Game of Thrones Season 17 Blu Ray Set Review

Season of boob tube serial

Game of Thrones
Season 2
Game of Thrones Season 2.jpg

Region ane DVD artwork

Starring Run into Listing of Game of Thrones cast
Country of origin U.s.
No. of episodes 10
Release
Original network HBO
Original release Apr i (2012-04-01) –
June 3, 2012 (2012-06-03)
Season chronology

Previous
Season i

Next →
Season 3

List of episodes

The second season of the fantasy drama television serial Game of Thrones premiered in the Us on HBO on April 1, 2012, and concluded on June three, 2012. It consists of x episodes, each running approximately fifty–threescore minutes. The flavour mostly covers the events of A Clash of Kings, the second novel of the A Vocal of Ice and Burn serial by George R. R. Martin, adapted for television by David Benioff and D. B. Weiss. HBO ordered the second season on April 19, 2011, which began filming in July 2011, primarily in Ireland, Northern Ireland, Republic of croatia and Republic of iceland.

The story takes place in a fantasy world, primarily on a fictional continent called Westeros, with one storyline occurring on another continent to the e, Essos. Like the novel, the flavour follows the backwash of Eddard "Ned" Stark's dramatic death, and the political turmoil that comes with it. The season mainly centers around the War of the Five Kings, fought amongst the leaders of Westerosi factions who are either staking a merits to the Atomic number 26 Throne, or seeking independence from it. Cersei Lannister, the widow of the tardily King Robert Baratheon, stays in the capital letter equally queen regent, while her son Joffrey rules as King of the 7 Kingdoms. Cersei's twin blood brother, Jaime, is Robb Stark'due south prisoner, and her other brother, the dwarf Tyrion, serves every bit Acting Hand of the Rex to Joffrey, until the siblings' father, Tywin Lannister, returns to help defend the capital. In the North, Jon Snow and the Night'southward Watch stay with a reluctant ally during an expedition beyond the Wall. Meanwhile, in Essos, with 3 newborn dragons by her side, Daenerys Targaryen attempts to detect allies and resources to assist her fulfill her perceived destiny to win the Iron Throne.

Game of Thrones features a large ensemble cast, including Peter Dinklage, Lena Headey, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Michelle Fairley and Emilia Clarke. The season introduced a number of new cast members, including Stephen Dillane, Natalie Dormer, Carice van Houten and Liam Cunningham.

Critics praised the show'southward production values, bandage, and music. Viewership rose compared with the previous season. The second season won half-dozen of the twelve Emmy Awards for which information technology was nominated. Information technology received a nomination for Outstanding Supporting Player in a Drama Series (Peter Dinklage) and Outstanding Drama Series. U.South. viewership rose by approximately 8% over the grade of the flavour, from 3.nine million to 4.2 million by the flavour finale.

Episodes [edit]

Bandage [edit]

Main cast [edit]

Starring [edit]

Also starring [edit]

  • Jason Momoa every bit Khal Drogo

Guest cast [edit]

The recurring actors listed here are those who appeared in season 2. They are listed by the region in which they first appear:

Product [edit]

HBO ordered a second season of Game of Thrones on April 19, 2011, two days afterwards the serial premiere.[thirteen] The second flavor obtained a 15% increment in budget in order to be able to stage the state of war's well-nigh important battle,[14] the Battle of the Blackwater, in episode nine.

Filming took place during 106 shooting days. During three-quarters of those, two crews ("Dragon" and "Wolf") were working simultaneously in different locations.[15]

Crew [edit]

David Benioff and D. B. Weiss serve as main writers and showrunners for the second season. They co-wrote half-dozen out of ten episodes. The remaining four episodes were written past story editor Bryan Cogman, A Song of Ice and Fire author George R. R. Martin, and new series writer and co-executive producer Vanessa Taylor, who wrote two episodes.

Alan Taylor was promoted to co-executive producer and directed four episodes, including the season premiere and finale. David Petrarca and David Nutter each directed two episodes, while series cinematographer Alik Sakharov and filmmaker Neil Marshall directed the remaining two.

