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{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Game of Thrones'': Season 5}}
{{season
 
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{{Season
| season =5
 
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| Season = 5
| image = Gameofthrones-season5_poster.jpg
 
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| Type = Thrones
| episodes =10
 
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| Image = {{PAGENAME}}.jpg
| airdates =April 12, 2015 to June 21, 2015
 
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| Episodes = 10{{HBOref|GOT5}}
| production=July 18 2014<ref>[http://www.makinggameofthrones.com/production-diary/2014/10/2/welcome-to-season-5]</ref>to<br>December 12 2014<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-thrones-wraps-filming-season-5/ Game of Thrones wraps filming for Season 5]</ref>
 
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| Premiere = "[[The Wars To Come]]"{{HBOref|GOT5}}
| DVD =TBA
 
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| Finale = "[[Mother's Mercy]]"{{HBOref|GOT5}}
| previous =[[Season 4]]
 
| next =[[Season 6]]}}
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| Network = [[HBO]]{{HBOref|GOT}}
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| First = April 12, 2015{{Listref|GOT}}
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| Final = June 14, 2015{{Listref|GOT}}
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| Runtime = 559 minutes{{Boxref|GOT5}}
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| Home = March 15, 2016{{Webref|name=Blu-ray |author=HBOWatch Staff |date=October 7, 2015 |url=https://hbowatch.com/game-of-thrones-season-5-available-in-blu-ray-dvd-march-15-2016/ |title=Game of Thrones Season 5 Available on Blu-ray, DVD March 15, 2016 |website=HBO Watch |access-date=December 15, 2023 }}
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| Starring = {{Collapse|[[Peter Dinklage]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Nikolaj Coster-Waldau]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Lena Headey]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Emilia Clarke]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Kit Harington]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Aidan Gillen]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Charles Dance]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Natalie Dormer]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Stephen Dillane]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Liam Cunningham]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Carice van Houten]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Indira Varma]]{{Ref|GOT502}}<br>[[Alfie Allen]]{{Ref|GOT503}}<br>[[John Bradley]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Sophie Turner]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Maisie Williams]]{{Ref|GOT502}}<br>[[Gwendoline Christie]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Jerome Flynn]]{{Ref|GOT502}}<br>[[Conleth Hill]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Kristofer Hivju]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Hannah Murray]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Dean-Charles Chapman]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Nathalie Emmanuel]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Michiel Huisman]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Michael McElhatton]]{{Ref|GOT503}}<br>[[Iwan Rheon]]{{Ref|GOT503}}<br>[[Tom Wlaschiha]]{{Ref|GOT502}}<br>[[Iain Glen]]{{Ref|GOT503}}}}
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| Producers = [[David Benioff]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[D.B. Weiss]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Carolyn Strauss]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Frank Doelger]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Bernadette Caulfield]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br><br>'''Co-executive producers'''<br>[[Vince Gerardis]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[Guymon Casady]]{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[George R.R. Martin]]{{Ref|GOT501}}
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| Writers = David Benioff{{HBOref|GOT501}}<br>D.B. Weiss{{HBOref|GOT501}}<br>[[Dave Hill]]{{HBOref|GOT504}}<br>[[Bryan Cogman]]{{HBOref|GOT505}}
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| Directors = [[Michael Slovis]]{{HBOref|GOT501}}<br>[[Mark Mylod]]{{HBOref|GOT503}}<br>[[Jeremy Podeswa]]{{HBOref|GOT505}}<br>[[Miguel Sapochnik]]{{HBOref|GOT507}}<br>[[David Nutter]]{{HBOref|GOT509}}
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| Production = July 18, 2014<ref>[http://www.makinggameofthrones.com/production-diary/2014/10/2/welcome-to-season-5]</ref>
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| Wrapped = December 12, 2014<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-thrones-wraps-filming-season-5/ Game of Thrones wraps filming for Season 5]</ref>
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| Year = Prior to [[278 AC]]{{Dateref|Maggy}} <small>(prologue)</small>{{Ref|GOT501}}<br>[[302 AC]]{{Dateref|Game of Thrones: Season 5}}
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| Previous = [[Game of Thrones: Season 4|Season 4]]{{HBOref|GOT}}
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| Next = [[Game of Thrones: Season 6|Season 6]]{{HBOref|GOT}}
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}}
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'''''Game of Thrones'': Season 5'''{{HBOref|GOT5}} is the fifth season of ''[[Game of Thrones]]''. It consists of ten episodes. It premiered with "[[The Wars To Come]]" on April 12, 2015 on [[HBO]], and concluded with "[[Mother's Mercy]]" on June 14, 2015. It is based on ''[[A Feast for Crows]]'' and ''[[A Dance with Dragons]]'', the fourth and fifth novels of ''[[A Song of Ice and Fire]]'' by [[George R.R. Martin]].
   
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==Premise==
'''Season 5''' of ''[[Game of Thrones]]'' was commissioned by [[HBO]] on 8 April 2014, following a substantial increase in audience figures between the [[Season 3|third]] and [[Season 4|fourth]] seasons.<ref>[http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/game-thrones-renewed-two-more-694544 The Hollywood Reporter]</ref> The fifth and [[Season 6|sixth]] seasons were commissioned simultaneously, the first time [[HBO]] has commissioned two seasons at once for a major drama series.
 
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{{Premise|GOT5}}
   
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==Overview==
The season consists of ten episodes. It began filming in July 2014 and concluded on 12 December 2014.<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-thrones-season-5-filming-kicks-high-gear-belfast/]</ref><ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-thrones-wraps-filming-season-5/]</ref> [[David Benioff]] and [[D.B. Weiss]] return as executive producers and showrunners for both seasons five and six, having signed a new two-year contract with HBO in early 2014.
 
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[[File:Purple Wedding.png|thumb|King Joffrey Baratheon, poisoned at his own wedding.]]
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[[File:Deadtywin.jpg|thumb|Tywin Lannister shot dead on the privy by his own son Tyrion.]]
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The [[War of the Five Kings]], once thought to be drawing to a close, is instead entering a new and more chaotic phase. [[Westeros]] is on the brink of collapse, and many are seizing what they can while the realm implodes, like a corpse making a feast for crows.
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[[File:Cersei_refuses_to_share_her_plans.jpg|thumb|With Tywin dead and Tyrion gone, Queen Regent Cersei is now Head of House Lannister and tasked with the burden of continuing her father's legacy.]]
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[[Tywin Lannister]] is dead, shot on the privy by his long-abused dwarf son [[Tyrion Lannister|Tyrion]]. The crazed boy-king [[Joffrey Baratheon]], Tywin's grandson, is also dead after being poisoned at [[Purple Wedding|his own wedding]], and succeeded by his younger and more pliable brother, [[Tommen Baratheon|Tommen]]. Queen [[Cersei Lannister]] succeeds her father as the head of [[House Lannister]], and once again takes over as [[Regent|Queen Regent]], as Tommen has yet to come of age. Cersei has been blocked by several powerful men over the years, including her husband King [[Robert Baratheon]] and his friend [[Eddard Stark]], but due to her betrayals they are both dead. Now with even Tywin and Joffrey dead, and Tyrion fleeing the realm, there are no more checks on Cersei's power, and she is essentially the Ruling Queen of the Seven Kingdoms in all but name. However, Cersei is neither a master strategist nor a skilled diplomat (unlike her father and brother) and she faces mounting crises that would have strained even their abilities.
   
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House Lannister and its allies have managed to crush [[House Stark]], but in many ways it was a pyrrhic victory. The [[Iron Throne]] was already in [[Money|massive debt]] to foreign banks before the war even began, and the Lannisters' immense wartime spending increased the crown's debts to crippling levels. The Lannisters must now desperately attempt to placate the [[Iron Bank of Braavos]], by far the largest of the foreign banks, and the one which the crown owes most of its huge debts to.
The season premiered on April 12, 2015.
 
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[[File:Houndaryarideaway.png|thumb|The Riverlands have been reduced to a burned-out wasteland by the war.]]
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The game of thrones is, unfortunately, not a simple game of [[cyvasse|''cyvasse'']] in which the pieces can be quickly reassembled: vast swathes of Westeros have been devastated by civil war, and it may take a full generation for them to rebuild. The [[Riverlands]], where most of the war was fought, have been reduced to a burned out husk. Nominally the Lannisters and their [[House Frey]] allies control the Riverlands, but it has been reduced to a lawless and corpse-filled devastation, hardly controlled by anyone. Winter is fast approaching, but instead of stockpiling harvests the past few years, the great lords have been busy destroying one of the main breadbasket regions of the Seven Kingdoms. Combined with the realm's massive debts to foreign banks, starvation level conditions are starting to set in for the [[Smallfolk|smallfolk]] across the realm. Outraged by the willful indifference of their rulers to their well-being for so long, commoners are starting to fall back onto old cultural touchstones, channeling their frustration into religious fanaticism. A [[Sparrows|popular disgust movement]] spreads across Westeros, and makes its way to the capital.
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[[File:Margaery wearing Cersei style clothes in Season 5.jpg|thumb|A power-struggle is growing between Cersei Lannister and Margaery Tyrell, now married to King Tommen.]]
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Adding to these woes is the increasing rivalry between the Lannisters and their Tyrell allies, specifically between Cersei and [[Margaery Tyrell]]. The Lannisters only managed to win on the battlefield with the armies and food resources won by their alliance with the [[House Tyrell]] of the [[Reach]]. Now that Tywin is dead, and Margaery is soon to be King Tommen's queen, the Tyrells are no longer pretending to be polite to the Lannisters, but openly demanding greater concessions and key positions of power. With half of the Lannister armies slaughtered by [[Robb Stark]] during the war, their financial resources depleted, and the Tyrells controlling the only major breadbasket region untouched by the war, the Lannisters are having to face the reality that the Tyrells hold numerous advantages over them. Just as [[Robert Baratheon]] became king only to become dependent on the support of the Lannisters, the Lannisters have now become dependant on the Tyrells.
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[[File:Tyrion and Varys in Pentos.jpg|thumb|Tyrion and Varys flee to the Free Cities after Tyrion kills Tywin.]]
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Without the political acumen of Tywin or Tyrion, Queen Regent Cersei struggles to address these major challenges. Adding even further to her woes is that the king's [[Small Council]] has been gutted, with [[Hand of the King]] Tywin dead, [[Master of Coin]] [[Petyr Baelish]] leaving for the [[Eyrie]], and both Tyrion and [[Master of Whisperers]] [[Varys]] fleeing the capital city. Of the original Small Council when the Lannisters first seized power, only [[Grand Maester]] [[Pycelle]] remains.
   
