I promised you two topics this week: Sansa Stark and Ramsay Snow. I’m going to have to punt on Sansa Stark. To coin a completely original expression, I’ve been hella sick recently. Not as sick as the baseball-bat-to-the-face-like Plutonian Death Flu the Young family got, but sick. I’m now better but I’ve fallen behind on a lot of things, including this one. So this week’s entry is going to be a bit shorter than originally planned. You may celebrate or grieve according to what you feel is appropriate.
The Assassination of Roose Bolton by the Coward Ramsay Snow
I’m gonna switch it up a bit here and say something nice about the show for a change: they got Roose Bolton right.
That wasn’t an easy task. Way back when Game of Thrones was just a twinkle in HBO’s eye, those of us in the online A Song of Ice and Fire book fandom would sometimes muse to ourselves about what actors would play what characters in a hypothetical dream adaptation. Some of it was prescient (lots of people saw Sean Bean as Ned Stark). Some of it was pie-in-the-sky stuff (Brad Pitt as Jaime Lannister! Vin Diesel as the Hound!). Some of it was predictable fan stuff (David Tennant as everyone!). But I remember that there was no consensus on who should play Roose Bolton. Suggestions ranged from Sir Anthony Hopkins to Cillian Murphy to Steve Buscemi and everything in between.
Privately, I didn’t think that Roose Bolton was unadaptable, but I was certain that if anyone ever did adapt the novels they’d get him wrong anyway. They’d make him either too mustauche-twirly, too obviously creepy, too young, too old, or some combination of the four. But they wouldn’t be able to evoke that understated, unsettling quality the character had in the books. But damn if they didn’t pull it off. The actor’s name is Michael McElhatton, and I’d never heard of him before, but a look at his IMDB pageimdb.com/name/nm0568385/ shows a guy who’s definitely paid his dues. I hope to see more of him after all this, because I suspect that Roose Bolton is a deceptively difficult part to play. You have to convey a menacing type of intelligence while also giving a low-profile performance. It’s a combination that Aidan Gillen’s Littlefinger never quite pulled off, for example.And I thought Gillen was excellent in The Wire.
Continue reading 〉〉 “Game of Thrones Griping 5: Klingon Promotion”
T w e n t y S i d e d
