(Warning: This post contains spoilers for the “Game of Thrones” series finale)
Whether you loved or hated the twists “Game of Thrones” dropped in its series finale earlier this month, Isaac Hempstead Wright says you can blame George R.R. Martin for at least one of the episode’s biggest bombshells: Bran a.k.a. the Three-Eyed Raven becoming Bran the Broken — the king of Westeros.
“[Creators] David [Benioff] and Dan [Weiss] told me there were two things George R.R. Martin had planned for Bran, and that was the Hodor revelation, and that he would be king,” Wright said in an interview published by HBO’s Making of Game of Thrones. “So that’s pretty special to be directly involved in something that is part of George’s vision. It was a really nice way to wrap it up.”
Of course whether or not the “A Song of Ice and Fire” author uses the Bran the Broken twist as the ending to his book series — which has two more planned installments, “The Winds of Winter” and “A Dream of Spring” — is still up to him. And we’re not really clear on where he stands on that issue at the moment.
The day after the “GoT” finale, Martin penned a blog post commemorating the “wild ride” from his first meeting with Weiss and Benioff to the ratings record-smashing series finale, Martin attempted to answer the question of just how much the HBO show’s ending matches up with the one he has planned for the books that inspired the series.
Martin also insisted that he will eventually finish the long-delayed final installments of those books … just don’t ask him when he’ll finish.
“I’m writing. Winter is coming, I told you, long ago… and so it is. ‘THE WINDS OF WINTER’ is very late, I know, I know, but it will be done,” Martin wrote. “I won’t say when, I’ve tried that before, only to burn you all and jinx myself… but I will finish it, and then will come ‘A DREAM OF SPRING.’” So there you have it. Sort of.
Meanwhile, there’s the question of the show’s ending. The first five seasons of “Game of Thrones” were adaptations of Martin’s novels. But the basis for Season 5, “A Dance With Dragons,” was released in 2011 while the show’s first season was still in progress and Martin didn’t finish “The Winds of Winter” before Season 6 began production. Which is why, during the final three seasons of the HBO series, the show charted its own course.
Events in Seasons 6, 7 and 8 were based on notes Martin gave to the showrunners about where he intended things to end — which, among other things, included who would end up ruling Westeros in the end. Even so, many fans have wondered if the finished novel series will go in a different place and more importantly, serve as the true conclusion to “Game of Thrones.”
According to Martin, expect things to be the same, and different.
“How will it all end? I hear people asking. The same ending as the show? Different? Well… yes. And no. And yes. And no. And yes. And no. And yes,” Martin wrote.
In his post, Martin said that the differences between television and literature will certainly come in to play. “I expect these last two books of mine will fill 3000 manuscript pages between them before I’m done… and if more pages and chapters and scenes are needed, I’ll add them.”
But the main thing Martin wants fans to know is that the question of which version will contain the correct ending isn’t really important. “Book or show, which will be the ‘real’ ending? It’s a silly question. How many children did Scarlett O’Hara have?” he said, referencing the heroine of another novel-turned-filmed-landmark, “Gone With the Wind.”
“How about this? I’ll write it. You read it. Then everyone can make up their own mind, and argue about it on the internet.”