

How would Jaqen have Arya's face without killing her? Welp, that's a hole, now isn't it?Īnother Season 7 theory, this one directly involving Sunday's feature-length finale, "The Dragon and the Wolf," involves the subtly hyped-for-years "Cleganebowl" - the inevitable second showdown between The Hound and his vile (now half-dead) brother The Mountain. My idea is less extreme than that and just uses the Nymeria reunion in the woods as a turning point to actually send her to King's Landing and "No One" to Winterfell.

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I know there are some who think Arya never actually made it back to Westeros, and that she's really just been the Waif in Arya skin the whole time. Hell, it's no more crazy than my personal weird theory that Arya Stark never made it to Winterfell. Basically, broken down, Bran's attempts to prevent the "Great War" cause him to go back in time in steps, failing at every turn, until eventually he time travels too much and gets trapped. There are holes for sure - namely why the Three-Eyed-Raven before Bran never mentioned anything - but the theory's gotten some new believers this week. There's even an element of the theory that suggest that the voices that drove King Aerys "Mad" came from Bran, who was telling him to "Burn" all the white walkers. Notably, Bran is also able to warg into humans and has powers that not only allow him to see into the past, but change things as well. It's a dense theory that involves warging, the idea that spending too much time in the past will get you stuck there, and the fact that the Night King and Bran seemed to be connected psychically. One of which is the idea that the Night King may be, in fact, Bran Stark - a long-running theory that got a boost from "Beyond the Wall." It involves Bran, who would have gotten stuck in the past, getting trapped inside the first white walker ever created (the Night King, who he witnessed getting turned), while attempting to actually thwart the creation of white walkers.

In an episode filled with revelations and new twists, this wasn't one of them.īut while this moment may not have panned out on the speculation front, "Beyond the Wall" still had plenty of things to theorize about. What people saw, apparently, was an unintentional brief marking on the eye that was either shadow or a reflection. I can say that there was no intention for that to be the case." "I'm going to have to go back and watch that moment close up," Taylor added, "and in slow motion to see what's going on there.
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In a recent interview with Insider, "Beyond the Wall" director Alan Taylor, who'd returned to the series years after directing Season 1's final two episodes, said that he hadn't "a clue what talking about."