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Besides the Reach, only the regions which have remained neutral so far still have all of their armies and resources intact: the [[Vale of Arryn|Vale]], ruled by [[House Arryn]], and [[Dorne]], ruled by [[House Martell]]. With nearly all the other Great Houses defeated or half-exhausted, the fresh armies of the Vale and Dorne can drastically alter the political playing field, depending on which side they choose to join.
Season 5 is based mostly on the fourth and fifth novels of the ''[[A Song of Ice and Fire]]'' book series, ''A Feast for Crows'' and ''A Dance with Dragons'', respectively. The storylines of the two books run concurrently but follow different sets of characters.<ref>[http://insidetv.ew.com/2014/06/18/game-of-thrones-season-5]</ref>
 
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[[File:Littlefinger and Alayne Season 5 trailer.jpg|thumb|Petyr "Littlefinger" Baelish, the true catalyst of the Stark-Lannister war, now rules as regent of the Vale, gathering his strength - and joined by his ward "Alayne".]]
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The ultimate result of the war was to exhaust the Starks, Lannisters, and other [[Great House]]s of the Seven Kingdoms - exactly as Petyr "Littlefinger" Baelish had planned. The secret architect of the conflict, it was Littlefinger who was responsible for poisoning Robert's Hand, [[Jon Arryn]], by conspiring with his own wife [[Lysa Arryn]]. Littlefinger then engineered the betrayal of [[Eddard Stark]], only to later assist [[Olenna Tyrell]] in assassinating King Joffrey [[Purple Wedding|at his own wedding]]. Baelish has now murdered Lysa, mere days after wedding her, and seized power over the Vale as regent for her young son. For the moment, Baelish remains in the Vale, consolidating his new hold over the Vale lords through his stepson [[Robin Arryn|Robin]] and his position as Lord Protector of the Vale. Alongside Baelish is the black-haired "Alayne", his ward and "niece" - secretly, [[Sansa Stark]], who fell into Littlefinger's custody after he helped her escape her long imprisonment at Joffrey's royal court.
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[[File:Doran,_Ellaria,_Areo_%26_Sand_Snakes.png|thumb|The [[Dornishmen]] are furious over the death of Oberyn Martell in a duel with Gregor Clegane.]]
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[[File:Sand_Snakes_send_Cersei_Myrcella%27s_lion_pendant.png|thumb|[[Sand Snakes|Oberyn's daughters]] threaten Cersei by sending her a dead viper with her daughter Myrcella's lion pendant stuffed in its mouth.]]
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In the deserts of the deep south of Westeros, the people of [[Dorne]] demand vengeance for the death of Prince [[Oberyn Martell|Oberyn]], who died in a [[Second trial by combat of Tyrion Lannister|trial by combat]] at the hands of Ser [[Gregor Clegane]]. Leading the call to enter the war against the Lannisters are Oberyn's paramour, [[Ellaria Sand]], and the eldest of [[Sand Snakes|his eight daughters]]: [[Obara Sand|Obara]], [[Nymeria Sand|Nymeria]], and [[Tyene Sand|Tyene]]. But [[Doran Martell]], the [[Prince of Dorne]] and Oberyn's older brother, continues to urge restraint. Further complicating the matter is that early in the war, the Lannisters bribed the Martells into staying neutral by offering a marriage-alliance, sending Cersei's daughter [[Myrcella Baratheon|Myrcella]] to Dorne to betroth her to Doran's son [[Trystane Martell|Trystane]]. Myrcella is still a [[Ward|ward]] living in Dorne's capital, [[Sunspear]].
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[[File:Stannis_attacks.png|thumb|King Stannis Baratheon's forces unexpectedly arrived at the Wall to save the Night's Watch from Mance Rayder.]]
   
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The most dire situation in Westeros, however, is in the [[North]] and at the [[Wall]]. The [[Battle for the Wall|massive assault against Castle Black]] by the [[Free Folk|wildling]] army of [[Mance Rayder]] was defeated at the last moment by the surprise arrival of [[Stannis Baratheon]] and his remaining forces. Stannis withdrew from his island stronghold [[Dragonstone]] to reach the Wall by sea, to defend the realm of which he feels he is the only rightful king. With his home territories in the [[Stormlands]] overrun, Stannis needs to win the allegiance of Robb Stark's defeated bannermen, to rally the North again as a springboard against Lannister rule, as well as the support of [[Jon Snow]], who therefore must walk a political tightrope between Stannis and his vows, since the [[Night's Watch]] is sworn to strict political neutrality. Though the battle against the wildlings is all but over, the Night's Watch is in its own dire conditions. With almost all of the Watch's top officers either killed or missing, among them Lord Commander [[Jeor Mormont]] and First Ranger [[Benjen Stark]], the organization has been left leaderless during this time of crisis, and therefore will have to navigate a contentious [[Elections#Night's Watch|election for a new Lord Commander]]. All the while, the [[White Walkers]] and their ever-growing army of [[Wight|the dead]] are bearing down on the Wall itself, intent on spilling over it to destroy the lands of men beyond, who remain ignorant of the long-forgotten but all-too-real danger.
==Plot==
 
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[[File:Red_wedding_roose_robb.jpg|thumb|Roose Bolton personally killed Robb Stark at the Red Wedding, and was appointed the new Warden of the North as a reward.]]
{{Season 5 plot}}
 
