Game Of Thrones (tv series) ongoing discussion thread (WITH TRAILER)

Cassie

Touching the monolith
Staff member
This thread is about the TV show, not the books.
 

Homo Erectus

Registered User
yeah but it's gonna suck for you TV heads when he dies and leaves the books incomplete cause the show is based on his books.
 

CaptainWacky

I want to smell dark matter
The tv series is unlikely to get seven seasons anyway, even if the books are finished.
 

Cock

Let's be making sexy business
[YOUTUBE]psbBi7dLnT4[/YOUTUBE]

I AM SO STOKED
 

headvoid

Can I have Ops?
I sense the pale breast ratio in this production will be high and this will trickle down into the Top 10's...
 

Tisiphone

Elitist Redheaded Trollop
Something will be trickling, definitely.
 

CaptainWacky

I want to smell dark matter
I don't know how old the girl playing Sansa is...
 

Cassie

Touching the monolith
Staff member
http://www.televisionaryblog.com/2011/03/winter-is-coming-or-at-least-15-minutes.html
Winter is coming a little earlier than expected...

HBO will give Game of Thrones fans a chance to catch 15-minutes of the April 17th series premiere a few weeks early, with a one-time airing on April 3rd at 9 pm ET/PT.

The 15-minute teaser, or "exclusive preview" in HBO parlance, will air on HBO's linear channel just once, before it's made available the following day on HBO.com, HBO on Demand, and via the premium cable channel's subscriber-only online service, HBO Go.

The series itself, meanwhile, is slated to kick off its ten-episode season on Sunday, April 17th at 9 pm ET/PT.

WINTER IS ALMOST HERE.
 

CaptainWacky

I want to smell dark matter
Blah, 15 minutes isn't enough to sink your teeth (OR COCK) into. JUST SHOW THE WHOLE THING NOW.
 

Cock

Let's be making sexy business
A Dance with Dragons to be released in July

dragons02.jpg
 

Cassie

Touching the monolith
Staff member
WE ALREADY POSTED THAT ALREADY IN ITS OWN THREAD COCK MONSTER.
 

CaptainWacky

I want to smell dark matter
We know. ;)
 

Cock

Let's be making sexy business
oh, goddamnit
 

Cassie

Touching the monolith
Staff member
Game of Thrones: TV Review - The Hollywood Reporter

Game of Thrones: TV Review
4:13 PM 4/2/2011 by Tim Goodman

Actor Sean Bean leads David Benioff and D.B. Weiss' small-screen adaptation of George R.R. Martin's bestselling "A Song of Ice and Fire" novels.

Barely a few minutes into HBO’s epic Game of Thrones series, it’s clear that the hype was right and the wait was worth it.

Based on the bestselling fantasy book series A Song of Ice and Fire by George R.R. Martin – often referred to as “the American Tolkein” – HBO is betting that fans of The Lord of the Rings will come to this for a sprawling, interwoven tale of feuding families, swords, sex, carnage, beasts, frayed loyalties, deception, intrigue and the pursuit of power.

As well they should. Game of Thrones has all the elements (many described above) that lure viewers to shows like The Sopranos, et al. That it’s a fantasy series shouldn’t scare anyone away, because – like Lord of the Rings – there’s a real allure to costume-dramas that pair dense mythology with all of the crowd-pleasing elements of war, honor, pride, lust, power and, yes, even humor. Thrones has all of those in spades and supports them with exceptional storytelling, strong writing, superb acting and some stunning visual effects.

Writers and executive producers David Benioff and D.B. Weiss will certainly have their hands full dealing with die-hard fans on what they got right or wrong (or left out or put in that may have not been in the books), but they have the backing of Martin, who worked closely with the duo, and that should count for a lot. Perhaps more important to those people who haven’t read the books or heard much about this series, Benioff and Weiss kick things off immediately – with action, blood-shed and eeriness. Director Tim Van Patten creates a beautiful, haunting, visual template of vast expanses (Northern Ireland, Malta), white snow and dark shadows while also allowing the visual effects to pack a wallop.

That kind of start to the 10-part series was essential because Game of Thrones is a complicated story with numerous characters and a dense, interwoven back-story. Though it demands attention, Thrones never once bogs down. It’s the kind of drama where, when the first episode ends, you wish the nine others were immediately available. And that validates HBO’s notion that television is the perfect medium for a fantasy series done right. Getting Martin’s Thrones, the gold-standard, could end up landing HBO its next franchise.

Thrones is set in the fictional land of Westeros, where various clans – or houses -- have lived and fought for generations in different realms, until the Targaryens invaded and united the Seven Kingdoms under the Iron Throne. Now, years later, there’s a battle for the throne.

Right from the start, Thrones starts telling as many as four stories, involving the House Stark, run by Lord Eddard Stark (Sean Bean, who will be familiar to Lord of the Rings” fans); House Baratheon, run by King Robert Baratheon (the wonderful Mark Addy), House Lannister, which is linked to House Baratheon because Queen Cersei Baratheon (Lena Headey) was born a Lannister; and the exiled House Targaryen, where Prince Viserys Targaryen III (Harry Lloyd) wants to reclaim the Iron Throne and all Seven Kingdoms of Westeros. To do that, he’ll need an army, which is why he wants his sister, Princess Daenerys (Emilia Clarke) to marry Khal Drogo (Jason Momoa), who leads a tribe of vicious warrior horsemen.

Got that?

It’s actually not as confusing as it may sound. And there are more than a few unexpected surprises and even humorous detours (mostly provided by Peter Dinklage as Tyrion Lannister whose whoring and drinking knows no bounds). A great series should challenge viewers to pay attention, to connect dots and anticipate connections. Thrones manages a superior complexity without ever making you think that you’ve lost the connection to the story. It’s paced with precision and the carefully crafted assemblage of characters unspools at such a rate that you can keep up while keeping tabs on their ever changing moods.

What that means, essentially, is that there’s a tight grip on the storytelling and a real understanding of who each person is – traits that make the complexity easier to bear.

It’s difficult to single out the most accomplished parts of Thrones. The ambition is immense, the fantasy world exceptionally well-conceived, the writing and acting elevating the entire series beyond contemporaries like The Borgias and Camelot, and the visual appeal continues to surprise with each episode.

What we have here is the successful pairing of an acclaimed collection of fantasy books with a television series that illuminates and expands what’s on the page.

Worth the wait? Absolutely. And even if you have no idea what all the fuss is about, you should get in from the start absorb Martin’s fantastical tale.

ALREADY GETTING GREAT REVIEWS. I'm jealous of those fucknoses getting screeners.

ALSO, I thought all this time that GRRM was from Scotland or SOMETHING. STILL, I've never seen anyone refer to him as the American Tolkien.
 

Cassie

Touching the monolith
Staff member
DOUBLE FUCKING POST.
 

CaptainWacky

I want to smell dark matter
NEARLY WINTER AT LAST.
 

Tisiphone

Elitist Redheaded Trollop
I'M SICK OF WAITING
 

CaptainWacky

I want to smell dark matter
IT BETTER BE GOOD.
 

Tisiphone

Elitist Redheaded Trollop
OR ELSE
 
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