WHO

THE End of Game of Thrones

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hen Kit Harington entered the conference room, he had no idea what to expect. The final season’s scripts had been emailed just a couple of days earlier, sending the Game of Thrones cast into a reading frenzy. Like millions of fans around the world, the actors had been waiting nearly a decade to learn their characters’ fates. The six-episode season (which launches in April, 2019, on Foxtel’s Fox Showcase) arrived at once, protected by layers of password security.

Sophie Turner flew through her copies in record time, quickly emailing the producers with her reaction. “It was completely overwhelmi­ng,” says the actress, who plays Sansa Stark. “Afterwards, I felt numb, and I had to take a walk for hours.” Others, like Emilia Clarke (Daenerys Targaryen), first had to hurry home to get some privacy. “I turned to my best mate and was like, ‘Oh my God! I gotta go! I gotta go!’ ” she recalls. “And I completely flipped out.” She then settled in for a reading session with a cup of tea. “Genuinely, the effect it had on me was profound,” Clarke adds. “That sounds insanely pretentiou­s, but I’m an actor, so I’m allowed one pretentiou­s adjective per season.” Peter Dinklage, meanwhile, broke his habit of checking immediatel­y to see if Tyrion Lannister survives. “This was the first time ever that I didn’t skip to the end,” he says.

The cast then went to Belfast for the formal read-through. By then, everybody knew the tale that was about to unfold, with two exceptions: Davos Seaworth actor Liam Cunningham (“The f---ing scripts wouldn’t open, the double extra security!” he grouses) and Harington, who refused to read anything in advance. “I walked in saying, ‘Don’t tell me, I don’t want to know’,” he says. “What’s the point of reading it to myself in my own head when I can listen to people do it and find out with my friends?” So, yes: Jon Snow, literally, knew nothing.

Showrunner­s David Benioff and Dan Weiss opened proceeding­s by asking the cast to refrain from doing anything during filming that might reveal even the tiniest spoiler (“Don’t even take a photo of your boots on the ground of the set,” one actor recalls being told). Then, at a long table scattered with a few prop skulls, the cast read aloud the final season of Game of Thrones. At one point, Harington wept. Later, he cried a second time.

fter the table read, the Game of Thrones cast spent 10 months filming just six episodes of television. But the season actually took far longer to pull off. Got’s final chapters have been in the works for years. To better understand what’s ahead, let’s first go back to EW’S Season 3 set visit and this never-before-revealed conversati­on with Benioff and Weiss ...

The production camper was like many others on the set – barren, cramped, cold, utilitaria­n, with dirt on the floors from muddy boots tramping in and out all day. The showrunner­s sat on the same side of a tiny dinette booth while the wind coming off the Northern Ireland bay howled outside. They were already thinking about their final season, and it worried them.

During its second season, the fantasy drama averaged 10.3 million viewers across all platforms. That was enough to ensure they were eventually going to finish the series, yet that inevitabil­ity was also the problem. Because when they first pitched Thrones to HBO, they hadn’t exactly been honest. And now they were working every day towards a finale that couldn’t be done.

“The lie we told is the show is contained and it’s about the characters,” Benioff said, which was at best half true. The epic fantasy was very much about its ensemble cast, but it’s also the least “contained” series ever made. “The worlds get so big, the battles get so massive.”

Author George R.R. Martin, whose series of novels forms the basis for Thrones, had revealed to the duo the broad strokes of how his Song of Ice and Fire saga secretly ends, including a descriptio­n of an epic final battle that’s been teased from the show’s very first scene. But this climactic confrontat­ion was miles out of reach for a series that cost about $5 million per episode. “We have a very generous budget from HBO, but we know what’s coming down the line and, ultimately, it’s not generous enough,” Benioff said.

So the producers had an idea: The final season could be six hours long and released as three movies in theatres – just like Martin’s best-known influence, The Lord of the Rings. That would give them the time and money needed to pull off their finale. “It’s what we’re working towards in a perfect world,” Weiss said. The flaw in this plan was that HBO is about serving its subscriber­s, not taking gambles at the box office. Behind the scenes, the network brass gently shot down the movie idea. But they assured Benioff and Weiss they would eventually have everything they needed to make a worthy final season.

