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ISBN-13: | 9781633197640 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Triumph Books |
Publication date: | 08/01/2017 |
Series: | 100 Things...Fans Should Know Series |
Sold by: | Barnes & Noble |
Format: | eBook |
Pages: | 256 |
File size: | 5 MB |
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Read an Excerpt
100 Things Game of Thrones Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die
Totally Unauthorized
By Rowan Kaiser
Triumph Books LLC
Copyright © 2017 Rowan KaiserAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-63319-764-0
CHAPTER 1
"Game of Thrones"
"When you play the game of thrones, you win or you die." — Cersei Lannister
In April of 2011, HBO aired the premiere episode of Game of Thrones. It was watched by over 2 million people — solid ratings, but nothing to indicate that it was a major event according to simple numbers. But for fans of the book series it was based on, A Song of Ice and Fire, it was a huge deal. It also had the full attention of TV critics, who'd seen HBO redefine television through the 2000s but which found itself without a major hit heading into the 2010s.
The critics generally liked it, and the fans certainly supported Game of Thrones, but the show's meteoric rise over the next few years, to the point where it's regularly called the biggest TV show on Earth, with individual episodes earning record-breaking numbers of Emmy awards, has still been an incredible surprise.
There aren't any unicorns in Game of Thrones, but Game of Thrones itself may be a unicorn. A unique set of circumstances led to its creation and it hit television at exactly the right time as television was ready for it. There's no "next Game of Thrones," it is entirely unique, and when it's done, it's done for good.
So what is Game of Thrones? It's an adaptation, and an increasingly different one, of one of the most popular fantasy book series of all time, A Song of Ice and Fire, by George R.R. Martin. The changes between the books and the show have been one of the most interesting parts of seeing Game of Thrones air. But it's also become increasingly controversial, as the changes from page to screen became increasingly notable before the show's story passed the book's in the sixth season.
Game of Thrones is also now the pinnacle of the entire fantasy genre. From the publication of Lord of the Rings in the mid-20 century, through Star Wars and The Sword of Shannara in the 1970s, and on to Robert Jordan's The Wheel of Time in the 1990s, heroic fantasy was heading in a certain straightforward direction. Then A Game of Thrones was published and changed that direction entirely. Amazingly, the same thing happened with movies and television. After the Lord of the Rings film trilogy, once again Game of Thrones came along and dominated the genre.
But Game of Thrones is also a television series on HBO. There, George R.R. Martin's Westeros has been reimagined by show runners David Benioff and D.B. Weiss. It may be a unique show in many ways, but it also comes from a tradition of the best network on television producing the most ambitious shows on television. Without The Sopranos and The Wire, Game of Thrones couldn't exist, and it fits in with them, as well as shows like Breaking Bad and Vikings and Shannara Chronicles.
Perhaps most importantly, though, Game of Thrones is a story. It's a fascinating, complicated story, with hundreds of characters in dozens of locations. All of them have their own histories and motivations, trying to do the best they can in the wars over the Iron Throne of the Seven Kingdoms. While Game of Thrones seems to start small, focusing on the Stark family and a handful of other people, it's traveled around the world to tell the stories of the woman-warrior Brienne of Tarth; the Greyjoy siblings, Yara and Theon; the Martells of Dorne; and former slaves in Slaver's Bay like Missandei and Grey Worm.
There's also a huge, complicated history behind the story of Game of Thrones. From the Targaryen invasion 300 years before the show begins to Robert's Rebellion just 15 before, history permeates Game of Thrones. Characters like Rhaegar Targaryen, Ser Duncan the Tall, and Queen Nymeria pass their influence through the series. Some of this is on-screen or in the books, and some is shown in supplemental sources, like the show's special features and books like The World of Ice and Fire. It's a huge world, which is one of its strengths and a source of consistent confusion.
Game of Thrones is all of these things at once. That's what makes it special. That's what made it the biggest television series on the planet. This is the magic that makes Game of Thrones great.
CHAPTER 2Season 1: The "They Can't Do That!" Season
"Ser Ilyn! Bring me his head!" — Joffrey Lannister-Baratheon
The first season of Game of Thrones is one of the great deceptions in television history. It is, like the novels it's based on, a remarkable shell game, a piece of sleight-of-hand that presents itself as one kind of story, only to reveal that it's something entirely different at the end. For much of the season, the setup is straightforward: Ned Stark tries to keep the capital stable, Dany and the Dothraki prepare to invade, and the White Walkers threaten from Beyond the Wall. Then Game of Thrones takes your conceptions of how stories should work and beheads them on the steps of the Sept of Baelor, then burns them at the stake for good measure.
That's not how stories are supposed to work! Sure, heroes can die — especially middle-aged ones, like Ned — but they die gloriously, not begging for their lives from a sadistic enemy. But Game of Thrones goes there — and TV storytelling would apparently never be the same.
