Why You Can't Help But Root For Jaime Lannister On Game Of Thrones

Why You Can't Help But Root For Jaime Lannister On Game Of Thrones




By Cian Maher


In Game of Thrones’s fourth episode of Season 4, “Oathkeeper,” Brienne of Tarth reads aloud from the illustrious Book of Brothers, a record of the most legendary deeds carried out by the Kingsguard over the years. Unlike decorated knights like Barristan Selmy and Arthur Dayne, Ser Jaime Lannister only has one page to his name, which focuses on the singular act he is known all across Westeros for: "Ser Jaime Lannister. Knighted and named to the Kingsguard in his sixteenth year. At the Sack of King's Landing, murdered his King, Aerys the Second. Pardoned by Robert Baratheon; thereafter referred to because Kingslayer."


in the next episode of Season 8 the focus is once again on Jaime, as he arrives in Winterfell and is presented to the court of Daenerys Targaryen. While Dany and Sansa Stark, who'd previously disagreed on almost everything, both stated that they didn’t trust Jaime, Brienne discussed up and vouched for him in court, alongside Jaime’s brother Tyrion. Yet as Bran Stark utters the infamous phrase, “The things we do for love,” Jaime is startled, recalling how he uttered these exact words to Cersei back in the series’s pilot. Soon after Bran saw Jaime and his sister Cersei having sex in a derelict tower, Jaime pushed him out a high window, totally intending to kill the then-10-year-old boy.


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It reminds you who Jaime was back then. Soon after finding out that Bran had survived the fall, he assured Cersei "the boy won't talk. And if he does, I'll kill him, Ned Stark, king, the full bloody lot of these up until you and I are the only people left in this world." He even suggests that, because Bran would have no excellent class of life should he come out of his coma, they may as well put him out of his misery now.


Later, at the end of Season 1, Catelyn Stark, holding Jaime captive, tells him that the world is full of injustice because of males like him. "There are no boys like me. Only me," he arrogantly responds. Nevertheless, this isn’t because of his shameful Kingsguard entry, the several notorious titles he holds (“Kingslayer,” “Oathbreaker,” “Man Without Honor”), his adulterous and incestuous relationship with his sister, or his cruelty, even towards a child like Bran. It’s because, unbeknownst to him in that moment, Jaime Lannister is a gentleman capable of proper redemption — a male who has the capacity to change.


And, at the conclusion of Season 1, Jaime’s redemptive arc is set into motion. Nevertheless, it isn’t up until a full season later that his character truly starts to develop. Toward the end of Season 2, Catelyn Stark decides to prepare a deal with Jaime: She’ll set him free from Robb Stark’s captivity in exchange for escorting her daughters back to her safely. Jaime accepts and, in doing so, meets the character who will ultimately change the course of his own destiny: Brienne of Tarth.


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Although Jaime is brutish at the begin, regularly taunting Brienne and goading her for her appearance, the two unwillingly grow fond of each other while in their time with each other. Case in point, in Season 3, as soon as they’re captured by Roose Bolton’s lackey, Locke, Jaime manages to save Brienne by reminding Locke that Brienne’s father is Lord Selywn Tarth, a male likely to pay his daughter’s weight in sapphires if they were to return her unharmed.


Yet, Jaime’s ploy comes at a cost, as Locke amputates the Kingslayer's sword hand for attempted bribery. As he looks on in horror, he goes through shock, pain, and ultimately realization: He’s right now a soldier without a sword hand, incapable of wielding the weapon that his entire identity was tied to. Although, inspired by a sobering reality check from Brienne, a new, handless Jaime is place on Earth — and so is the formative connection between him and Brienne.


While in his captivity, Jaime opens up to Brienne, showing a new side of the Kingslayer that leads to his disavowal of the title. He tells her that by killing Aerys, he saved thousands of people in King’s Landing who would have lost their lives to wildfire.


This tender scene serves because the crux of his growth as a character. He outright decries the title of Kingslayer, owning his birth name. The Kingslayer had a sword hand, yet right now, having lost his source of arrogance, Jaime faces the real world as who he really is — just Jaime.


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After his release, Jaime takes the initial sure stride on his road to redemption. Knowing that Brienne had been left beyond with Locke and his gentlemen, and understanding what boys like that do to their prisoners, he turns back, threatening his armed escort by saying that he’ll tell Tywin they were the ones to sever his hand if they don’t permit him to go back for Brienne. Upon his arrival, he sees that Brienne is in a bear pit, armed with only a wooden sword. He courageously jumps in, realizing that he can’t fight yet, as a Lannister, he must be protected. His captor, Steelshanks, intervenes, and both he and Brienne are saved.


In that moment, Jaime starts to rewrite his narrative, a change that lingers even right after his return to King's Landing. He gifts Brienne a Valyrian steel sword and suit of armor; and he cooperates with the his brother Tyrion escape King's Landing — and Cersei's wrath — following his trial.


So, by the time we’ve arrived to his last battle for the Crown while in Season 7, where Jaime attempts to overcome Daenerys Targaryen at Highgarden, you can’t help rooting for him — for who he has become — despite the fact that he fights for the Lannisters. As he bills the Mother of Dragons, spear in hand, Tyrion, right now the Hand to Daenerys, looks on, whispering the words going through every viewer’s mind: “Fucking idiot.” Yet, nevertheless Jaime’s definitely an idiot, he’s also become a hero.


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And his eventual betrayal of the Iron Throne completes his developments. Perhaps it would have been “honorable” if he stayed by Cersei’s side as she resisted to act against the Army of the Dead. Nevertheless his decision later in Season 7 to do what is right alternatively opposed to what is perceived as “honorable” subverts the entire idea of what it means to be good in the initial place. By forsaking a vow to fight for his family member, Jaime has come full circle. And because the Battle of Winterfell awaits, Jaime — not Kingslayer — places himself in Brienne’s humble service, even bestowing the honor of knighthood upon her, and drawing attention to the most quintessential segment of his character — ironically, his sense of honor.


Any time if he gave Brienne her sword back in Season 4, she named it “Oathkeeper.” Perhaps she didn’t know that in doing so, she became the person that inspired Jaime to rethink the oaths swore if he first became Ser Jaime Lannister. “Protect the innocent” and “defend the weak” are just two of the pledges taken by knights once the title is conferred on them.


Thanks to Brienne, Jaime Lannister became the hero he was routinely meant to be. There’s still room in the Book of Brothers for a new chapter.









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