrogance and acts more like later seasons Jaime. But then it's right back at the end.
Soldier to soldier an old war story’s they share, I honestly think Jamie like him, but is a cu*t nonetheless
To be fair I think he was just in a bad mood because of Robert. After Jory leaves he actually looks like he kind of feels bad for how the conversation ended.
He remembers he is Ned Stark’s people at the end. He hates Ned with how he was treated when he stopped Arys on his massacre. Rather than acknowledging the good thing on what he has done, Ned was disgusted with him on how he killed the person he swore to protect. Sometime blind honor can kill you.
@@jaeger3052 What good thing? Perhaps in Jaime pov, he did save the city from burning in wildfire, but he only served the mad king when it was conviniant. He didnt save Elia from the Mountain and didnt act sooner before when the Mad King did other attrocities like when Ned's father and brother were burned in front of him.
He acted when :
- Tywin was at the gates, massacred and sacked the city.
- When he was the last kingsguard around the King
- Sat on the Iron Throne while the city was being destroyed and the Princess was killed along with her children
In Ned's pov, he saw just a man out of opportunity and served his king when it was good to serve him.
@@theberserker6000This is what people don’t understand. Perception is what is damning. I think Jaime was right to slay the Mad King but I totally understand Ned’s POV. Ned was wondering where this dedication to morality was when his father and brother were burnt alive.
“They stopped liking it at the end”
Fuck that was cold.
Robert legit ended up crushing the iron islands, I think Balon ended up with a naked throne room with no walls(broken by siege towers)and one of the walls crushed his son and heir, he ended up kneeling to Robert
crazy how merciful Robert was, he didn't execute him, kept him as a lord and Balon still stabbed Ned in the back
@@Ar1AnX1xcould be true but maybe not, the books are now unreliable since they were written by the maesters. and the hbo series shows what actually happened
@@Jeremy_the_unfallible_n-a that's all according to the show runner who cant even get which houses own which keeps correct lol
@@RoadKillr27 GRRM said himself that the Fire and Blood book that the HOTD series is based off of was written by maesters and is unreliable. Lol
@@RoadKillr27 So learn facts, he said the hbo series shows what actually happened.. smh
Just finished watching season 1 again and was gutted when Jory died. Surely he knew that Jamie was one of the best living swordsman but it didn't stop him from having ago.
It was his duty to protect ned
Him being the best swordsman of his time wasn't even why he lost. Jaime couldn't even bother fighting him in a sword fight and sneaked a dagger to his eye
@@Samuel.R.Jonassenur so cool
@@Samuel.R.Jonassen Nice try in your attempt at being a c*nt but I've watched this show twice already. That's why I stated "I've just watched season 1 *again*" because it isn't my first time.
@@Samuel.R.Jonassen what are you doing?
I'm sure these guys would have their eyes out for each other.
The one comment I looked for
I see what you did there
"They stopped liking it at the end."
That's vintage S 1-3 Jamie
That lines downright cold
Thoros is a fucking legend with that flaming fuckin sword🤣😭
Beric Dondarrion is who wields the sword later though. Thoros is part of the same Brotherhood, so I'm not sure if he later gave Beric the sword or if this was a gaffe by the writers.
@grayden4138 no, Thoros lights his swords on fire with wildfire in the books while in the show Dondarrion just cuts his hand. In the books Dondarrion doesn't use a flaming sword he's just a badass "immortal" knight until he gives up his life to bring back Catelyn Stark as Lady Stoneheart.
@@FathersUnited-fu Yeah, I know things were different in the books. I'm referring to the show, though. I don't recall Thoros having flaming swords by the time we meet the Brotherhood, only Beric, which is why this exchange is puzzling.
We find out later that he doesn't even remember that, he was so hammered drunk lmao
@@grayden4138 It's not the sword that's unique. It's the magic. Thoros was fighting bandits and using guerrilla tactics against lannister armies, no reason to run around with a flaming sword when youre supposed to be hiding in the middle of the woods. Neither of them use flaming swords until Beric brought set his on fire against the Hound. Then when they go beyond the wall we see both Beric and Thoros set their blades aflame.
