1. Squandered Foreshadowing
In dramatic writing, there’s a principle called “Chekhov’s Gun” named after acclaimed Russian writer Anton Chekhov:
In other words, if you’re going to insert something into the story and draw a lot of attention to it, it must be relevant to the story at hand and play a significant role in the narrative going forward.
InGame of Thrones, this principle became a staple of the series as many plot points were started and emphasized long before they reached fruition. But in season eight? This principle seemingly vanished.
Case in point: the story drew attention to Daenerys' ability to bear children several times in previous seasons, and there was that moment when Jorah Mormont declined Jon Snow’s offer of Longclaw and told him: “May it serve you well, and your children after you.”
The implication is that Daenerys and Jon Snow would have children, and season eight seemed to move toward children that they would have together. Yet despite season eight’s revelation about Jon and Daenerys' lineage, the couple’s relationship fell away without any significance.
It’s just one example where season-spanning foreshadowings were wasted by the final season, shoddily ignored and cast aside.
2. Absurd Character Arcs
Game of Thronesbegan as a slow-burning push, with each character being one piece in a cosmic chess game, with each move carefully considered—right up to when that slow-burn policy vanished.
Season eight took the good-hearted Queen Daenerys from the series' beginnings and turned her into The Mad Queen within three episodes.
Now, there’s nothing wrong with the idea of Daenerys turning into a dark and twisted character after she’s tortured by loss and guilt. But that’s a character arc that demands more than three episodes—more like three seasons. It’s an absurdly paced character arc.
Daenerys' growing madness should have been woven through numerous episodes and increasingly tormented decisions, pushing her further and further down a dark path that she couldn’t escape despite the efforts of her supporters around her.
Instead, Daenerys' personality flipped a 180 faster than Tony Hawk, simply so she could spearhead the destruction of King’s Landing.
Unfortunately, this isn’t isolated to the character of Daenerys. It was true of various other characters throughout the run of the final season—like Brienne, Jaime, Arya, Sansa, and countless others—and the resulting effect is that fans were yawning long before Jon killed Dany.
3. Rushed and Senseless Plot
Watching the final season of the series, you get the feeling that Benioff and Weiss were sitting in the writer’s room and sputtering out “That’ll do” time and time again to half-baked plot suggestions.
The astounding lack of craft—and the lost essence of what the show used to be—took the wind right out of the show’s sails. By the end of season eight, everything that had been shown as important in the first few seasons had descended into cliché and mindless clap-trap.
The demise of the White Walkers—while epic as a battle—was too brief. Production stories from cast and crew, who’d spent weeks shooting the battle, led audiences to think this would be the Helm’s Deep ofGame of Thrones. But it wasn’t. It was lackluster and inconsequential.
The stakes were nonexistent as audiences knew neither Jon nor Dany could die—they still had much else to do. The entire sequence remains baffling for a series that had built up this world-ending threat from its very first episode, only for it all to be wiped away in one night.
As for the events after The Battle of Winterfell? The less said, the better. The rushed and lazy plotting can be summed up by the random coffee cup inexplicably left on the middle of a medieval table.
4. Stinging Response by the Cast and George R. R. Martin
After the final season ofGame of Thronesaired, HBO sent a handful of the actors to Comic Con to form a panel that was essentially meant to endure the brunt of fan backlash over the season.
As comedian Seth Rogen pointed out during the event—his own panel had directly followed theGame of Thronespanel—the fact that David Benioff and D.B. Weiss didn’t even show up for their own show said a lot.
David Benioff and D.B. Weiss were fully aware of all the controversy surrounding the show’s final season, but they didn’t care to answer any questions about it, nor did they want to interact with fans, nor did they intend to admit any of the mistakes they’d made.
With season eight now long behind, several of theGame of Thronescast have made personal statements about the ending, with Kit Harington, Emilia Clarke, Lena Heady, Nathalie Emmanuel, and various others overtly dissatisfied with the conclusion.
However, the most significant critique of the final season came from George R. R. Martin himself, who—since the fiasco—has repeatedly promised fans that the books will not end in similar fashion.
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