• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

*UNMARKED SPOILERS ALL BOOKS* Game of Thrones |OT| - Season 7 - Sundays on HBO

They were told 3 big wtf moments. One of them being the ending was never specified. I don't see the show ending with anything other than one of dany or Jon on the iron throne.
Showrunners David Benioff and Dan Weiss tell EW those conversations included ”three holy sh– moments" in particular.

The first: (future book spoiler)
Stannis Barathon sacrificing his daughter Shireen — which was shown during the show's fifth season.

The second: Hodor's mind-bending origin story, which was revealed in Sunday's hour. Martin has known the true meaning behind Hodor's name since introducing the character in the first novel of the saga, A Game of Thrones.

And the third shocking moment?

”... is from the very end...," Benioff teased.
http://ew.com/article/2016/05/24/george-rr-martin-3-twists-game-thrones/
(future book spoiler)
Wait, does that mean Shireen is going to get torched by her father in the books as well?
The fuck.
sounds like Stannis a scum fuck in the books, too.
 

ZOONAMI

Junior Member
I don't find it that unbelievable. On one hand, she is happy to be home, and to see her sister. On the other hand, she and Sansa never really got along. Arya is also closer to Jon and would be inclined to protect him.

She's got a ton of stuff being thrown at her, and the confusion seems reasonable.


I'm sure the resolution to all this will suck though. I want them to figure it out and kill Littlefinger.

Sansa didn't listen to LF on Brienne killing Arya. LF gonna die.
 

Speevy

Banned
The third shocking moment is either Dany's death or Bran becoming Neo and single-handedly destroying the whitewalkers. Book it.
 

Speevy

Banned
I'm picturing a brilliant but demented old man writing books on an Etch a Sketch, spouting one crazy revelation after another to Dan and Dave.

They deliver it to us in the sleaziest, half-baked manner possible.
 

Brakke

Banned
It's things that happened on the show. If you're so precious that you're worried about the show revealing things before the books, why are you even here?
 

Gigglepoo

Member
It's things that happened on the show. If you're so precious that you're worried about the show revealing things before the books, why are you even here?

You don't see the difference between something appearing in the show without context versus D&D telling us a scene will be in the books? I don't care about spoilers, I just find it hypocritical of them.
 

Speevy

Banned
If The Winds of Winter released today, I don't think there would be a single page of material that could spoil one of the next 7 episodes.
 
One of the major themes of the book is that it doesn't matter who sits the iron throne. What matters is that the system be made to address real concerns. Plus there's the theme of magic dying out over time (even if it's becoming more important now). So I could totally see Dany and Jon dying and someone more mundane becoming king or queen, like Sansa.

I was referring to the show ending.

I doubt tbe iron throne will exist by the end of the books.
 
GoT is kinda misogynist, but thats the point no? The world is bleak, now if only bad things happened to women it would be worse but the good and gray guys got their punishment too. Things have been looking better for Dany and bad for Cersei

No it's not. Depiction is not endorsement. The world of Westeros is misogynist, the books are not. GRRM made the inherent misogyny of medieval history and fantasy literature readily apparent, rather than pretending it didn't exist. He shines a light on the fact that there is no meaningful consent possible in things like arranged marriages by writing about how Cersei was basically raped by Robert, and how Lords would have the right to sleep with a vassal's bride on their wedding night regardless of whether they want to or not. These are all features, not bugs. You're meant to go "that's hella misogynist." Maybe that's what you meant, but I think the distinction between depiction and endorsement is very important and very often overlooked in criticism of both the books AND the show's depiction of (sexual) violence towards women.
 
Gotta love how D&D loathe spoilers but are fine telling us what Martin told them.
They only told the first 2 because the first 2 happened already, they're still keeping the last one a mystery...till it happens.
Being from the very end doesn't mean the very end. May be something to do with a single character as opposed to the ending on the whole.
I think it's up for interpretation. Whatever it is at the "very end", the events of the end would have to be in line for that event to still take place in similar conception.
 
