![]() ![]() "I think the "butterfly effect" that I have spoken of so often was at work here. On his blog, Martin writes the following. ![]() Update: George R.R Martin has given his own thoughts on this subject, in the wake of a lot of reaction to how the TV show portrayed the scene compared to the book. If you look closer there are those moments where she - well, I haven't seen the finished edit, of course - but we tried to have it where she goes into it then she pulls away, she goes in then she pulls away, but of course he is forcing himself." Voice your thoughts about his explanation in the Comments below. The emotions, everything is just messed up, and then he just wants to reconnect and becomes that weird thing. A lot of dysfunctional relationships or you've seen them where you go, 'Why the hell did they stay together for so long?' 'Well, we love each other.' 'But it's f***ed up! It's just f****d up.' Everything here is extreme. When he says, 'Why the hell did the gods make me love a hateful woman?,' I think that is at the core. And now … you'll have to watch the show.They have history, a long history. ![]() Everything else has been being in the same rooms and pretending. I think it's, well, we talked a lot about it, of course, 'Is it rape?' Their whole relationship has been over all those years has been a physical one and it's been about catching those moments and their love affair over those years has been condensed to those moments of passion. YES NOHere's what Coster-Waldau had to tell us about That Scene: "That's certainly George R.R. ![]()
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