When the second season of Game of Thrones
finished a few weeks ago, it ended with a suitably epic cliffhanger, following
the first season’s lead with an ending that proves the story the show is
telling is bigger, stranger and far deadlier than it might appear.
But by the time the last notes of the last music over the final end credits faded away, I was already feeling a bit lost. When I fell hard for the show last year, I still had all the books to go, and there was plenty of story gaps still to be filled. But in that past year, I’ve devoured all the remaining Westeros stories (with the exception of the most recent Dunk and Egg story), and read innumerable essays on the lives, cultures and histories of this incredible world that George R R Martin has created.
But by the time the last notes of the last music over the final end credits faded away, I was already feeling a bit lost. When I fell hard for the show last year, I still had all the books to go, and there was plenty of story gaps still to be filled. But in that past year, I’ve devoured all the remaining Westeros stories (with the exception of the most recent Dunk and Egg story), and read innumerable essays on the lives, cultures and histories of this incredible world that George R R Martin has created.
I’m up to speed and, like everybody else,
patiently waiting for the next book in the series and the next season of the
show.
But I do feel a little lost now, and wonder
if the same obsession I’ve had over the past year will survive the next 10
months, without new material to feed the fire.
It probably will, because I fucking adored
the second season of the television series.
Interlude:
The Bear And The Ho Fair (A mummer’s farce)
By Lady Janye of West Auckland
CERSEI:
You sent my daughter off to relative safety on the eve of what's probably going
to be a vicious and bloody war when I had clearly planned for us all to commit
suicide by Ser Wilko Johnson! Now you will pay the price because I have found -
YOUR HO!
*Soldiers
bring in said ho*
TYRION:
ohthankgod that's not my ho.
CERSEI:
What was that, Stumpy? Planning to have a cry about it?
TYRION:
Ahem, yes! Yes, that is my ho! Oh, how could you have found her? How could you
be so dastardly and clever and yet still produce psychopathic inbred children?
It is a riddle without solving! Oh, woe-ho is me!
HO:
Well, we haven't really seen each other in a while….
TYRION:
YES I LOVE YOU TOO HONEY! You be brave now, my most favourite of hos!
HO:
Sure, whatevs. Just don't forget that I'll be stashed in the dungeon or
wherever.
After falling for the books so hard, it’s a
little surprising that many of the moments I enjoyed so much in the second
season weren’t in the novels - that terrific interaction between Twyin
Lannister and Aria Stark, Jaime charming and killing his cousin, Bronn and The
Hound having words in the pub, Khal Drogo threatening to seriously fuck up
anybody who keeps him from his love, even that bastard death.
The television show is full of moments like
this, little pieces of character and plot that could not be done in the books
because of forced perspectives, or were necessary because TV is a different
medium with a need to keep faces on screen, and after becoming so familiar with
the books, anything new is instantly apparent, and was usually rewarding in
some way.
There were still a lot of great moments
from the books that translated beautifully to the new medium – Peter Dinklage
selling the hell out of the moment when Tyrion realises that after all his
plans and schemes, he still has to lead the attack; or the beautiful way the
Brienne and Jaime scenes are exactly what is expected, while still managing to be
genuinely funny.
All these little moments – both new and old
– sit inside this grand tapestry of a story which just gets so richer the
deeper you go, and is superbly paced, with the entire second season moving up towards the big battle in the ninth episode.
But the television show is more than just a
retelling of the plot – it has its own style and mood, and does things the
books can’t.
After all, the novels don’t have that astonishing
score from Ramin Djawadi, who took his own previous themes from the first
season and twisted them into strange and horrible new pieces. The King’s Arrival
– once a powerful and firm, but fair, piece of pomposity - becomes something darker and nastier when that
dick Joffrey is on the Iron Throne, and the final piece of music in the season
took the show’s main theme and slowed it right down to a dirge for the walkingdead, one that was getting faster and faster. And who doesn’t love The
National?
The show was also – for all its budgetary
limitations - visually impressive – from the green fire on the Blackwater to
the endless cold of the North of the Wall (or Iceland).
The show also made terrific use of real locations - wars are planned next to
pounding surf and tense negotiations take place on cliftops, lterally right on the edge of
war.
The land is a major character in this
story, but it’s in the faces of the people who live on it that the real story
is told. A servant girl with a secret tells an insanely powerful lord that
anybody can be killed, the looks of confused concentration when a
lone boat is spotted in Blackwater Bay. The series has meaty actors making the most of meaty roles, experienced
actors with a lifetime of living finding humour and humanity in amongst the sad
soliloquies, and youngsters with incredible depth.
The casting of the younger roles is a
real success of this adaptation. The wrong kid actor can kill a whole story, but
Maisie Williams holds the laser gaze of Charles Dance, and Alfie Allen shows
the tragedy of Theon in those big, shocked eyes. It’s hard to believe these are
some of the very first roles these kids have ever had, (and even hard to
believe that this Allen is that Alfie.)
The show wasn’t perfect – there were a few
missteps and moments that fell flat, but the quality is so high for most of
these series, that these tiny faults appear as petty nitpicking, and there are plenty of
other places to find that sort of thing, if you’re so inclined.
Interlude, part two:
The Slight Drizzling of Castamere (Another mummer’s
farce)
By Lady Janye of West Auckland
TYRION:
Stannis and his army are coming and Stannis knows the city and he knows which
gates are strong, and which gates are made of mud. Like the Mud Gate.
BRON:
*cleans fingernails with dagger*
TYRION:
He'll land here at the Mud Gate…wait a minute. Why the hell do we *have* a Mud
Gate? Did we run out of iron? Steel? Picket fences? Fat children?
BRON,
VARYS: ….
Later
that day, when the battle begins:
THE
HOUND: RAAAA!!! Let's kill people! If any of you die with a dry sword, I'll
romance your corpses just like that Tom Petty music video!!!
SOLDIERS:
….
THE
HOUND: Did you hear me? I WILL WINE AND DINE YOUR DEAD ASSES!!!! THERE MAY EVEN
BE SLOW DANCING!!!
SOLDIERS:
WAAAAAA!!!
So now that the second season is done, and
it’s another ten months – and counting - until the next new episode.
And so I don’t have the books to read
again, don’t have all those plot mysteries to solve, don’t have all that
history to get into.
And so what? There’s always more, even in
the paths I’ve already trodden. There is the Concordance – which promises to
get into all sorts of other stories in this world – and a new Dunk And Egg (and
the last one too,) production of the next season is about to kick in, and the
Winds of Winter is coming. At some point.
Until the next new thing, there is also the
past to trawl through, new depths to explore, new theories regarding the fates
of three Freys, or subtle poisonings. I literally lie awake at night wondering
if the Dragon With Three Heads has to share the same blood, or how many manifestations
of the Bear And The Maiden Fair there are in the story, (I got about nine so
far).
There is always more. I may have read all the books and essays and wiki entries I can,
but there is always more history, more background to fill in, and that’s how I’ll
get through the next 10 months.