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  • ♪ (DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

  • (GRUNTING)

  • Episode three was... Oh, my God.

  • As a fan I thought, "Wow." As a DP, I thought, "Fuck." (CHUCKLES)

  • If you take Hardhome

  • and you take Bob, and to take the lake,

  • and you add them together, add a five-by-four,

  • you have episode three.

  • DUNCAN MUGGOCH: We had 11 weeks of night shooting,

  • so that was quite a feat for any crew to go through.

  • DAVID BENIOFF: We knew this episode was gonna be almost entirely battle.

  • It's well over an hour and it's mostly action.

  • And part of what we cared about a lot here

  • was getting Miguel on board

  • and forcing him to shoot 55 straight nights.

  • Look at it this way: I never ever want to do that again.

  • I don't think anybody who did that ever wants to do it again.

  • Yeah, that was tough.

  • And I don't think it was something

  • that anybody really realized just how hard it was gonna be.

  • EMILIA CLARKE: "The Long Night."

  • When I was doing it, it was minus 14.

  • Just chilling. Minus 14.

  • In a field.

  • You know, it's too cold to snow.

  • When it's too cold to snow, you know you got trouble.

  • BERNADETTE CAULFIELD: Chris and the rest of the team, they were there day in, day out.

  • We would start your evening at six o'clock at night,

  • and then you'd go home at five o'clock in the morning

  • and it just-- That's brutal.

  • Your body never acclimates to that 100 percent.

  • JACOB ANDERSON: By, like, week three, they...

  • people looked slightly haunted.

  • The cast, stunts, background, crew,

  • everybody just looked like, this is...

  • This is, like, getting into us. (CHUCKLES)

  • This is, like, getting into our spirits.

  • I-- I'm not gonna lie, it was horrible. (CHUCKLES)

  • We enjoyed the work and I said to my guys,

  • "You know, you might not want to do it again,

  • but you won't regret doing it the first time,

  • because the product, what you've achieved, is amazing."

  • CHRIS NEWMAN: I think the crew, they enjoyed the--

  • The result is, you know, you didn't do all this and think,

  • "That's not really impressive." There's no doubt about it.

  • It's really an impressive sequence.

  • And I think the nights are just one of the things we're gonna get through this.

  • It's just another notch in the belt

  • of the crew on Game of Thrones that they'd done things that feel quite unique.

  • MAISIE WILLIAMS: I'm proud of everyone.

  • I'm proud of the work that was put in.

  • I think it was a mammoth task that we were faced with.

  • And we did it, and it just feels incredible.

  • That first week after night shoots,

  • seeing the crew, like, smiling at the sun.

  • What they went through was pretty stunning,

  • and, look, it's not-- You know,

  • there's no special prize for being the toughest crew, but there probably should be.

  • D.B. WEISS: Working in the pitch dark in the rain, in the mud,

  • it's a real testament to the entire Belfast crew,

  • who... gave us something that no amount of money could ever buy.

  • ♪ (DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

  • The task that we had, which was the primary task on three,

  • was how do we keep this interesting?

  • 'Cause simply, battle fatigue, you know.

  • You just get bored, you get exhausted.

  • We really wanted to make sure we were telling

  • a coherent story with the whole thing and not just having...

  • battle-beat, battle-beat, battle-beat.

  • There needs to be a shape to it and a propulsion to it.

  • DAVE HILL: It became clear when we started planning it,

  • that the battle was gonna be a series of concentric circles.

  • It would be walls of defenses failing,

  • and the dead getting closer and closer to the center,

  • into the heart of Winterfell and taking over everything.

  • The way that I concepted episode three visually,

  • was to create a color scheme that developed throughout the whole episode.

  • So, it starts with a moonlit night...

  • because the Night King brings the storm and the clouds.

  • The moon becomes dissipated and the moonlight takes over,

  • but in a very diffused kind of way.

  • (SHOUTING)

  • And then the next stage would be the trench going up.

  • (INDISTINCT DIALOGUE)

  • We wanted the trench to be this overpowering light.

  • And in prep for a long time, Miguel always mentioned hell to me.

  • It's turning into Hell for each character.

  • So the blood-red fire of the trench takes over the image and...

  • completely drains out the blue of the moon until the end,

  • because the trench is dying down.

  • The moonlight suddenly gets introduced again.

  • So that was kind of the way for me to...

  • To break it up into sections.

  • MIGUEL SAPOCHNIK: So, you have something that's visually different,

  • so it's refreshing in that respect.

  • But how do we take it one step further?

