The Borneo Post

The ever-expanding universe of ‘Game of Thrones’

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PARIS: Ten years after its launch and two years after it ended, ‘Game of Thrones’ fans have plenty more to look forward to, from TV spinoffs to the longawaite­d final books.

It’s the question that has driven fans of the Iron Throne to despair: when will author George RR Martin finally finish the fantasy saga ‘A Song of Ice and Fire’ on which ‘Game of Thrones’ was based.

The first volume appeared in 1996 and the fifth in 2011, just after the TV show was launched. Two more volumes are due, but the global success of the series appears to have derailed Martin’s work schedule.

Impatience has been building, and with every new project that Martin takes on, there are fears the final volumes may never emerge, especially since Martin is now 72 years old.

In 2020, he assured fans he was working every day on volume six, which is titled ‘The Winds of Winter’ and even hoped to finish it this year. Martin has plenty more on his plate, however, not least the first TV spinoff, ‘House of the Dragon’, which is set 300 years before the original series and focuses on House Targaryen.

Shooting in England is due to start this month, with a release date on HBO set for 2022. At least two other prequel shows are in developmen­t, according to Deadline magazine, but have yet to be given the green light.

Another prequel project starring Naomi Watts and set thousands of years earlier, went as far as producing a pilot episode before it was axed by the network in late 2019.

Martin last month signed a five-year deal with HBO parent company WarnerMedi­a to develop new content, which is said to include more ‘Thrones’ spin-offs: the saga of warrior queen Nymeria provisiona­lly entitled ‘10,000 Ships’, a seafaring drama ‘9 Voyages’ with the creators of historical drama ‘Rome’, and a gritty underworld tale set in Westeros capital King’s Landing called ‘Flea Bottom’.

A ‘Dunk and Egg’ TV series based on Martin’s novellas about a knight and his squire has long been rumoured, while an animated drama spanning thousands of years has also been mooted.

He is also linked to several non‘Thrones’ projects, including ‘Who Fears Death’ and ‘Roadmarks’, both based on fantasy novels from other authors, and an adaptation for Netflix of his early short story ‘Sandkings’.

If that wasn’t enough, there’s also a Broadway version of ‘Game of Thrones’ due in 2023.

‘Game of Thrones’ has also proved a boon for tourism in the locations that featured in the show.

Dubrovnik on the Croatian coast (the stand-in for King’s Landing), the Palace of the Alcazar in Seville (Dorne), and Doune Castle in Scotland (Winterfell) all saw a boost in arrivals prior to the pandemic.

Martin is himself a lover of castles and medieval architectu­re, and has even tried to get a fort built in his garden in Santa Fe – though he has yet to get permission. Fans in desperate need of an immediate ‘Thrones’ fix might also try ‘The Accursed Kings’, a book series by French writer Maurice

Druon. — AFP

PARIS: Winter came and went, leaving millions disappoint­ed by the ending and a generation of adolescent boys exhausted from over-stimulatio­n.

Many more wondered whether all the blood and bare bottoms were strictly necessary.

But few would argue that HBO’s “Game of Thrones”, celebratin­g its 10th birthday on April 17, was anything less than a televisual phenomenon.

Much to the chagrin of TV executives, figuring out how to repeat its global success remains as much a mystery as how anyone ever built a 700-foot wall entirely out of ice.

The winning components are clear, not least HBO’s penchant for naked – usually female – bodies.

The non-stop sex brought controvers­y, especially when it was less consensual than in the original books, starting with the brutal consummati­on of Daenerys’ marriage to Khal Drogo in the first episode in 2011.

“I think they misjudged the audience at the very beginning... There was something quasiporno­graphic going on there,” said Carolyne Larrington, a medieval literature professor at the University of Oxford and author of “All Men Must Die: Power and Passion in Game of Thrones”.

But overall, according to the experts at MrSkin.com, the show sits a lowly seventh in the all-time TV nudity rankings, with 82 nude scenes (74 per cent female).

That’s far below “Shameless” and “True Blood”, with 236 and 137 nude scenes, respective­ly.

Gore was another attraction, with a catalogue of skin-flaying, eye-gouging, throat-slitting, horse-heart-eating carnage that, famously, refused to spare even the show’s main characters.

Their unpredicta­ble chances of survival added to its addictive appeal as the deaths racked up – 59 in season one, soaring to 3,523 in the massacrous eighth and final season, according to data site Statista.

Still, there are more violent shows around and titillatio­n alone cannot explain a viewership that reached 207 countries and saw 19.3 million people tune in live for the final episode in 2019 in the United States alone, according to HBO.

Media analysts Parrot Analytics said it was still the most talked-about show through 2020, a year after it finished.

Much of the credit must go to the spectacula­r way in which the world of Westeros was brought to life by showrunner­s Dan Weiss and David Benioff, and above all to the rich story-telling of George R.R. Martin, on whose books the show was based.

“What made the show so interestin­g were the twin poles of power politics and family,” said Larrington.

“How you gain power and how you exercise it... and how the young people spend the whole eight seasons looking for ways not to be like their parents or grandparen­ts... these are what gave it its universal appeal.”

For all the criticism around its treatment of women, the story had complex female characters at its core.

“To maximise your audience, it’s no good for fantasy shows simply to have manly men doing manly things while the women are just damsels in distress or mothers looking concerned,” Larrington said.

Even for fans of the books, the success came as a shock.

“It’s still hard to believe that the show exploded into a phenomenon like it did,” said Myles McNutt, author of “Game of Thrones: A Guide to Westeros and Beyond”.

“It could have been that Martin’s story was more accessible than we realised but it just had to be unburdened from the intimidati­ng size of his novels.”

He said that the timing also helped, coming just as social media became a vital part of TV viewing.

“Game of Thrones” was indeed the show that launched a thousand memes.

Many even found their way into political discourse, from a British lawmaker warning that winter would come if people didn’t vote for Brexit, to then-president Donald Trump tweeting an image of himself in the show’s artwork with the words “Sanctions Are Coming” aimed at Iran.

It may be no surprise that concocting the next hit fantasy show looks challengin­g.

HBO has multiple prequels in developmen­t, though only one, “House of the Dragon” is so far greenlit.

Amazon, meanwhile, has forked out US$250 million for the rights to “Lord of the Rings”.

But the stakes are high, as the makers of “Game of Thrones” found when the final series was vilified by fans for seeming rushed.

Some 1.8 million people – and counting – have signed a petition demanding it be remade “with competent writers”.

McNutt said that it was unclear how audiences would respond to new takes on their favourite parallel worlds.

“But HBO and Amazon are betting hundreds of millions of dollars that ‘Game of Thrones’ opened the door to a thriving future for fantasy television, and that’s definitely never something I would have imagined a decade ago when the show premiered,” he added.

 ?? — AFP file photo ?? A model of the White Walker, character from Game of Thrones is displayed at the Internatio­nal Game of Thrones exhibition in Stockholm.
— AFP file photo A model of the White Walker, character from Game of Thrones is displayed at the Internatio­nal Game of Thrones exhibition in Stockholm.
 ?? —AFP photo ?? File photo taken on May 20, 2019 Fans watch HBO’s ‘Game of Thrones’ series finale at a viewing party at Brennan’s bar in Marina del Rey, California.
—AFP photo File photo taken on May 20, 2019 Fans watch HBO’s ‘Game of Thrones’ series finale at a viewing party at Brennan’s bar in Marina del Rey, California.

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