In A Game of Thrones (1996), Bran accidentally sees Queen Cersei Lannister and her twin brother Ser Jaime having sex; whereupon he is pushed from the window by Jaime to keep the incest a secret, but he survives in a coma.
Jaime Lannister pushing Bran Stark out a window to his almost-death at the end of the “Game of Thrones” pilot because he saw him having sex with his twin sister Cersei is one of the most iconic moments in the history of the soon-to-be-ended HBO series.
He says, “I'm sorry for what I did to you” and then “I'm not that person anymore.” And Bran says, “You still would be, if you hadn't pushed me out of that window.” I take that as agreement that Jaime has changed in some ways, that he does “feel bad” for what he did to Bran.
He does regret it. But he would do it again as long as he still feels the toxic, narcissistic pull of Cersei.
Eight seasons ago, a much blonder, much smarmier Jaime pushed Bran out of Winterfell's highest tower after the tree-climbing Stark son accidentally caught Jaime and his sister, Cersei (Lena Headey) in a moment of intimacy.
Tyrion seems to know that Jaime pushed Bran at the beginning of AGoT (how?), and yet lingers in Stark territory by heading north to the Wall.
Jaime Lannister threw Bran out of a window when Bran was a young boy in an effort to kill him. Bran didn't die, but he did lose his ability to ever walk again. In the final season of Game of Thrones, Bran forgives Jaime, taking responsibility for his own life and understanding Jaime's motivations.
Jaime also learns that his biological son, King Joffrey I Baratheon, died at his own wedding feast. By the time Jaime arrives in King's Landing, his hair has grown a bit, having become short and bristly. His face is still thin and hollow, however, and he now has lines under his eyes, still making him look older.
Bran didn't tell anyone the truth about his fall from the tower because he knows the North needs Jaime in the war against the dead.
Yes. Bran has had a crush on Meera for a while, and when they are attacked by wights and he wargs in Hodor, he wonders what Meera will think if he tells her that he loves her. Meera led the way back up the hill, jabbing at the wights when they came near.
Cersei has been involved in an incestuous affair with her twin brother, Jaime, since childhood. All three of Cersei's children are Jaime's, which is unbeknownst to Robert. The rumored illegitimacy of her children causes a power struggle in the wake of the king's death, known as the War of Five Kings.
Bran had stumbled upon Jaime and Cersei having sex, and Jaime and Cersei didn't want anyone to find about their incestuous affair. Right before he pushed Bran, Jaime says, “the things I do for love.”
"He's now entering a training period which is going to take quite some time, much of which isn't particularly cinematic. So rather than being stuck in a cave for a year, we figured it would be interesting to leave him out for a little bit, so when you see him again…" Benioff didn't want to reveal much more beyond that.
The Night King's Touch leaves a mark on Bran, and it's apparently like a GPS system that lets him know exactly where Bran is at all times. That's great for the Night King — whose end goal is to destroy everything. Killing Bran, as Sam Tarly explains, means killing all memories.
The catalyst for so much of the drama that engulfed the realm came from Jaime Lannister pushing Bran out of a high tower, leaving the boy paralyzed for life.
He probably got the feeling that Bran didn't need a hug from the last time he tried to hug him. He got indifference from Bran and he read him right. Bran is sort of “other” now and hugs are wasted on him.
In the HBO television adaptation, Game of Thrones, Osha is a wildling woman from Beyond the Wall who flees south to escape the threat of the White Walkers. She is portrayed as the fierce protector of Bran and Rickon Stark after her arrival in Winterfell.
If someone does not benefit him or is incapable of serving his ends, they are dispensable. This relentlessness - and unwillingness to prevent the tragedy that forges his path to royalty - is what makes Bran the true villain on Game of Thrones.
No, it is said Bran can't remember what happened to him.
Who's the father of Cersei's child? The father, based on the all the evidence and context, is again Jaime Lannister, Cersei's brother. The first time we heard about the pregnancy was back in season 7, when Jaime was still knocking around King's Landing.
(She does not yet appear to be showing.) In reality, we know that Tyrion has known about the pregnancy, as well as the baby's true parentage, since the end of Season 7. (Cersei told Jaime it was his, and that she would publicly declare as much, before she ever slept with Euron.)
Cersei did have three children, Joffrey, Myrcella, and Tommen, and they all died.
He's not a Targaryen, and he's expressed zero interest in even being the Lord of Winterfell, as was his birthright — which is a big part of the reason why he earns the crown. “I know you don't want it,” Tyrion (Peter Dinklage) tells Bran.
Brienne loves Jaime because she's seen the good in him, and he shows her the respect she craves. Jaime loves Brienne because she brings out the best in him and makes him feel like a worthy man.
Jaime grows fond of Brienne as he finds her innocence endearing and he can trust her because of their shared trauma. However, Jaime also is driven to survive by his love for Cersei. More than anything, he wants to be with her. But he also knows that Brienne loves him more.