  • So, what we decided was to give each act a genre.

  • So, basically Act I is suspense and it's buildup.

  • And the best way to do buildup is--

  • In any sort of kinda monster movie,

  • which is what this is, is to not see the monster.

  • Act II is actually,

  • from the moment that Arya is on the back foot

  • and enters into the castle, that's the horror movie.

  • And then Act III is an action movie.

  • (GRUNTING)

  • And so, by breaking it into genres,

  • it allowed us to change rhythm and go off on tangents

  • when we followed specific characters

  • for a longer period of time rather than worried about

  • what was happening to everyone else.

  • NEWMAN: The core of it is the people you care about.

  • You wanna care about the people fighting,

  • so every effort is made to make sure that

  • you center that conflicts around the people you know.

  • BENIOFF: So, whether it's Arya's storyline,

  • or Sansa and Tyrion down in the crypt,

  • or Jon Snow and Dany up on the dragons,

  • it's kinda like all these separate little battles within the greater battle.

  • (YELLING)

  • (BREATHES HEAVILY)

  • (INDISTINCT DIALOGUE)

  • Light the trench! Light the trench!

  • Ah, fuck!

  • (CHUCKLES) Sorry, I'm really sorry.

  • ♪ (UP-BEAT MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

  • BENIOFF: The living do have some time to prepare for this battle.

  • And one of the things they know going into it

  • is that they're gonna be outnumbered,

  • and another thing they know

  • is that the wights don't like fire.

  • So, they dig a massive trench around the entire castle, and fill it with kindling.

  • DEBORAH RILEY: To read the word "trench" on the page doesn't sound like anything,

  • but it took such a lot of work to try and resolve it to a point

  • that it was a convincing method of defense.

  • It was important that this trench

  • not be something that anybody could jump over.

  • So, we needed to construct these bridges

  • that would then collapse and create another barrier.

  • The trench had real wooden spikes,

  • real wooden logs lining throughout the trench.

  • Then the real logs were replaced by steel logs

  • that could burn over a number of weeks

  • without burning away.

  • We had to accommodate a whole special effects rig.

  • So, the considerations are enormous.

  • Then, yeah, the trench sort of encompasses...

  • pretty much the whole of the castle.

  • As trenches go, it was a good trench. (LAUGHS)

  • And I've done some trenches. (CHUCKLES)

  • MAN: Light the trenches!

  • And then the reality of how do we light a...

  • nine-hundred foot-long thing full of bitumen,

  • with hundreds of people running at it

  • and stunt people in it.

  • Oh, I mean...

  • ♪ (ROCK MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

  • So... (LAUGHS)

  • The complicated process of the trenches began

  • with the concept of it being a first line of defense.

  • Therefore, it had to be impressive, it had to be very big.

  • So, we had to devise a way we could produce a flame

  • which is big enough for the outside environment.

  • So we came up with a system,

  • which is just a simple water trough.

  • It makes the most economical flame out of propane.

  • And then, of course, you've got to think about the consumable part of it.

  • You can't have real logs in there, it has to be a steel thing.

  • It has to be able to endure the heat and the fire.

  • I think we did 900 steel logs, and we did 16 steel troughs.

  • And then you have to work out how you get that amount of gas to each trough.

  • We've got one four-ton tanker with a mobile unit,

  • which is five ton.

  • So, with the combination of the two,

  • we convert liquid into the gas,

  • and that's what gives us our gas of life.

  • We run it off an electronic

  • valve system that's tied in with a firing box.

  • And each one is ignited by an individual gas bank in a sequence.

  • It uses a lot of gas. A lot of gas.

  • -Got your gas bill yet? -Haven't got my gas bill. Dreading that one.

  • (BOTH LAUGH)

  • When you see the Red Priestess come out and light that trench,

  • that that would be such an extraordinary moment,

  • as it just... (BLOWS) ...lights around Winterfell.

  • In terms of imagery, I always thought that was such a fantastic thing.

  • So, you really were seeing for the first time the ice and fire meeting.

  • So, that was something that I thought was a really lovely image to establish.

  • -(FIRE ROARING) -(SNARLING)

  • (SNARLING)

  • WILLIAMS: I got a call from Miguel, like, a year before we started shooting.

  • Basically, he was like, "I can't tell you anything

  • but get your endurance up now, I want you to be training.

  • You have a lot to do. It's gonna be night shoots.

  • We're gonna do three months of night shoots."

  • And I was just like, "Okay!"

