Game of Thrones’ director reveals key details about Jon Snow and Daenerys Targaryen
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| Game of Thrones’ director reveals key details about Jon Snow and Daenerys Targaryen |
Cautioning: This article contains spoilers for the most recent Game of Thrones scene, "Past the Wall."
When we were acquainted with the universe of Game of Thrones each one of those years prior, it immediately subverted fans' desires of exactly who the legend was by murdering Ned Stark nine scenes in. However, George R.R. Martin, who's been composing A Song of Ice and Fire for over 20 years now, has known who the story has been about this time.
In any event, as per Game of Thrones chief Alan Taylor, who came back to the show in the wake of helming season 1's "Baelor" and "Fire and Blood." In a posthumous meeting with Deadline for "Past the Wall," he uncovered that amid the recording of season 1, Martin went to the Game of Thrones set in Malta and transparently examined certain things he had made arrangements for his book arrangement. As per Taylor, Martin wasn't as monitored about that kind of thing at the time, given that the show still couldn't seem to end up noticeably the overall wonder it now is.
Something or other Martin told Taylor? That in spite of the majority of the characters in the show, A Song of Ice and Fire was truly Jon Snow and Daenerys Targaryen's story.
"[Martin] insinuated the way that Jon and Dany were the point, sort of," Taylor told Deadline. "That, at the time, there was a gigantic, immense range of characters, and Jon was a modest, you know, knave child. So it wasn't clear to us at the time, yet he sorted of say things that influenced it to clear that the meeting and the union of Jon and Dany were kind of the purpose of the arrangement."
What's less sure—and Taylor is holding off on disclosing certain things as a result of what may occur in season 8—is if Martin additionally implied that Jon and Dany's merging would likewise be a sentimental one; there is positively an abundance of book proof to propose to such an extent. In the show, in any case, it's plainly beginning to travel that way.
Taylor additionally exposed a well known hypothesis that has developed after "Past the Wall." After concentrating on a long shot of Longclaw, Jon's Valyrian steel sword, the eye shade of the sword's handle seemed to change for a brief moment, which persuaded that maybe Bran may have been warging into Longclaw.
This Is Insider's Kim Renfro proposed that the sword might've recently been iced over and got wet, causing whatever had rolled out Longclaw's shading improvement to wash away. What's more, Taylor, who knew the shoot needed to make a slice to demonstrate the water on Jon immediately solidifying, concurred.
"I know there was talk about beginning to demonstrate that procedure, thus they presumably amped it up and utilized whatever they could to demonstrate the move. So I believe that is a decent hypothesis and I'm going to run with that one until the point that I take a gander at it all the more intently and check whether I can make sense of what's happening."
Also, as for what Viserion truly may be? Taylor can't state either, albeit like past Game of Thrones chief Matt Shakman he contrasted Viserion with something like an atomic weapon.
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| Game of Thrones’ director reveals key details about Jon Snow and Daenerys Targaryen |
"It's the following scene's concern to choose what to call him," Taylor told This Is Insider. "I do know how he acts later on, and I know a few things about what occurs with him. Some really enormous things are drawing closer. They now have this weapon and the amusement changes quick, as you'll see."




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