#anti casey bloys
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unknown-terrain ¡ 4 months ago
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HBO Boss threw shade @ GRRM; DEADLINE: Looking ahead to next Emmy season, you already have House of the Dragon. What do you think about its Emmy chances with fans being divided over Season 2? BLOYS: Well, I’m not sure that the fans were divided over Season 2. DEADLINE: Maybe just George R.R. Martin. BLOYS: Yes, maybe one fan was. But no, the show did really, really well. I expect that will be in competition.
LOL, he wishes it was just one fan.
Casey Bloys is in denial about HotD S2's mixed reaction just as he was for the GoT S8 backlash back then. I know he's protecting his brand but it's saying a lot how he glosses over the audience's true reaction and flat out lies. He should be especially concerned about HOTD currently because it's HBO's most expensive show atm but the viewership ratings have gone down and they really can't afford to lose more of the audience with a big budget show like that. Also HotD is nowhere the phenomenon that GoT was.
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levelofyoureye ¡ 2 months ago
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hey so those of y’all in the marauders fandom who are saying you’ll watch if ben barnes plays sirius and andrew garfield plays remus… better take those anti-JKR disclaimers out of your bios!
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iheartbookbran ¡ 2 years ago
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On the one hand, of course, I despise the idea of the Conquest being adapted for television (or worse, a movie) because to me this is yet another example of how the character of Daenerys is and will continue to be the franchise’s biggest and most profitable asset and HBO will not hesitate to keep on making money off of her image and House Targaryen’s popularity as a whole while at the same time refusing to acknowledge the terrible treatment she received during the last season of the original show.
But on the other hand I think it will be super funny to see how Targ antis will keep on crying about their erroneous conceptions of imperialism and white supremacy while simultaneously tuning in every week to watch each new episode of the Evil Targaryen Show as if Casey Bloys is paying them personally and also latching onto the most conservative, reactionary characters at their disposal just for the sake of it.
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yocalio ¡ 5 years ago
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WELP someone tell me this is fake. This is fake click bait right??? They get roasted in this article anyway lmao.
“HBO itself is fairly relaxed about Benioff and Weiss toddling off to make their enormous fortune and anger Tolkien fans by suddenly turning Gandalf into a vengeful dragon-riding bastard who leaves halfway through the Battle of the Pelennor Fields to torch the Shire.
"Any place that they end up at would be lucky to have them," HBO President of Programming Casey Bloys told Deadline yesterday. "I want talent to make as much money as they can."
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mrmichaelchadler ¡ 6 years ago
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TCA 2018, Day 1: HBO's Deadwood Returns, My Brilliant Friend, Sharp Objects and More
It’s the first morning of my first trip to the Television Critics Association press tour, and I’m nervous. Sitting outside a ballroom at the Beverly Hilton, my mind races down the F.A.Q. one might keep tucked away in one’s brain for just such an occasion—Where do I sit? Will there be somewhere for me to plug in my computer? Should I ask questions? Can I ask questions? What if it’s a dumb question and they think I’m a fraud? Wait, am I a fraud? I’m a fraud, aren’t I? Oh god, what am I doing with my life?—when another writer, The A.V. Club’s Danette Chavez, appears like a miracle at my side and kindly mother-hens me toward the door, answering the more rational of my questions in a matter-of-fact way. She tells me about seating and power outlets and photos and so on; she assures me it won’t be nearly as overwhelming as it might seem.
Then we walk into the ballroom and within minutes I’m at a Delos counter, forced to choose: am I a black hat, or a white hat? Polite inquiries are also made about the bigness of my head, a line of questioning never depicted on “Westworld.” I confirm that yes, I have a very large head, and walk away, questioning the nature of my reality.
HBO’s panel isn’t nearly the terrifying experience I dreamed up, but overwhelming is, in fact, the best word for it. After selecting my black hat—for sartorial reasons—there are no more requests to interrogate my innermost nature. What there is instead is news, and it starts with news of the sort that TV writers simply lose their minds for—or this one does, at least.