  • Like, I think I was in Boston at the time,

  • like, eating cheese fries, like, "Cool!" (CHUCKLES)

  • (YELLING)

  • (GRUNTING)

  • Her entire fight through the battlements

  • was just a real great moment,

  • and everything that I have learned really did come down to that

  • and I did use every sort of skill that I'd learned in that fight.

  • ROWLEY IRLAM: It's one thing to go on the battlements,

  • but then over the top of Winterfell,

  • you've got these two staircases that go up to the middle section of castellation.

  • So, we thought it would be really claustrophobic

  • and dark and scary to be in there with wights,

  • but that's when the full staff doesn't really work.

  • We all know these tunnels are very small

  • and the last thing you want is a five-and-a-half

  • or a six-foot quarter staff going through small, little alleyways.

  • So, what I decided to do on this one,

  • be able to cut it in half so it'd be able to disassemble

  • within the fight sequence, and then have two,

  • -so she could use both in each hand. -(GRUNTING)

  • Which is great, and it gave Arya then the stunts,

  • something else to play with and to train with.

  • Yeah, 'cause if I concentrate on doing the move,

  • one of them does it, and then the other one doesn't.

  • And it's like...

  • One of the incredible things about Maisie is that she's a righty.

  • Because Arya in the books is left-handed,

  • she decided she was gonna learn how to fight left-handed.

  • So, in season one, when she's training with Syrio Forel,

  • she's training with her left hand

  • and it was incredibly challenging, but what it does mean was that

  • she's learned how to fight left-handed and she's actually right-handed,

  • so she's become an ambidextrous fighter.

  • Maisie does almost all of this stuff on her own.

  • She has an excellent stuntwoman for the dangerous stuff,

  • but most of it is actually Maisie.

  • Her coordination and she's really quick. (CLICKS FINGERS)

  • You know, can make changes on the spot and it actually--

  • She's really easy to work with.

  • It's one thing practicing a fight,

  • which is like a spar, a sparring fight, you know.

  • But then when you're actually fighting for your life...

  • (YELLING)

  • ...with loads of stuntmen who, like, do this day-to-day

  • and are not scared of anything, and they're covered in this crazy makeup

  • and they're coming at you like... (GROWLS)

  • It's just a completely different ballgame.

  • And I think I probably hold the record for the most apologies on set.

  • (WILLIAMS GASPS)

  • -Fucking hell! I'm so sorry. -(LAUGHTER)

  • -(GROWLING) -Fuck! Fuck! Fuck! Fuck! Sorry! Sorry! Sorry!

  • Sorry, guys!

  • MAN: They're fine, they got pads on.

  • WEISS: We knew any situation where lots of people are fighting,

  • Arya needs to play a central role

  • 'cause she's one of the best at it.

  • That's amazing, and it's a lot of fun to watch,

  • but it's also-- It's one note and to try to play that note

  • through the whole episode, it wouldn't have worked. So, having her wounded,

  • and having her almost taken out of commission

  • and almost rewinding the clock on who Arya Stark is, would really be interesting.

  • It would also give us a chance to change up the nature of the story we were telling.

  • ♪ (TENSE MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

  • SAPOCHNIK: The library sequence was

  • built around the idea of: I need to have a marked shift,

  • where the audience, instead of coming back and going,

  • "And more battle," they come back and they go, "Oh.

  • Change in style."

  • Hopefully, what it does is it refreshes the audience, and they're like, you know,

  • "We wanna know what's going on outside, but we're okay

  • to be inside for a minute and slow things down.

  • And we're also okay to be with Arya," who's suddenly,

  • from being this incredibly confident character

  • that she's been now for quite some time,

  • is completely traumatized by what's happened to her.

  • One of the things we did when we shot that sequence is

  • we designed the library in a certain way, and then I took Maisie in there,

  • and I got nine wights or something in there,

  • and I gave them all a path and then I told her

  • she had to make her way through it without being seen.

  • And we figured out this whole choreographed piece

  • where everything was a near miss and everything was just about not seeing her,

  • and everything had to be silent.

  • And it was really fun to do.

  • (SHUFFLING)

  • WILLIAMS: Oh, my God, that was so scary.

  • (LAUGHTER)

  • BARRIE GOWER: So the hero wights in the library.

  • Miguel, he was after somebody who could get themselves

  • into quite an interesting position,

  • but have the physique which would be a little bit unworldly,

  • which would suggest they're dead basically.

  • I knew of this performer, Spanish performer,

  • called Javier Botet,

  • and he's double, triple jointed. He can do the most ridiculous things with his body,

  • and he's been covered in prosthetics

  • pretty much all his career, so I knew he was the guy

  • that could pretty much sell it for us.