The clever thing is that Game of Thrones worked to prepare viewers for eventualities like this long before Ser Ilyn Payne swung Ned's sword at the Sept of Baelor. The very first episode of Game of Thrones works similarly. It sets up grand conflicts: between the living and the dead, and between the Starks and the Lannisters. It says it's a fairly traditional fantasy story with clearly delineated good and evil, but then Bran Stark peers through a window he shouldn't have and Jaime Lannister shoves him — to his probable death — saying, "The things I do for love."
This created the model that Game of Thrones would consistently use for the next several years: set up a story you think is going in one direction and, with a shocking act of violence, upend it and take it in a different direction. TV doesn't just casually kill kids like that! (Bran, as we found out the next week, didn't actually die, but was permanently disabled.) What happened to Bran eventually happened to Ned, and far more permanently.
In 1996, this model of storytelling was a revelation in fantasy literature, and within five years and three books, firmly established A Song of Ice and Fire as the premiere (non–Young Adult) fantasy series around. Game of Thrones used a similar model: its initial season's ratings were fine, but a few seasons later, it was arguably the most popular show on television. In both cases, timing was essential. Fantasy novels in the 1990s were primed for a shift toward moral ambiguity and shocking violence, as discussed in the next chapter. Television was equally primed, but in a different way: Game of Thrones arrived at a perfect time to take advantage of the shock twist and hyperserialization (discussed in chapter 5).
It would be easy to credit Game of Thrones with popularizing the shock twist, but it was really a rising trend for TV when the show premiered in 2011. Its parallel genre-show-with-violence, The Walking Dead, premiered about six months before, while a teen soap like The Vampire Diaries had risen to prominence as television's "it" show based largely on its application of "surprise stabbings." The timing was perfect: HBO was in the process of adapting a novel series built on TV's hottest new trend.
And it worked: the buzz surrounding Game of Thrones' surprise twists helped propel it to consistently increasing ratings. Every single season finale was higher-rated than its premiere; every single premiere was higher-rated than the previous season's finale — something I've never seen with any other TV show. (This remarkable streak ended, just barely, with the Season 6 premiere being slightly lower-rated than the Season 5 finale.) If you wanted to know what everyone was talking about, you watched Game of Thrones. That started with the Season 1 premiere and was solidified by Ned's death.
But if you want to look at what was really revolutionary about the first season of Game of Thrones, you have to look closer than just "shock twists!" It was that Game of Thrones slowly destabilized what we expect from stories overall, by being complicated, by being inconclusive, and by killing the people who normally don't die.
One of the most shocking things about Game of Thrones when it debuted was how unapologetically complex it was. In many ways, this show was confusing as hell, with many early viewers feeling totally lost. HBO has done this before — The Wire takes about five episodes to really understand its linguistic rhythms and get what the characters actually mean, for example. But Thrones did this with history — there is a massive backstory to what's happening that the TV show just couldn't show. I used to describe the early seasons of the show as having about 75 percent of the conversation and action from the books, but only about 25 percent of the history and mythology — the books are just that dense.
And yet it worked. Some of this is performance-based: Peter Dinklage as Tyrion and Maisie Williams as Arya, specifically, captured the essences of their fan-favorite characters immediately, providing easy rooting interests for new fans. And the series was simply amazing to look at: superb direction, sets, locations, CGI, and costuming made it one of the most attractive shows on TV.
But the real key was the understanding that this was an already-existing story with an existing fanbase. While not every reader was enthused by the TV series, the commitment to authenticity deployed by HBO's production and marketing — like sending expensive Maester's kits to influential journalists, critics, and fans — won the bulk of fan culture to their side. Readers could function as instant experts for viewers with questions (sometimes too enthusiastically, to be fair), and a complex fandom ecosystem based on the divide between readers and non-readers sprang up. It wasn't perfect, and wars over "spoilers" continued for years, but it made certain that every time someone asked, "Wait, who's that guy again?" there was usually someone able to answer — thus allowing Game of Thrones to tell its complicated story with confidence.
The complication isn't just in number of names or subplots. It's also that the show doesn't tell a conventional story. Game of Thrones sets up a straightforward plot: Beyond the Wall, there are White Walkers, threatening us all. In Essos, the rightful heir to the throne is making deals to acquire an army to retake the kingdom. And in King's Landing, a good man heads into a swamp of moral ambiguity, seeking to save his kingdom. At a glance, these seem to correspond with evil monsters, good heroes, and a fascinating grey area in between, all headed for a giant collision.
Even halfway through the season, a conventional story still seems possible. Dany convinces Khal Drogo to bring his army across the ocean. A wight appears in Castle Black, making their threat obvious to the heroes there. And Ned Stark prepares to bypass the Lannisters by setting Robert's brother Stannis up as king, instead of the Lannister heir, Joffrey. Then it all goes wrong. Drogo is killed, partially by Dany's idealism, stranding her in Essos without an army. Ned's coup goes awry, leading to his death and apparent Lannister victory. And the White Walkers, well, they're still out there, but the show punts their investigation to a Night's Watch Ranging set for Season 2.