Casey Bloys, President, HBO Programming: “Deadwood” Returns
The “Deadwood” movie is officially alive. Bloys starts his executive session off with that right-out-of-the-gate announcement, telling the TCA that the next, and presumably final, saga of David Milch’s revered Western has been greenlit by the network. “We're looking at an October start date,” he told the audience. “Dan Minahan is gonna direct it. Carolyn Strauss, Gregg Feinberg, David Milch, all of these people have worked very hard to get this together … it has been a logistics nightmare, getting all the cast members' schedules lined up, but we are there and it is greenlighted.”
When pressed, Bloys says that the network is hoping for an air date in the spring of 2019, but feels we really ought to be satisfied with the fact of its existence alone, which: fair. 
It’s easily the biggest, but is far from the only, piece of news from Bloys. He also confirms that “Confederate,” the controversial series from “Game of Thrones” heads David Benioff and D.B. Weiss, still has a pulse: “[Weiss and Beinoff] have gotta finish the final season of 'Game of Thrones' ...  And of course [they] have the 'Star Wars' movie. When they figure out their schedules they’ll come back to us. But nothing has been written and so no change in status there.” 
Also of note: repeated assurances that the AT&T/Time-Warner merger will not “dilute the HBO brand,” despite a tone of a recently leaked meeting between the new head of Warner Media and HBO’s CEO: “No one is asking us to take pitches of a 'Love Boat' reboot or anything like that.”
Other highlights: the five potential “Game of Thrones” spinoffs have been narrowed to one, though others may still be developed; “Game of Thrones” will return in the first half of 2019; “I have a newsflash, Meryl Streep is very, very good” in season two of “Big Little Lies”; buying “The Tale” at Sundance was a positive experience and he imagines they’ll do more of the sort in future. 
“Last Week Tonight with John Oliver”: On the power of saying “I can prove that’s true.”
To try to summarize Oliver’s energetic conversation with TCA writers is a fool’s errand, and I shall not attempt it—when the subject of such a panel is witty, well-informed, and thorough for a living, his answers to questions will be pretty darn good. So let’s just stick with this particular gem, delivered in response to a question about the episode in which he bought, and then forgave, $15 million in medical debt:
“It’s one thing to say, you know, there are predatory companies that can buy people’s medical debt, and then turn their lives upside-down in the process, and the barrier of entry is too low to get into this. Saying that is true, but it feels like it kind of lands a little harder occasionally if you say and the barrier is too low to get into this, and I can prove that’s true. I am now a medical debt company, and I have done this. It’s kind of like showing that you have the ingredients for an atom bomb, and you shouldn’t have had access to those in the same way—I mean, it’s very rare that it works particularly that way, although, it did kind of with the church, as well, because it’s one thing to say churches are tax-exempt, and they can promise you anything and demand money. It’s another thing to say, 'I am now a church. Send me money. We will cure your Lupus. Send me fucking money.' That feels like you are kind of proving your argument in a slightly more visceral way. So that’s why sometimes we engage in those real-world examples.”
He also repeatedly invited the Olsen twins to prove that there are, in fact, two of them.
“My Brilliant Friend”: Elena Ferrante is “Like a Ghost”
The anonymity of the writer who works under the name Elena Ferrante is not what makes her books so good, but it’s a bit tantalizing all the same. Saverio Costanzo, director of the series adaptation of Ferrante’s book “My Brilliant Friend,” seems to agree. 
“We have been [emailing] each other since the beginning ... I don’t know who she is. I am not curious to know, actually. She was like writing with us from the beginning … She was collaborating a lot. She was not defending the novel she wrote.  She was just trying to guard us from making mistakes. She is, in my opinion, a very good script writer ... She can be very tough, but she can be also very gentle. But, you know, it’s –- like [working] with a ghost somehow. So, I’ve been writing [email] to someone who I don’t know who she is.”
Even in a crowded slate, “My Brilliant Friend” stood out. Look for it this fall.