They only told the first 2 because the first 2 happened already, they're still keeping the last one a mystery...till it happens.
I think it's up for interpretation. Whatever it is at the "very end", the events of the end would have to be in line for that event to still take place in similar conception.

Yeah it is up to interpretation. But the circumstances for shireen will definitely be vastly different. Hodor may also be different but equally as heart breaking. We already know a lot of what's going on now won't happen in the books.
 
Shocking moment.

From the very end.

Plus Jon Snow is the prince that was promised/Azor Ahai bullshit.

Dany gonna get stabbed through the heart confirmed

sometimes I don't get all the hype for the azor ahai bullshit because I thought GRRM does not care much for prophecies?
 

WaffleTaco

Wants to outlaw technological innovation.
Yeah it is up to interpretation. But the circumstances for shireen will definitely be vastly different. Hodor may also be different but equally as heart breaking. We already know a lot of what's going on now won't happen in the books.

of course the circumstances will be different but the outcomes will still be the same. it just feels weird to me how the show starts off so close to the book if it ends so differently than how the story intended to.
 

WaffleTaco

Wants to outlaw technological innovation.
of course the circumstances will be different but the outcomes will still be the same. it just feels weird to me how the show starts off so close to the book if it ends so differently than how the story intended to.
That's because they didn't want to do the plots of books 5 (and eventually 6). So they made a bunch of characters be in the same general location instead of spread out.
 
It's hard to view Stannis as scummy, because in his view he is trying to save the seven kingdoms from the White Walkers. What's the life of one girl versus the lives of everyone else? It's why Stannis is a good (in the sense of well-written and interesting) character.
as I understand it in the books Stannis prays for Robb Stark's death just like he does in the show; just knowing that makes me believe he is scum through and through.

On the show though they made it look like he didn't have much of a choice. Jon kicks him out of castle black and they have no choice but to (try) lay siege on Winterfell.
That's because they didn't want to do the plots of books 5 (and eventually 6). So they made a bunch of characters be in the same general location instead of spread out.
we're talking about the final shock, so this would be book 7/season 8.

also, WaffleTaco, reading your name out is makin me hungry. I better go get some breakfast
 
of course the circumstances will be different but the outcomes will still be the same. it just feels weird to me how the show starts off so close to the book if it ends so differently than how the story intended to.
I mean the story is already a lot different. Character arcs are having different conclusions and show counterparts are unrecognizable compared to book versions (Euron). It's most likely going to be the case. It seems to be a decision made in the lead up to season 6 as before this it was talked about as two routes to the same destination.
 
While I'm not yearning for Darkstar I'd vastly prefer a chaotic character like him causing conflict to the Dorne story we got.
"We don't kill little girls in Dorne"
"Never mind. Also let's use poison but make it so obvious that it was us that we might as well have stabbed her in front of Jaime"
"Weak men will never rule Dorne again. Everyone will surely just accept being ruled by kinslaying bastards instead"

Replace the Sand Snakes with Arianne's Queenmaker plot and it would've been better.
Plus having Darkstar in will make Dawn more relevant.
The Sand Snakes suck in both mediums.
 

Rixxan

Member
No it's not. Depiction is not endorsement. The world of Westeros is misogynist, the books are not. GRRM made the inherent misogyny of medieval history and fantasy literature readily apparent, rather than pretending it didn't exist. He shines a light on the fact that there is no meaningful consent possible in things like arranged marriages by writing about how Cersei was basically raped by Robert, and how Lords would have the right to sleep with a vassal's bride on their wedding night regardless of whether they want to or not. These are all features, not bugs. You're meant to go "that's hella misogynist." Maybe that's what you meant, but I think the distinction between depiction and endorsement is very important and very often overlooked in criticism of both the books AND the show's depiction of (sexual) violence towards women.

