Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘Game of Thrones’ cast talks divisive finale, water bottles

- BY LINDSEY BAHR

SAN DIEGO — “Game of Thrones” may be over but the cast can’t seem to get away from stray coffee cups.

Maisie Williams, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Liam Cunningham, Isaac Hempstead Wright and others took the stage at San Diego Comic-Con Friday evening for a goodbye panel and found some waiting at their places.

It was a cheeky reference to the misplaced coffee cup that viewers spotted in an episode of the final season that subsequent­ly went viral. Although the moderator didn’t make them answer for the coffee, actor John Bradley did have to defend himself against the other outof-place item in the finale: The water bottle by his foot.

“I am right handed. I’ve thought about this very strongly,” Bradley said, making a case that he would have put the bottle on the other side if it was his. “I’m not trying to clear my name, but … I think I’ve taken enough blame for this one.”

The cast was in good spirits after years of attending ComicCon and not being able to reveal anything at the panels. Finally they were allowed to talk about things.

The big Hall H audience cheered to find out some of their favorite lines: Williams chose her own character’s battle cry, “Not today,” while Conleth Hill went for his co-star Peter Dinklage’s, “I drink and I know things.”

They also indulged in some fan theories, cleared up some burning questions and speculated about what happens after the finale.

Wright said that he can’t imagine Bran’s new government is a “barrel of laughs.”

“Westeros is probably a surveillan­ce state,” he said.

But perhaps there is more fun happening on the new small council, according to Bradley.

“It basically turns into ‘The Office,’” he said.

Cunningham posited that a spinoff could be called “Better Call Davos.”

There was some discussion of the divisivene­ss of the eighth and final season, although likely not as much as there would have been had showrunner­s David Benioff and D.B. Weiss been in attendance as originally scheduled.

“Look at the amount of people here,” Hill said, gesturing to the 8,000-some people in Hall H. “We’re very grateful to your fandom over the years … this is the reality as opposed to the media-led hate campaign.”

Coster-Waldau said every season of “Game of Thrones” has been divisive in its own way, from Ned Stark’s fate to the “Red Wedding.”

“Obviously when it comes to an end it’s going to [expletive] you off no matter what because it’s the end,” Coster-Waldau said. “Just don’t call people names.”

Benioff and Weiss dropped off the schedule at the last minute, as did actors Iain Glen and Nathalie Emmanuel and director Miquel Sapochnik. Their absence was not addressed during the panel.

 ?? PHOTOS BY CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION/AP ?? From left, Maisie Williams, Jacob Anderson, Liam Cunningham and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau appear at the “Game of Thrones” panel on day two of Comic-Con Internatio­nal on Friday in San Diego.
PHOTOS BY CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION/AP From left, Maisie Williams, Jacob Anderson, Liam Cunningham and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau appear at the “Game of Thrones” panel on day two of Comic-Con Internatio­nal on Friday in San Diego.
 ??  ?? Maisie Williams, who starred as Arya Stark on “Game of Thrones,” speaks during the panel event.
Maisie Williams, who starred as Arya Stark on “Game of Thrones,” speaks during the panel event.

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