“Jane Fonda in Five Acts”: A legend gets unsurprisingly candid
The phrase “living legend” gets tossed around with relative ease, but here’s a situation where it actually applies. The subject of HBO’s upcoming documentary takes to the stage with director and producer Susan Lacy for a candid conversation peppered with moments of refreshing, even moving, self-awareness. When asked what change in her life had the biggest impact on who she is, Fonda says “the Vietnam War,” without hesitation, adding that “prior to my becoming an anti-war activist, I had lived an eventful life, an interesting life, but a meaningless life. I was a kind of a pretty girl who made movies and [was] kind of hedonistic. And so when I decided to throw in my lot with the antiwar movement, everything shifted. Everything.”
That’s a pretty good indicator of the tenor of “Jane Fonda in Five Acts,” something Lacy echoes when she’s asked about the way the documentary opens (which I won’t ruin here, but it involves Richard Nixon): “I wanted a signal that this was not a film about a movie star. I wanted to signal that right up front. Jane is a great movie star, she's a great actress but that is not I think the heart of her story.”
“Camping”: A charm offensive and a conspicuous absence 
The tempo for the session centered on “Camping,” the latest comedy-that’s-kind-of-a-drama from Jenni Konner and Lena Dunham, is set by star Jennifer Garner, who begins the proceedings by trying to chat with co-star David Tennant, appearing via satellite, who can’t hear her greetings at first—"Can you hear us now? Tardis to David Tennant," she says, to the delight of presumably many but certainly one (me). Before long, it’s all pelvic floors and paper planners, rattlesnakes and under-crackers, and references to a 400-hour gag reel of nothing but giggles. Fun and effervescence, loads of enthusiasm. Quite a show.
But it’s hard not to wonder how much of that conspicuous enthusiasm is meant to counteract the absence of Lena Dunham, first slated to appear in person, then via satellite, before HBO executive Amy Gravitt tells the audience that Dunham “got hit by the flu in New York.” The flu happens, that’s not weird. This particular flu, however, comes on the heels of the announcement that Dunham and Konner have parted ways as producing partners. 
Konner, asked about the split, says that she and the absent Dunham “feel super lucky to have had eight amazing years together. That's really long for a collaboration. And we just want to do different things. It's like, there's no drama to be found there. It's just work. It's just about the creative process.”
During the panel, Dunham sends a tweet about Frances McDormand. Frances McDormand is cool, that’s not weird.
“Sharp Objects”: Ending on time
The bulk of the session on “Sharp Objects,” HBO’s excellent miniseries adaptation of Gillian Flynn’s first novel, centers on characters, their language, their habits, and their sweating habits. That’s fitting, as Flynn’s novel is a dark character study disguised as a gothic southern murder mystery, wrapping a complicated, sometimes unlikable female protagonist in the kind of page-turning, reach-for-the-popcorn trappings one looks for in a beach read. 
Great as that conversation is—listening to Patricia Clarkson, Chris Messina, breakout Eliza Scanlen, and unknown quantity Amy Adams talk about their craft is no small thing—the real news of the panel comes from showrunner Marti Noxon, who fields a question initially directed at Flynn with regard to a second season of the series. 
“We’re not talking about a season two,” Noxon says firmly. “This is it.” And then, with a chuckle, “So bask in it while you can.”
A series ending where its source material does shouldn’t be surprising, but “The Handmaid’s Tale” is set to get up to 10 seasons, and while part of me (and many others) would love a chance to see more of Clarkson and Adams sparring, there’s something reassuring and satisfying about knowing that this limited series is, in fact, limited. 
“Pod Save America”: O brave new world, that has such cameras in it
Like the “2 Dope Queens” before them, the gentlemen of the podcast “Pod Save America” are putting down their headsets and taking their show to your eyeballs. Asked about the changes the show will see now that it’s headed to television, hosts Tommy Vietor and Jon Lovett had two contrasting responses.
Vietor, all facts: “This will be four episodes from various locations across the country that will air as one-hour specials on Friday nights, [which] will be very similar to [our] live shows with some different ... pieces that are special for HBO.”
Lovett, blowing minds: “Now, like, one of the biggest differences between the podcast and the show is that we're gonna use cameras, visual cameras, so [you] can see people, because that was something that HBO made clear to us is actually really important to their format. Being able to see and not only hear, which is obviously a learning experience for us, but [one] we think is very exciting.  