Years later, the producers would strike a deal to spend two years on a shortened Season 8 that would cost more than $21 million an episode. You could say HBO made good on its promise, and the showrunner­s happily give the network full credit. “They put their money where their mouths are – literally stuffed their mouth full of million-dollar bills, which don’t exist anymore,” Weiss quips.

But it’s probably more accurate to say that since Season 3, Benioff and Weiss willed their ambitious final season into reality the hard way: by growing Game of Thrones into the biggest show in the world, a hugely profitable pop culture and merchandis­ing sensation with more than 30 million viewers an episode and a record number of Emmys. Only with that kind of leverage do your towering ambitions begin to look like reasonable requests.

In fact, the GOT team was so successful that the biggest sticking point was persuading HBO to halt the series. “We want to stop where we – the people working on it, and the people watching it – both wish it went a little bit longer,” Benioff says. “There’s the old adage of ‘always leave them wanting more’, but also things start to fall apart when you stop wanting to be there. You don’t want to f--- it up.”

That concern – a constant desire to conclude the show on the strongest possible note – is something we heard over and over from the cast and crew when we visited the GOT set for the last time.

rriving at the studio gate, I’m halted by a guard and asked to scan my badge, a security upgrade from past years. Then I’m asked for my phone, and the guard covers its cameras with stickers – that’s new, too. Along with an HBO escort, I walk inside an enormous hangar that’s so large it’s where the RMS Titanic was painted.

What’s being filmed here is Episode 6, the series finale. Like Harington going into the table read, I don’t know anything about the final season’s story line. I look around at a meticulous­ly constructe­d set that I’ve never seen on the show before. Several actors are performing, and I’m stunned: There are characters in the finale that I did not expect. I gradually begin to piece together what has happened in Westeros over the previous five episodes and try not to look like I’m freaking out.

There is nothing more that can be said about that scene at this time.

A word about spoilers: The cast is used to keeping story secrets, yet they’ve never sounded so anxious about it. “There are moments where you don’t trust yourself to have this in your brain,” says Joe Dempsie, who plays Gendry. “You’re in possession of something millions of people want to know. It’s such a bizarre feeling. And between now and when it comes out, I’m gonna be drunk at some point.”

So far, at least, the team has done a better job than in previous years at keeping the story under wraps, even while drunk. Theories abound online, but they are guesses. A purported script leaked to Reddit, but here’s a way to spot a fake – real Game of Thrones’ scripts don’t say “Game of Thrones” on them. Production documents stating which actors were required to be where and when used code names (Clarke, for example, was “Eldiss”). “It gets highly confusing when you need to remember who is who,” Turner says.

Benioff and Weiss’ next gig is writing a new Star Wars film, and they received some final-season secrecy tips from The Last Jedi director Rian Johnson and producer Kathleen Kennedy. “They’ve given us a lot of hints about how to lock things down, things we never would have thought of or didn’t know were possible,” Weiss says.

At some point HBO will release a proper final-season trailer revealing more. Until then, here’s some basic setup we can tell you: Season 8 opens at Winterfell with an episode that contains plenty of callbacks to the show’s pilot. Instead of King Robert’s procession arriving, it’s Daenerys and her army. What follows is a delicious intermingl­ing of characters – some of whom have never previously met, many who have messy histories – as they all prepare to face the inevitable invasion of the Army of the Dead.

“It’s about all of these disparate characters coming together to face a common enemy, dealing with their own past, and defining the person they want to be in the face of certain death,” co-executive producer Bryan Cogman says. “It’s an incredibly emotional, haunting, bitterswee­t final season, and I think it honours very much what George set out to do – which is flipping this kind of story on its head.”

How these fan favourites get along drives much of the drama this season (OK, here’s one specific tease – Sansa isn’t thrilled that

Jon bent the knee to his fancy new Targaryen girlfriend, at least not at first).

The drama builds to a confrontat­ion with the Army of the Dead that’s expected to be the most sustained action sequence ever made for television or film. One episode – the same that Benioff and Weiss were concerned about pulling off so many years ago – is wall-to-wall action, courtesy of “Battle of the Bastards” director Miguel Sapochnik. Last April a crew member posted online that Game of Thrones had wrapped 55 consecutiv­e night shoots while filming a battle. Media outlets around the world ran stories saying the final season’s battle took twice as long as the 25-day shoot for Season 6’s climactic “Battle of the Bastards”. This wildly understate­d what really happened. The 55 nights were only for the battle’s outdoor scenes. Filming then moved into the studio, where Sapochnik continued shooting the same battle for weeks after that.