Casting [edit]

The casting for the second season began in May 2011.[sixteen] Although a large portion of the showtime-season cast were returning, the producers were nevertheless faced with a huge number of new characters to be cast. The producers decided that several characters from A Clash of Kings, including the Freys and Crannogmen Reeds at Winterfell, Frey bannermen of the Starks, the Tullys, Stannis' wife and daughter, Theon's uncle Aeron Greyjoy and the bastard Ramsay Snowfall would not be cast despite actualization in the novel. Showrunners David Benioff and D. B. Weiss commented on this saying that certain character introductions taking place in A Clash of Kings would be delayed until the 3rd flavour. This was washed due to the large number of characters already introduced in season two, and because they couldn't beget to have people "waiting around" for their characters to become fundamental to the plot.[17] Having to fill and then many speaking roles, the showrunners non simply "postponed" the introduction of several key characters, but they also merged some into one, or certain plot-functions were given to different characters. Many physical traits were also altered, such as the ethnicity or historic period of characters. The bandage was estimated to be the largest on telly.[eighteen] Scattered around ii fictional continents characters include, past lodge of importance:

Emerging as the fourth claimant to the throne is the estranged brother of the late king Robert, Stannis Baratheon (Stephen Dillane).[xix] The foreign priestess Melisandre, portrayed by Carice van Houten poses as an influential, all the same manipulative advisor to Stannis. Van Houten was previously asked (but unable) to audience for the role of Cersei in flavor 1. While her character retains her signature scarlet robes and hair, different in the novels Melisandre is not portrayed as having ruby-red eyes, making her appear somewhat more human.[20] Liam Cunningham stars as Ser Davos Seaworth, the "Onion Knight", a bannerman of Stannis and a sometime smuggler.[21] Cunningham had already been in talks for a function in the first season. As he is left-handed, his Davos has the fingers of the right hand shortened, dissimilar in the novels where his left paw is crippled. In an interview, Cunningham said that a lot of new dialogue had to be written for his character, because in the novels Davos, a signal-of-view graphic symbol, is portrayed more through his thoughts than through his actions.[22] These three characters headed a new storyline assail a different location, that by the end of the season merged with the principal plot.

Theon Greyjoy (Alfie Allen), a main bandage member from the first season, but with bottom importance than the others, came to prominence during the 2nd flavor, every bit his story unfolded and his character became more central. Gemma Whelan appeared as his sister, Yara Greyjoy. Named "Asha" in the novels, the character'southward name was changed to avoid confusion with the Wildling Osha, Bran Stark's companion.[23] "Asha" is portrayed as a fairly provocative and independent woman, a captain of thirty ships, equally opposed to her television counterpart Yara, who did not retain "Asha'due south" traits, although her rivalry with Theon remained intact. Their begetter Balon Greyjoy was played by Patrick Malahide.[24] Many of the characters involved in the Greyjoys' storyline weren't introduced, almost notably Balon's brother Aeron Greyjoy. Yet, the storyline received enormous praise, with the amending of Yara's name and persona being the but criticism.

Tom Wlaschiha is cast equally Jaqen H'ghar, a mysterious prisoner who develops a murderous relationship with young Arya Stark (Maisie Williams).[25] Wlaschiha's pronunciation of his graphic symbol's name, Jack-in, was adopted for use in the bear witness.[26] Natalie Dormer, all-time known for her portrayal as seductive Anne Boleyn in Showtime's The Tudors, was cast in a similar role as Margaery Tyrell, a noblewoman and the wife of the third claimant to the throne, Renly Baratheon.[27] Gwendoline Christie played, to much praise, Brienne of Tarth, a female person warrior who joins Renly Baratheon'due south baby-sit, merely subsequently becomes a follower of Catelyn Stark.[28] To prepare for the role, Christie took upward an intense grooming regimen, adding over a stone (six.4 kg) of musculus mass.[29] And so that she could be mistaken for a human, her armor was decorated with lines that slant away from her hips.[30] On the other side of the fictional globe, ii female roles with rising prominence were added to the cast: Skins star Hannah Murray filled the role of Craster's daughter Gilly, a love involvement to Samwell Tarly;[31] while the second function, the one of Ygritte, Jon Snow's honey involvement amongst the Wildlings, was played past Rose Leslie.[32]