Other highlights from day one: A very promising panel on National Geographic’s “Valley of the Boom,” a hybrid narrative and documentary series that centers on the dotcom bubble with a streak of the irreverence of “The Big Short”; an appearance by Jeff Goldblum in support of his just-announced NatGeo series, “The Curiosity of Jeff Goldblum”; drinking a smoothie called “Bernard’s Brain Stimulant” or something like that and worrying I was going to find out I’m a Cylon—er, sorry, a Host. Wrong show. 
Day 2: “Chopped,” Bobby Brown, a feminist British murder mystery, and Tom Arnold’s “”Hunt for Trump Tapes.”
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gameofthronesitaly ¡ 7 years ago
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HBO sta pianificando una tattica anti-leak per il finale di serie
HBO sta pianificando una tattica anti-leak per il finale di serie
La produzione di Game of Thrones si affida ad una tattica old-school per preservare il mistero dietro l’attesissimo finale di serie dell’ottava stagione.
Secondo Casey Bloys di HBO:
“So che gireranno finali multipli così nessuno potrà sapere quale sarà l’effettiva conclusione dello show”
“Con uno show con così lunga durata devi farlo. Perché la gente viene a conoscenza delle riprese (Come…
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njawaidofficial ¡ 7 years ago
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'Game of Thrones' Guide: The Definitive Resource for Season 7
http://styleveryday.com/2017/09/10/game-of-thrones-guide-the-definitive-resource-for-season-7/
'Game of Thrones' Guide: The Definitive Resource for Season 7
Read the entirety of The Hollywood Reporter’s coverage of the seventh season of ‘Thrones.’
Here’s a piece of Game of Thrones trivia that you probably didn’t know. Were you aware that the number of people who live in King’s Landing is the same number of Thrones stories The Hollywood Reporter published over the course of season seven?
Okay, that’s a slight exaggeration. We didn’t publish millions of Thrones stories this season — just dozens and dozens, well more than a hundred, and that’s not even accounting for the dozens of interviews, theories, news items and more we covered in the preseason. It’s not impossible that you missed our coverage of the historic HBO series, but it is improbable, and it’s certainly not for lack of trying on our end.
For your immediate and future reading pleasure, please feel free to bookmark this spot as your one-stop shop and definitive resource for all things Game of Thrones season seven.
Episode One: “Dragonstone”
• Season 7 Premiere: TV Review • Seven Key Scenes From the Premiere • Every Season Premiere, Ranked • Game of Thrones Premiere Crashes HBO Website • TV Ratings: Premiere Crushes Previous Audience Record • Game of Thrones Premiere Enlisted Jon Snow to Help Prevent Spoilers • Kit Harington Discusses Jon Snow’s Past and Future Ambitions • David Benioff and Dan Weiss Announce New HBO Series: Confederate • Benioff and Weiss Defend Confederate Sci-Fi Slave Drama: “The Concern Is Real” • Ed Sheeran Lands in Westeros • Even Ed Sheeran Is Freaking Out About His Cameo • Ed Sheeran’s Twitter Account Back Online, Hours After Disappearing • Ed Sheeran Denies Deleting Twitter Account Because of Thrones Backlash • Rory McCann on The Hound’s Fiery Future • Ramin Djawadi on Traveling From Westeros to Westworld • John Bradley Describes Shooting Premiere’s Filthiest Scene • How Daenerys’ Homecoming Was Designed • Director Recalls Ed Sheeran’s One Request on Set • Sophie Turner on Graduating From the HBO Series • How the Season 7 Premiere Sets the Stage for the Endgame • A Closer Look at Arya Stark’s Red Wedding Response • Podcast: How Season 7’s Premiere Forecasts a Major Death • What the Hound’s Story Says About Season 7’s Future • A Firsthand Account of HBO’s Comic-Con ‘Winter is Here’ Activation • The Night King Comes for the Comic-Con Panel • Comic-Con Trailer Teases Jon and Dany’s First Meeting • Watch the Trailer for Season 7’s Second Episode • What’s Coming in “Stormborn” • New “Stormborn” Photos Tease a Violent Confrontation • Must-See Moment: Return of the King (and Queen) Whisperers
