Welcome to this weekโ€™s Reno News & Review.

The movie Iโ€™m most looking forward to isnโ€™t a movie at allโ€”itโ€™s the last episodes of Game of Thrones. If you donโ€™t watch the show, youโ€™re probably sick of hearing about it. But then again, youโ€™re also probably living under a rock and proudly telling all the passing roly polys, โ€œI donโ€™t own a TVโ€ or โ€œThat show is just the Cinemax version of Lord of the Rings.โ€

Iโ€™m sure Iโ€™m not the only fan who hasnโ€™t been able to think about much else after the second episode of the final season. It was an all-time great episodeโ€”a classic quiet-before-the-storm episode, with little plot advancement but lots of great character moments. And it ended on a nail-biting cliffhanger, with this weekendโ€™s extra-long episode slated to be a massive battle, in which most major characters are in mortal danger. This, of course, is a show that built its reputation killing off the characters nobody expected to die. Honestly, the most shocking thing HBO could do this next episode is not kill anyone.

I watched the first season not long after it aired in 2011. And then I read the George R. R. Martin booksโ€”on which the series is basedโ€”before the the second season. Itโ€™s the deepest, weirdest, most rewarding fictional mythology Iโ€™ve ever encounteredโ€”better than Lord of the Rings, Marvel Comics or the Bible.

As Iโ€™ve mentioned a few times, a family illness has kept me home a lot recently. Since we werenโ€™t getting out, Margot and I decided to re-watch the run of the show. Noticed a bunch of strange things re-watching โ€”like, for example, how much Joffrey, the sadistic child king of seasons 2 and 3, reminds me of the current occupant of the Oval Office.

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