Mon
Jul 25 2011 1:00pm
In the Game of Thrones Comic-Con Panel, Everybody Wins

“They managed to successfully sum up in 10 minutes what took me 1200 pages to write,” said George R.R. Martin after a clip show that summed up the entire first season. His light attitude was indicative of the entire Game of Thrones television panel, making it clear that everyone involved really loved being a part of the show, especially Jason Momoa (Khal Drogo), who joked that he was furious when he found out his character died, and spent part of the panel trying to convince GRRM and the showrunners to bring him back.

When the cast walked out, they pretty much all looked different than you would expect. Nikolaj Coster-Waldau (Jamie Lannister) had a pretty crazy beard. Momoa looked more like Conan than Drogo. Emilia Clarke (Dany) had her natural brown hair, which was decidedly un-Targaryen-like. And the most shocking tranformation was Lena Headey (Queen Cersei) who looked more like a hipster with her gigantic sunglasses, weird straw hat, tattoos on her arms, and short wacky hairdo. Pretty much the only one who looked “normal” was Peter Dinklage (Tyrion).

According to creator/showrunners David Benioff and D.B. Weiss, having 5,000-plus pages of A Song of Ice and Fire dropped off on their doorstep was incredibly intimidating after GRRM chose them to adapt it, but both were immediately drawn in. As they developed it, they said that many execs wanted to do the first book as a 2-hour movie, but they just couldn’t imagine that. Finally, they approached GRRM with the idea of doing an HBO series, but they weren’t sure how he would react. When he said he was on board, they were thrilled.

GRRM then asked what part of the story got the panelists “hooked.” Many of them said it was the moment when Jaime pushes Bran out the window. Coster-Waldau said that’s when he knew it was serious. Peter Dinklage, who was surprisingly subdued during the panel, said that it was the Whitewalkers and all of the fantasy elements that hooked him. He joked that he was bored any time he came on screen, then immediately became more invested after he left. He also had another great one-liner when everyone was asked to describe how they thought the series should end. Most said they wanted to “win” or be on the throne, but Dinklage simply said, “Dance number.”

When asked if they were addicted to the books, Emilia Clarke revealed that she read the first book before the filming of the first season and it became her “bible,” with tons of character notes all over the book. But she didn’t want to read ahead because she wanted to be in more or less the same place as her character, so she decided to use the books as a sort of present for herself — when she finished filming season 1, she let herself read book 2, and she plans to follow that method from now on.

GRRM asked Kit Harrington (Jon Snow) if he preferred working with a fake elephant (from a stage play he was recently in) or with the real dog who played Ghost. He said that he loves Copper (Ghost), but it’s hard to work with animals since they don’t always do what you want them to. Copper apparently spent much of his time being happy and excited about the meat Kit often carried around when filming with him instead of looking like the serious and dangerous Ghost.

It was Momoa, however, who stole the panel. In true Hollywood fashion, he was wearing sunglasses in the beginning, but early on he removed them to reveal that he was wearing the distintive black eye makeup of his character. He and Emelia even spoke in the Dothraki tongue! He said it was really neat to talk to someone in a madeup language and be understood.

One extremely interesting tidbit the creators revealed was that Jason’s casting was actually the result of fan discussions. They’d been scouring actors to find someone for Drogo to no avail when they decided to check out the fan discussion boards. You know those lists we’re always creating of our “dream choices” for who gets cast in what role? Well, they saw Momoa on one of those lists. They weren’t familiar with his work (“We didn’t watch much Baywatch,” one said.), but he looked right so they figured they might as well bring him in. The audition that followed was unforgettable. Momoa decided to show that he had what it took for the role: during his audition he ripped off his shirt and started doing a Dothraki dance he made up for Drogo.

Wish you had been there to see that? Well, good news! Though Momoa refused to do it for the Comic-Con audience, it will be an extra on the DVDs for the first season, along with many other cast members’ auditions and lots of artwork and storyboards. Deleted scenes won’t be on the DVDs because they used pretty much all of the footage for the final product that we’re already seen. A pretty good reason, I think.

Another fun tidbit: when Jason was asked who would win in a fight, Conan or Drogo? His answer was unequivocally the Khal!

What does the future hold? Benioff and Weiss said that the second season will stay pretty true to the second book, with more dragons, bigger direwolves, danger in the North, and the introduction of the Red Priestess. However, they think book three (A Storm of Swords) is too big and complex for just one season, so season 3 may diverge from the book a little more and extend into the 4th season... should they get renewed for those seasons. The creators didn’t want to spoil anything for those who hadn’t read the books (which I was very thankful for!), but they said that their goal was to get to the event they called “RW.” They said that those who read the book would understand. GRRM decribed it as the most difficult scene he’s yet had to write in any of the books, and said that he actually had to write every other scene in book 3 first, then come back and make himself write this one. If they get to the point with the series, all of them will be “very happy.”