  • And from a prosthetics point of view,

  • he's got a couple of little bits and pieces.

  • He's got some little cheek bone appliances.

  • We got a few little scrapes and wounds, and then we just did

  • this sort of airbrushed body painting on him as well,

  • and just really accentuated all his sort of shadows

  • and all his muscles and his bone structure

  • and his movement just sold it for us.

  • (CRACKLING)

  • (SNARLING)

  • ♪ (UP-BEAT MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

  • JOE BAUER: We're all in love with Lyanna Mormont.

  • I think the whole world is, so we wanted this to be

  • her absolute heroic moment.

  • BELLA RAMSEY: Oh, when I found out I was dying,

  • it was, like, it was the best thing, really.

  • It sounds strange, but I either decided I'd be happy

  • if I ended up on the throne, which I thought was very, very unlikely,

  • or I had a great death, so I'm very happy.

  • And the whole giant thing, that's just really cool.

  • -Bang. -(THUD)

  • ERIC CARNEY: All the shots with Lyanna and Krum...

  • were all really pretty complicated,

  • and they all had lots of pieces to them.

  • So, it started out at tomb, where we shot the Winterfell set,

  • and we shot a lot of the backgrounds for the shots,

  • and where we wanted to frame for the giant,

  • we used this technology called INCAM,

  • and this allowed us to playback sort of an animation

  • of what the giant's performance would be that was synced to the camera.

  • And so that when Sean Savage, who's the A camera operator,

  • is operating on the day, he can actually see the giant

  • at its proper scale in the set.

  • So, they were able to operate it as if it was a real thing.

  • We got it.

  • Yeah, that better, boys. Let's move that out.

  • The giant is real. He could be 3D,

  • but we prefer to shoot real, organic live photograph people wherever we can.

  • Our giant performer, Ian White,

  • who's seven-foot five, I believe,

  • he performed all the actions of the giant

  • in front of green screen, but we shot him in a way

  • to double his scale.

  • For the shots where he had to pick up Lyanna,

  • we put tracking markers on a green doll that he picked up,

  • and we motion captured that and would use it to drive

  • a robotic arm, basically, to pick up our actress, Bella,

  • and that would move her around as if she's being held by Krum.

  • You know, for some of those shots,

  • there's at least four or five elements that we photographed

  • at different times that will all go into making that final shot.

  • Really, it's just bringing the lowest techs,

  • miniature props approach, and the very highest tech,

  • digital scaling and digital handoffs.

  • -(SCREAMS) -(ROARS)

  • RAMSAY: Yeah, I think it's very fitting for Lyanna to die,

  • like, doing something like that, stabbing a giant in the eye.

  • It's a bit like-- I realized today,

  • it's a bit like David and Goliath.

  • The same sort of thing... that just a stab in eye kills him.

  • (CHUCKLES) With this little Lyanna Mormont.

  • ♪ (UP-BEAT MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

  • PETER DINKLAGE: Down in the crypt becomes just a complete horror movie.

  • It's terrifying down there. We're in a crypt.

  • Nobody thought of that.

  • He's bringing all the dead people back to life.

  • And they've put women and children in a crypt

  • with all the dead people, so.... (GROWLS)

  • Tyrion is smart, but I guess not that smart.

  • SOPHIE TURNER: Yeah, the whole action was really fun,

  • 'cause I never get to do any action.

  • In between setups, Peter and I would be joking around,

  • like, with our guns, like,

  • running between podium to podium trying to catch a wight.

  • We felt like action stars, even though

  • we're probably around, like, five meters.

  • GOWER: With the wights in the crypt, for us, that was exciting,

  • 'cause we realized we could do some really cool mummified,

  • and dried husky sort of, um, wights.

  • We referenced ancient mummies. We looked at corpses

  • and there are some tombs which have got these figures which are

  • exactly the inspiration we were looking for

  • and they're these dried, wizened bodies

  • which still have dried encrusted skin all over them.

  • They still have hair, and they're hundreds and hundreds of years old.

  • They have their teeth. Really, really dusty,

  • and completely different to what we'd seen before.

  • TURNER: There was one point where I had to, like,

  • run through a crowd of people, and wights were coming out,

  • and one came up to me, and I actually started crying,

  • I was so scared, like-- (CHUCKLES)

  • Whenever I get scared, I just cry and it was so awful.

  • Those wights are horrible. Just as scary in real life. I hate them.

