‘Game of Thrones’: Will Littlefinger Turn Sansa Dark?

‘Game of Thrones’: Will Littlefinger Turn Sansa Dark? – The Hollywood Reporter

April 24, 2015 8:00am PT by Aaron Couch

Sophie Turner weighs in on what the young Stark's alliance means for her character: "Sansa disguises her true feelings very well.” Helen Sloan/courtesy HBO

Sophie Turner weighs in on what the young Stark’s alliance means for her character: “Sansa disguises her true feelings very well.”

Is Sansa (Sophie Turner) headed down a dark path?

Game of Thrones fans have fretted about Sansa allying herself more closely with the devious Littlefinger (Aidan Gillen), whose list of despicable acts is quite lengthy. (Remember poor Ros, or the less likable Lysa?)

Sansa adopted darker clothes and hair during the tail end of season four, prompting viewers to toss around the phrase “Dark Sansa,” and Sunday’s episode provided further evidence that she was turning away from the good guys, when she rejected  Brienne’s (Gwendoline Christie) offer of protection.

See more ‘Game of Thrones’: What Happens After You’re Killed Off       

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But Turner dismisses talk that Sansa is turning dark, saying that she is merely transitioning from pawn to player in the game of thrones.

“When people say dark Sansa, they think she’s going to be bad. But she’s still a Stark, you guys. She’s not a Lannister,” Turner tells The Hollywood Reporter.

In the upcoming episode, Littlefinger, who is ostensibly a Lannister ally but has a much longer game in mind, will provide Sansa a path to avenge the wrongs done to the Starks.

“You loved your family. Avenge them,” he says in the trailer.

That could mean bad news for a number of houses. The Lannisters take the bulk of the blame for her family’s problems, but there’s also the Freys, who hosted the Red Wedding that resulted in the deaths of her brother Robb (Richard Madden) and mother Catelyn (Michelle Fairley). There’s also Roose Bolton (Michael McElhatton), Robb’s treacherous bannerman who helped orchestrate the Red Wedding.

See more Game of Thrones’: 20 Best Quotes                                    

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Turner says Sansa has learned from the mistakes of her family — particularly that of her father Eddard (Sean bean), whose honor cost him his life.

“Ned Stark got his head chopped off because he was very open about how he didn’t like Joffrey and he didn’t like the Lannisters,” says Turner. “Sansa disguises her true feelings very well.”

Stay tuned to The Live Feed for more from Game of Thrones.

Game of Thrones airs at 9 p.m. Sundays on HBO.

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Aaron Couch

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‘Game of Thrones’ Star’s Surprise Return Is “Part of a Bigger Plan”

April 20, 2015 6:00am PT by Aaron Couch

Tom Wlaschiha plays the mysterious Jaqen H'ghar once again and says viewers will learn "more about how he works and what's important to him." Macall B. Polay/ courtesy HBO

Tom Wlaschiha plays the mysterious Jaqen H’ghar once again and says viewers will learn “more about how he works and what’s important to him.”

[Warning: Spoilers ahead for Sunday’s episode of Game of Thrones, “The House of Black and White.”]

A man returns.

Jaqen H’ghar (Tom Wlaschiha) made a surprise appearance in Sunday’s episode of Game of Thrones, marking the reintroduction of one of the show’s deadliest characters.

Jaqen was last seen in season two in which he played an integral role to Arya’s (Maisie Williams) story. He agreed to kill three people of her choosing after she saved the lives of Jaqen and his companions, who were prisoners on their way to The Wall. He eventually gave Arya a coin she could use to find him, and she finally put it to use in the season-four finale, when she took sail to Braavos to find him.

See more ‘Game of Thrones’: What Happens After You’re Killed Off  

In Sunday’s episode, Arya goes to a temple where she’s told Jaqen will be. The face-shifting Jaqen eventually reveals himself to be a man who had told her to go away earlier. In the books, Jaqen is a member of the Faceless Men, a league of master assassins viewers will learn more about this season.

In a chat with The Hollywood Reporter Wlaschiha weighs in on Jaqen’s ultimate plan and what’s in store for Arya.

It’s not clear at all what Jaqen wants. Will we learn more about his goals this season?

I don’t really know what he wants, but we will definitely learn more about how he works and what’s important to him and how the Faceless Men sect is built and what’s important to them.

In season two, he owed Arya a debt for saving his life. Why does he continue to have a fascination with her?

It’s all part of a bigger plan. We still don’t know who Jaqen is and why he showed up in the story in the first place. It was never explained why he ended up in the black cells in King’s Landing and then went on that journey. It wasn’t a coincidence. It was all part of a bigger plan — that’s my theory.

Is it hard playing a character when you don’t know his motivations?

It’s great to play because characters that have a secret are always more interesting. The scenes are very rich. There’s this playfulness about him, but also there’s a seriousness about him. The way he teaches Arya is not by telling her what he wants but rather by trying her to get to where he wants her to be. It’s cool to play because you can take many detours and you can do little things, give little hints.

What was your first day back on set like?

I put on the wig, and I looked in the mirror, and suddenly I recognized myself. I’d always hoped to be back, but I couldn’t be sure. With Game of Thrones, the only thing you can be sure of is that you can’t be sure of anything.

See more Game of Thrones’: 20 Best Quotes                                    

Where did your inspiration for his distinct way of speaking come from?

