Montreal Gazette

THE WAITING GAME

GOT goes the distance to stop spoilers

- TRAVIS M. ANDREWS

Rarely has a potential haircut received so much attention.

On Game of Thrones, Kit Harington — and his thick mane of black hair — plays Jon Snow, a central character whom many fans think may be killed off. The show’s fifth season, in fact, ended with Snow being stabbed multiple times. The final shot showed his blood staining the snow. The camera cut away, with the audience not knowing if he’s been killed or merely injured.

The answer to that question — Did Jon Snow die? — was so carefully guarded that co-showrunner David Benioff reportedly even refused to tell his wife, actress Amanda Peet.

During the next year, obsessive fans kept close watch on Harington’s whereabout­s. They also kept track of his hair length (Snow has long hair), tying to figure out if he was filming a new season (which would indicate that Snow was still alive). Meanwhile, paparazzi flocked to the sets.

Learning from the experience, the GoT crew reportedly filmed decoy scenes when filming season 7.

“We did fake some scenes,” Harington told Jimmy Kimmel during a recent appearance on his show. “We put together people in situations where we knew the paparazzi was around so they’d take photos, and that would get on the internet to fake scenes.”

The questions haven’t slowed down for Harington. Recently Kimmel sneakily asked when he would begin filming season 8, hoping to catch the actor off-guard. But after seven years, Harington is a pro.

“Ahh, well, you see, that was sly,” he said. “Nice try.”

Arguably, no show works harder to avoid spoilers. The producers of Game of Thrones guard its plot points with the same fervour the show’s characters chase that coveted iron throne, a defence The Ringer’s Andrew Gruttadaro called “near pathologic­al.”

As he reported, the media no longer receives advance screeners of the show, which are generally used to prepare reviews for publicatio­n immediatel­y after the show airs. Paper scripts were eliminated for fear that they could be easily leaked and not as easily tracked. When discussing certain characters and scenes, the show’s staff often uses code names. The crew even watches for drones that could be photograph­ing their sets.

The cause for security might sound strange, but some of the show’s fans can safely be described as obsessive — many have tracked down sets in hopes of photograph­ing the production.

“One guy hiked 18 hours on foot in the middle of Spain’s La Mancha desert to take pictures,” co-showrunner D.B. Weiss told Entertainm­ent Weekly. “Another guy in Northern Ireland crawled through the mud and did his own little private commando mission.”

So the security is important, especially since each episode costs an average of US$6 million.

Perhaps the hardest job falls on the show’s actors. They don’t even get to see the episodes until they air, and they’re forbidden to share any plot points they do know. So it can’t be easy when they find themselves bombarded with questions they can’t answer on late-night shows and in feature-length magazine articles.

And saying the wrong thing can be profession­ally devastatin­g.

Take Gemma Whelan, the actress whose breakout role portraying Yara Greyjoy was almost yanked from her because she let the casting news slip.

Accidents happen, sure, but many who work on the show said they’re infuriated by leaks. As for its creators? They simply can’t understand why anyone’s trying to spoil the show in the first place.

“Any sane person would admit that knowing this stuff in advance lessens the experience of watching it, and yet people are really hungry to find out things that will make something they presumably like worse for them,” Weiss told Entertainm­ent Weekly. “I don’t totally get it.”

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 ?? HBO ?? Kit Harington stars in the wildly popular HBO series Game of Thrones, a show that takes its security so seriously it’s “near pathologic­al.”
HBO Kit Harington stars in the wildly popular HBO series Game of Thrones, a show that takes its security so seriously it’s “near pathologic­al.”

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