Well said, the difference is important
 
I mean the story is already a lot different. Character arcs are having different conclusions and show counterparts are unrecognizable compared to book versions (Euron). It's most likely going to be the case. It seems to be a decision made in the lead up to season 6 as before this it was talked about as two routes to the same destination.
yeah I have to admit it is pretty much its own storyline, but I hate it. The show started off the same as the books...if it was always going to be different at the end you might as well have made the starting point different too.
 
yeah I have to admit it is pretty much its own storyline, but I hate it. The show started off the same as the books...if it was always going to be different at the end you might as well have made the starting point different too.
There's nothing to hate, it's still a good t.v. show.

If we ever get the final books, you'll have those to enjoy too. Many surprises will remain unspoilt, so it will be a blast to read through.
 
There's nothing to hate, it's still a good t.v. show.
...there is plenty to hate, my man.

If we ever get the final books, you'll have those to enjoy too. Many surprises will remain unspoilt, so it will be a blast to read through.
key words: "if we ever get"

if someone plans on reading the books and watching the show the first half of the story is spoiled for them. if the show never intended to finish how the books will then the show should have started in its own way too.
 

Gigglepoo

Member
yeah I have to admit it is pretty much its own storyline, but I hate it. The show started off the same as the books...if it was always going to be different at the end you might as well have made the starting point different too.

D&D had no clue the books wouldn't be done when they took over. Seemed like they realized they had to finish things their way with S5.
 
...there is plenty to hate, my man.

key words: "if we ever get"

if someone plans on reading the books and watching the show the first half of the story is spoiled for them. if the show never intended to finish how the books will then the show should have started in its own way too.

Then you're asking for a completely different TV series with little/nothing to do with the books?

The books have a good level of additional depth and insight into characters which make them a joy to read despite the show. I read the books after watching the first few seasons and still loved the first three despite knowing a lot of what happens.
 
No it's not. Depiction is not endorsement. The world of Westeros is misogynist, the books are not. GRRM made the inherent misogyny of medieval history and fantasy literature readily apparent, rather than pretending it didn't exist. He shines a light on the fact that there is no meaningful consent possible in things like arranged marriages by writing about how Cersei was basically raped by Robert, and how Lords would have the right to sleep with a vassal's bride on their wedding night regardless of whether they want to or not. These are all features, not bugs. You're meant to go "that's hella misogynist." Maybe that's what you meant, but I think the distinction between depiction and endorsement is very important and very often overlooked in criticism of both the books AND the show's depiction of (sexual) violence towards women.

That's true of the books but not the show, though I'm sure that's still their intention.

The rules of the world of Game of Thrones are so flimsy and poorly defined, changing from character to character, episode to episode and season to season that it's hard to believe they mean anything which makes it harder to believe the writers are beholden to some unseen, in-universe logic and easy to believe they rewrite that logic based on whatever they want the plot to do.

To me, anything Game of Thrones tries to say about topics like violence, sexual abuse (inc. rape) or torture seem superficial at best because it doesn't come from a place that seems genuine.
 
Then you're asking for a completely different TV series with little/nothing to do with the books?
this is pretty much a way to describe seasons 6/7/8 to books 6/7, is it not?

The books have a good level of additional depth and insight into characters which make them a joy to read despite the show. I read the books after watching the first few seasons and still loved the first three despite knowing a lot of what happens.
as you should, and the adaptation tries to maintain that depth and early on they were successful. the show wouldn't have happened if there was no source material to begin with and since there is very little source material now i would go off of them as much as I can.
 
yeah I have to admit it is pretty much its own storyline, but I hate it. The show started off the same as the books...if it was always going to be different at the end you might as well have made the starting point different too.

What? You can't blame D&D for running the story on bulletpoints instead of new source material.
The foundation they have built in the show still counts, the beginning of the series isn't nullified because of how different the characters are now, bad or good.
I'm also annoyed with a lot of what they're doing and how they've handled characters but come on now.

They probably should've waited till the series ended but let's be real, the books won't finish.
TWOW will come out(lol) and another book will be announced on-top of ADOS.
I sincerely believe the show is the only conclusion we'll get.
 