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[[File:Snow.jpg|thumb|Roose's sociopathic son Ramsay is now Lord of Winterfell under his father, and has "remade" Theon Greyjoy into his broken servant, Reek.]]
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The main armies of the Northern Houses, however, were slaughtered in the south at the [[Red Wedding]], and the large main army of [[House Bolton]] has just returned to the North following the [[Siege of Moat Cailin|recapture of Moat Cailin]]. The Boltons switched to the Lannister side during the betrayal at the Red Wedding, during which their leader Lord [[Roose Bolton]] personally killed Robb Stark, and they have been installed as the new rulers of the North in the name of King Tommen and the Lannisters. With the other Northern Houses defeated and weakened, the Lannister-backed Bolton army can now suppress any feeble opposition to their rule. Meanwhile, Roose's sociopathic bastard son [[Ramsay Bolton|Ramsay Snow]] - now legitimized as Ramsay Bolton - is the new Lord of [[Winterfell]] under his father, reoccupying the castle which he [[Sack of Winterfell|personally burned out]] previously. With the Boltons in power, Ramsay is now free to commit numerous atrocities throughout the North, such as [[Flaying|flaying]] men alive and [[Tansy|hunting and killing]] young women for sport.
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However, the struggle for the North is not yet over. Various areas of the North's western coast are still held by [[Ironborn]] invaders under [[Balon Greyjoy]], who chose to crown himself as [[King of the Iron Islands]] and attack the North during Robb Stark's march south rather than ally with him against the Lannisters. Balon's son and heir, [[Theon Greyjoy|Theon]], who himself was a ward of Lord [[Eddard Stark]] and one of Robb's closest advisors, turned on the Starks and led the assault himself but was betrayed by his own men and is now a prisoner of the Boltons, having been brutally flayed, tortured, and psychologically broken by Ramsay himself, who has reduced Theon to his personal slave, "Reek".[[File:Stannis Baratheon in Castle Black with Jon Snow.jpg|thumb|right|Jon must deal not only with the Watch but also with Stannis.]]
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[[File:Aemon_part_of_jon_s_judging.jpg|thumb|right|The Night's Watch faces a difficult election for a new Lord Commander.]]
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[[File:Titan_of_Braavos.jpg|thumb|right|The Free City of Braavos.]]
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[[Essos|East of Westeros]], after murdering his own father, [[Tyrion Lannister]] has fled across the [[Narrow Sea]] to the [[Free Cities]], his future intentions unknown even to himself. Accompanied by Varys, he arrives in the east, unaware that the erstwhile Master of Whisperers might yet have secrets to reveal. Further north, meanwhile, representatives from the Iron Throne travel to the Free City of [[Braavos]] to assuage the Iron Bank's frustrations about all of the money the Lannisters owe. Unbeknownst to all, [[Arya Stark]] has also fled to Braavos, due to a favor she was owed for saving the life of one of the mysterious guild of assassins in Braavos known as the [[Faceless Men]].
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[[File:6f038a22773525ec3a2a270f79f892c3.jpg|thumb|Daenerys Targaryen has been forced to chain up her uncontrollable dragons.]]
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[[File:Dragons_imprisoned.png|thumb|The dragons chained in a cavern underneath Meereen.]]
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Further east in [[Slaver's Bay]], [[Daenerys Targaryen]]'s hold over [[Meereen]] has become very precarious, as ruling the city is becoming much more difficult than conquering it was. Sectarian violence is rampant between the former slaves and former [[Great Masters|slave-masters]], revenge attacks are on the rise, and the resurgent [[Wise Masters|slavers]] at [[Yunkai]] are rallying all those who oppose her. Daenerys's three [[dragon]]s, now growing to dangerous size, have become uncontrollable and she can no longer rely upon them to defeat her enemies on the battlefield. [[Drogon]] burned a child to death while he was hunting and fled the city, forcing Daenerys to chain up the remaining two dragons in the caverns underneath the city. In addition, Daenerys is still distraught over the recent revelations concerning her once-trusted advisor [[Jorah Mormont]], whom she exiled from the city as punishment. Her remaining advisors Ser [[Barristan Selmy]], [[Missandei]], and the sellsword [[Daario Naharis]] attempt to help hold her reign together.
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But unbeknownst to Daenerys, word has finally spread to Westeros that the last living Targaryen heir has hatched three live dragons. No longer a mere curiosity halfway across the world, several different factions in Westeros are now pondering how Daenerys and her dragons will factor into the already confusing and multi-sided civil war still tearing the Seven Kingdoms apart. Envoys are beginning to head east to court Daenerys's allegiance: but those who try to dance with dragons run the risk of being burned.
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==Episodes==
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{| {{Prettytable}}
  +
! Episode
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! Image
  +
! Title
  +
! Air date
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|-
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| style="text-align: center;" | 1{{HBOref|GOT501}}
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| [[File:Thrones S05E01.jpg|150px]]
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| "[[The Wars To Come]]"{{HBOref|GOT501}}
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| April 12, 2015{{Listref|GOT}}
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|-
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| style="text-align: center;" | 2{{HBOref|GOT502}}
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| [[File:Thrones S05E02.jpg|150px]]
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| "[[The House of Black and White]]"{{HBOref|GOT502}}
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| April 19, 2015{{Listref|GOT}}
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|-
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| style="text-align: center;" | 3{{HBOref|GOT503}}
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| [[File:Thrones S05E03.jpg|150px]]
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| "[[High Sparrow (episode)|High Sparrow]]"{{HBOref|GOT503}}
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| April 26, 2015{{Listref|GOT}}
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|-
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| style="text-align: center;" | 4{{HBOref|GOT504}}
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| [[File:Thrones S05E04.jpg|150px]]
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| "[[Sons of the Harpy (episode)|Sons of the Harpy]]"{{HBOref|GOT504}}
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| May 3, 2015{{Listref|GOT}}
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|-
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| style="text-align: center;" | 5{{HBOref|GOT505}}
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| [[File:Thrones S05E05.jpg|150px]]
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| "[[Kill the Boy]]"{{HBOref|GOT505}}
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| May 10, 2015{{Listref|GOT}}
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|-
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| style="text-align: center;" | 6{{HBOref|GOT506}}
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| [[File:Thrones S05E06.jpg|150px]]
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| "[[Unbowed, Unbent, Unbroken]]"{{HBOref|GOT506}}
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| May 17, 2015{{Listref|GOT}}
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|-
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| style="text-align: center;" | 7{{HBOref|GOT507}}
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| [[File:Thrones S05E07.jpg|150px]]
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| "[[The Gift]]"{{HBOref|GOT507}}
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| May 24, 2015{{Listref|GOT}}
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|-
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| style="text-align: center;" | 8{{HBOref|GOT508}}
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| [[File:Thrones S05E08.jpg|150px]]
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| "[[Hardhome (episode)|Hardhome]]"{{HBOref|GOT508}}
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| May 31, 2015{{Listref|GOT}}
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|-
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| style="text-align: center;" | 9{{HBOref|GOT509}}
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| [[File:Thrones S05E09.jpg|150px]]
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| "[[The Dance of Dragons (episode)|The Dance of Dragons]]"{{HBOref|GOT509}}
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| June 7, 2015{{Listref|GOT}}
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|-
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| style="text-align: center;" | 10{{HBOref|GOT510}}
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| [[File:Thrones S05E10.jpg|150px]]
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| "[[Mother's Mercy]]"{{HBOref|GOT510}}
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| June 14, 2015{{Listref|GOT}}
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|}
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==Cast==
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{{Main|Game of Thrones: Season 5/Cast}}
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===Starring===
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* [[Peter Dinklage]] as [[Tyrion Lannister]] <small>(10 episodes)</small>
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* [[Nikolaj Coster-Waldau]] as [[Jaime Lannister]] <small>(7 episodes)</small>
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* [[Lena Headey]] as [[Cersei Lannister]] <small>(8 episodes)</small>
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* [[Emilia Clarke]] as [[Daenerys Targaryen]] <small>(8 episodes)</small>
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* [[Kit Harington]] as [[Jon Snow]] <small>(9 episodes)</small>
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* [[Aidan Gillen]] as [[Petyr Baelish]] <small>(6 episodes)</small>
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* [[Charles Dance]] as [[Tywin Lannister]] <small>("[[The Wars To Come]]")</small>
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* [[Natalie Dormer]] as [[Margaery Tyrell]] <small>(5 episodes)</small>
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* [[Stephen Dillane]] as [[Stannis Baratheon]] <small>(8 episodes)</small>
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* [[Liam Cunningham]] as [[Davos Seaworth]] <small>(7 episodes)</small>
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* [[Carice van Houten]] as [[Melisandre]] <small>(6 episodes)</small>
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* [[Indira Varma]] as [[Ellaria Sand]] <small>(5 episodes)</small>
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* [[Sophie Turner]] as [[Sansa Stark]] <small>(9 episodes)</small>
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* [[Maisie Williams]] as [[Arya Stark]] <small>(6 episodes)</small>
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* [[John Bradley]] as [[Samwell Tarly]] <small>(9 episodes)</small>
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* [[Kristofer Hivju]] as [[Tormund]] <small>(5 episodes)</small>
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* [[Hannah Murray]] as [[Gilly]] <small>(6 episodes)</small>
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* [[Alfie Allen]] as [[Theon Greyjoy]] <small>(6 episodes)</small>
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* [[Conleth Hill]] as [[Varys]] <small>(4 episodes)</small>
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* [[Jerome Flynn]] as [[Bronn]] <small>(6 episodes)</small>
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* [[Gwendoline Christie]] as [[Brienne of Tarth]] <small>(6 episodes)</small>
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* [[Michiel Huisman]] as [[Daario Naharis]] <small>(7 episodes)</small>
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* [[Nathalie Emmanuel]] as [[Missandei]] <small>(7 episodes)</small>
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* [[Dean-Charles Chapman]] as [[Tommen Baratheon]] <small>(5 episodes)</small>
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* [[Tom Wlaschiha]] as [[Jaqen H'ghar]] <small>(6 episodes)</small>
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* [[Michael McElhatton]] as [[Roose Bolton]] <small>(4 episodes)</small>
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* [[Iwan Rheon]] as [[Ramsay Bolton]] <small>(6 episodes)</small>
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* with [[Iain Glen]] as [[Jorah Mormont]] <small>(8 episodes)</small>
  +
  +
===Guest starring===
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* [[Brenock O'Connor]] as [[Olly]] <small>(9 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Ben Crompton]] as [[Eddison Tollett]] <small>(8 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Owen Teale]] as [[Alliser Thorne]] <small>(7 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Ian Beattie]] as [[Meryn Trant]] <small>(6 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Tara Fitzgerald]] as [[Selyse Baratheon]] <small>(6 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Joel Fry]] as [[Hizdahr zo Loraq]] <small>(6 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Daniel Portman]] as [[Podrick Payne]] <small>(6 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Jacob Anderson]] as [[Grey Worm]] <small>(5 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Roger Ashton-Griffiths]] as [[Mace Tyrell]] <small>(5 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Keisha Castle-Hughes]] as [[Obara Sand]] <small>(5 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Nell Tiger Free]] as [[Myrcella Baratheon]] <small>(5 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Julian Glover]] as [[Pycelle]] <small>(5 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Jessica Henwick]] as [[Nymeria Sand]] <small>(5 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Kerry Ingram]] as [[Shireen Baratheon]] <small>(5 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Anton Lesser]] as [[Qyburn]] <small>(5 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[DeObia Oparei]] as [[Areo Hotah]] <small>(5 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Jonathan Pryce]] as the [[High Sparrow]] <small>(5 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Rosabell Laurenti Sellers]] as [[Tyene Sand]] <small>(5 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Eugene Simon]] as [[Lancel Lannister|Lancel]] <small>(5 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Charlotte Hope]] as [[Myranda]] <small>(4 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Finn Jones]] as [[Loras Tyrell]] <small>(4 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Faye Marsay]] as the [[Waif]] <small>(4 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Ian McElhinney]] as [[Barristan Selmy]] <small>(4 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Toby Sebastian]] as [[Trystane Martell]] <small>(4 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Alexander Siddig]] as [[Doran Martell]] <small>(4 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Will Tudor]] as [[Olyvar]] <small>(4 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Dominic Carter]] as [[Janos Slynt]] <small>(3 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Ian Gelder]] as [[Kevan Lannister]] <small>(3 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Peter Vaughan]] as [[Aemon]] <small>(3 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Hannah Waddingham]] as [[Septa]] [[Unella]] <small>(3 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Paul Bentley]] as the [[High Septon (Tommen)|High Septon]] <small>(2 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Diana Rigg]] as [[Olenna Tyrell]] <small>(2 episodes)</small>
  +
* [[Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson]] as [[Gregor Clegane]] <small>("[[Mother's Mercy]]")</small>
  +
* [[Richard Brake]] as [[Night King]] <small>("[[Hardhome (episode)|Hardhome]]")</small>
  +
* [[Lino Facioli]] as [[Robin Arryn]] <small>("The Wars To Come")</small>
  +
* [[Mark Gatiss]] as [[Tycho Nestoris]] <small>("[[The Dance of Dragons (episode)|The Dance of Dragons]]")</small>
  +
* [[Ciarán Hinds]] as [[Mance Rayder]] <small>("The Wars To Come")</small>
  +
* [[Rupert Vansittart]] as [[Yohn Royce]] <small>("The Wars To Come")</small>
  +
  +
==Crew==
  +
Regular directors [[Neil Marshall]], [[Alex Graves]], [[Alik Sakharov]], and [[Michelle MacLaren]] are not returning for Season 5. Notably, this is also the first time since Season 2 that no episodes are directed by the executive producers, [[David Benioff]] and [[D.B. Weiss]]. MacLaren's departure also makes Season 5 the first since Season 2 with no female director. MacLaren is the only female director who ever worked on the TV series, producing two episodes in Season 3 and another two in Season 4.
  +
  +
[[George R.R. Martin]] stated he would not be writing an episode, as he has done in every previous season, because he wants to focus on finishing ''The Winds of Winter'', the sixth novel in the [[A Song of Ice and Fire|book series]].<ref>[http://www.zap2it.com/videos/game-of-thrones-george-rr-martin-winds-of-winter-jeyne-westerling-prologue-258382]</ref> Meanwhile, [[Dave Hill]], the former assistant for Benioff and Weiss and the writer of the ''[[Histories & Lore]]'' short videos, was brought forward to write an episode after Benioff and Weiss were impressed with his story ideas involving Olly and Ygritte in the fourth season.
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  +
The entire production crew that worked on Season 5, spread across several countries, consisted of roughly 1,000 people. Of them, about 750 worked in Northern Ireland - that is, about 250 worked exclusively in other countries, but many of those who worked at the production's home base in Northern Ireland also visited filming locations in other countries.<ref>''TV & Satellite'' magazine, April 2015</ref> Of these, the entire [[Costumes|costuming]] department includes about 100 people (including major designers, embroiderers, hairstylists, cleaners, cloth-agers, sorters and fitters, and metal armor forgers).<ref>[[Game of Thrones: Season 4|Season 4]] Blu-ray commentary.</ref> As for the cast in Season 5, the show employed 166 actors who had speaking roles, and another 5,000 extras for crowd scenes.<ref>''TV & Satellite'' magazine, April 2015</ref>
  +
  +
===Producers===
  +
* [[David Benioff]]: executive producer, showrunner
  +
* [[D.B. Weiss]]: executive producer, showrunner
  +
* [[Bernadette Caulfield]]: executive producer
  +
* [[Frank Doelger]]: executive producer
  +
* [[Carolyn Strauss]]: executive producer
  +
* [[George R.R. Martin]]: co-executive producer
  +
* [[Vince Gerardis]]: co-executive producer
  +
* [[Guymon Casady]]: co-executive producer
  +
* [[Greg Spence]]: producer
  +
* [[Christopher Newman|Chris Newman]]: producer
  +
* [[Bryan Cogman]]: producer
  +
* [[Lisa McAtackney]]: producer
  +
* [[Michele Clapton]]: costume designer
  +
* [[Deborah Riley]]: production designer
  +
* [[Ramin Djawadi]]: composer
  +
* [[Nina Gold]]: casting director
  +
* [[Robert Sterne]]: casting director
  +
  +
===Writers===
  +
*[[David Benioff]] and [[D.B. Weiss]]: episodes [[The Wars To Come|1]], [[The House of Black and White|2]], [[High Sparrow (episode)|3]], [[The Gift|7]], [[Hardhome (episode)|8]], [[The Dance of Dragons (episode)|9]], and [[Mother's Mercy|10]]
  +
*[[Dave Hill]]: [[Sons of the Harpy (episode)|episode 4]]
  +
*[[Bryan Cogman]]: episodes [[Kill the Boy|5]] and [[Unbowed, Unbent, Unbroken|6]]
  +
  +
===Directors===
  +
*[[Michael Slovis]]: episodes [[The Wars To Come|1]] and [[The House of Black and White|2]]
  +
*[[Mark Mylod]]: episodes [[High Sparrow (episode)|3]] and [[Sons of the Harpy (episode)|4]]
  +
*[[Jeremy Podeswa]]: episodes [[Kill the Boy|5]] and [[Unbowed, Unbent, Unbroken|6]]
  +
*[[Miguel Sapochnik]]: episodes [[The Gift|7]] and [[Hardhome (episode)|8]]
  +
*[[David Nutter]]: episodes [[The Dance of Dragons (episode)|9]] and [[Mother's Mercy|10]]
   