  • DINKLAGE: They're around dark corners, and you're like--

  • You don't fully know where they're all coming from.

  • I mean, everything's safe and mapped out,

  • but it's still-- You get into it.

  • And you're just going by candlelight,

  • we don't have any other lighting sources down there, really.

  • It's creepy. It was fun.

  • A week underground with dead people.

  • ♪ (UP-BEAT MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

  • Think we're such nice people, but, you know, we--

  • It's just such violence that we're portraying,

  • and, uh, I've often said, "How did we end up here?"

  • I think the lesson that we learned

  • on Battle of the Bastards was just how difficult it is

  • to work with dead bodies, to work with these prop bodies.

  • How expensive it is,

  • how difficult they are to move around...

  • so Rob Cameron and Gavin Jones, our prop maker, came up

  • with the idea of molding these bodies into these disks.

  • The brief was to try and create a lightweight version of bodies

  • as a sort of relief.

  • We would get eight or nine dummies dressed in their armor,

  • and then we would make a huge mold of that.

  • So, our mold could capture all of the detail,

  • the limbs and the fabric and the armor.

  • KEVIN FRASER: We had, I think, probably about 300 body piles,

  • which we would've painted up in different elements,

  • you know, give them some skin tone, give them a bit of a palette,

  • and individually pull out each body.

  • ROB CAMERON: And the good thing about these, the weight of them,

  • we can actually mound them up,

  • so the prop boys came up with this great idea of wedges

  • and then building them up,

  • so it's total carnage and devastation, really.

  • It looks great.

  • I've got to say, they work really, really, well.

  • The prop guys will never wanna see

  • another one of these disks again,

  • because they spent a hell of a lot of their time

  • walking them around, moving them from the right flank.

  • Okay, now we've gotta dress the left flank.

  • So, all the bodies have to move across to the left flank.

  • Fucking hell!

  • PAUL GHIRARDANI: For close up stuff, interspersed with that,

  • would be live people dressed as dead bodies.

  • When you walk on set sometimes, and they're about to shoot,

  • suddenly one of them will twitch or sort of move or something

  • and it's like, "Oh, my God!" because that's actually an extra

  • who's been dressed as a dead body.

  • And will sort of be in there amongst the ones we put in.

  • Yeah, it's very disconcerting. (CHUCKLES)

  • It's a strange place to be.

  • ♪ (UP-BEAT MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

  • SAPOCHNIK: The last third of the movie

  • where we move into an action film,

  • Jon realizes that the real task still at hand

  • is to, essentially, protect Bran.

  • -Bran! -BRAN: Go!

  • SAPOCHNIK: And so, he heads into Winterfell and we follow him on a journey.

  • SEAN SAVAGE: We've used Automus Maxima,

  • it's a handheld device

  • either the camera operator or the grip can carry it,

  • and then one of the camera operators

  • will operate it remotely. You know, it's like...

  • It's like a remote control steady cam, really.

  • It's very clever.

  • The camera flows through the castle,

  • and stays with the character. I think the audience

  • is gonna feel like they're traveling with them,

  • and right up front with them.

  • That was the real kind of heart of, I think, that episode,

  • is that long sequence with all those different characters.

  • SAPOCHNIK: We needed Jon to make his way through the courtyard,

  • and bear witness to all of the characters that we know and we care about,

  • that he knows and he cares about, being overwhelmed.

  • What we essentially did is we took each group of people

  • and gave them all a fight, and they learn the fight,

  • and we shot the fight, and we use little pieces of it.

  • They were all losing battles.

  • ANDERSON: I got to do, like, a flippy move.

  • Got to fling my spear, like, around my head,

  • I like doing that stuff. A bit of flair.

  • -(GRUNTING) -(SNARLING)

  • GWENDOLINE CHRISTIE: I loved, loved, filming the sequence

  • where we are really up against it

  • and it is overwhelming for Brienne,

  • and Brienne is in battle mode.

  • It was really all-encompassing that night.

  • Being there was so intimidating and so, you know,

  • we were all really panicked by how claustrophobic it was,

  • and I think that really adds to the work.

  • One of my highlights from that episode is standing

  • on the pile of bodies and fighting for my life.

  • And the funny thing was that we said to the stunt guys,

  • if you manage to get me down, take me down,

  • so on some takes, I died... (CHUCKLES) ...or Tormund died.

  • (GRUNTING)

  • I was really fighting for my life.

  • Kristofer's life. (LAUGHS)

  • (GRUNTS)

  • (LAUGHS)

  • Strong arms, that.