Finding the remaining book pages is going to be like opening Xaro Xhoan Daxos' vault.

fun fact: mahershala ali was supposed to be that guy
What? You can't blame D&D for running the story on bulletpoints instead of new source material.
I can, and I already do, and I will continue to do so.
The foundation they have built in the show still counts, the beginning of the series isn't nullified because of how different the characters are now, bad or good.
I'm also annoyed with a lot of what they're doing and how they've handled characters but come on now.
The show has been so great because of the foundation, and the foundations were the books. So in order for the show to end at its greatest, it's best they stick to what GRRM had planned because their own ideas won't be NEARLY as good.

They probably should've waited till the series ended but let's be real, the books won't finish.
TWOW will come out(lol) and another book will be announced on-top of ADOS.
I sincerely believe the show is the only conclusion we'll get.
The Harry Potter movies started before the books were finished and the Walking Dead show started before the comics finished their run. Thrones should be no different - other than of course the adaptation passing the source but if I had access to the source of the source who is GRRM, I'd keep him on the project closely.
 

Zabka

Member
GRRM finds the story as he writes it. Any plans he has can be tossed aside at a moment's notice. What could be accurate to his plan today could be totally different from what actually makes it into the books.
 
GRRM finds the story as he writes it. Any plans he has can be tossed aside at a moment's notice. What could be accurate to his plan today could be totally different from what actually makes it into the books.

so he's like Akira Toriyama, then. well, I'm sure whatever he outlines, he still has the endgame planned out. Just like he's planned out all along that Lyanna is Jon's mother.
 

duckroll

Member
Maybe you should find something more constructive to do with your life if you're going to post every other reply on the page whining about something that honestly, I don't even know why you care about considering you only started reading the books because of the show. You haven't even read them all! Who cares! Do you have this weird argument in your head 24/7 about this stuff? Get a grip.
 
fun fact: mahershala ali was supposed to be that guyI can, and I already do, and I will continue to do so.
The show has been so great because of the foundation, and the foundations were the books. So in order for the show to end at its greatest, it's best they stick to what GRRM had planned because their own ideas won't be NEARLY as good.

The Harry Potter movies started before the books were finished and the Walking Dead show started before the comics finished their run. Thrones should be no different - other than of course the adaptation passing the source but if I had access to the source of the source who is GRRM, I'd keep him on the project closely.

First off, you're comparing them to a film series and an adaptation that was promised to be sort of different from the start.
Thrones is a different beast and an outlier in TV, they had the outlines. Apparently they're sticking to the outlines since GRRM(who apparently has no idea how to close his own series) have given them nothing else.

That's my point with regards to bulletpoints, that's all they have.
The outline would be "Jon comes back and takes Winterfell, is declared KOTN"
or "Dany defeats the Harpies and heads for Westeros." Now the blanks are filled in.
Add that to S7 and that's what this looks like.
 
The third shocking moment is either Dany's death or Bran becoming Neo and single-handedly destroying the whitewalkers. Book it.

With how bleak the show is I wouldn't be surprised if the white walkers march around the great wall and the Night King ends up sitting on the iron throne at the end of season 8.
 
Maybe you should find something more constructive to do with your life if you're going to post every other reply on the page whining about something that honestly, I don't even know why you care about considering you only started reading the books because of the show. You haven't even read them all! Who cares! Do you have this weird argument in your head 24/7 about this stuff? Get a grip.
I'm going to finish the books eventually. I don't plan on being a show-only fan forever.
First off, you're comparing them to a film series and an adaptation that was promised to be sort of different from the start.
I used to say that the Walking Dead tv show's storyline is its own, independent from the comics but fans of the comics who watch the show have said it is the same storyline with a few changes. Harry Potter follows the original story very closely I would say it is the same storyline and th eonly changes that were supposed to mean were for a. time constraints of a film and b. certain things working better on screen than the way they did on paper.
Thrones is a different beast and an outlier in TV, they had the outlines. Apparently they're sticking to the outlines since GRRM(who apparently has no idea how to close his own series) have given them nothing else.