 
==Production==
 
==Production==
  +
===Adaptation===
Location scouting for Season 5 took place in Croatia and Spain. Filming in Croatia will continue in and around Dubrovnik, Split, and Žrnovnica, and will expand to new locations around Imotski and Šibenik.<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/07/03/game-thrones-finds-additional-locations-croatia/]</ref> The Spanish locations which were scouted are in Andalusia, namely the Alhambra of Granada, the Alcázar of Seville and the Alcázar de los Reyes Cristianos of Córdoba.<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/05/11/location-scouting-game-thrones-season-5-reportedly-begun/]</ref><ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/05/21/game-thrones-scouting-locations-spain/]</ref><ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/05/24/game-thrones-scouting-palaces-spain-season-5/]</ref>
 
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{{Main|Game of Thrones#Adaptation process and catching up with the books}}
   
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While developing Season 4, Benioff admitted that "Season 5 gives him nightmares"<ref>[http://www.hypable.com/2013/07/22/game-of-thrones-season-4-comic-co/]</ref>. However, once they actually had outlined the season, Benioff and Weiss revealed "the fear started to dissipate." They also claimed the season would be "drawing heavily" from ''A Feast for Crows'' and ''A Dance with Dragons'', the fourth and fifth books of George R.R. Martin's ''[[A Song of Ice and Fire]]'' saga.<ref>[http://insidetv.ew.com/2014/06/18/game-of-thrones-season-5]</ref>
On July 2, 2014, U.S. ambassador to Spain James Costos confirmed at an economic forum meeting that ''Game of Thrones'' will be filming in the country. HBO later confirmed the same day that Seville was selected as the primary filming location, as well as other sites in the surrounding province of Seville.<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/07/02/hbo-confirms-seville-filming-location-game-thrones-season-five/ HBO confirms Seville as filming location for Game of Thrones season five]</ref> Further reports strongly indicate that the [[Wikipedia:Alcázar of Seville|Alcázar of Seville]] will serve as the [[Water Gardens]], the seaside palace of [[House Martell]] located just outside of [[Sunspear]], the capital of Dorne. Alcázar is the oldest palace still in use in Europe, acting as a part-time residence for the present Spanish royal family. The site was first fortified in 712, and the Almohads expanded it in the twelfth century, making it a royal residence in 1248. Extensive additions were also made in subsequent centuries. It was declared a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1987. The Alcázar was previously used in Ridley Scott's 2005 film ''Kingdom of Heaven'' as the filming location for the court of the king of Jerusalem.<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/07/01/spain-confirmed-location-game-thrones-season-5/ Spain confirmed as a location for Game of Thrones Season 5]</ref>
 
   
  +
The book series was originally planned as a trilogy (''A Game of Thrones'', ''A Dance with Dragons'' and ''The Winds of Winter''), but Martin realized his plot of "book one" would have to be expanded into three novels (''A Game of Thrones'', ''A Clash of Kings'' and ''A Storm of Swords''), which means the first three books are "Act One" of a three Act story. In fact, the climax of ''A Storm of Swords'' concludes many of the plot lines begun in ''A Game of Thrones''. Furthermore, what Martin originally planned as the middle novel [[Meereenese Knot#In the books|grew too vast]] to be published as a single tome, so he cut it into two books that take place concurrently: in very rough terms, the fourth one (''A Feast for Crows'') follows all of the characters in the [[Seven Kingdoms]] while the fifth one (''A Dance with Dragons'') covers the storylines that take place elsewhere (such as the Night's Watch at the Wall, Tyrion as he escapes to the Free Cities, and Daenerys in Slaver's Bay). Season 5 will present the events featured in these two books in chronological order, intercutting between the two clusters of storylines.
Locations have been scouted in Seville as well as the nearby town of Osuna.<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/07/04/preparations-game-thrones-season-5-filming-seville-osuna-way/]</ref> Fresco Film Productions put out an open casting call via Facebook for extras in the area.<ref>[https://www.facebook.com/Frescofilm/posts/10152121565131786]</ref> Rosario Andújar, the mayor of Osuna, stated in ''El Mundo'' that several filming locations which have been scouted include the Plaza de Toros (a bull ring with sandstone walls, over a century old), the university (built in 1548, with four towers and influenced by the Italian Renaissance, La Colegiata (a church founded in 1535), and the Canteras de Osuna (the old quarries that supplied stone for the town).<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/07/04/preparations-game-thrones-season-5-filming-seville-osuna-way/]</ref>
 
   
  +
On the one hand, this combination of novels could easily span two seasons, since it would be longer than ''A Storm of Swords'', which was adapted into the third season and most of the fourth one. On the other hand, whereas the [[Red Wedding]] happens around the middle of the third novel and provided a convenient climax for Season 3, there are no similarly game-changing or climactic events in the middle of ''A Feast for Crows'' or ''A Dance with Dragons'' —both of which are slower-paced than the previous novels anyway.
On July 3, 2014 it was reported that filming will briefly return to Iceland, but apparently will not feature any major characters, instead focusing on landscape shots. Line producer Snorri Þórisson confirmed that the show intended to film a battle in Iceland in the month of November, but that with rewrites, the scene grew too large (the scene may now be filmed somewhere else, filmed with a combination of greenscreen, or pushed to Season 6). It is difficult to film protracted battle scenes in Iceland during the fall due to the very limited daylight hours.<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/07/03/game-of-thrones-returning-to-iceland-for-limited-season-5-filming/]</ref>
 
