Showing posts with label George R.R. Martin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George R.R. Martin. Show all posts

Friday, June 21, 2024

War comes to ‘House of the Dragon’ / ‘It’s a story about two women and it will continue to be until the end’




Harry Collett, Emma D'Arcy and Oscar Eskinazi, in a scene from the second season of 'House of the Dragon.'THEO WHITEMAN



War comes to ‘House of the Dragon’: ‘It’s a story about two women and it will continue to be until the end’

The second season of the ‘Game of Thrones’ spinoff delves into the confrontation between two sides of the Targaryen house. ‘We want to reward the audience for sticking with us,’ says showrunner Ryan Condal



NATALIA MARCOS
Paris, 18 June 2024


The Dance of Dragons is about to begin. On one side, the Black Council, with Rhaenyra claiming her place on the Iron Throne. On the other, the Green Council, with Aegon on the throne, backed by his mother, Alicent Hightower. The rifts within the very broken Targaryen family have turned into gaping divides, accentuated by painful deaths. Tragedy struck at the end of the first season of House of the Dragon, the series that has returned to the phenomenon that was Game of Thrones to tell the past of this saga of dragon riders. The Dance of Dragons, the civil war in the Targaryen, is imminent and inevitable.

Thursday, February 27, 2020

Unusual toothy pterosaur found hidden in the wrong group




Unusual toothy pterosaur found hidden in the wrong group

The prehistoric flying reptile with oddly dark bones belongs to a whole new genus named after House Targaryen in Game of Thrones.


JOHN PICKREL
PUBLISHED NOVEMBER 26, 2019


A fossilized creature with oddly dark bones has emerged as the first of its name in a newly described line of toothy pterosaurspaleontologists report in the journal Historical Biology. Dubbed Targaryendraco wiedenrothi, in a nod to the fictional House Targaryen from the blockbuster TV series Game of Thrones, the reptile is the most complete Cretaceous pterosaur known from Germany.

George R.R. Martin / Game of Thrones honoured in new classification of pterosaur




George R.R. Martin

Game of Thrones honoured in new classification of pterosaur

Targaryendraco wiedenrothi has been renamed after House of Targaryen in George RR Martin’s fantasy saga

Alison Flood

George RR Martin is celebrating after a palaeontologist, who named a new genus of pterosaur after the dragons of House Targaryen, agreed with him that dragons should have two, rather than four, legs.

Thursday, July 25, 2019

George R. R. Martin Didn’t Work on Nightflyers




George R. R. Martin Didn’t Work on ‘Nightflyers.’ It Shows


DECEMBER 29, 2018

The new Syfy series Nightflyers is based on a novella by George R. R. Martin that was first published back in 1980. Fantasy author Erin Lindsey says that the original story feels dated, but that it displays a basic storytelling competence that the show never really achieves.
“The things that I didn’t like about the Martin novella were details, at the end of the day, but I thought the bones were good, and in a certain way this is the reverse,” Lindsey says in Episode 341 of the Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy podcast. “Some of the details are cool, but they can’t make up for the fact that the bones aren’t there.”

Science fiction author Matthew Kressel notes that Nightflyers never really moves beyond recycling familiar elements from better movies and TV shows.
“To me it just felt like someone was unfamiliar with the tropes of science fiction,” he says. “I felt like they watched a lot of science fiction movies and TV and said, ‘Oh, that would be cool, that would be cool, that would be cool.’ But it never really cohered into a solid narrative.”
Geek’s Guide to the Galaxyhost David Barr Kirtley had high hopes for Nightflyers, but was disappointed to learn that George R. R. Martin was barely involved with the show. “He says that he heard they were making this show and he was like, ‘How can they do that? I haven’t given them the rights,'” Kirtley says. “And it turned out that he had sold the rights as part of the contract for the 1987 feature film and he hadn’t even realized it.”

TV writer Andrea Kail says that Nightflyers lacks any sort of creative vision, and that the show just seems to be trying to cash in on Martin’s name.
“The beauty of Game of Thrones is that [David] Benioff and [D.B.] Weiss were huge fans of the books,” she says. “They went after George and said, ‘We want to do this.’ It was a passion project for them. This didn’t feel like a passion project for anybody.”
Listen to the complete interview with Erin Lindsey, Matthew Kressel, and Andrea Kail in Episode 341 of Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy (above). And check out some highlights from the discussion below.
David Barr Kirtley on the Nightflyers feature film:
“The novella was adapted into a 1987 movie that was so stunningly successful that the director used a pseudonym so that nobody would know he had directed it. Around this time George R. R. Martin had published his fourth novel, The Armageddon Rag, which was a pretty cool book but an enormous commercial failure. His writing career had been going so well that he had bought a house, and now he couldn’t afford his house anymore, so he was deeply in debt. He told the New York Times that he had actually started taking classes to become a real estate agent, and he would have become a real estate agent if the money from this movie hadn’t come along and pulled him out of debt. And I think that’s probably the only thing that anybody will ever be glad about this movie for.”


