What gives Dragon House advantage over recent seasons The game of thrones is the source material. But the series is based on George R. R. MartinX Fire and blood it’s not just another adaptation, the beauty of the series is that the book is a scientific exposition of a character named Archmaester Gildain that takes into account various sources, namely septons, masters, and even a guy named Mushroom. These accounts usually contradict each other, making Archmaester Gildain himself an unreliable narrator. Ryan Kondal who developed the series with Martin and co-hosted the Season 1 show with Miguel Sapochnik It has used the unreliability of the narrator gives the show an edge. Recently Sara Hessone of the writers and executive producer of the series, told how this fact helped the creators to tell their own story.
Martin recounts the history of the Targaryens in Fire and blood books as part of the backstory of his series Song of Ice and Fire. Hess says, “He makes it very, very clear that this is an unreliable narrative. So no one in this book really knows what happened.” It was in this ignorance that the creators found an opportunity to tell a version of their own story: “Three separate reporters say what they think might have happened and contradict each other, which gives us as adapters incredible leeway because we have no idea what happened.” The final episode, “We Light the Way,” is a great example of this, as we see Ser Christon Cole grab and kill Ser Joffery the Kissing Knight during a dinner that takes even avid book readers by surprise. happened during a tournament planned by King Viserys.
The creators also used this discrepancy to establish the show’s patriarchal aspect: “one of the things we ran into when we started thinking about it was that history is written by the winners, history is written by the men.” It’s the men talking about what they think happened, and they’re probably wrong,” Hess said. long away Dragon House managed to surprise even the most avid fans of books with his twists and turns.
Otherwise, Claire Kilnerthe director of Episode 4, “King of the Narrow Sea”, exploited the unreliability of the stories by depicting the closeness between Rainier (Millie Alcock) and Demon (Matt Smith), we see that they go to a certain extent before the last one recedes. The audience is left in that sweet spot of knowing and not knowing as both decide to deliver a narrative that suits their own purpose. Also, we’re told in the books that Damon is actually teaching Rainier how to seduce Ser Kriston, which was left out of the series: “It’s great that we have the core, the story, the characters and all that, but inside. that we have a huge amount of leeway and the freedom to tell our own story, which is great,” says Hess.
New episode Dragon House drops out every Sunday. You can read Hess’ comments below:
Source: Collider