   
  +
Some of those two novels had already been advanced to Season 4 (everything after Daenerys took Meereen, everything after Brienne left King's Landing to look for Sansa, Sansa's story after Lady Lysa's death, Bran's whole story and the Fall of Moat Cailin), while other storylines were delayed to Season 6 (the Ironborn and Riverlands subplots, Arya's blind period and Sam arriving at Oldtown.) Ultimately, however, the bulk of these books was still adapted into Season 5. Despite some condensations, Jon Snow at the Wall, Cersei and the Tyrells in King's Landing, Tyrion heading to Meereen, and Daenerys in Meereen cover most of the major plot points which happened to each of them. The Stannis and Bolton storylines in the North, however, was extremely condensed. Both were reasonably close to what happened in the novels until about the second half of Season 5. In the novels, Stannis leaves the Wall to begin his campaign in the North only about ''one third'' of the way into the fifth book, after which it and the Boltons at Winterfell become one of the primary focuses of the narrative. The Sansa and Brienne storylines (entirely separate in the novels, both from each other and from the Bolton storyline) were also condensed. The writers also adapted some of the Dorne subplot, but with such limited screentime dedicated to it that the main parts of it didn't appear, nor did several major characters, such as arguably the storyline's main character —Doran's daughter and heir, Arianne Martell, who is actually a POV narrator. Tyrion's storyline as he was heading east to Meereen introduced a major new subplot involving a major political shakeup in the Free Cities, but this was cut completely from Season 5, and it will probably be omitted in the future.
On July 13, 2014, it was confirmed that filming would begin in September in the town of Sibenik, Croatia. The location is most likely to represent parts of Braavos with St. James Cathedral rumored as the House of Black and White.<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/07/13/sibenik-confirmed-shooting-location-game-thrones-season-5]</ref>
 
  +
  +
===Filming===
  +
Location scouting for Season 5 took place in Croatia and Spain. Filming in Croatia would continue in and around Dubrovnik, Split, and Žrnovnica, and expand to new locations around Imotski and Šibenik.<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/07/03/game-thrones-finds-additional-locations-croatia/]</ref> The Spanish locations which were scouted are in Andalusia, namely the Alhambra of Granada, the Alcázar of Seville and the Alcázar de los Reyes Cristianos of Córdoba.<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/05/11/location-scouting-game-thrones-season-5-reportedly-begun/]</ref><ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/05/21/game-thrones-scouting-locations-spain/]</ref><ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/05/24/game-thrones-scouting-palaces-spain-season-5/]</ref>
  +
  +
On July 2, 2014, U.S. ambassador to Spain James Costos confirmed at an economic forum meeting that ''Game of Thrones'' would be filming in the country. HBO later confirmed the same day that Seville was selected as the primary filming location, as well as other sites in the surrounding province of Seville.<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/07/02/hbo-confirms-seville-filming-location-game-thrones-season-five/ HBO confirms Seville as filming location for Game of Thrones season five]</ref> The [[Wikipedia:Alcázar of Seville|Alcázar of Seville]] served as the [[Water Gardens]], the seaside palace of [[House Martell]] located just outside of [[Sunspear]], the capital of Dorne. The Alcázar is the oldest palace still in use in Europe, acting as a part-time residence for the present Spanish royal family. The site was first fortified in 712, and the Almohads expanded it in the twelfth century, making it a royal residence in 1248. Extensive additions were also made in subsequent centuries. It was declared a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1987. The Alcázar was previously used in Ridley Scott's 2005 film ''Kingdom of Heaven'' as the filming location for the court of the king of Jerusalem.<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/07/01/spain-confirmed-location-game-thrones-season-5/ Spain confirmed as a location for Game of Thrones Season 5]</ref>
  +
  +
Locations were scouted in Seville as well as the nearby town of Osuna.<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/07/04/preparations-game-thrones-season-5-filming-seville-osuna-way/]</ref> Fresco Film Productions put out an open casting call via Facebook for extras in the area.<ref>[https://www.facebook.com/Frescofilm/posts/10152121565131786]</ref> Rosario Andújar, the mayor of Osuna, stated in ''El Mundo'' that the scouted locations include the Plaza de Toros (a bull ring with sandstone walls, over a century old), the university (built in 1548, with four towers and influenced by the Italian Renaissance, La Colegiata (a church founded in 1535), and the Canteras de Osuna (the old quarries that supplied stone for the town).<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/07/04/preparations-game-thrones-season-5-filming-seville-osuna-way/]</ref>
  +
  +
On July 3, 2014 it was reported that filming would briefly return to Iceland, but would not feature any major characters, instead focusing on landscape shots. Line producer Snorri Þórisson confirmed that the show intended to film a battle in Iceland in the month of November, but that with rewrites, the scene grew too large. It is difficult to film protracted battle scenes in Iceland during the fall due to the very limited daylight hours.<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/07/03/game-of-thrones-returning-to-iceland-for-limited-season-5-filming/]</ref> It is unclear if this was a reference to the [[Massacre at Hardhome]] or the [[battle in the ice]].
  +
  +
On July 13, 2014, it was confirmed that filming would begin in September in the town of Šibenik, Croatia, which largely represented [[Braavos]]. St. James Cathedral was used as the basis for the headquarters of the [[Iron Bank of Braavos]].<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/07/13/sibenik-confirmed-shooting-location-game-thrones-season-5]</ref> The cathedral is the center of Croatia's Catholic Church and the see of the Šibenik diocese. The basilica, which is in the UNESO World Heritage list, is widely considered to be the most important example of Renaissance architecture in the country.
   
 
On July 27, 2014, in an interview with Sophie Turner, she confirmed that she would start filming in Belfast on Wednesday July 30.<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FZeHrrtAmPs]</ref>
 
On July 27, 2014, in an interview with Sophie Turner, she confirmed that she would start filming in Belfast on Wednesday July 30.<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FZeHrrtAmPs]</ref>
Line 35: Line 260:
 
On August 9, 2014, it was confirmed that the production team in Spain would be filming in one of Osuna's active bull-fighting rings, the Plaza de Toros, but that actual filming in the ring might not take place until October.<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-thrones-season-five-filming-spain-rumored-already-begun-portstewart-filming-completed/ Game of Thrones season five filming in Spain rumored to have already begun ; Portstewart filming completed]</ref> Bull fights are held at the Plaza de Toros annually, events which end with bulls actually being killed in the arena.<ref>[https://twitter.com/westerosorg/status/498204704296665089 Westeros.org Twitter account] (Warning: graphic video of bulls being stabbed to death)</ref>
 
On August 9, 2014, it was confirmed that the production team in Spain would be filming in one of Osuna's active bull-fighting rings, the Plaza de Toros, but that actual filming in the ring might not take place until October.<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-thrones-season-five-filming-spain-rumored-already-begun-portstewart-filming-completed/ Game of Thrones season five filming in Spain rumored to have already begun ; Portstewart filming completed]</ref> Bull fights are held at the Plaza de Toros annually, events which end with bulls actually being killed in the arena.<ref>[https://twitter.com/westerosorg/status/498204704296665089 Westeros.org Twitter account] (Warning: graphic video of bulls being stabbed to death)</ref>
   
On August 11, 2014, WatchersOnTheWall.com reported that 86 year old actor actor [[J.J. Murphy]] died a matter of days after filming his first scenes as [[Denys Mallister]], the commander of [[the Shadow Tower]], the westernmost active castle on [[the Wall]]. <ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/actor-j-j-murphy-dies-filming-game-thrones-season-5/ Actor J. J. Murphy dies after beginning filming for Game of Thrones season 5]</ref> The same day, Benioff and Weiss made an official statement via HBO's twitter account that the role will not be recast: "We will not be recasting J.J. Murphy. He was a lovely man, and the best Denys Mallister we could have hoped for. And now his watch is ended." Apparently Season 5 will continue to use those scenes that Murphy already filmed, and possibly rewrite other scenes to work around his absence.<ref>[http://www.twitlonger.com/show/n_1s3hn4l Official statement from the creators of GameofThrones]</ref> This will make Denys the second posthumous character appearing in the TV series (as well as the second cast member who has died): actress [[Margaret John]], who played [[Old Nan]], died only two months before Season 1 premiered, though all of her scenes had already been completed.
+
On August 11, 2014, WatchersOnTheWall.com reported that 86 year-old actor actor [[J.J. Murphy]] died a matter of days after filming his first scenes as [[Denys Mallister]], the commander of the [[Shadow Tower]], the westernmost active castle on the [[Wall]].<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/actor-j-j-murphy-dies-filming-game-thrones-season-5/ Actor J. J. Murphy dies after beginning filming for Game of Thrones season 5]</ref> The same day, Benioff and Weiss made an official statement via HBO's twitter account that the role would not be recast: "We will not be recasting J.J. Murphy. He was a lovely man, and the best Denys Mallister we could have hoped for. And now his watch is ended."<ref>[http://www.twitlonger.com/show/n_1s3hn4l Official statement from the creators of GameofThrones]</ref> In the end, Murphy's role was brief and Mallister had no lines of dialogue. This makes Denys the second posthumous character appearing in the TV series (as well as the second cast member who has died): actress [[Margaret John]], who played [[Old Nan]], died only two months before Season 1 premiered, though all of her scenes had already been completed.
   