This scene just epitomoses Jaime so perfectly, amiable and friendly to a vicious jerk in seconds.
At the same time though when Jory walks away Jaime is like why did I even do that?
@@A_Black_Sheep94 That's the catch though. A very conflicted guy who had trained himself to be reflexively rude due to his sister and father. I am very interested to see how GRRM ends his story, hope it's better than what D and D did.
@@PGChemistry-s2y I don't think he's finishing the story bud sorry.
@@PGChemistry-s2yI can't imagine Martin ever redeeming Jaime fully. He is a twist on the classic knight in shinning armour trope, on surface level Jaime fits perfectly, but he's messed up and views and morals are very messed up. At best I can see him offing Cersei and then offing himself.
I think Jaime in this scene is shown as someone who likes battles more than politics, in this scene he lightens up when he’s talking about the siege and becomes friendlier to the point he seems to forget the noises getting louder, but his face closes when Stark is mentioned, bringing him back to reality.
Jory, one of the most underrated characters ever 💔
Jaime pushes Bran and Kills Jory, both cheap shots with his left hand. Only for Locke to cut off his right hand. In all situations Jaime thought he was untouchable and nothing would happen to him because he is a Lannister. Poetic justice in true GOT style that people get what they deserve not from those who they did wrong to, but from someone they least expect it.
They tell their history through short stories
Just beautiful
Jorry immediately answered "4" because he knew that's how many there were by the voices. He's a trained scout and Ned's most trusted man. He's accustomed to gathering as much info about his surroundings as he can as quickly as possible. It's just second nature to him.
Either that or...
Cool idea, sadly it’s edited and cutdown, he originally says 3 after a few moments (hears another woman) than corrects to 4.
@@Buzzsaw.1103 But did he correct himself because he heard a fourth womans voice?
@@anon4854 He says 2-3 unbothered, Jaime tells him that he thinks there are more and asks him to make a new guess. So he says 4. But it's clear in the show that he doesn't want to engage in such conversation about the king and his whores and therefore the queen as well who's Jaime's sister. He's just answering an unrelevant question out of kindness or at least he doesn't want to be rude towards queen's sister, a kings guard member and an old ally, so he changes the subject to the time they fought together. There is no mention of Jory's scout skills earlier in the show.
Unless he knew by scent
Poor Jory, but at least he was spared from the worst
Like season 8?
He was saved from season 8.
Well the Cassels and Pooles pretty much all died but yes, at least they weren't around to see S8.
@@nunyabiznes33 wait, what? The entire Cassel family died? When? I didn't read the books
Worse pain?
No the later seasons’ writing
Only now did I notice Jamie ended up taking that very eye. Must have been on purpose.
Right, the irony is palpable. 😂
I looked at the scene where Ned gets arrested and I don't see it? He straight up kills him or what?
@@wariyoshidirector Yep, Jaime puts a dagger through his eye.
@@wariyoshidirector It's not the arrest scene, it happens earlier than that. Jaime confronts Ned about the capture of Tyrion when Ned comes from a conversation with Littlefinger and has his men killed.
Aye
" I doubt it." Say what you want about Jamie, but he was a good judge of people.
Not really. If he was a good judge of people, he would not have tried to fool Locke, which would have allowed him to keep his hand.
Other than his sister
He thought Cersei was a good person 😂😂
@@fearablackheaven1198 he had a simp lense for cersei
A hypocrite from start to end
"Nearly took my eye" well that was foreshadowing
Yeah no kidding, lets give em a hand huh 👏
I’m guessing that was why Jaime did it, kind of a “The Greyjoys failed but I won’t”
I don't think I have* ever seen a show that has had more foreshadowing, or plot armor, than GoT. lol
@@Nebontha there was really no plot armor at all in the first seasons.
