Is The Wheel of Time digging a hole for itself with Lan and Moiraine in season 2?

The heart of the series, Moiraine Damodred (Rosamund Pike), and her Warder, Lan Mandragoran (Daniel Henney), who, after her loss of magical abilities, will both struggle to adjust to their new relationship
The heart of the series, Moiraine Damodred (Rosamund Pike), and her Warder, Lan Mandragoran (Daniel Henney), who, after her loss of magical abilities, will both struggle to adjust to their new relationship
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Daniel Henney (Lan Mandragoran)
Daniel Henney (Lan Mandragoran)

The Wheel of Time is making some confusing choices with its magic

The plotline with Lan and Moiraine also raises some big questions about the nature of the bond. As of Episode 4, the show hasn’t spent any real time exploring whether Moiraine is stilled (permanently severed from magic) or is just living under the influence of a long-term shield which keeps her from accessing the One Power as long as its in place. Both of these things happen in The Wheel of Time novels to different characters. We don’t know which Moiraine is dealing with.

We can assume the show is doing this for dramatic effect. It’ll be a big moment when and if Moiraine gets her powers back. But it doesn’t make any sense that the Aes Sedai in the series wouldn’t want to try and help Moiraine by answering this question. It’s a hugely important one, because if Moiraine is actually stilled, it would impact her bond with Lan; he would feel it as if she had died. And if she isn’t stilled, then why isn’t anyone talking about potential options for how to remove the shield on her? Is it just because it was woven with saidin, the male half of the One Power, and therefore female channelers can’t see it?

Making things even more confusing, The Wheel of Time runs with the idea that Moiraine is masking the bond from Lan, “taking it” from him, which doesn’t make any sense. Moiraine doesn’t have access to magic, so how can she mess with the magical bond connecting her and Lan? Is it just some meditative trick she’s using independent of the One Power? And if that’s the case, shouldn’t warders be able to do it too, rather than just Aes Sedai?

Perhaps the mask between Moiraine and Lan’s bond is stuck as a result of her showdown with Ishamael in season 1? Moiraine had already masked the bond with Lan when Ishamael cut her off from her magic. In the season 1 finale, Moiraine tells Lan that she cannot unmask their bond because she can no longer touch the source. So maybe she and Lan are just lying about the nature of their problem to other Aes Sedai like Alanna in season 2?

The Wheel of Time TV show isn’t really digging into any of these questions, at least not yet. It’s very possible that the back half of the season will bring more clarity, but right now the logistics of the magical issues facing Moiraine and Lan feel muddled.

The Wheel of Time
The Wheel of Time

How The Wheel of Time changing Lan and Moiraine could affect the future

Even as The Wheel of Time has improved this season, the way it’s navigating Lan’s plotline has me worried for future seasons. Will Moiraine still fall through the door? I hope so; the show would give up a great moment if it skips that. But at this point, even if it does a great job with that scene, it’s hard to imagine it pulling off Lan’s subsequent problems with the bond being severed well since season 2 is already covering it.

There are other causes for concern. If Moiraine gets her magic back in the near future there’s still time for the show to bring her closer in line with the source material. However, seeing how liberally The Wheel of Time is pulling material from different novels in the series to service this plotline has me worried that they could pull even more stuff from other books…or even other characters.

A big question that crops up later in the series is whether stilling can ever be healed. This is a crucial plotline that intersects with multiple characters, most of whom have already been introduced in the TV show. Now that Moiraine has lost her powers, part of me worries that the show might move up parts of that plotline for her. That would not only take it away from the characters who would otherwise have that material later, but the main healer involved in that story is nowhere near the ability they need to be at for any of it to make sense, even if it happened in season 3 or early season 4.

The Wheel of Time TV show is projected to last about eight seasons. There are 15 novels including the prequel New Spring to adapt. That’s a lot of material, so it’s unavoidable that some things are going to be combined or cut down. However, the stilling plotline is crucial and isn’t likely to end up on the cutting room floor; the show even put a bit of foreshadowing for it in this week’s episode.

At this point The Wheel of Time has backed itself into something of a corner. It either keeps that stilling storyline, which would by necessity retread some of the same emotional ground we’ve already seen covered in Moiraine’s story this season, or it mixes things up in some big ways. Either way it feels like the potential for problems is high.

The Wheel of Time
The Wheel of Time

Why is The Wheel of Time building up these side characters?

I’ve done a lot of moaning about ways The Wheel of Time is potentially making missteps here, but I also need to acknowledge some of the good calls they’re making. One of those is that Alanna is getting a lot more character development.

Alanna has a very important thing to do, which we’ll likely see happen in the fourth or fifth season (provided the show keeps that part, which I believe it will). She’s a very minor character in the books who suddenly becomes a much bigger piece of the puzzle, so developing her ahead of time makes total sense. So does jettisoning Myrelle from the show and giving her material to Alanna. We already have a lot of great Aes Sedai actors on this show, and The Wheel of Time is already struggling to distribute screen time evenly among them, to say nothing of the Emond’s Field Five, the main characters of the saga, some of whom have only appeared in a handful of scenes this season.

Developing Alanna and her warders, as well as other characters like Liandrin and Logain, are all solid choices. They all have important parts to play at different points in the series. But the way the show is navigating Lan and Moiraine’s story is much harder to wrap my head around. Even as The Wheel of Time gets better, the changes to these characters have me more worried about the show as an adaptation overall. I’m still not totally sold on its ability to coherently navigate complicated magical concepts, of which there will be many.

This is a different turning of the Wheel than we got in the novels. Things are bound to be different. I just hope they also make sense.

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