  • (GRUNTING)

  • (SCREAMING)

  • BENIOFF: One of the shots that I really love there

  • is Jon looks over at his best-- Sees his best friend

  • being attacked by all these wights,

  • and in any other circumstance, Jon would, of course, rush over

  • to try to help Samwell.

  • It was great, because it was this idea of...

  • Sam being one person Jon has always gone back for,

  • has always relied on, has always been his true friend,

  • and he had to sacrifice him to go after the Night King,

  • and then it was finalized with a moment where...

  • at some point, we just ran out of stunt guys to throw at Sam,

  • and so he sat there, and he just started crying and it was great,

  • because it truly was crying amidst all this violence.

  • So seeing John do that with Sam,

  • I thought it was really, really great.

  • Again, he felt true to the character.

  • JOHN BRADLEY: If you're involved in a battle scene,

  • you like to see yourself as a fighter,

  • and you like to make it look as good as you possibly can,

  • and Miguel was the one who has to keep reigning me in and say,

  • "Remember, you're playing Samwell Tarly,

  • and Samwell Tarly is not a fighter."

  • The reason that Sam is in there is because he's not a fighter,

  • and it's because he can show how normal people would cope.

  • IRLAM: So we had to really dial him down

  • and we just make it in such a way

  • that we wouldn't allow him to be cool.

  • We just put him under so much pressure,

  • which is not fair to him as a person,

  • because we could pr-- We could do it to everybody else too,

  • but we just don't. We made Kit look really cool. We do.

  • You know, it's like-- All right,

  • what can we do to make Kit look cooler?

  • ♪ (UP-BEAT MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

  • (VISERION ROARS)

  • SAVAGE: So, one of the most challenging shots

  • was when we traveled through the courtyard extensively

  • and then we head down to what we used to call the old kennels,

  • and as he's running down this very long, dark corridor,

  • we had to coordinate about 15 stuntmen

  • dropping out of the roof around him.

  • They're obviously going to arrive in a certain zone,

  • -certain moment, certain second. -(GRUNTS)

  • Which... between the stunt guys and Kit,

  • they had to coordinate perfectly.

  • ...against the wall. Now put it on his neck,

  • and then drag it out.

  • But take your time. I wouldn't kill him...

  • I wouldn't kill him until you see the next guy.

  • (GRUNTING)

  • SAPOCHNIK: And everything was really based around the idea of, like,

  • how can we make it feel as messy as possible?

  • SAVAGE: Well, then we had to obviously put

  • one of our stabilized handheld rigs behind him,

  • and still stay really close to him

  • to make the audience feel that jeopardy,

  • the danger of what was happening.

  • After we've choreographed it and rehearsed it, what have you,

  • and when we're shooting it, my job is the safety of it

  • and making sure it all works.

  • Then I'm queuing, because, obviously,

  • we all need to be in sync.

  • (SHOUTING COMMANDS)

  • -Now! -MAN: Good!

  • SAVAGE: That was probably one of the greatest challenges,

  • just to be in the right time and right place.

  • And it had to be in, you know, fractions of seconds to do it.

  • And the camera did a 180 around him

  • at one point during all this chaos.

  • Um... And we run backwards at that point

  • until the great big steel door is--

  • on-- on railings is shot

  • right in front of these guys near the last second.

  • And it feels like Jon Snow's just got through there,

  • as has just-- the camera's just got through as well.

  • So, yeah. It's a very cool shot.

  • IRLAM: (YELLS) Go, go, go, go, go!

  • -HARRINGTON: That's gotta be it. -(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

  • Just 'cause we fancy making you do it again. (LAUGHS)

  • But ultimately, the key thing there

  • was to give Kit the fight of his life

  • and then, at the end of it, present him with

  • a... insurmountable odd, which is...

  • a dead dragon.

  • Or an undead one. Or not-dead.

  • ♪ (UP-BEAT MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

  • STEVE KULLBACK: The zombie dragon lands,

  • having his face been torn off, can't exactly see,

  • smashes through the ravenry. Just an insane fight where

  • Jon is ducking behind these pieces of set

  • as this icy blue fire is blasting over the top of him.

  • JOE BAUER: But the fun thing is that Viserion is so damaged

  • by this point, he already has a hole through his neck

  • from being taken down by the Night King.

  • Now he's missing half his face, so he's leaking.

  • -(YELLS) -So, you know, this blue fire

  • is kind of leaking and shooting around.

  • KULLBACK: There's fire blasting all over the place,

  • which we shoot photographically, for real,

  • using a 3D motion control camera,

  • blasting fire in a darkened stage.