On August 24, 2014, WatchersOnTheWall.com reported that filming would again return to Diocletian's Palace in Croatia. The cellars of the palace were previously used as the underground passageways in Meereen during Season 4.<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/diocletians-palace-confirmed-season-5-filming/]</ref>
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On August 24, 2014, WatchersOnTheWall.com reported that filming would again return to Diocletian's Palace in Croatia. This site was an ancient Roman palace built by emperor Diocletian in the fourth century. Despite the name, it resembles a fortress more than a palace (in fact, only half of it was Diocletian's residence, and the other half housed a large military garrison.) The cellars of the palace were previously used as the underground passageways in Meereen during Season 4, and they were used for this purpose again.<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/diocletians-palace-confirmed-season-5-filming/]</ref>
   
On September 3, 2014, [[Kristian Nairn]] ([[Hodor]]) revealed that he will not be returning in Season 5: ''"We're not actually in Season Five, by the way. We have a season off. We have a year’s hiatus...Solely because, I imagine, our storyline is up to the end of the books. - So I get a year off now."''<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/toome-lockdown-game-thrones-filming-kristian-nairn-talks-season-5/ Kristian Nairn not to appear in Game of Thrones Season 5]</ref> There was concern that Bran Stark would not appear either, since his storyline had almost reached the end of its material from the fifth and most recent novel, ''A Dance with Dragons'', but [[Isaac Hempstead-Wright]], who plays Bran, seemed to imply he would be back.<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/09/04/isaac-hempstead-wright-confirms-appearance-season-5-game-thrones/]</ref> However, it was later confirmed Bran would indeed not be in the fifth season.<ref>[http://insidetv.ew.com/2014/11/05/game-of-thrones-why-bran-season-5/]</ref> On October 6, 2014, [[Art Parkinson]] ([[Rickon]]) confirmed that he and [[Natalia Tena]] ([[Osha]]) would not be returning in Season 5.<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/10/06/art-parkinson-confirms-rickon-osha-still-awol/ Art Parkinson Confirms Rickon, Osha Still AWOL]</ref>
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On September 3, 2014, [[Kristian Nairn]] ([[Hodor]]) revealed that he would not be returning in Season 5: ''"We're not actually in Season Five, by the way. We have a season off. We have a year’s hiatus...Solely because, I imagine, our storyline is up to the end of the books. - So I get a year off now."''<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/toome-lockdown-game-thrones-filming-kristian-nairn-talks-season-5/ Kristian Nairn not to appear in Game of Thrones Season 5]</ref> Although [[Isaac Hempstead-Wright]], who plays Bran, seemed to imply he would be back<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/09/04/isaac-hempstead-wright-confirms-appearance-season-5-game-thrones/]</ref>, it was later confirmed Bran would indeed not be in the fifth season.<ref>[http://insidetv.ew.com/2014/11/05/game-of-thrones-why-bran-season-5/]</ref> On October 6, 2014, [[Art Parkinson]] ([[Rickon Stark|Rickon]]) confirmed that he and [[Natalia Tena]] ([[Osha]]) would not be returning in Season 5.<ref>[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/10/06/art-parkinson-confirms-rickon-osha-still-awol/ Art Parkinson Confirms Rickon, Osha Still AWOL]</ref>
   
On October 14, 2014, ''Game of Thrones'' production units were observed filming in [[Wikipedia:Córdoba, Andalusia|Córdoba]], Spain, at the [[Wikipedia:Roman Bridge of Córdoba|Roman Bridge of Córdoba]].<ref>[http://cordopolis.es/2014/10/14/juego-de-tronos-toma-el-puente-romano-de-cordoba/]</ref> Benioff and Weiss confirmed that Córdoba will represent at least some shots of the Free City of [[Volantis]]. The city is located at the mouth of the massive [[Rhoyne]] River, and is famous for its "[[Long Bridge]]" which crosses over it.<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-thrones-filming-continues-roman-bridge-cordoba/]</ref>
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On October 14, 2014, ''Game of Thrones'' production units were observed filming in [[Wikipedia:Córdoba, Andalusia|Córdoba]], Spain, at the [[Wikipedia:Roman Bridge of Córdoba|Roman Bridge of Córdoba]]<ref>[http://cordopolis.es/2014/10/14/juego-de-tronos-toma-el-puente-romano-de-cordoba/]</ref>, a famous landmark in the Historic Center of Córdoba built in the first century BC. The bridge has been restored and renovated several times across the ages, and now only two of the arches are from the original Roman construction. Benioff and Weiss confirmed the bridge would represent the [[Long Bridge]] of [[Volantis]].<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-thrones-filming-continues-roman-bridge-cordoba/]</ref>
   
That same week, Benioff and Weiss spoke in a special event at the Teatro Central de Sevilla. They confirmed that there would be flashbacks in Season 5, despite their previous assertions that there would never be flashbacks on the TV show. They did experiment with using flashbacks in the unaired [[Pilot episode|pilot episode]], but afterwards felt that it broke up the dramatic pacing. The books themselves do not have straightforward "flashback scenes", but POV narrators will remember or recall past events at length (i.e. when Jaime explains why he actually killed the Mad King, in "[[Kissed by Fire]]"). A drawback of this has been that they cannot always easily fit long expository speeches recounting large blocks of backstory into episodes (without resorting to [[Sexposition]]), so several major backstory events have only been briefly mentioned in passing (such as [[Rhaegar Targaryen]]). By Season 5, however, they have reached a point where there was no way to easily explain certain backstory events other than with flashback scenes. This apparently confirms earlier casting reports which indicated that there will be flashback scenes featuring Young Cersei. What remains to be seen, however, is if these flashback scenes will be presented as ''objectively'' true, with an omniscient camera, or if they will be based on the ''subjective'' recollection of the characters, ''[[Wikipedia:Rashomon effect|Rashomon]]''-style.<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/flashbacks-volantis-filming-confirmed-game-thrones-season-5/]</ref>
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That same week, Benioff and Weiss spoke in a special event at the Teatro Central de Sevilla. They confirmed that there would be flashbacks in Season 5, despite their previous assertions that there would never be flashbacks on the TV show.<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/flashbacks-volantis-filming-confirmed-game-thrones-season-5/]</ref> They did experiment with using flashbacks in the unscreened [[Pilot (Game of Thrones)|pilot]], but afterwards felt that it broke up the dramatic pacing. The books themselves do not have straightforward "flashback scenes", but POV narrators will remember or recall past events at length (i.e. when Jaime explains why he actually killed the Mad King, in "[[Kissed by Fire]]"). In the end, season five featured a single scene of this sort: the [[The Wars To Come|first episode]] opened with a flashback to when Cersei was young and visited [[Maggy]].
   
  +
There are so many standing sets built for the show in Season 5 that the production is starting to run out of space. Increasingly, new sets are built in smaller areas, making it more difficult for Directors of Photography to set up lighting and backings. The smaller interiors are filmed at Banbridge, while the larger spaces are housed at Titanic Studios.<ref>[http://www.denofgeek.com/tv/game-of-thrones/39270/game-of-thrones-season-5-what-we-learned-from-the-blu-rays Season 5 Blu-ray commentary]</ref>
===Adaptation===
 
:''See main article on "[[Game of Thrones (TV series)#Future seasons, and catching up with the books]]"''
 
   
  +
==Awards==
While developing Season 4, Benioff admitted that "Season 5 gives him nightmares"<ref>[http://www.hypable.com/2013/07/22/game-of-thrones-season-4-comic-co/]</ref>. However, once they actually had outlined the season, Benioff and Weiss revealed "the fear started to dissipate." They also claimed the season would be "drawing heavily" from ''A Feast for Crows'' and ''A Dance with Dragons'', the fourth and fifth books of George R.R. Martin's ''[[A Song of Ice and Fire]]'' saga.<ref>[http://insidetv.ew.com/2014/06/18/game-of-thrones-season-5]</ref>
 
  +
''Game of Thrones'' Season 5 won a record-breaking 12 times in the 2015 Emmy Awards, including Best Drama.<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-of-thrones-breaks-the-record-for-most-emmy-wins-in-a-year/]</ref>
   
  +
Season 5 won awards in four major categories:
The book series was originally planned as a trilogy (''A Game of Thrones'', ''A Dance with Dragons'' and ''The Winds of Winter''), but Martin realized his plot of "book one" would have to be expanded into three novels (''A Game of Thrones'', ''A Clash of Kings'' and ''A Storm of Swords''), which means the first three books are "Act One" of a three Act story. In fact, the climax of ''A Storm of Swords'' concludes many of the plot lines begun in ''A Game of Thrones''. Furthermore, what Martin originally planned as the middle novel [[Meereenese Knot#In the books|grew too vast]] to be published as a single tome, so he cut it into two books that take place concurrently: in very rough terms, the fourth one (''A Feast for Crows'') follows all of the characters in the [[Seven Kingdoms]] while the fifth one (''A Dance with Dragons'') covers the storylines that take place elsewhere (such as the Night's Watch at the Wall, Tyrion as he escapes to the Free Cities, and Daenerys in Slaver's Bay). Season 5 will present the events featured in these two books in chronological order, intercutting between the two clusters of storylines.
 
   
  +
*Outstanding Drama Series
On the one hand, this combination of novels could easily span two seasons, since it would be longer than ''A Storm of Swords'', which was adapted into the third season and most of the fourth one. On the other hand, whereas the [[Red Wedding]] happens around the middle of the third novel and provided a convenient climax for Season 3, there are no similarly game-changing or climactic events in the middle of ''A Feast for Crows'' or ''A Dance with Dragons'' —both of which are slower-paced than the previous novels anyway.
 
  +
*Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series – [[David Nutter]] for the Season 5 finale, "[[Mother's Mercy]]"
  +
*Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series – [[David Benioff]] and [[D.B. Weiss]] for "Mother's Mercy"
  +
*Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series – [[Peter Dinklage]] as [[Tyrion Lannister]] (who previously won in this category for his work in Season 1).
   