Even the grand mysteries of Game of Thrones' first season are left unresolved. Two big ones drive the early story: who poisoned Jon Arryn, and who attempted to assassinate Bran? Although the show points us toward answers — the Lannisters, in both cases — it doesn't actually conclusively resolve them. In fact, the show waits until the end of Season 4 to say who the poisoner was, and never goes back to the issue of who sent the assassin. Instead, Game of Thrones uses both of these to set other, bigger events in motion: Lord Arryn's death, of course, starts the entire series, while the investigation into the assassin's dagger leads Catelyn Stark to arrest Tyrion Lannister, thus starting the War of the Five Kings.
This is how the aborted fantasy stories work as well. Jon's death sets up the next phase of the story, with Ned as Hand — so Ned's death sets up the next phase, the full-on civil war of the War of the Five Kings. Likewise, Drogo's death exists not simply to prevent Dany from invading the Seven Kingdoms, but for her to find the cause of defeating slavery, build a power that's reliant on her and not her marriage, and grow into the leader she will become. Oh yeah, and acquire goddamn dragons.
It's also worth noting that while these resolutions don't necessarily satisfy the initial premise of the show — dragons versus zombies! — they do provide satisfying stories on their own. The first season for Daenerys is about her seizing autonomy, even when it has horrific side effects. And for poor, dear Ned Stark, the first season is about his failure to understand how power works in King's Landing, even if that leads to one son, Robb, and his daughters learning the lesson he should have in far more painful fashion.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from 100 Things Game of Thrones Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die by Rowan Kaiser. Copyright © 2017 Rowan Kaiser. Excerpted by permission of Triumph Books LLC.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Table of Contents
Contents
1. "Game of Thrones",2. Season 1: The "They Can't Do That!" Season,
3. 1990s Fantasy,
4. Season 2: The "Now What?" Season,
5. HBO Drama,
6. Season 3: The Grand Tragedy,
7. The Red Wedding,
8. Season 4: The Bloody Climax,
9. "A Song of Ice and Fire",
10. Season 5: In Which Things Get Dark,
11. "The Winds of Winter",
12. Season 6: Brings Hope Back,
13. George R.R. Martin,
14. Season 7: The Beginning of the End,
15. Daenerys Targaryen,
16. Jon Snow,
17. R+L=J,
18. Tyrion Lannister,
19. Sansa Stark,
20. Arya Stark,
21. The War of the Five Kings,
22. The War of the Queens,
23. Glossary of "Thrones",
24. Cersei Lannister,
25. Petyr "Littlefinger" Baelish,
26. Lord Varys, the Spider,
27. Who are "Game of Thrones'" Writers?,
28. Who are "Game of Thrones'" Directors?,
29. The Continent of Westeros,
30. The North,
31. House Stark and Winterfell,
32. King's Landing and the Crownlands,
33. House Targaryen,
34. Robert's Rebellion,
35. The Blackfyre Rebellions,
36. House Lannister and the Westerlands,
37. The Vale,
38. House Arryn and the Eyrie,
39. The Riverlands,
40. House Tully and Riverrun,
41. House Greyjoy and the Iron Islands,
42. House Baratheon and the Stormlands,
43. House Tyrell and the Reach,
44. House Martell and Dorne,
45. Beyond-the-Wall and the Wildlings,
46. The Night's Watch,
47. The White Walkers,
48. The Night's King and the Long Night,
49. Essos and the Rest of the World,
50. The Dragons of Valyria,
51. "The World of Ice and Fire",
52. Jaime Lannister,
53. Stannis Baratheon,
54. "Blackwater",
55. Tywin Lannister,
56. Ned Stark,
57. Bran Stark,
58. Brienne of Tarth,
59. Catelyn Stark,
60. Who the Hell Is Lady Stoneheart?,
61. George R.R. Martin's Original Pitch,
62. A Feast with Dragons,
63. The Wars of the Roses,
64. The Accursed Kings,
65. "The Lord of the Rings",
66. Know Your Direwolves,
67. In the Credits,
68. Who Sent the Assassin After Bran?,
69. Tyrion, the Secret Targ?,
70. The Costumes of "Thrones",
71. Ramin Djawadi, Composer of "Thrones",
72. "The Rains of Castamere",
73. David J. Peterson, Language Inventor,
74. The Duels of "Game of Thrones",
75. "The Watchers on the Wall",
76. "Hardhome",
77. "The Battle of the Bastards",
78. Rhaegar Targaryen,
79. Who the Hell Is Young Griff?,
80. The Meereenese Knot,
81. Jorah Mormont,
82. King Joffrey,
83. Melisandre and the Red God,
84. The High Sparrow,
85. The Faceless Men,
86. The Brotherhood without Banners,
87. "Dunk and Egg," the "Game of Thrones" Spinoff,
88. POV Characters,
89. Sit on the Iron Throne,
90. Take a "Game of Thrones" Tour!,
91. Tommen and Myrcella,
92. Who Is the Heir to the Iron Throne?,
93. Margaery Tyrell,
94. Robb Stark,
95. Oberyn Martell,
96. Telltale's "Game of Thrones",
97. "Crusader Kings 2", the Strategy "Game of Thrones",
98. Ramsay Snow,
99. Have a Beer with Brewery Ommegang,
100. Hodor?,