  • BAUER: We actually did laser cuts for Viserion

  • from the digital model of those openings.

  • And then bronze casts were made and then fitted

  • by Sam Conway and his team with fire jets.

  • And then that was put onto this robot with a quick arm

  • so that the fire would leak out of openings

  • that were accurate to the dragon.

  • And there were so many moving parts in this scene,

  • because you've got the environment he's living in,

  • which is partially the courtyard dressed

  • and largely virtual

  • because of the destruction that's needed to be created.

  • And there's shooting Kit in the set piece,

  • so that he's got something to really duck behind

  • and have interactive lighting wrap around him.

  • -Fire! -(KIT YELLS)

  • GHIRARDANI: We did a lot of destruction in that courtyard.

  • We like building things, but equally,

  • we like destroying things. That's always quite fun.

  • So we go at it with flamethrowers, paint,

  • earth, mud, you name it, we just...

  • take it in there and do whatever it takes to destroy the thing.

  • I asked for a load of wood to be removed.

  • We made a huge bonfire of it.

  • We burned it for about a day

  • until it's charcoaled, it's almost destroyed.

  • Then actually, we get something rather beautiful.

  • It's rather wonderful.

  • Just when you think that it's all over,

  • just when you think that Jon Snow's gonna be the hero,

  • again, we realize...

  • that Arya appears through the mist.

  • ♪ (UP-BEAT MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

  • I mean, you're like, "Ooh, maybe I'll get him!

  • I'm not gonna get him."

  • And then you're reading, you're like, "Ooh,

  • maybe Jon's gonna get him!

  • Wait, he's not gonna--" And I remember

  • actually being like, "Whoa!"

  • And kind of applauding in my head, and you know, "Yeah!"

  • And then in the read-through when, like,

  • when Maisie was doing it, and we were all just like

  • wooping and cheering. (LAUGHS)

  • Yeah, it's amazing.

  • I think Maisie thought it was super cool.

  • She's like, "Yeah, I'm gonna kill him."

  • Um... Kit was really fine with it.

  • I was pissed.

  • I was pissed that it wasn't me killing the Night King.

  • I could've-- I would've sw-- I would've given you, like--

  • I'd have bet you thousands.

  • Before we read the finals, I was like,

  • "Yeah, it's definitely me."

  • And then they lead you on, Jon's chasing the Night King.

  • BENIOFF: Jon Snow has always been the hero,

  • the one who's been the savior,

  • but... it just didn't seem right to us for this moment.

  • It's probably three years now, or something, we've known

  • that it was gonna be Arya who delivers that fatal blow.

  • Dan and David let me break all the Game of Thrones rules

  • for that sequence.

  • Majority of it is shot 96 frames a second,

  • it's all super-slow motion, it's all heightened reality,

  • which is not what they usually do.

  • It's a surreal nightmare.

  • Finally, the Night King and Bran are finding each other.

  • ♪ (SOMBER MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

  • The music plays a big part in creating

  • that sense of despair that should exist in that moment.

  • And you're intercutting with Jon,

  • who's clearly not going to make it.

  • And you're intercutting with all our other characters,

  • where they're just-- they're so fucked.

  • Everybody's fucked.

  • I mean, that was literally-- that was the phrase we kept using.

  • It's like, "Let's do the "it's fucked" shot."

  • And then everyone would shoot a shot

  • where it just feels like there's no escape.

  • Everyone's going to die right now. You know they're not,

  • but we want you to feel that same feeling

  • of, "Oh, my God. It's...

  • We can't. What's the recovery? How do we come back from this?"

  • And we've all forgotten about, you know,

  • that little innocent girl from all those years ago

  • who's turned into a trained killer, who's coming out of nowhere.

  • ♪ (TRIUMPHANT MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

  • 'Cause essentially, she does jump out of nowhere,

  • and that's a wire rig.

  • It's a wire rig we did on the location, but the location wasn't ideal.

  • It was really hard to get a crane in there,

  • and we've obviously got the weirwood tree.

  • So it was tricky to do it there,

  • and we did a version of it there, but then we had to redo it

  • because we didn't have the ability to control it as much as we'd hoped.

  • And it needed to be a real "boom, out of nowhere" moment

  • and a real-- you know, a locking together of these two characters.

  • (ARYA SCREAMS)

  • Shooting that was tedious, but...

  • so great to be able to perform all these different beats

  • within maybe, like, two seconds of footage.

