But where the book eases you into a lot of the machinations, the show just drops you into the middle of it. My girlfriend has been struggling to figure out exactly what's happening, and I completely sympathize.
Even I wonder who's who, what's going on, and why every third person has to remind me that winter is coming when it's currently snowing in the shot!
It makes for difficult viewing and I wonder if maybe the producers could have spent a little more time and money on explication instead of paying actresses to take their tops off. Some of the sex makes sense--Bran's tragedy could only have been explained with a sex scene. The rest is just titillation for its own sake. Just a thought.
Draco Mallfoy's creepier little brother? |
Which leads me to my final thought. Just a musing really. I figure if you're going to make a book into a movie, or just re-create the story of someone else, you ought to bring something new to the table. Game of Thrones revels in spectacle and the book succeeds in places where a television show necessarily cannot.
Namely, the bits in people's heads; the backstory, the motivations, and abundant plots and schemes. The show should fill those in, but really needs to depart from reproducing the book shot-for-shot on film.
This applies to any production of a book into film, though, be it for TV or cinema or whatever. Once a story's been told, it's done, move on. Fanboy wish fulfillment isn't a good enough reason to remake something. Moral of the story: Give us something new.
Moving on. Had I never read the books, I don't think I'd last watching the show. It's too deep, and the learning curve is ridiculous. And having read the first book, I don't know. It's a beautiful show without only minor flaws. Just feels a little superfluous.
Am I going to keep watching? Heck yeah. Am I going to watch season two? Definitely. Maybe even season three when the time comes. Is it great TV? Meh. Battlestar: Galactica was better.
HBO suffers from the false assumption that in order to sell it's product, it needs to provide at lest 10%-15% soft-pornographic material. While George R.R. Martin is somewhat crude and gritty in his books, the HBO adaption is far more sexualized than it needs to be. One of the things that they did with the sex scenes I thought was smart, is they actually revealed some of the character's inner thoughts that you would have only known about had you read the book. So kudos to them on that.
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