@@jordias6436 That's probably true, I can't think of any instances in Season 1 where there was notable plot armor. But there was just so gods damned bloody much of it in the later seasons.
maaan... listen to this dialog... so much feeling, so much subtext... so much dept.
Whats crazy is Jory says Theon is a good lad. Theon would later on execute Jorys uncle in Winterfell.
That’s crazy indeed!😂 And Jaime was right here saying he doubts that
Yeah but tbf that guy did have a ridiculous beard
@@maxcritchley619Ser Rodrik was a chad. More respect
This actually feels like if GRRM wrote a Jamie chapter for the first book, cut it, then brought it back for the TV series. Some of the show only scenes in the first few seasons were amazing; especially when there was material to go off of.
Its nice to see two rival warriors seeing eye to eye. Hope they can give each other a hand in the future
Gnarly. Well done.
Such a well written scene for Jamie Lannister😍
One of the best stories in the show.. Jaime, the cocky cnt, humbled, fights for what is right, then returns to his Love. Hyperbolic, but he is the most relatable character of the show. Brienne finishing his story made my eyes water.
"Theon's a good lad"
"I doubt it"
Foreshadowing
Jory At least was kind till end and left honourly maybe not a stark but a wolf aside Ned
Jamie tends to show respect when talking to those he knows have seen true battle. All he ever wanted was Honor and he sacrificed that for the realm.
Yes yes yes. Exactly.
I think Jaime is one of the bigger plot holes in ASOIF, because why is the reason for his betrayal of the Mad King a secret? Why is Brianne the first person in 15 years, who he tells the truth? Everyone should know it.
@@MrBell-iq3sm because all those who could vouch for him were either dead, didn’t care, or thought it was in their best interest to let Jamie take all the blame.
Ned could have easily found out, but like Jamie said, he was pissed and for some reason, placed an inordinate amount of blame on Jamie for what happened to his father and brother.
@@Crescentknight8189 Vouch? Everyone in the Kingdom should know at this point. Everyone knows Aerys was mad, cruel and obsessed with wildfire. His last hand has a pyromancer. Why didn't Jaime simply tell the story? It makes sense and improves his status. Suddenly there isn't a story about an opportunistic, treasonous knight, but a story about a knight, who was forced to make a difficult decision to save a city and his own people, the Lannisters.
This entire Ned Stark aspect makes no sense either, because Jaime made it clear that the Starks are nothing to him.
@@MrBell-iq3sm Jamie probably could have told his story…if Tywin hadn’t already been in the midst of sacking the city. Even if Jamie told everyone in king’s landing, No one would have believed he had noble intentions after that.
The Ned aspect was simply Ned needing someone to blame for his family’s death. He blamed Jamie for not doing it sooner and strangely enough, for breaking his oath. He believed that Jamie should have went taken the black.
-That's where you got your scar?
-Aye!
Foreshadowing through the homophony of "aye" and "eye".
Why was Jaime so aggressive towards politeness?💀
Well he just said the king his brother in law puts extra effort on cheating on his sister when he's on duty. Plus he always puts up a front when Ned is involved even though he desperately wants his approval
Jaime’s annoyed in general, partly due to the king, and partly because he hates Ned Stark
@@gabem3251less so hates and more so wants a pat on the back
@@mogreen1232- Fact.
Well, because he sacrificed his honor and reputation (treasures, for a knight) in exchange to kill the mad king and save kingslanding, only to be seen as a traitor, coward, kingslayer in the eyes of the great lords he’s sworn to protect. He is frustrated and arrogant as an armor.. like “fuck everyone and everything, I only care for my siblings”
I watched this scene uncensored so many times, that the *>BLEEP
I feel like Jaime regretted snapping at him at the end.
You can literally see him think "Gah...that was kinda a dick move..."
He keeps the grudge against Ned for not recognising he stabbed the mad king to save King's Landing.
@@maximumpotential3796Which is crazy, but in character for disillusioned Jaime, since Ned has every reason to believe it was just another part of the coup attempt
@@samphillips8188 yea Ned has all the reasons to believe that because Tywin actually betrayed the mad king and joined Roberts Rebellion, also sort of mercilessly sent his goons to kill Elia Martell and her children.