It’s written that way, and I remember when I first got the auditioning scene, I was at home and I’d never heard of Game of Thrones because season one hadn’t aired in Germany yet. I remember thinking, “What the hell is that?” It reminded me of a character from my childhood nobody knows in America. It’s a very famous character in Germany — an Apache Indian chief called Winnetou, and he always speaks in the third person. 

You had a lot of cool stuff to do in season two. Is season five a teaching season, or will there be action as well?

It is a teaching season, but it is cool teaching. It’s not boring teaching. It’s not going to be like in high school. 

Game of Thrones airs Sundays at 9 p.m. on HBO.

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Aaron Couch

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‘Game of Thrones’ Director on Nightmare Shoot: We Couldn’t Film “The Way We Planned It”

April 19, 2015 10:00pm PT by Aaron Couch

Michael Slovis says flooding forced him to rethink a major scene at the last minute: "Our little trickle of a stream was now a raging torrent of a river." Helen Sloan/ courtesy HBO

Michael Slovis says flooding forced him to rethink a major scene at the last minute: “Our little trickle of a stream was now a raging torrent of a river.”

[Warning: Spoilers ahead for Sunday’s episode of Game of Thrones, “The House of Black and White.”]

Game of Thrones is wasting no time shaking things up this season.

It’s been a long time since an episode featured major developments for so many characters as Sunday’s did. Among the big moves:

Jon (Kit Harington) was elected Lord Commander of the Night’s Watch; Daenerys (Emilia Clarke) nearly started a riot after publicly executing a young murderer; Jaime (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) embarked on a covert mission to rescue his daughter Myrcella (Nell Tiger Free) from Dorne; Brienne (Gwendoline Christie) found Sansa (Sophie Turner) and learns the young Stark wants nothing to do with her; and the biggest fan service moment of them all: Jaqen H’ghar (Tom Wlaschiha), not seen since season two, returned to begin training Arya (Maisie Williams) in the ways of the Faceless Men.

In a chat with The Hollywood Reporter, director Michael Slovis talks about crafting those big moments, why the fight scene with Brienne turned out completely different than he planned, and the challenge of introducing Dorne, the faraway homeland of season four fan favorite Oberyn (Pedro Pascal).

See more ‘Game of Thrones’: What Happens After You’re Killed Off       

There’s a lot of tension when Brienne meets Sansa. How did you convey what all of those character’s wanted?

You have so much going on in that scene. Everybody had an agenda in that. You had to make it clear what each person’s cause celebre was. Nobody is really saying what they mean in that scene. One of the great things they do on Game of Thrones that is not available on any other show I’ve been on, is we had a rehearsal day. The art department marked out the studio in the dimensions of the inn, and we spent two hours rehearsing it as if we were doing a movie or a play.  

You then immediately go into a horse chase. What were some of the challenges of that?

We had actors who could and could not ride. Or were not allowed to ride because it’s dangerous to ride down those hills that quickly. I had this incredibly beautiful image in my head that the entire fight was going to happen out in the middle of that stream, where at the end Poderick gets to the water and his horse won’t cross.

When we first went to the farm where we shot that, it was a teeny, tiny trickle of stream. We built a dam further down the river, and we cut out with a backhoe a space for the guy — after he gets stabbed in the neck — to fall into so it would be safe. And we did all of this planning, because they were going to be sloshing around in the water for this fight.

See more Game of Thrones’: 20 Best Quotes                       

Judging from the episode, that’s not how it turned out.

On the way into work that morning, the stunt coordinator Rowley [Irlam] called me in the car and said, “We can’t shoot the fight the way we planned it.” Our little trickle of a stream was now a raging torrent of a river, because of the rains of the previous weeks. Even a modest sized show has trouble changing direction in short notice. But certainly something the size and complexity of Game of Thrones has an even harder time. To everybody’s credit, we shot our horse chase that day and we went in and we reblocked the fight.

Did you always know Sam’s election speech would be a total scene-stealer?

I did not know ahead of time how he was going to do it and pull it off, but I had a version in my head that was not as quietly impassioned as John [Bradley] was. When we shot it, I just was blown completely away and I knew that it was going to be the centerpiece. That is the moment when that scene completely turns. He single handedly guides it and turns it.

See more ‘Game of Thrones” Most Gruesome Deaths

Sam has proven to be much more heroic than he thinks.

Especially coming off of that lovely moment in the end of episode one when Mance [Ciaran Hinds] is burning and Gilly [Hannah Murray] turns her head into his shoulder and looks to him for comfort. And you follow through with the scene in the library, which was also a very interesting scene, where the whole idea of leadership is a central theme and he’s talking about the youngest boy to be elected Lord Commander. I didn’t even realize when we were doing it that it all summed up into that little speech Sam gave for Jon. 

The confrontation in Dorne between Doran and Ellaria seems likely to have big implications for future episodes. How did you get that tone right?

All guest directors depend very heavily on showrunners to fill them in — to tone us in an appropriate way to do this. They guide me in what we call tone meetings about  what they’re trying to set up for future episodes, which is equally important to what’s happening in my episode. I can say, “He should get pissed off and stand up and rant and rave,” and they can go, “You know what, we’ve thought of that. But four episodes down the road, this happens and we’re waiting for that kind of emotion for then.” I’m just using this as an example, This is in no way tied in specifically to the story. But my point is that they have the really big picture so they can get me and my episodes to fill in the space between the last episode of season four and to be an interstitial.  

Stay tuned to the Live Feed Monday for a post-mortem with Tom Wlaschiha, who discusses his return as Jaqen H’ghar.

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Aaron Couch

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