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This is a continuation thread, the old thread is [split]461871[/split]
Oh gawd, don't get them started...
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If you want Justice, you've come to the wrong place.
Didn't he have a beard in that Narnia movie he did?
Dinklage was cautious during his first Game of Thrones meeting. In the film Prince Caspian, part of the Chronicles of Narnia series, he had played the dwarf Trumpkin and spent the seven-month shoot in Eastern Europe and New Zealand sweating under a long red beard. It was a lovely experience, he said diplomatically, but it was pretty uncomfortable. So in that meeting with Benioff and Weiss, before anyone explained Game of Thrones or Tyrion Lannister to him, he made a simple request: no beard, no pointy shoes. Dwarves in these genres always have this look. My guard was up. Not even my guard my metal fence, my barbed wire was up. Even Lord of the Rings had dwarf-tossing jokes in it. Its like, Really? But he learned from Benioff and Weiss that Tyrion was a different kind of fantasy little person. Hes somebody who turns that on its head. No beard, no pointy shoes, a romantic, real human being. And perhaps most important in getting Dinklage, who still hadnt had that many lead roles in the years since The Station Agent, to sign on before the meeting was half over: They told me how popular he was.
Oberon Sexton said:In terms of the zeitgeist...I'd say ASOIAF has had a larger affect. People aren't comparing Jordan to Tolkien like they are GRRM. The fact that these large scale books are being adapted pretty faithfully to the screen is a pretty huge acomplishment IMO
That's only because of Game of Thrones's popularity and as it has been a kind of Lord of the rings for television, not due to the GRRM's books before the show came out and made him this mainstream.