“It’s brutal,” Dinklage says. “It makes the ‘Battle of the Bastards’ look like a theme park.” The battle doesn’t have just one focus, either, but rather intercuts between multiple characters involved in their own survival story lines that each feels like its own genre. “Having the largest battle doesn’t sound very exciting – it actually sounds pretty boring,” Benioff says. “Part of our challenge, and really Miguel’s challenge, is how to keep that compelling.”

To help pull it off, the production hugely expanded its set for the Stark ancestral home of Winterfell, adding a towering castle exterior, a larger courtyard and more interconne­cted rooms and ramparts. Strolling around the new Winterfell is like wandering in a sprawling, immersive medieval resort compared with its previous motel-like scale.

The Winterfell expansion is just a small example of how every element of the production was heightened this year in an effort to “not f--- it up”. Scenes that normally might take a day to film now took several. “[Camera] checks take longer, costumes are a bit better, hair and makeup a bit sharper – every choice, every conversati­on, every attitude has this air of ‘This is it’,” Clarke says. “Everything feels more intense. I had a scene with someone and I turned to him and said, ‘Oh my God, I’m not going to do this ever again,’ and that brings tears to my eyes.”

Lena Headey, who plays Cersei Lannister, agrees: “There was a great sense of grief. It’s a huge sense of loss, like we’ll never have anything like this again.” More tears, like during the table read. You know, Harington will actually reveal why he cried that second time. “The second time was the very end,” Harington says. He’s referring to when the cast reached the last page of Episode 6, and what the showrunner­s wrote there at the bottom. “Every season, you read at the end of the last script ‘End of Season 1’ or ‘End of Season 2’,” Harington says. “This read ‘End of Game of Thrones’.”

 ??  ?? IN THIS EXCLUSIVE REPORT FROM THE SET, WE REVEAL THE EMOTIONAL STORY OF CREATING THE MOST IMPOSSIBLE FINALE IN TELEVISION HISTORY WITH THE FINALSEASO­N COMING NEXT YEAR, HOW DO YOU END THE BIGGEST SHOW ON AIR? BLOOD, SWEAT AND LOTS OF TEARS
IN THIS EXCLUSIVE REPORT FROM THE SET, WE REVEAL THE EMOTIONAL STORY OF CREATING THE MOST IMPOSSIBLE FINALE IN TELEVISION HISTORY WITH THE FINALSEASO­N COMING NEXT YEAR, HOW DO YOU END THE BIGGEST SHOW ON AIR? BLOOD, SWEAT AND LOTS OF TEARS
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 ??  ?? WINTER IS HERE Sansa Stark (Sophie Turner) is preparing Winterfell for war in Season 8.
WINTER IS HERE Sansa Stark (Sophie Turner) is preparing Winterfell for war in Season 8.
 ??  ?? FULL CIRCLE (Left) Daenerys Targaryen (Emilia Clarke) and Jon Snow (Kit Harington) journey to Winterfell in Season 8 to defend the realm; (right) the final season will have plenty of callbacks to the show’s pilot and first season.
FULL CIRCLE (Left) Daenerys Targaryen (Emilia Clarke) and Jon Snow (Kit Harington) journey to Winterfell in Season 8 to defend the realm; (right) the final season will have plenty of callbacks to the show’s pilot and first season.
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 ??  ?? ROYALLY EVIL The Night’s King is the ultimate villain in GOT. His main purpose was to wipe out the human race.
ROYALLY EVIL The Night’s King is the ultimate villain in GOT. His main purpose was to wipe out the human race.
 ??  ?? Everything feels more intense. Every choice, every conversati­on, every attitude has this air of ‘This is it’.”EMOTIONAL FAREWELL “I had my last day on set in July of this year and it was very sad,” said Peter Dinklage at the Emmys in September. BLOODY QUEEN In an iconic moment, Daenerys eats a horse heart in Season 1 of Game of Thrones.
Everything feels more intense. Every choice, every conversati­on, every attitude has this air of ‘This is it’.”EMOTIONAL FAREWELL “I had my last day on set in July of this year and it was very sad,” said Peter Dinklage at the Emmys in September. BLOODY QUEEN In an iconic moment, Daenerys eats a horse heart in Season 1 of Game of Thrones.
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