Houston Chronicle Sunday

‘Thrones’ women rule — or try to

- By Lorraine Ali

The great war is here. Or at least it will be when “Game of Thrones” returns in July and the show enters, presumably, the final stages of the battle for Westeros.

A formidable list of contenders is circling from as many directions as the blades of the Iron Throne point — which has not escaped the notice of the throne’s current occupant.

“Enemies to the East. Enemies to the West. Enemies to the South. Enemies to the North,” Cersei Lannister says in a season trailer. “Whatever stands in our way, we will defeat it.”

What stands in her way are the armies of at least two women with a claim to the throne and several more who would literally kill to see anyone but a Lannister ruling the realm from atop King’s Landing.

All, however, have the chance to rule the show’s forthcomin­g narrative; what started as a classic male-dominated adventure six seasons ago has become an unlikely tale of female empowermen­t.

The surviving women of “Game of Thrones” have been endlessly brutalized by the men of Westeros and Essos, but now they have the upper hand … and there’ll be hell to pay.

Based on author George R.R. Martin’s book series “A Song of Ice and Fire,” “Game of Thrones” has since outpaced the fantasy novels. Though Martin is reportedly writing the sixth volume for what is intended to be a sevenbook series, HBO’s new season (like the one before) follows a largely rogue story line. (Martin has provided some outlines to show creators D.B. Weiss and David Benioff from the eventually forthcomin­g “The Winds of Winter.”)

Following the success of realistic, family-based dramas such as “The Sopranos” and “Six Feet Under” and gritty tales of urban Baltimore in “The Wire,” “Game of Thrones” was a huge and expensive gamble for HBO when it premiered in 2011.

It’s since become the premium network’s most successful show and an epic journey in its own right; even as it outstrippe­d its source material, “Thrones” launched conversati­ons — about the depiction of rape, nudity and violence — far larger than the expected natterings about deviations from the book. “Game of Thrones” even outstrippe­d itself, its ambitious filming schedule forcing HBO to push this premiere back several months. And this season will contain just seven episodes instead of 10.

Now, for the first time in the Emmy-winning HBO series’ history, nearly all of the show’s central characters have slain their obstructiv­e regional enemies and are poised to converge on King’s Landing in an ultimate battle for control of the Seven Kingdoms.

Daenerys Targaryen, the Stark sisters Sansa and Arya, Cersei, Yara Greyjoy and Brienne of Tarth are all on a potential collision course. And last we saw Jon Snow, Tyrion Lannister and Theon Greyjoy, they also were planning to march toward the Iron Throne. All seek to topple the Lannister queen and brother/lover Jaime from power.

Cersei is no fool, however. Last season, she incinerate­d her enemies in a wholesale massacre so evil it rivaled the Red Wedding. Goodbye, High Sparrow, Margaery Tyrell Baratheon and a good third of the cast. Sweet King Tommen was simply collateral damage. Her fiery scheme was so brilliant, she deserves the throne she now inhabits for sheer gamesmansh­ip points alone.

No such luck, especially when dragons are involved, and Daenerys, who proclaims in the new trailer: “I was born to rule the Seven Kingdoms and I will!,” isn’t about to give up her dreams of world domination for a cozy life in Essos.

Daenerys, aka Khaleesi, aka Mother of Dragons, Breaker of Chains, Protector of the Realm (let’s stop there lest we run out of room), has amassed an army of the fiercest fighters: the nomadic horsemen known as Dothraki and the Iron Island’s formidable marine fleet. Add dragons to the mix, and she has the land, sea and sky covered. The strategic counsel of Tyrion, Cersei’s estranged brother, is a small but powerful asset.

Snow — aka King of the North and previously assumed to be Ned Stark’s illegitima­te son — is also a rightful heir. But Snow, who was brought back to life from the dead by the Red Priestess, has no idea (yet) that there’s royal dragon blood flowing in his restored veins.

The most powerful possible narrative, however, promises to be that of the Stark women. Sisters Sansa and Arya haven’t seen each other since they were separated as girls in Season 1 after the execution of their father, Ned, at the hands of the Lannisters. They have both learned about survival, and Sansa has tasted vengeance and victory and likely wants more.

As for the dozen or so other key characters not mentioned — including Littlefing­er, the women of Dorne, Varys — they’re also hovering about, perhaps concocting more devious plans, deadly poisons or a wider network of spies than imagined in previous seasons.

What is clear is that July 16 feels like centuries away for most “Game of Thrones” fans. Winter is coming this summer, but not soon enough.

 ?? HBO ?? Sansa Stark (Sophie Turner) is among the women who may be out for vengeance in the new season of “Game of Thrones.”
HBO Sansa Stark (Sophie Turner) is among the women who may be out for vengeance in the new season of “Game of Thrones.”

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