Episode Two: “Stormborn”
• Game of Thrones Delivers Fire, Blood and Casualties in Epic Battle Scene • David Benioff and Dan Weiss Explain Arya Stark’s Bittersweet Reunion • A ‘Game of Thrones’ Spinoff Wouldn’t Air Until “At Least a Year” After Final Season • HBO’s Casey Bloys Defends Slave Drama From ‘Game of Thrones’ Creators: “It’s a Risk Worth Taking” • HBO’s Slavery Drama ‘Confederate’ Faces Minefield of “Fundamentally Problematic” Issues • The Bachelorette Borrowed a Location From Game of Thrones • HBO, Russia’s Amedia Strike Exclusive Deal • Carice van Houten on Playing a More Measured Melisandre • John Bradley on Sam���s Second Sickening Season 7 Scene • Nathalie Emmanuel Discusses That “Emotional” Sex Scene • Pilou Asbæk on Becoming a Maniac as Euron Greyjoy • Gemma Whelan Weighs in on Yara’s Future and that Elemental Sea Battle • Seven Key Scenes From “Stormborn” • The Good News About Cersei’s Very Bad Discovery • Podcast: Is There a Traitor in Daenerys’ Army? • A Historic Meeting Goes Down in the Trailer For “The Queen’s Justice” • Jon Snow Arrives at Dragonstone in New Season 7 Photos • Must-See Moment: The Lion’s Roar
Episode Three: “The Queen’s Justice”
• How the Most Anticipated Meeting Yet Played Out • Game of Thrones Bosses Break Down Season 7’s Most Important Encounter Yet • HBO Responds to Anti-Slavery Show #NoConfederate Campaign • HBO Networks Hit by Cyber Attack • HBO Hack: Insiders Fear Leaked Emails as FBI Joins Investigation • Richard Madden Joins Netflix Comedy Ibizia • Podcast: Will Jon Snow Ever Learn His Secret Origin? • Ranking the Highlights From That Epic First Meeting • How Game of Thrones is Building Up Some Serious Jon Snow Hype • Forecasting a Deadly New Prophecy • Every Dornish Death, Ranked • A Toast to the Wines of Westeros • A History of the King in the North • Grey Worm Star Shares His Season 7 War Stories • Conleth Hill on Varys’ Ominous Future • Indira Varma on Ellaria Sand’s “Brilliantly Cruel” Fate • Daenerys Needs Jon Snow’s Help in “The Spoils of War” • The Westeros Avengers Assemble in New Photos
Episode Four: “The Spoils of War”
• Massive Battle Leaves Jaime Lannister’s Fate in Doubt • Seven Key Moments from the Loot Train Battle • MLB Pitcher Noah Syndergaard Scores Thrones Cameo • Director Matt Shakman on “Dealing Death From the Sky” • What’s Next for Jaime Lannister After That Big Battle • Bronn of the Blackwater’s Seven Best Moments • Showrunners Reveal the Dark Side of Arya and Sansa’s Reunion • An Overview of Arya Stark’s New Weapon • Theon Greyjoy Faces an Uncertain Future • Jon Snow Faces the Truth in “Eastwatch” Trailer • Photos for “Eastwatch” Tease the Fiery Battle’s Fallout
Episode Five: “Eastwatch”
• Game of Thrones Just Set the Stage for Its Most Important Battle Yet • Game of Thrones Casually Dropped a Legitimate Jon Snow Shocker • Showrunners Discuss the White Walker War Plan • Brienne and Arya Duel in Star Wars Parody • New Episode Leaks • Star Expects Thrones to Ditch Digital Scripts After HBO Hack • Peter Dinklage Asks Fans to Stop Buying Huskies Because They Look Like Direwolves • Joe Dempsie on Returning as Gendry • Nikolaj Coster-Waldau on Jaime’s Emotional News • Jerome Flynn on Bronn Wrangling Lions and Battling Dragons • Director Matt Shakman on Walking the Line of War and Reveals  • Director of Photography Reveals Loot Train Battle War Stories • Seven Key Scenes From “Eastwatch” • Ranking the Eastwatch Eight’s Death Odds • Podcast: What’s Happening in Winterfell? • What Gendry’s Return Means for Game of Thrones‘ End Game • What an Early George R.R. Martin Outline Means for the End • With Two Episodes Left, Death Beckons for Jon Snow • What the Photos Tell Us About “Beyond the Wall”
