Well damn.
In a show that's known for great scripts and epic sets, tonight's episode set a new standard. Fantastic.
Just beautifully done. Majestic and brutal at the same time.
So much emotional and physical resonance.
This is why I watch shows like Game of Thrones, Sopranos and Breaking Bad. Of those three, all my favorites, none has done epic in the way GoT has.
Great episode.
I've watched it three times now. That's rare, particularly for a mid-season episode.
EDIT: Got to come back to this and add more. That a show can be this long in the tooth and still generate that level of absolute epicidity (I know that's not a word, but there isn't one for it...) is amazing to me. I may be wrong, but it doesn't appear that its going to sputter to the end like so many great shows (Sopranos in particular) did.
Even more amazing is this show's capability to make you simultaneously love and hate the same character. I love the arc of Jamie Lannister. He's not a bad guy, but he's not a good guy. You don't want him to fail, but you damn sure don't want him to win either. Bronn is a great character, but do you want him to die at the hands of Danerys or live to see another day -- even if it means he has to hurt her? Every character is flawed. None are deserving of the throne. Except maybe Cersei. Nothing is clear cut or black and white.
The last ten minutes of this episode were simply stunning. When Danerys came riding in on the dragon it was magnificent. Unreal CGI (something that wouldn't have been possible in the early days of the show before it grew flush with cash). I can't remember a show that ever had me conflicted like that. I had sympathy for each of the characters in that particular arc -- Tyrion, Bronn, Jamie, Dany and the dragon -- even as they were on opposing sides.
Just a great show.