Juliana Weiss-Roessler has been writing professionally for over 10 years. Currently, she’s an editor for PinkRaygun, a geek girl e-zine, and a food and organic living contributor to Savings.com. She has ghostwritten one sci-fi novel and is now ghostwriting a second one. You can learn more about her writing at WeissRoessler.com or follow her geekery and adventures onTwitter @julweiss.

10 comments
David Thomson
1. ZetaStriker
On a less tasteful note, when asked what his favorite thing about his role was, he said something along the lines of "getting to rape beautiful women", causing everyone at the panel to facepalm . . . everyone but Dinklage, who gave a prompt, approving nod.
wingracer
2. wingracer
Gee, I wonder what that "RW" event they are talking about could be? haha
wingracer
3. sofrina
i only read the first book, but i'm sure "rw" is the moment when we see just how seriously walder frey takes his 'tolls.'
wingracer
4. hawkwing_lb
@ZetaStriker:

Really? That's... Well, shit. There goes any respect I might have had for Jason Momoa as a human being.
wingracer
5. myst44
@4. I'm guessing that comment was in character...
Elio García
6. Egarcia
A small bit of vanity leads me to note that the forum they were visiting for casting ideas was Westeros.org's forum. In fact, when the pilot was comissioned David and Dan both visited the forum and invited fans to start suggesting cast members, and we set up a Casting sub-section in an organized way. I suspect I even know which post David saw -- this one from way back in 2008.

I'm so glad George finally asked Momoa the Conan vs. Drogo question -- I've been suggesting it to journalists for months, but none of them have gotten an answer out of him. Of course, whether the answer would have been the same if asked on the Conan panel, one must of course wonder...

Re: Momoa's remark,

In context, he basically said that he loved that the fantasy genre was no-holds barred these days, that one could do anything in it. So, yes, he said "rape beautiful women", but he also said "tear someone's tongue out through their throat." I don't think he wants to tear anyone's tongue out, and I don't expect he wants to rape anyone. He's talking about how the narrative can do things that push boundaries, that fantasy is no longer the domain of Disney on TV.

Yes, the specific examples he used were not the best since there were doubtless people in the audience with experience of brutal violence (murdered family or friends) and of rape (personally, or of acquaintances) and at the least was insensitive. But he was trying to articulate something that wasn't really about those things except as examples of the sort of boundaries that HBO allowed the show to push.
wingracer
7. jennygadget
"So, yes, he said "rape beautiful women", but he also said "tear someone's tongue out through their throat.""

And yet...only one of these things happens in real life with any statistically significant frequency. So, shockingly enough, I will continue to treat these comments differently.

Also - portraying rape in any media is boundary pushing? Since when?
wingracer
8. hawkwing_lb
I'm not suggesting Momoa actually wants to rape anyone.

But rape is a form of violence which is disproportionately under-reported and under-prosecuted. According to most studies, one in four women will be raped or sexually assaulted during their lifetimes, and one in six men. Other studies place this figure higher. According to a 1986 survey, 33% of men were willing to commit rape if they believed they would get away with it; a study conducted in the last decade found that one in twelve men surveyed had committed acts which meet the legal definition of rape.

By presenting rape as something desirable, even in jest, Momoa has contributed to the prevailing cultural narrative - which prefers not to see that rape is a widespread problem which hurts real people.

So I really don't care if he was talking about narrative pushing-of-boundaries or not.

And, by the way, I don't think depictions of rape are new or in any way edgy. You might be able to make the argument that graphic depictions of sexual violence on screen are new, but film and television have been using sexual violence to drive plots since the dawn of the medium - it's a tired trope that's as old as theatre.

(And now that I've said my piece, I'll remove my Hairy-legged Angry Feminist glasses, and go be an Embittered Socialist elsewhere on the internet for a while.)
Elio García
9. Egarcia
I don't think they're boundary-pushing at all. I was suggesting the context out of which Momoa was speaking

I think Momoa thinks that within the specific context of fantasy, it's boundary-pushing. Which lit-fantasy readers know is not, in fact, true, but his exposure to fantasy literature is extremely limited (and, it seems, fantasy film -- he has apparently never seen Conan the Barbarian).

I think he is/was one of those people who equates fantasy to kid's stuff, to Disney, and so on, so it's no surprise if he'd consider it pushing boundaries to have graphic violence and the like in this genre.

As I said, these were not the best examples he could have chosen. They were, at the very least, insensitive. To perhaps mitigate a little bit, in other interviews he noted that the rape scene with Dany was very hard for him to film because the idea that it bothered him, and if I remembrer correctly Emilia Clarke discussing the same scene said that Momoa was apologetic about having to act out the scene with her.
wingracer
10. tigeraid
Context people, context. Momoa's a great guy and quite funny.

Subscribe to this thread

Receive notification by email when a new comment is added. You must be a registered user to subscribe to threads.
Post a comment