That's my point with regards to bulletpoints, that's all they have.
The outline would be "Jon comes back and takes Winterfell, is declared KOTN"
or "Dany defeats the Harpies and heads for Westeros." Now the blanks are filled in.
Add that to S7 and that's what this looks like.
If GRRM is intentionally withholding all event information from the showrunners and only giving them a checklist of what's to come, then I guess it's okay. It isn't their fault if the main man is not giving them more information to work with and they have to make do with what they have.
 

duckroll

Member
Serious question: WHY DO YOU CARE? You haven't read the books, you only know what is different from stuff you read about on the internet, why does it affect you? Why are you so bothered that anything is different? This is really inane. The show is flawed, but judge it for what it is and not what it isn't. There's a reason why the opening credits of Game of Thrones says "Created by David Benioff & D.B. Weiss"... :p
 
If GRRM is intentionally withholding all event information from the showrunners and only giving them a checklist of what's to come, then I guess it's okay. It isn't their fault if the main man is not giving them more information to work with and they have to make do with what they have.

He definitely gave them significant information for the endgame, where characters will be, who will die etc. But how to get there is something he's figuring out himself.
How many books have you finished?
 
Serious question: WHY DO YOU CARE? You haven't read the books, you only know what is different from stuff you read about on the internet, why does it affect you? Why are you so bothered that anything is different? This is really inane. The show is flawed, but judge it for what it is and not what it isn't. There's a reason why the opening credits of Game of Thrones says "Created by David Benioff & D.B. Weiss"... :p
because man I just don't like it when adaptations diverge from the source material. unless it is cases where the divergence handles things better than the source did. Thrones does that sometimes. Why do I have to not care about it just because I haven't read them yet?
He definitely gave them significant information for the endgame, where characters will be, who will die etc. But how to get there is something he's figuring out himself.
If that's the case then I'll put a pause on the constant bashing I've been giving the showrunners, then.
How many books have you finished?
I'm still on one of the early chapters of A game of thrones but I promise I'm going to finish them all before season 8.
 
That's true of the books but not the show, though I'm sure that's still their intention.

The rules of the world of Game of Thrones are so flimsy and poorly defined, changing from character to character, episode to episode and season to season that it's hard to believe they mean anything which makes it harder to believe the writers are beholden to some unseen, in-universe logic and easy to believe they rewrite that logic based on whatever they want the plot to do.

To me, anything Game of Thrones tries to say about topics like violence, sexual abuse (inc. rape) or torture seem superficial at best because it doesn't come from a place that seems genuine.

The show has a lot spottier track record than the books for sure. There are scenes that clearly got away from them, like Jaime raping Cersei in the sept, which apparently wasn't meant to be rape but totally was (Unlike in the books). But I don't think that's true of all such cases. I think Ramsay raping Sansa for example was depicted and written thoughtfully. You can talk about the plotting being weird (why would LF put her in that position? But LF is badly written on the show, always has been) but the scene itself I think was good.

In general though I think there's a tendency to interpret the show's approach to sexual violence with minimum good faith and assume the worst, most cynical intentions on the part of the creators. Part of that is surely the show's own fault, but there are also plenty of people who love to rip it apart for depicting sexual violence at all.

This article, written by a female rape survivor, gave me a perspective on the show that I hadn't really considered before. Recommended reading http://nonameinanytongue.tumblr.com...-innkeepers-daughter-rape-and-sexual-violence

Again, that doesn't exempt the show from all criticism: it has undoubtedly fucked up in this area multiple times, and it also wants to have its cake and eat it with regards to sexualization (especially in earlier seasons). But to write off the entire venture as thoughtless is too dismissive imo
 

duckroll

Member
because man I just don't like it when adaptations diverge from the source material. unless it is cases where the divergence handles things better than the source did.

Okay congrats you just contradicted yourself in the same linear line of thought.

I DON'T LIKE THIS THING, UNLESS THIS THING IS GOOD AS OPPOSED TO BAD.
 
Top Bottom