  +
Season 5 also won in eight technical categories, awarded at the Creative Arts Emmys:
Ultimately, by the end most storylines will reach the end of the fifth and most recent book. Other storylines, however, may not yet reach the end of the latest material, as the TV series has never rigidly followed the original chronology. For example, while Bran's and Sansa's storylines were already nearly out of published material by the end of Season 4, Jon Snow was still not finished with all of his storyline from the third novel. Therefore, the rate at which each storyline exhausts its material may vary from one to the next, as it has previously.
 
   
  +
*Outstanding Special Visual Effects – "[[The Dance of Dragons (episode)|The Dance of Dragons]]"
===Cast===
 
  +
*Outstanding Makeup For A Single-Camera Series (Non-Prosthetic) – "Mother’s Mercy"
:''Main article: [[Season 5 cast]]''
 
  +
*Outstanding Production Design For A Narrative Contemporary Or Fantasy Program (One Hour Or More) – "[[High Sparrow (episode)|High Sparrow]]" – [[Deborah Riley]], Production Designer
  +
*Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing For A Drama Series – "The Dance of Dragons"
  +
*Outstanding Casting For A Drama Series – Casting Directors [[Nina Gold]], [[Robert Sterne]], and Carla Stronge
  +
*Outstanding Sound Editing For A Series – "[[Hardhome (episode)|Hardhome]]"
  +
*Outstanding Sound Mixing For A Comedy Or Drama Series (One Hour) – "Hardhome"
  +
*Outstanding Stunt Coordination For A Drama Series, Limited Series Or Movie – [[Rowley Irlam]], Stunt Coordinator
   
  +
Many major critics and review sources, however, reacted to the wins by expressing that Season 5 was probably the weakest season of ''Game of Thrones'' to date - compared to its own prior seasons. This led to discussion about whether the Emmy voting system was skewed or out of touch. Two general positions developed:
====Starring cast====
 
* [[Peter Dinklage]] as [[Tyrion Lannister]] (6 episodes)
 
* [[Nikolaj Coster-Waldau]] as Ser [[Jaime Lannister]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Lena Headey]] as Queen Regent [[Cersei Lannister]] (5 episodes)
 
* [[Emilia Clarke]] as Queen [[Daenerys Targaryen]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Kit Harington]] as [[Jon Snow]] (5 episodes)
 
* [[Aidan Gillen]] as Lord [[Petyr Baelish]] (5 episodes)
 
*[[Charles Dance]] as Lord [[Tywin Lannister]] ("[[The Wars to Come]]")
 
* [[Natalie Dormer]] as Lady [[Margaery Tyrell]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Stephen Dillane]] as King [[Stannis Baratheon]] (5 episodes)
 
* [[Liam Cunningham]] as Ser [[Davos Seaworth]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Carice van Houten]] as Lady [[Melisandre]] (3 episodes)
 
* [[Indira Varma]] as [[Ellaria Sand]] (3 episodes)
 
* [[Alfie Allen]] as [[Theon Greyjoy|Reek]] (3 episodes)
 
* [[John Bradley]] as [[Samwell Tarly]] (5 episodes)
 
* [[Sophie Turner]] as [[Sansa Stark]] (6 episodes)
 
* [[Maisie Williams]] as [[Arya Stark]] (3 episodes)
 
* [[Kristofer Hivju]] as [[Tormund Giantsbane]] (2 episodes)
 
* [[Hannah Murray]] as [[Gilly]] (3 episodes)
 
* [[Conleth Hill]] as [[Varys]] (3 episodes)
 
* [[Gwendoline Christie]] as [[Brienne of Tarth]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Jerome Flynn]] as Ser [[Bronn]] (3 episodes)
 
* [[Michiel Huisman]] as [[Daario Naharis]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Nathalie Emmanuel]] as [[Missandei]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Dean-Charles Chapman]] as King [[Tommen Baratheon]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Tom Wlaschiha]] as [[Jaqen H'ghar]] (3 episodes)
 
* [[Michael McElhatton]] as Lord [[Roose Bolton]] (3 episodes)
 
* [[Iwan Rheon]] as [[Ramsay Bolton]] (3 episodes)
 
* [[Iain Glen]] as Ser [[Jorah Mormont]] (4 episodes)
 
   
  +
*The first group of critics felt that Season 5 did not deserve these Emmy wins (particularly Best Drama) in and of itself, but it has become common practice for the awards to be given to series that are "due" - series that should have won in prior awards years but were overshadowed by competition from other series. ''Game of Thrones'' never won Best Drama in its first four seasons - even after the climactic and critically very well received events of the third and fourth seasons, when it was competing against other shows such as ''[[w:c:breakingbad:Breaking Bad|Breaking Bad]]'' or ''Mad Men'' which were also considered to be in their prime. While Season 4 of ''Game of Thrones'' gained widespread praise, it competed at the Emmys against the ''universally'' praised final season of ''Breaking Bad'' (even Benioff and Weiss have said they are massive fans of what ''Breaking Bad'' achieved). These critics argued, in short, that Season 5 was not Emmy-worthy material but the win was meant to make up for past seasons when they ''should'' have won. This led to further criticisms of the broader pattern of voting for series that are considered to be "due" for a win even if their current material doesn't deserve it.
====Selected guest starring cast====
 
  +
*The second camp of critics, while feeling that Season 5 was the weakest season of ''Game of Thrones'' to date, expressed that this was only in comparison to the very high standard set by its own prior seasons - and moreover, because many other critically praised shows such as ''Breaking Bad'' were no longer airing, Season 5 of ''Game of Thrones'' simply faced weaker competition - in which case, these critics felt that Season 5 indeed deserved to win on its own merits, given that the awards are ''relative'' to other shows that are airing in a given year.
* [[Ben Crompton]] as [[Eddison Tollett]] (5 episodes)
 
* [[Brenock O'Connor]] as [[Olly]] (5 episodes)
 
* [[Jacob Anderson]] as [[Grey Worm]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Roger Ashton-Griffiths]] as Lord [[Mace Tyrell]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Ian Beattie]] as Ser [[Meryn Trant]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Tara Fitzgerald]] as Queen [[Selyse Baratheon]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Joel Fry]] as [[Hizdahr zo Loraq]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Julian Glover]] as [[Grand Maester]] [[Pycelle]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Kerry Ingram]] as Princess [[Shireen Baratheon]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Finn Jones]] as Ser [[Loras Tyrell]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Ian McElhinney]] as Ser [[Barristan Selmy]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Daniel Portman]] as [[Podrick Payne]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Eugene Simon]] as Ser [[Lancel Lannister]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Owen Teale]] as Ser [[Alliser Thorne]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Will Tudor]] as [[Olyvar]] (4 episodes)
 
* [[Jonathan Pryce]] as the [[High Sparrow]] (3 episodes)
 
* [[Dominic Carter]] as [[Janos Slynt]] (3 episodes)
 
* [[Anton Lesser]] as [[Qyburn]] (3 episodes)
 
* [[Paul Bentley]] as the [[High Septon (After the Riot of King’s Landing)|High Septon]] (2 episodes)
 
* [[Keisha Castle-Hughes]] as [[Obara Sand]] (2 episodes)
 
* [[Ian Gelder]] as Ser [[Kevan Lannister]] (2 episodes)
 
* [[Jessica Henwick]] as [[Nymeria Sand]] (2 episodes)
 
* [[Rosabell Laurenti Sellers]] as [[Tyene Sand]] (2 episodes)
 
* [[Faye Marsay]] as the [[The Waif|Waif]] (2 episodes)
 
* [[DeObia Oparei]] as [[Areo Hotah]] (2 episodes)
 
* [[Toby Sebastian]] as Prince [[Trystane Martell]] (2 episodes)
 
* [[Alexander Siddig]] as Prince [[Doran Martell]] (2 episodes)
 
* [[Nell Tiger Free]] as Princess [[Myrcella Baratheon]] (2 episodes)
 
* [[Peter Vaughan]] as [[Maester Aemon]] (2 episodes)
 
* [[Diana Rigg]] as Lady [[Olenna Tyrell]] ("[[Unbowed, Unbent, Unbroken]]")
 
* [[Ciaran Hinds]] as [[Mance Rayder]] ("The Wars to Come")
 
* [[Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje]] as [[Malko]] ("Unbowed, Unbent, Unbroken")
 
* [[Lino Facioli]] as Lord [[Robin Arryn]] ("The Wars to Come")
 
* [[Rupert Vansittart]] as [[Yohn Royce]] ("The Wars to Come")
 