The fact they knew how to write AND perform was made it amazing. Especially with foreshadowing
The fact that Jaime then stabbed him in the eye. Smh. They were friendly & then Jaime ruined it with murder.
"..one of them bastards almost took my eye."
In showbusiness.. this is called foreshadowing.
A nice video with no nonsense music at the background
jaime continuing to be the best GoT character ❤
That last frame. Little moments like that really sells that there’s more to Jaime we had yet to see. The realization that Jory didn’t deserve his petty anger, Jaime resented his life and was resentful of becoming disillusioned with the idea of nobly serving someone, he’s cursed to serve people he detests, he hated serving Robert, he was resentful of Ned, and for a moment was resentful of how much Jory respected and gladly served Ned, maybe even envious of Jory, serving someone worthy of serving.
Love all the additional scenes Jory got in the show. Made his death hit harder.
I lived in the first season how the showrunners would give this exposition by having character meet and recount old battles. It taught us their history and would show us what kind of people they were at the same time. Man, why were they only this good when they were adapting from the actual source material?
Jaime's sudden aggression when he heard
" Lord STARK " tells how much he hates House Stark 🤣😭
He doesn't hate House Stark, in many ways Jaime admires Ned. Jaime is self loathing, he is bitter and the contempt from Ned just pulls it all up the surface.
Jaime always coveted honor, and being looked down by a man known for how honorful he is just twists the knife even more.
@@alexandertsamourlidis646 I think there's also a bit of resentment at the fact that Robert holds Ned in such high regard and trusts him, but Jamie can't stomach Robert so he can't stomach Ned by proxy. Not to mention that the South see the North as backwater/rural/country folk.
Ned was the one that found Jaime right after he had just killed the Mad King. Jaime hates the fact that Ned was the one to see it without hearing his side of the story. Jaime thought that he was saving others by doing so, while Ned thought Jaime had just broken his oath to save himself from Robert’s siege. Behold the Kingslayer.
So much good foreshadowing and character moments in under a minute. Gods this show was strong.
Jaime was right about Theon
Scenes like this is why I had to watch the shows over and over again.
All except S8
“Aye”
“Eye, you say??? I’ll remember that”
The foreshadowing in this scene alone is crazy
I love that acting at the end, Jaime looking like he regretted snapping at Jory, grade A acting
He has a very handsome look in armor, Jamie does.
Jamie's actor did a lot of A tier to S tier acting, some of the very best acting in any Fantasy/Medieval movie/show, definitely top 5 on the show which is crazy because most of the actors/actresses killed it
He fought by Jaime's side witnessing his prowess but still he put himself between Jaime and Ned. That's bravery
The growth and humbling of his character was so good.
Even better in books
and somehow they butchered his entire character arc with one sentence.
@@prowelshman which one
@@codranine6054 "to be honest, I never really cared much for them, innocent or otherwise." just really poor writing, especially since he had that speech in season 3 about stabbing the Mad King to save the whole city.
"nearly took my eye"
Unfortunately the guy he's talking with took his eye a couple of episodes later
Gods the writing was strong then....
Well that's one tightly packed with foreshadowings scene...
I think these two are going to be great friends
R.I.P. Jory. Good man, great family.
Jaimie would never spit in Jory's eye, he has way too much respect for that.
"it was like seeing a shark on a mountain top" jesus that's a masterclass of a line, the writing is crazy
He doubted it and grey joy proved the legend right
I wish he had a bigger role...i liked his character
Jory, what every loyal NPC retainer in our old D&D campaigns wished they were
Man I miss the dialogue of GOT. HOTD could never…Still a good show though
One of the Greyjoys NEARLY took my eye.
Jaime would remember that.
One of the only times when Jamie is younger you see him drop his walls as he genuinely recalls the battle with fondness.