Daenerys Targaryen's (Emilia Clarke) stay at Qarth, opened the way for several recurring characters. Nonso Anozie played Daenerys'southward host at Qarth, Xaro Xhoan Daxos.[33] The graphic symbol differed a lot from his novel counterpart. Xaro's homosexuality, femininity and caucasian origin were overshadowed by nighttime skinned Anozie's masculinity and heterosexuality. Interim as 1 of her suitors is the treacherous warlock Pyat Pree portrayed past Ian Hanmore. Her third and last suitor was the masked priestess Quaithe (Laura Pradelska). Specially created for the goggle box series was the then-called "Spice King", a rich merchant from Qarth, played by Nicholas Blane. Also an original creation of the show is the character of Talisa (Oona Chaplin), a healer from Volantis and a romantic interest for Robb. She fills the role of some other female interest of Robb's, called Jeyne Westerling, who has no similarities with Talisa whatsoever. In addition to Talisa, Michael McElhatton joins the cast in the role of Roose Bolton, an of import character in Robb Stark's storyline. Lastly, Simon Armstrong plays the legendary Dark's Watch ranger Qhorin Halfhand.

Others were also added to the cast, either in a small recurring role or with reduced prominence. The nigh notable example is Tony Way's Ser Dontos Hollard, a drunk knight, who had a pivotal role in Sansa Stark's storyline that ran in the course of two novels, while in the series the part was reduced to a small scene in the opening episode. Others include: Ben Crompton equally "Dolorous Edd" Tollet, a man of the Dark'southward Watch.[34] Robert Pugh every bit the Wildling Craster, father and married man to Gilly.[35] Kerr Logan as Davos Seaworth's pious son Matthos.[36] Karl Davies every bit Ser Alton Lannister, a character created for the serial[37] who replaces Cleos Frey as envoy from the Starks to the Lannisters. Daniel Portman took the role of Podrick Payne, the squire to Tyrion Lannister.[38] The 19-year-old Portman plays Podrick as virtually 16 years old, instead of virtually 12 as in the novels. To be able to portray Podrick as bad-mannered, shy and weak, Portman, previously a sportsman, stopped his fitness regimen and gained some weight to appear more endearing.[39] Lucian Msamati played Salladhor Saan, a Lysene pirate and friend of Davos Seaworth. Finally, Edward Dogliani appeared briefly as the "Lord of Basic" (or "Rattleshirt" in the novels), a Wildling leader and Oliver Ford Davies every bit Stannis's maester Cressen.[forty]

All of the recurring characters from the starting time flavour returned, with one notable exception: Conan Stevens, whose part of Gregor Clegane was recast with Ian Whyte, did not render.[41] Roy Dotrice, a friend of George R. R. Martin, known for reading the audio versions of the novels and having previously rejected a role due to health reasons, appears this flavour as Pyromancer Hallyne, an elderly alchemist at King's Landing.[42]

Locations [edit]

For the 2d season, the city of Dubrovnik, Croatia, was used instead of Malta for scenes in Rex's Landing and Daenerys' scenes in Qarth.[43] For example, the Minčeta Belfry in Dubrovnik was used as the House of the Undying. Scenes set due north of the Wall were filmed in Iceland in November 2011. The primary locations are the Vatnajökull glacier,[44] the Svínafellsjökull glacier about Skaftafell, and the Mýrdalsjökull glacier near Vik used equally the location for the Fist of the First Men with Höfðabrekka as the Frostfang Mountains.[45] [46] [47] New shooting locations in Northern Ireland include The Linen Mill Film & Television set Studios in Banbridge, Ballintoy Harbour[48] and Downhill Strand. Equally the story in the 2nd season required that the Winterfell ready be expanded, a new set for Winterfell was congenital at the Moneyglass Estate near Toome hamlet.[49]

Music [edit]

