- Aug 7, 2018
- 7,095
- 9,069
Once again, internet opinions ignore reality. As much as folks disliked the last season of game of thrones. The D&D team have made tons of money, and multiple awards for their work on GoT. The idea of a fan backlash (which like last Jedi is way overblown) has effected their careers is ridiculous.
They have their pick of who to work with, and they have obviously chosen Netflix, who is known to throw out extreme amounts of money in any direction.
Once again, internet opinions ignore reality. As much as folks disliked the last season of game of thrones. The D&D team have made tons of money, and multiple awards for their work on GoT. The idea of a fan backlash (which like last Jedi is way overblown) has effected their careers is ridiculous.
They have their pick of who to work with, and they have obviously chosen Netflix, who is known to throw out extreme amounts of money in any direction.
Sorry, dude. 1/2 of the writers was behind the madness that is X-Men Origins: Wolverine. They adapted Martin's work well until there was nothing to adapt. When (mostly) left to their own devices, the show went downhill (with certain very head-scratching comments about the decision making in the Behind the Scenes features). Unlike most, I still enjoyed Seasons 6&7 despite their flaws, but they were too obvious to ignore for Season 8.
The decision to conclude the story at all was incredibly bold. The only thing they can be blamed for is the decision to rush to the end. The brevity of the dialog, the whiplash travel across the continent, the apparently unmotivated character pivots, all ties back to that. For all we know, George could have handed them all those plot points nobody likes on a cocktail napkin, intending to flesh them out over 20 years with 500,000 words each. Brilliant, we would have thought. Now he’s just laughing as he goes back to the drawing board.
I also don’t think people understand the monumental task and cost of keeping this cast and crew together going forward. The cast might be criticizing how poorly their character was handled now, but what were they asking for that next season?
I would have stopped production after season 6 and pointed at George whenever anyone asked about more. You want an ending, let that guy commit to it. Anyone who read the books as they were released has had the nagging suspicion in the back of their mind that this wasn’t going to end well since the first announcement.
This live tweet thread of a D/D Q&A makes me wonder if this is for the best.
I also don’t think people understand the monumental task and cost of keeping this cast and crew together going forward. The cast might be criticizing how poorly their character was handled now, but what were they asking for that next season?.