Matthew Kressel on worldbuilding:
“The only way they can communicate with the [aliens] is by bringing along a psychic, which sounds perfectly reasonable, except the psychic is literally a psychopath—at least that’s how they present him from the get-go. And I’m like, ‘Why would they bring this completely unstable psychopath with them on this journey which is the last best hope of humanity? Can’t they find a more stable psychic?’ I didn’t quite get that. And then they bring him on board in this giant cage, and he looks through the window and messes with someone’s brain, so it’s like, ‘Well, what’s the point of the cage then?’ I don’t understand why they’re even locking him away if he can literally just ‘think outside the box’ and fry someone’s brain.”
Erin Lindsey on storytelling:
The Expanse is a really good example of a show hitting its stride where they got a lot of the little details not great in the first couple of seasons. Some of the acting was bad, a lot of the dialogue was terrible. But you can forgive those things if the story drives you forward, if there’s a clear sense that if you have questions, as a viewer, that the show makers have answers—and that you feel that they have answers—and that they’re going to be satisfying answers when you finally get them. That’s what keeps you going forward in the story. And there’s no forward momentum in [Nightflyers], because what the characters are trying to achieve as a team is unclear, and their personal motivations are also largely unclear.”

David Barr Kirtley on Syfy:
“I had high hopes for this show. I want Syfy to succeed. I want there to be a science fiction channel on television. I want there to be shows set in outer space. I think the idea of a horror show set on a spaceship is cool. I had high expectations for this, and I was all set to like it. … Syfy has announced that they’re doing a bunch of classic science fiction. They have HyperionGateway, and Ringworld, and I think even other things—Brave New World I think they were doing?—all in development. And obviously something went wrong with this show, and I just really hope that whatever it is gets sorted out before they give a similar treatment to something like Hyperion. That would just break my heart.”




George R.R. Martin / Nightflyers / Neflix


George R.R. Martin
NIGHTFLYERS
Neflix






Jodie Turner-Smith
Jodie Turner-Smith


Gretchen Mol
Gretchen Mol

Gretchel Mol



Sunday, August 27, 2017

Game of Throne / Winds of Winter could be out in 2018, says George RR Martin

George R.R. Martin
Photo by Murdo Macleod
Poster by T.A.


Game of Thrones: Winds of Winter could be out in 2018, says George RR Martin

Author tells readers that he is ‘months away’ from finishing long-awaited next instalment of epic fantasy series A Song of Ice and Fire

Alison Flood
Monday 24 July 2017 10.05 BST



George RR Martin has informed fans impatient for his new Game of Thrones novel The Winds of Winter that he is “still months away” from completing it – but offered hope that they might be reading it next year.

Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Game of Thrones / An epic publishing story

‘Tyrion’s long shadow’, from Game of Thrones: the 20th anniversary illustrated edition.
Photograph: HarperVoyager
Game of Thrones: an epic publishing story

George RR Martin originally planned a trilogy, but 20 years on, his publisher recounts watching the story grow into a seven-volume, multimillion-selling monster


Alison Flood
Friday 5 August 2016 13.29 BST


O
n 6 August 1996, HarperCollins published a book it expected to sell around 5,000 copies in hardback. A tour in the US to mark publication of the novel, A Game of Thrones, saw “modest” turnouts of readers, admits its author George RR Martin. At one stop-off, in St Louis, that number fell to zero.

“I actually drove four patrons out of the bookshop, allowing me to set my all-time ‘bad signing’ record at minus four,” Martin reminisces on his blog. Sales back in 1996 “were … well, OK. Solid. But nothing spectacular. No bestseller lists, certainly.”
Twenty years on, Martin has sold more than 70m copies of his A Song of Ice and Fire novels around the world. But Jane Johnson, Martin’s publisher at HarperCollins in the UK, says that while the first chapters of A Game of Thrones “blew me away” when she was asked to read them in 1993 by her boss. “The writing was sharp and witty and immediate; the range of characters – all full of life – was breathtaking, the world-building impressive, with all the dirty, gritty details that made you feel you were reading well-researched historical fiction rather than a made-up fantasy world. But most of all was that intoxicating tangle of sex and power.” Johnson “knew we had to have it”, but predictions for sales were not, at first, particularly high.

A new iillustration from Game of Thrones: the 20th anniversary illustrated edition,
published on 18 October. Photograph: HarperVoyager

“We costed our offer on modest sales in our territories – expecting, or should I say, hoping for, something like 5,000 hardbacks and 50,000 paperbacks: at the time ambitious numbers for genre fiction,” she says. “And it didn’t immediately look as if we’d achieve that. Initial sales were only moderately encouraging. It’s always hard launching a new series, even by an author, like George, who has been on the scene for a while.”