The music for the second season was again composed by Ramin Djawadi. It contains a rendition of a song ofttimes mentioned or sung in the novels, The Rains of Castamere, by the indie rock band The National.[50]

The soundtrack for the flavor was released on June nineteen, 2012.[51]

Promotion [edit]

HBO released numerous teaser trailers for the second season, beginning on December 11, 2011.[52] The second trailer, published on January 29, 2012,[53] was viewed iii.5 1000000 times in the first three days later on publication, a record for HBO promotional content.[54] Other trailers were released on February 24,[55] March 3 (set to Florence and the Motorcar's Seven Devils)[56] as well every bit later.

HBO also published other promotional material, such as bandage photographs[57] and teaser posters, prior to the airing of the first episode. The 2d issue of Entertainment Weekly in March 2012 had four alternative covers defended to in-costume photographs of Peter Dinklage (Tyrion), Emilia Clarke (Daenerys), Kit Harington (Jon Snow) or Nikolaj Coster-Waldau and Lena Headey (Jaime and Cersei Lannister).[58]

Reception [edit]

Pre-release [edit]

Thanks to the critical and commercial success of the first season, too equally HBO'south marketing efforts, the second season received intensive media coverage well before information technology started ambulation. Sunday is Coming, a two-minute short moving picture for Funny or Dice, satirized viewers' excitement about the render of Game of Thrones.[59] Several media outlets reviewed the flavour'south showtime four episodes before they were broadcast, and rendered nearly uniformly positive verdicts.

Critical response [edit]

Game of Thrones (season 2): Disquisitional reception by episode
  • Season two (2012) : Percentage of positive reviews tracked by the website Rotten Tomatoes[60]

Several media outlets reviewed the season's first four episodes earlier they were broadcast, and rendered most uniformly positive verdicts. The flavor holds a Metacritic score of 90 out of 100 based on 26 critics, indicating "universal acclamation".[61] On Rotten Tomatoes, the 2nd flavor has a 96% approval rating from 37 critics with an boilerplate rating of eight.89 out of 10. The site's disquisitional consensus reads, "Game of Thrones follows up a stiff debut with an even ameliorate second season, combining elegant storytelling and vivid characters to create a rich fantasy globe."[60]

Brian Lowry of Diversity gave the season a positive review and stated, "Thrones creates such a rich visual feast - replete with plenty of gratuitous nudity and blood-letting - every bit to almost obscure its fundamental storytelling pleasures, which are every bit much a mob drama as anything else, having traded bullets for broadswords."[62] Nancy deWolf Smith of The Wall Street Journal said that "each week the story unfolds like a tapestry, its intricate stitches slowly creating not merely a scene just a whole globe."[63] Slant Magazine gave the flavour iii out of 4 and stated, "[Game Of Thrones] Flavour Two must be admired for its gripping presentation of splintered families and unwavering ruthlessness."[64] Emily Nussbaum of The New Yorker gave the flavour a positive review and stated, "Game of Thrones is the latest entry in television's most esteemed category: the sophisticated cable drama about a patriarchal subculture."[65] Matt Zoller Seitz of Vulture positively spoke about the season that "what's onscreen is so consistently remarkable, and so much smarter than information technology needed to be in gild to satisfy viewers who are mainly looking for sex, violence, and intrigue, that the testify'due south presence feels similar a kind of miracle."[66]

David Wiegand of the San Francisco Chronicle its "compelling, murderous and sexy characters".[67] The New York Post stated, "Even though I get so confused my caput feels like it'southward going to explode, Game of Thrones is brainy, good fun."[68] Newsday gave it a score of 'A+' and said that it was "TV's best (merely practice your homework before diving in)."[69] Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly gave it a score of 'A-', who praised its storytelling to exist "so vivid, so vital, and but plain fun."[lxx] Maureen Ryan of HuffPost gave the season a positive review and stated, "Information technology'south gratifying to be able to say that the outset four hours of Season 2 of Game of Thrones are far more elegant and engaging."[71] Andy Greenwald of Grantland praised its ambition and scope,[72] while James Poniewozik of Time found the premiere episode to be "hustling off steadily and confidently."[73] Peter Dinklage'southward portrayal of Tyrion Lannister was acclaimed by William Thomas of Empire, who gave it a score of five out of 5.[74]