I always wanted a bran flashback of Thoros with charging in with his flaming sword cause everyone talked about how epic it was!!
And here we have one of the best dialogues of the entire show. It starts here, but ends only when Jamie finishs it taking Jori's eye... Showing us that he always had remember him. Jamie hid his emotions and thoughts behind this hateful arrogance. The look in his eyes at the end of this very scene proves my point ❤❤❤
Robert’s groan as the girl is leaving the room 😂
Lmao reminiscing about the War like it was epic moment during a gaming session with the lads
Jaime pushes Bran and Kills Jory, both cheap shots with his left hand. Only for Locke to cut off his right hand. In all situations Jaime thought he was untouchable and nothing would happen to him because he is a Lannister. Poetic justice in true GOT style that people get what they deserve not from those who they did wrong to, but from someone they least expect it.
Leaving a message Ned gave you to bring to Robert with Jaime is certainly a choice of all times 😂
Jamie was happy to have some other fellow soldier to talk to and relate to, and it got soured when mentioning doing something for ned.
every time two war veterans start sharing stories in this show it’s always an amazing little scene (and basically forshadowing someone dying a horrible death)
*jamie is an asshole*
*they find common ground*
*jamie is an asshole again*
"i doubt it" he was right 👍
Everyone respects our fire priest Thoryn!
This was the first time that Jaime seemed like there was more to him, like there was good in him despite the arrogance.
Also that "I'll remember that until the day that I die" line...sad with how he dies.
"He's a good lad"
"I doubt it"
Jamie instincts where on point
Guy: theorn. He’s a good lad
Jamie: I doubt it
i like that they knew who thoros of myr was. it serves to make story more intricate
"One of the Greyjoys nearly took my eye". Well that's foreshadowing at its best...
“ they stopped liking it in the end “ - what a bad ass line talk about less is more
One of the grejoys nearly took my eye and moments after Jaime took it by himself. Also these two has the same energy
The Bobby grunt when she opens the door 😂
I love how everyone has a memory of, Thoros of Myr, with that burning sword
Jory: Can I *hand* this letter to you?
Jamie: Leave it there and I'll keep a *sharp eye* on it
Love that cold rejection total abrupt tonal shift takes you off guard effective efficient character development
"He's a good lad"
"I doubt it"
Both were right. Doubt made Theon a monster. But faith in Theon made him a hero.
Jory has a lovely voice
Most heartbreaking part of this scene. When Jamie remembers Pike, just forna second he slips into his real self when he talks about Thoros and it just becomes two warriors sharing tales of a shared battle and just for a moment there is Jamie showing respect, then his guard comes back up and you can see the regret in his face when Jory leaves after he snaps at him
This was such a well written scene. You see behind the arrogant facade Jaimie puts in. But then as soon as Ned stark is mentioned his anger boils over
I genuinely don't think most people fathom how good of a writer George RR Martin is
"I doubt it."
- Jaymee Laysistaa
"One of the greyjoys nearly took my eye"
Jamie: say no more
Seems like Jaime was having a nice time talking to Jory until he was once again reminded of Ned Stark's existence
Now we know where Prince Charming went after Shrek
“One of the Greyjoy’s nearly took my eye” ooooo probably shouldn’t have told him that
Jaime's bitterness in the early seasons, when he feels apart from people, and lashes out at anyone who tries to be earnest with him, is such a sad reflection of who he becomes later. You can see how much he just wants to be normal, to relate to people, to have adventures, and to live free, but he's just miserable where he's at.
what one Swordsman missed.. Jaime finished 😥😥 the eye
"Theon, he's a good lad."
"I doubt it."
Jaime making Simpsons predictions
One of the greyjoys nearly took my eye.
Damn, Jaime remembered that one.
One could say he was… staring daggers at him 🫠
That little part when he’s talking about Thoros, you see a sparkle of his better side.
I love how everybody remembers that battle because of Thoros of Myr charging through with his flaming sword.
They talk about it in this scene and another scene where Barristan Selmy and Jorah Mormont laugh about it