Monday, April 18, 2016

Maisie Williams Says After Season 6 “The End Is In Sight”

All discussions of how many seasons are left for HBO’s Game of Thrones should be prefaced with the following statement: Currently there are none. Until a season is actually officially declared as a “go,” everything is speculative. Martin himself has said this: that with TV things can change on a dime, and though productions will always proceed as if there are more seasons to come until there suddenly aren’t, just because production designers mention how they are already focusing on pre-production of Season 7 doesn’t mean there is one until HBO puts that press release in our inboxes on Monday after the Season 6 premiere.

Now, with that legal disclaimer out of the way, everyone knows that since HBO’s upfronts last year that the talk has been two more seasons, not one. That somehow, after five years of the showrunners chanting “Seven Gods, Seven Kingdoms, Seven Books, Seven Seasons,” HBO had won the battle for more content and we would go for eight. Which is why the news earlier this week that “eight” was probably in reality going to be Season 7, Parts 1 and 2 was not that big a shock to me. It worked for AMC–twice! If it works for basic cable, then it should work for pay cable, no?

The fact is, if the show were going to run eight seasons, that would have had to have been decided back in Season 4, in order to spread the plot out more evenly. Part of the problem with Season 5 was that the show was trying to cover too much ground (two full novels) in ten episodes. Now that the ground has been covered, there’s no stretching. The milk, as Lady Olenna would say, cannot be put back up the udders. This was a show that was only plotted to run 70-ish hours. And from the sounds of what the actors on the show are saying, hours 51-60 were written and plotted that way–all claims of an eighth season be damned.

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Speaking to The Hollywood Reporter, several of the actors involved with the production confirm that by the end of the season, the audience will see the conclusion rushing towards us. According to Maisie Williams:

“We’re building up to a massive downhill sprint. That’s what it feels like. We’re getting more riled up. At the end of this [season], people will obviously be waiting for the next season of the series, but it will feel like the end is in sight.”

Michael McElhatton, who plays Roose Bolton, agrees.

“Definitely, yeah. They can move so fast as writers. They can cut swathes of people, just killing people off. Suddenly, a person’s gone, and that journey’s over, and that journey’s over … with all these characters, [the writers] can move incredibly fast with the storytelling.”

GoT Trailer200056

Kristofer Hivju, who plays wildling Tormund Giantsbane, compares this Season 6 with those on TV shows designed to go for 10 or 20 seasons.

“In many TV shows, season six is the season where you really start rebooting the same conflicts over and over again. (But t)his is a big journey for all the characters. It’s one big story. We don’t have to redefine the essence of the show. We’re just continuing.”

John Bradley makes the comparison explicit with Breaking Bad, another show which was designed to go a specific amount of seasons, and found itself at the end doing two shorter half-a-seasons in order to please AMC.

“Even great shows find it hard to sustain over time. One of my favorite shows is Breaking Bad, but I do feel like with that last season, there’s a new starting point. I think season four wrapped up really nicely, and season five [felt] almost contrived to get to another season. I don’t think that’s going to happen here. Everybody’s through-line is so complete and direct.”

“You get the sense that stories are coming to a conclusion.”


Via http://winteriscoming.net/2016/04/18/maisie-williams-says-after-season-6-the-end-is-in-sight/

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