mardi 18 juillet 2017
Who Are the Faceless Men on Game of Thrones?
Arya Stark's storyline on Game of Thrones this season can be described in one word: revenge. While some of the Starks have reunited and are plotting to merely keep a foothold at their home, Arya has been carrying out a revenge plot to murder everyone on her kill list, and she's using her training as a Faceless Man to do it. For a refresher on who these "men" are what they do, keep reading.
Who Are the Faceless Men and What Are They Capable Of?
They're a guild of assassins based in Braavos with a reputation for being both extremely successful in their work and extremely expensive to hire. But they aren't employed by just anybody. They serve the Many-Faced God, also known as the God of Death.
Our first taste of a Faceless Man comes with Jaqen H'ghar, who spends time with Arya in Harrenhal on season two. He tasks her with naming three people for him to kill after she'd taken three lives that weren't hers to take. Upon later escaping Harrenhal, he gives Arya a coin and the phrase "Valar Morghulis," both of which will help her find him in Braavos if she wished to train with him. With that, he shows off an ability of the Faceless Men - changing his face to that of another person's - and disappears until Arya arrives at Braavos on season five. In the books, Jaqen doesn't appear again at all. Rather, a character called the Kindly Man takes on the role of Arya's mentor.
How Do the Faceless Men Come to Be?
During Arya's training with Jaqen, he reveals the story of the Faceless Men's history, which goes all the way back to ancient Valyria. In the city's volcanic mines, slaves prayed to different gods, pleading to end their suffering. A man heard their pleas and concluded that they were actually all praying to one god with many different faces: Death. The man then began killing the slaves and eventually their masters, thus beginning the Faceless Men and instilling their belief that death is a gift.
Is Arya a Faceless Man?
Despite the fact that Arya immersed herself in the world of Faceless Men and the Many-Faced God, she left training after refusing to kill an actress and realizing she couldn't give up her identity. She's been using her face-off skills to kill Walder Frey, then his whole family, while still being "Arya Stark," i.e., not "no one." So is she having her cake and eating it too? And will her misuse of the faces come back to haunt her? Probably.
Related Posts:
Everything You Need to Know About Sylvester Stallone's Role in Guardians of the Galaxy 2 Spoilers for Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 below! If your head is spinning by the time you finish watching Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, you're not alone. The sequel to the 2014 Marvel flick is a dizzying, colorful ride t… Read More
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2: Breaking Down All 5 End Credits Scenes You may have heard the news that Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 would have five end credits scenes and thought, "Not possible." Well, it is possible. And Marvel did it. Five different sequences are spread between the credits… Read More
All Hail Elizabeth Debicki's High Priestess Ayesha in Guardians of the Galaxy 2 When Ayesha, high priestess of the Sovereign, first pops up on screen in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, it's electric. Sitting in all of her gilded glory, the leader of the xenophobic, gold-skinned race of aliens - who are … Read More
What Will the Game of Thrones Spinoff Be About? We Have Some Ideas When you have a show like Game of Thrones that has met such monumental success, it means the moment the end of the show is in sight people will start talking about a spinoff. There's already been confirmation from HBO that a… Read More
HBO Is Developing FOUR Game of Thrones Spinoff Series As the end of Game of Thrones draws dangerously near, HBO is getting ready for its next big series. While we know the network was hoping to get a spinoff in the works, we just found out that it's actually developing four spi… Read More
0 comments:
Enregistrer un commentaire