Episode Six: “Beyond the Wall”
• How the Deadly “Beyond the Wall” Sets Up the Season 7 Finale • Benioff and Weiss Explain The Death of the Dragon • HBO Announces Season 7 Finale Title and Run Time • Richard Dormer on Defying Death Once Again • Iain Glen on the Targaryen Army’s Devastating Loss • Kristofer Hivju on Tormund’s Chaotic Moment • Director Alan Taylor on Bringing Down a Dragon • Podcast: A Closer Look at a New Jon Snow Mystery • Seven Key Moments From “Beyond the Wall” • What That Devastating Death Means for the Series Finale • The Historic Moment That Could Redefine Everything • The Cast Previews Season 7’s Final Episode • Predictions for the Season 7 Finale • What to Expect From the Season 7 Finale, Based on the Trailer • What to Expect From the Season 7 Finale, Based on the Photos • The Game of Thrones Finale, And 7 Other Things to Watch This Weekend
Episode Seven: “The Dragon and the Wolf”
• Season 7 Finale Shatters Status Quo, Sets Stage for a Violent End • Benioff and Weiss Explain the Royal Jon Snow Twist • Critic’s Notebook: Rousing Finale Caps an Uneven Season • Why the Wait For the Final Season Isn’t a Big Deal (Anymore) • Finale Hits Record High With 16.5 Million Viewers • The Surprising VFX Inspiration for Daenerys’ Dragons • Podcast: What Will Happen in the Final Season Premiere? • A Tribute to Littlefinger • Seven Key Scenes From the Finale • What That Destructive Ending Means for the Final Season • The Stark Truth About the Night King • Seven Predictions for the Final Season • Kristofer Hivju on Tormund’s “Frightening” Fate • Isaac Hempstead Wright on the Biggest Bran Theories • Liam Cunningham: “The Great War Has Begun” • John Bradley on that “Game-Changing” Jon Snow News  • Director Reveals Secrets Behind the Season 7 Finale • What Game of Thrones Still Needs to Accomplish With Six Episodes Left • The 15 Best Quotes From Season 7 • The Final Images From Westeros, For Now • The Season 7 Finale, One Week Later • Every Season Finale, Ranked • Every Season Seven Episode, Ranked • Every Major Season 7 Death, Ranked • Every Season, Ranked • Every Episode, Ranked Through Seven Seasons
Follow THR.com/GameOfThrones all offseason long for news, interviews, theories and more.
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#7 #Definitive #Game #Guide #Resource #Season #Thrones
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izazilli ¡ 7 years ago
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Estreia sĂŠtima temporada de "Game of Thrones"
New Post has been published on https://www.izazilli.com/2017/07/17/estreia-setima-temporada-de-game-of-thrones/
Estreia sĂŠtima temporada de "Game of Thrones"
Neste domingo (16/07), como de costume, os canais HBO/Max abrem seu sinal e streaming para que o grande público possa assistir à estreia da sÊtima temporada de sua aclamada sÊrie Game of Thrones.
Composta de sete episódios, a nova temporada tambÊm estreia nos EUA neste domingo, enquanto os alemães terão de esperar atÊ segunda-feira para assistir a Dragonstone (Pedra do dragão), título original da nova fase da sÊrie.
Muito mais sangue
Mesmo antes da atual temporada, que tradicionalmente estreia em abril, houve várias especulações sobre a continuação da série. Os dois trailers disponibilizados pela HBO em maio e junho últimos forneciam poucas informações – e, ao mesmo tempo, muitos motivos para especulações.