  • (SCREAMING)

  • BENIOFF: We knew it had to be Valyrian steel.

  • To the exact spot where the Child of the Forest

  • put the dragonglass blade to create the Night King.

  • And that weapon has been one of the totemic pieces for us,

  • and ultimately, we've known for a long, long time

  • that was gonna end the Night King.

  • WEISS: When Samwell's reading the book about dragonglass

  • there is a picture of the dagger.

  • SAMWELL: The Targaryens used dragonglass to decorate their weapons

  • without even knowing what the First Men used it for.

  • WEISS: It is very possible that the same thing

  • that created the Night King

  • is the thing that was necessary to destroy the Night King,

  • or maybe it's Valyrian steel, or...

  • Figure it out for yourself.

  • Not gonna say.

  • ISAAC: I think that's such a...

  • nice little full-circle thing as well,

  • that that's the knife that was destined to kill Bran,

  • and here it is, saving him.

  • (ICE CRACKLES)

  • That's, like, an iconic moment.

  • You know, the fall of the dead.

  • It's exactly what you need.

  • (LAUGHS) Like, oh, yeah!

  • She, like, takes him down!

  • It's so good. It's so good.

  • It's perfect.

  • I think it's, uh, it's an inspired move.

  • Um... You've always been waiting as to what purpose...

  • Arya's assassin skills were gonna lead to.

  • And it's for the most important purpose.

  • Reading what I get to achieve

  • and Arya's whole purpose in this world and everything she's trained for

  • comes down to this one episode.

  • It's just amazing.

  • And it's just-- it's beautiful. It's poetry.

  • And I'm grateful that it was me and not Kit.

  • (LAUGHS)

  • ♪ (UP-BEAT MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

  • Think about Jorah. From the first time we met him,

  • he was with Dany, you know.

  • And the first time you meet him is at Dany's wedding,

  • when he's giving her the books of Westerosi history.

  • And from that time, he's been mostly by her side.

  • If Jorah could have chosen a way to die,

  • it would have been protecting Dany.

  • SAPOCHNIK: There was a lot of input from Iain

  • and from Emilia about

  • making sure their characters stayed true to who they were.

  • Not having Jorah lose sight of his goal,

  • which is protect his queen at all costs.

  • Emilia didn't want to be completely damsel-in-distress.

  • EMILIA: My hero.

  • She didn't feel that her character

  • would be like that. But then, we didn't--

  • we've never seen her do anything in that vein,

  • so we needed to make her not look like

  • she was completely ineffective and disinterested

  • in saving Jorah.

  • And then you don't care what happens to--

  • No, that's why I'm trying to play up the "Waaah."

  • But also, this was Iain's big moment.

  • (GRUNTING)

  • WEISS: We realized that all he ever wanted to do

  • was to serve her. And all he ever wanted to do

  • was to-- was to fight to protect her

  • and there'd never been a moment where she more needed

  • someone to fight to protect her than this moment.

  • And Iain himself, I think, was--

  • I think he was happy to go down fighting,

  • 'cause he's very good at it.

  • ♪ (SOMBER MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

  • My favorite scene to shoot was my demise.

  • Yeah. Yeah.

  • Just-- just because it required most of me.

  • It was the most demanding and the most fulfilling scene.

  • And it felt the right conclusion for Jorah's role.

  • And being given a good setting,

  • a very kind of dramatic and telling setting.

  • BENIOFF: Incredible performance from Iain

  • and also from Emilia at the very end there

  • as she's holding him in her arms, and just that--

  • you know, it's really hard to fake that kind of...

  • of pure grief.

  • And Emilia just really broadened those moments.

  • I think part of it was 'cause she's such a good actress,

  • but I think part of it is because

  • she and Iain had been working together

  • for so, so long and have become very, very close,

  • and they've had so many scenes together,

  • and it's all coming to an end, you know.

  • Both their characters' relationship on the show,

  • but also, our time together working on the show.

  • It was really hard.

  • You know, I just had to look at Iain's...

  • face, and it was like...

  • it's all there, it's all-- that's our relationship, it's like, the whole...

  • You know, we've been with these characters

  • for so many years.

  • We've been, like, to hell and back with them.

  • It's been, uh, it's been...

  • It's been quite a journey.

  • ♪ (SOMBER MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

  • Can't find the words.

  • You know? It's just...

  • great fun and, uh...

  • yeah.

  • I'm so really, very, very chuffed

  • to be a part of the whole mad, wonderful thing of it all.

  • ♪ (MUSIC CONCLUDES) ♪

♪ (DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

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