The most spectacle-heavy show on television may have something to say about the ways in which theater influences modern entertainment.
I got into Game of Thrones when season four was just beginning. I remember it vividly because I had stayed up all night one evening bingeing season one, and the next day season two, and then the next day season three. After that, I ran to the bookstore to pick up a copy of “A Game of Thrones” by George R.R. Martin and I prepared myself for season four. Looking back now, I can’t exactly pinpoint how I got through all of that in a matter of days, and it makes me appreciate the fact that I got into the show relatively early. And by all of that, I’m talking about a lot. My three day (going on a fourth day) binge ended with the red wedding, and yet I was still ready for more, and have been since that summer. Now, who knows what that says about me, but in those long days and nights bingeing the show, what I looked forward to most, even when my eyes were drooping at three in the morning, was Tyrion outsmarting someone, Cersei devising a plan, Varys speaking to literally anyone, Daenerys and Jorah contemplating how best to move onward to Westeros. While Bran’s fall from that tower in episode one hooked me, all of the one-on-one conversations from that point on captured my heart.
What often feels most known about the show are the dragons, the white walkers, the violence, and the nudity. When Game of Thrones is referenced on another show or piece of entertainment, it’s typically the dragons or the medieval-like fantasy spectacle that’s drawn on for its iconism. That said, amongst all of the spectacle and shock value on the show, it’s easy to forget that Game of Thrones is really complex and intricate television. After all, about two-thirds of the series involves no dragons or white walkers at all, but rather, people talking in dimly lit rooms, speaking of houses and characters who may not have completely established themselves in the minds of audiences yet. And if you think about the show in terms of that, it’s evident a possible reason as to the show’s current and lasting popularity is because of the way it values words in a visual medium.
Game of Thrones was adapted from George R.R. Martin’s “A Song of Ice and Fire,” a series of books so long, they haven’t yet been finished. While a good chunk of the books is devoted to descriptions of people, places, and food, much like the show, some of the most important moments are those of conversations between people, or one character relaying something to another. I would say no other show currently on television knows the art of the monologue like Thrones does.
Take for instance one of the absolute best scenes on a television show in general, Tyrion’s speech during his trial in season four.
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