Mas uma coisa ĂŠ certa: a sĂŠtima temporada serĂĄ sangrenta. Todos os sinais apontam para guerra.
Os exércitos estão a postos em todo o continente Westeros. A batalha final pelo Trono de Ferro em King’s Landing parece inevitável. Além disso, os trailers dão a entender que, na sétima temporada, chegou a hora dos temidos Caminhantes Brancos (White Walkers).
Na nova temporada, batalha pelo Trono de Ferro parece inevitĂĄvel.
Um clima apocalíptico reina sobre o universo de Game of Thrones. Mas serå que depois do sÊtimo capítulo da sÊtima temporada tudo acabou? Não, a sÊrie vai continuar. Uma oitava temporada jå estå em planejamento. Embora ela deva ter somente seis episódios, cada um deles deverå ter a duração de um longa-metragem.
Segundo o diretor de programação da HBO, Casey Bloys, os scripts ainda não foram concluídos, não se podendo planejar a produção. Por esse motivo, Ê possível que a oitava e última temporada estreie somente em 2019, acrescentou Bloys em entrevista à revista americana Entertainment Weekly.
Curta participação do cantor Ed Sheeran
lÊm de velhos conhecidos heróis e anti-heróis da saga, a sÊtima temporada traz ao menos um rosto novo. O cantor britânico Ed Sheeran participa como convidado, podendo ser visto durante cerca de cinco minutos, revelou recentemente Sheeran, explicando que cantarå para Arya Stark (interpretada por Maisie Williams).
O artista nĂŁo informou, no entanto, que mĂşsica irĂĄ interpretar, mas adiantou que seu personagem nĂŁo vai morrer. Maisie Williams ĂŠ uma grande admiradora do cantor ruivo.
Vårias premiaçþes
Game of Thrones é uma série de superlativos. Em sua capa, a revista Time chegou mesmo a intitular a produção da HBO como a “série mais popular do mundo”. Uma suposição apoiada pelos recordes de audiência.
Além disso, a aclamada saga já ganhou um total de 38 Emmys – mais que o dobro de qualquer outra série nos 70 anos de história do principal prêmio de TV em todo o mundo. Também no Emmy deste ano, que deverá acontecer em 17 de setembro próximo, a série de Fantasia está novamente entre os favoritos.
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gameofthronesitaly ¡ 7 years ago
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New Post has been published on http://www.gameofthronesitaly.it/2017/09/14/hbo-piano-anti-leak-finale-serie/
HBO sta pianificando una tattica anti-leak per il finale di serie
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La produzione di Game of Thrones si affida ad una tattica old-school per preservare il mistero dietro l’attesissimo finale di serie dell’ottava stagione.
Secondo Casey Bloys di HBO:
“So che gireranno finali multipli così nessuno potrà sapere quale sarà l’effettiva conclusione dello show”
“Con uno show con così lunga durata devi farlo. Perché la gente viene a conoscenza delle riprese (Come abbiamo visto le riprese rubate in tutti gli shoot esterni l’anno scorso in spagna – quinn). Quindi opteranno per questa soluzione, più riprese finali in modo che nessuno sappia quale sarà il finale definitivo.“
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Facendo così, sembra che nemmeno gli attori stessi sapranno il finale, dovranno guardarlo anche loro come noi. Questa “tattica” è stata fatta in passato anche per i Soprano e Breaking Bad.
HBO al momento non conferma o smentisce la cosa.
Recentemente è stato anche chiesto a D&D come si sarebbero comportati per evitare i leaks nell’ottava stagione, Dan Weiss ha risposto così:
“Non ti diciamo come pensiamo di comportarci. In caso lo facessimo ci sarebbe già qualcuno pronto a trovare il modo di aggirare la cosa”
La produzione dell’ottava stagione inizierà ad Ottobre e si dice che terminerà intorno ad Agosto 2018. Proprio per questo è quasi certo che l’ottava stagione inizierà nell’inverno 2018 o nei primi mesi del 2019.
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La pre-production è già iniziata a Settembre, rimanete sintonizzati perché a breve faremo un articolo a riguardo! 😉
Alex&Quin fonte
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