The only major publication to give the season a negative review was Neil Genzlinger of The New York Times, who stated, "You have to have a fair amount of free time on your hands to stick with Game of Thrones, and a adequately low reward threshold."[75]

Ratings [edit]

Accolades [edit]

The second season was nominated for 11 Primetime Emmy Awards, which included Outstanding Drama Series and Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series for Peter Dinklage. It won six awards, for, Outstanding Costumes for a Series, Outstanding Fine art Direction for a Single-Camera Serial, Outstanding Makeup for a Single-Camera Series (Non-Prosthetic), Outstanding Audio Editing for a Series, Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Comedy or Drama Series (One-Hour), and Outstanding Special Visual Effects.[76]

Release [edit]

Broadcast [edit]

The second flavor of Game of Thrones was broadcast on HBO in the United states from Apr 1, 2012 to June 3, 2012.[110] [111]

Home media [edit]

DVD/Blu-ray box sets and digital downloads of the 2nd season were released in North America on Feb xix, 2013.[112] The DVD set contains a thirty-minute characteristic covering the production of the episode "Blackwater", actor interviews, character profiles, twelve audio commentaries by cast and crew, and a discussion about Westerosi religions by the showrunners and George R. R. Martin. The Blu-ray set additionally contains a feature about the "State of war of the Five Kings" that breaks out in season ii, besides as nineteen animated histories of the mythology of Westeros and Essos.[113]

Game of Thrones: The Complete 2nd Season
Set details Special features
  • Format: AC-3, Blu-ray, DTS Environment Sound, Dubbed, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen
  • Language: English, French, Castilian, Czech, Hungarian, Polish, Spanish
  • Subtitles: English language, Spanish, Spanish, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, Hebrew, Hungarian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Serbian, Swedish, Turkish
  • 16:9 attribute ratio
  • 5-disc fix, 10 episodes
  • "Creating the Battle of Blackwater Bay": A 30-minute characteristic including new footage from the set and interviews.
  • "Game of Thrones: Inner Circle": Interviews with several cast member to talk near their experiences shooting season two, chastened by executive producers David Benioff and D. B. Weiss.
  • "The Religions of Westeros": George R. R. Martin, David Benioff and D. B. Weiss discuss the competing religions in the serial and how they influence the various characters in Westeros and across.
  • "Character Profiles": Profiles of seven major characters as described past the actors portraying them including Renly Baratheon, Stannis Baratheon, Robb Stark, Theon Greyjoy and more.
  • Twelve audio commentaries by, among others, Benioff, Weiss, Martin, Clarke, Dinklage, Harington and more than.

Blu-ray exclusive:

  • "War of the Five Kingss": Track the claims, strategies and key players involved in the battle for the Fe Throne with this interactive guide that follows the movements of various armies detailing their victories and defeats.
  • "Histories & Lore": 19 animated histories detailing the mythology of Westeros and Essos every bit told from the varying perspectives of the characters themselves and featuring, in-office, illustrations from Game of Thrones storyboard artist Volition Simpson.
  • "In-Episode Guide": In-feature resources that provides background data almost on-screen characters, locations and relevant histories.
  • "Subconscious Dragon Eggs", easter eggs.[112]
DVD release dates
Region 1 Region two Region 4
Feb 19, 2013[114] March 4, 2013[115] March half dozen, 2013[116]

Copyright infringement [edit]

The second season of Game of Thrones was the most-pirated TV serial in 2012.[117]

References [edit]

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External links [edit]

  • Game of Thrones – official Usa site
  • Game of Thrones – official U.k. site
  • Game of Thrones – The Viewers Guide on HBO.com
  • Making Game of Thrones on HBO.com
  • Game of Thrones at IMDb
  • Game of Thrones: Flavor 2 at Rotten Tomatoes

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Game_of_Thrones_%28season_2%29

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