In 1996, epic fantasy would only be found “tucked away in the far, dark corners of high-street bookshops under the label ‘Sci-fi’, or in specialist SF shops like Forbidden Planet”, and supermarkets “wouldn’t touch fantasy with a bargepole,” she says.
“So the market was limited back then. Rather less so now: thank you, George,” adds Johnson. “But even so, word-of-mouth recommendation was soon spreading like wildfire around fans. And it wasn’t long before we exceeded all of our original expectations, and soon the series books were all hitting the bestseller lists. Of course, no one could ever have expected them to sell more than 70m in more than 40 languages.”
HarperCollins bought Martin’s story initially as a trilogy, focusing on the families of the Starks, the Lannisters and Daenerys, and the Others beyond the Wall. Today, that trilogy already stretches to five books, with Martin currently working on the much-anticipated sixth, The Winds of Winter.


“Back then, I’d thought the whole story could be told in three books, and that it would take me three years to write them, a year per book,” writes Martin on his blog, where he posted a picture of himself in 1995, taken after he’d signed contracts for the first three books in the series but before he’d delivered them.
“That picture was taken just a few weeks after I blew my first (but not my last, oh no) deadline on the series. Ah, how innocent I was … little did that guy in the picture imagine that he would be spending most of the next two decades in the Seven Kingdoms of Westeros with Tyrion, Daenerys, Arya, Sansa, Jon Snow, Bran, and all the rest.”
“As Tolkien said about Lord of the Rings, ‘the tale grew in the telling,’” says Johnson. “Like Lord of the Rings, A Game of Thrones starts small and focused, and the world unfolds bit by bit out of it, offering new people and places as you progress. And each of those people and places acquired such vitality and presence that the delivered first manuscript came in at over 1,300 pages, but was nowhere near the third-of-the-way-through point of the draft synopsis. But it was wonderful: there was real grit to the action and a sense of deep history and colour to the world.”


“We were very happy when at that point George said he thought it would need to be four books instead of three. Around the time of writing [the fourth book] A Feast for Crows, when it was clear that the world and characters were going to need a lot more space for this hugely epic story to do itself justice, we realised it would need to be six, then seven books. George said that he feels seven’s a good number, and the right place to stop.”
Calculations say Martin has killed 3,717 characters in the series – so far – and Johnson believes that Martin has written more than 1.8m words in A Song of Ice and Fire. “He works so damn hard,” she said. “That’s more like 18 books’ worth of published words by most other writers’ standards. Not bad going in 23 years of working on this series.”



Johnson won’t be pushed on when readers might see The Winds of Winter – Martin, writing on his blog, is giving nothing away either, although he has revealed plans to publish an illustrated edition of A Game of Thrones in October. “Here I am, 20 years later … still working on book six … (and no, sorry, I have no announcement to make on that front),” he writes.
“I’m like Jon Snow: I know nothing,” says Johnson. “As most people know by now, he’ll announce it first on his blog so that everyone hears at the same time. And as soon as we possibly can after he delivers, we’ll publish.



Saturday, July 23, 2016

Game of Thrones fans are hoping that The Winds of Winter and A Dream of Spring will be released together

Geroge R.R. Martin

Game of Thrones fans are hoping that The Winds of Winter and A Dream of Spring will be released together

George RR Martin's reputation as a slow writer sadly makes the theory implausible

Jess Denham
Monday 18 July 2016


Game of Thrones author George RR Martin might be known for keeping fans waiting for books, but a new theory has emerged that they could be rewarded with two new novels at once.
Five long years have already passed since 2011’s A Dance with Dragons, but with The Winds of Winter and A Dream of Springboth already promised, could it be that a double-whammy will hit stores at the same time?
Speculation is rife that the sixth instalment in Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire series could be released at the World Science Convention in August, where Martin will be taking part in panels, doing a reading and signing books.


There could well be truth in this rumour, but the second seems less likely (although if Jon Snow can come back to life, there’s always hope). Some fans on Reddit have suggested that the wait for The Winds of Winter might have been longer than anticipated because Martin plans to surprise us all by dropping A Dream of Spring simultaneously.
One possible reason for this could be to protect book readers from spoilers after the TV show overtook Martin last season. However, while we’d love to believe that two new Game of Thrones books could soon be in our hands together, Martin’s repeated admissions of writer’s block strongly hint otherwise. “What if it’s taking so long because he wrote both and is pulling our legs,” wrote one user, only to add “No, probably not.”
There have been long delays between his novels before - notably between 2000’s A Storm of Swords and 2005’s A Feast of Crows, and again between that book and A Dance with Dragons. Some fans are growing so impatient that they have begged Martin to enlist the help of a co-author, possibly Neil Gaiman. Martin is yet to respond to these requests and has grown angry at fans worried that he may die before finishing the series.
Game of Thrones is set to return for its seventh season in May 2017 after racking up 23 Emmy nominations last week. Here’s hoping Martin at least gives us The Winds of Winter before then but for now, the wait continues…