   
  +
Either way, ''many'' post-Emmy critical reviews felt the need to express their view that Season 5 was the weakest season of the TV series so far (by its own standards), and ponder if it deserved such accolades in and of itself. These included: [http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/envelope/goldstandard/la-et-st-emmy-predictions-20150918-column.html ''The Los Angeles Times'',] [http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/tv/2015/09/21/emmys-game-of-thrones-win-true-problem/72559332/ ''USA Today'',] [http://www.rollingstone.com/tv/news/emmys-2015-nothing-about-this-show-makes-any-damn-sense-20150921?page=2 ''Rolling Stone'',] [http://www.vulture.com/2015/09/game-of-thrones-emmys-wins-for-its-weakest-season.html ''Vulture'',] [http://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2015/09/2015-emmys-reaction ''Vanity Fair'',] [http://variety.com/2015/tv/columns/emmys-game-of-thrones-analysis-viola-davis-jeffrey-tambor-1201598133/ ''Variety'',] [http://www.ew.com/article/2015/09/21/game-thrones-how-emmys-reward-genre-television ''Entertainment Weekly'',] [http://deadline.com/2015/09/game-of-thrones-emmys-wins-best-drama-series-hbo-1201539291/ ''Deadline'',] [http://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/tvandradioblog/2015/sep/21/emmys-game-of-thrones-awards-best-season ''TheGuardian.com'',] [http://collider.com/game-of-thrones-won-the-emmy-for-its-worst-season/ ''Collider''], [http://www.businessinsider.com/why-game-of-thrones-won-so-many-emmys-for-its-most-uneven-season-2015-9 ''BusinessInsider'',] [http://io9.com/see-how-daenerys-dragons-come-to-life-in-game-of-throne-1732048603 ''io9'',] [http://www.buddytv.com/articles/2007-emmy-awards/2015-emmy-awards-the-best-and-57538.aspx ''BuddyTV.com'',] [http://www.bustle.com/articles/97708-game-of-thrones-season-5-rules-2015-emmy-nominations-but-does-it-really-deserve-to ''Bustle'',] and [http://www.hitfix.com/whats-alan-watching/emmys-2015-hbo-sweeps-hamm-finally-wins-and-new-rules-make-new-winners ''HitFix'',] among others.
====Yet to appear====
 
Returning cast:
 
* [[Richard Brake]] as the [[White Walkers' master]]<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/rattleshirt-recast]</ref>
 
* [[Mark Gatiss]] as [[Tycho Nestoris]]<ref>[http://insidetv.ew.com/2014/08/27/mark-gatiss-season-5-thrones/]</ref>
 
* [[Sarine Sofair]] as [[Lhara]]<ref>[http://www.spotlight.com/interactive/cv/1/F100433.html]</ref>
 
   
  +
''TechInsider'' was bewildered that Benioff and Weiss won the Best Writing for a Drama Series award for the Season 5 finale "[[Mother's Mercy]]", given that it contained the strange and non sequitur line from [[Tyene Sand]], "You want a good girl, but you ''need'' the bad pussy!" - which while not from the novels, is now officially part of a script that won an Emmy award for Best Writing.<ref>[http://www.techinsider.io/game-of-thrones-finale-mothers-mercy-wins-emmys-2015-9]</ref>
New cast:
 
* [[Enzo Cilenti]] as [[Yezzan zo Qaggaz]]. Announced July 25, 2014<ref name="S5NewCast">[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-thrones-season-five-cast-announced-comic-con/]</ref>
 
*[[Hannah Waddingham]] as [[Septa]] [[Unella]]. Announced October 9, 2014<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/british-actress-cast-septa-unella/]</ref>
 
* [[Birgitte Hjort Sørensen]] as TBA. Announced March 15, 2015.<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/borgen-actress-joins-the-cast-of-game-of-thrones]</ref>
 
* [[Ross O'Hennessy]] as the [[Lord of Bones]]. Announced March 25, 2015.<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/rattleshirt-recast/]</ref>
 
   
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No major critical reviews of record expressed a view that Season 5 was actually better than the prior four seasons that did not win such awards.
New minor cast:
 
* [[Emma Maguire]] as a [[Winterfell worker]]. Announced September 17, 2014
 
* [[Oengus MacNamara]] as TBA. Announced October 2, 2014.<ref>[https://www.facebook.com/actorsintl/posts/807483375977861]</ref>
 
* [[Bobby Asghar]] as [[Catacomb Master #1]]. Announced October 20, 2014<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm6800489/]</ref>
 
* [[Annika Hillbrink]] as a [[sword fighting wight]]. Announced October 27, 2014<ref>[http://www.castingcallpro.com/uk/view.php?uid=485386]</ref>
 
* [[Nick Boulton]] as the [[fighting pit announcer]]. Announced November 3, 2014<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/new-cast-members-confirmed-and-exciting-new-views-in-osuna/]</ref>
 
* [[Zoe Smedberg]] as a [[wildling female]]. Announced November 8, 2014<ref>[http://www.castingcallpro.com/uk/view.php?uid=580397]</ref><ref name="Nov10Cast">[https://twitter.com/p_iagency/status/531867059467354112]</ref>
 
* [[Lacy Moore]] as a [[Braavosi Madam]]. Announced November 10, 2014<ref name="Nov10Cast" /><ref>[http://www.spotlight.com/interactive/cv/1/F75852]</ref>
 
* [[Nigel O'Neill]] as a [[Baratheon General]]. Announced November 10, 2014<ref name="Nov10Cast" /><ref>[http://www.spotlight.com/interactive/cv/1/M119380]</ref>
 
* [[Maggie Hayes]] as TBA. Announced November 10, 2014<ref>[https://twitter.com/UniversalMark1/status/531858828409962497]</ref>
 
* [[Aifric O'Donnell]] as TBA. Announced November 18, 2014.<ref>[https://www.facebook.com/145056755541557/photos/a.189402797773619.46797.145056755541557/769224573124769]</ref>
 
* [[Tristan McConnell]] as [[Gordy]]. Announced November 22, 2014<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm3295900/]</ref><ref>[http://instagram.com/p/vWoX5zSwXc/?modal=true]</ref>
 
* [[Barrie Martin]] as a wildling / wight. Announced November 23, 2014<ref>[http://www.castingcallpro.com/uk/view.php?uid=456492]</ref>
 
* [[Jamie Darlington]] as TBA. Announced December 9, 2014.<ref name="Dec9Cast">[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3866826/?ref_=nm_flmg_act_9]</ref>
 
* [[Gemita Samarra]] as [[Brea]]. Announced December 9, 2014.<ref name="Dec9Cast" /><ref>[http://instagram.com/p/vjcGUXmrB3/]</ref>
 
* [[Irma Mali]] as TBA. Announced December 9, 2014.<ref name="BreaOthers">[http://instagram.com/p/vjnhCkD7m-/?modal=true]</ref>
 
* [[Ollie Kram]] as a [[Braavosi prostitute]]. Announced December 9, 2014.<ref name="BreaOthers" />
 
* [[Tim Loane]] as TBA. Announced December 9, 2014.<ref>[https://twitter.com/UniversalMark1/status/539564879611719681]</ref>
 
* [[Jake Abraham]] as a [[Meereenese peddler]]. Announced December 9, 2014.<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0008940]</ref>
 
* [[Simon Millar]] as a wildling. Announced December 16, 2014.<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm5504790]</ref>
 
* [[Murray McArthur]] as a [[wildling elder]]. Announced December 18, 2014.<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0564133]</ref>
 
* [[Garry Mountaine]] as [[Brusco Bouncer]]. Announced January 6, 2015.<ref>[http://www.lbmactors.com/members/garry-mountaine/]</ref>
 
* [[Jack Hickey]] as a [[young Bravo]]. Announced January 6, 2015.<ref>[http://www.firstcallmanagement.ie/hickey-jack.html]</ref>
 
* [[Roman Beguns]] as a [[gladiator]]. Announced January 7, 2015.<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm4172785]</ref>
 
* [[Fisun Burgess]] as a [[Meereenese peddler]]'s [[Peddler's wife|wife]]. Announced January 7, 2015.<ref>[http://www.spotlight.com/interactive/cv/1/F4708.html]</ref>
 
* [[Zahary Baharov]] as [[Loboda]]. Announced February 2, 2015.<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1707712]</ref>
 
* [[Ian Lloyd Anderson]] as [[Derek]]. Announced February 4, 2015.<ref name="Feb04Cast">[http://watchersonthewall.com/season-five-casting-news-updates/]</ref>
 
* [[Jonathan Byrne]] as [[Brant]]. Announced February 4, 2015.<ref name="Feb04Cast" />
 
* [[Fausto Labraña]] as a [[Dothraki pit fighter]]. Announced February 6, 2015.<ref>[http://faustolabrana.com/actor-cv/#access]</ref>
 
   
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Season 5 was nominated for two Writer's Guild of America Awards: the first for Drama Series, and the second for Episodic Drama (specifically Benioff and Weiss for the Season 5 finale, "Mother's Mercy").<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-of-thrones-nominated-for-two-wga-awards/ Game of Thrones nominated for two WGA Awards!]</ref>
====Reportedly cast characters====
 
* [[Varamyr|Varamyr Sixskins]]<ref name="Season 5 New Characters">[http://winteriscoming.net/2014/06/05/characters-rumored-cast/]</ref>
 
* [[Luther]]<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/major-details-game-thrones-season-5-scene-casting-call-flamboyant-villain/]</ref>
 
* [[Simpson]]<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/season-five-casting-news-updates/]</ref>
 
   
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Season 5 was nominated in the 2016 Producer Guild Awards, for the Norman Felton Award for Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television (Drama). The specific nominees are David Benioff, D.B. Weiss, Bernadette Caulfield, Frank Doelger, Carolyn Strauss, Bryan Cogman, Lisa McAtackney, Chris Newman, and Greg Spence.<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-of-thrones-nominated-for-pga-award-and-jon-snow-among-the-most-influential-characters-of-2015/ Game of Thrones nominated for two WGA Awards! Game of Thrones nominated for PGA award and Jon Snow among the most influential characters of 2015]</ref>
=== Crew ===
 
Regular directors [[Neil Marshall]], [[Alex Graves]], [[Alik Sakharov]], and [[Michelle MacLaren]] are not returning for Season 5. Notably, this is also the first time since Season 2 that no episodes are directed by the executive producers, [[David Benioff]] and [[D.B. Weiss]]. MacLaren's departure also makes Season 5 the first since Season 2 with no female director. MacLaren is the only female director who ever worked on the TV series, producing two episodes in Season 3 and another two in Season 4.
 
   
  +
Season 5 was nominated in two categories at the 2016 Screen Actors Guild Awards. The first nomination is for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series. The second nomination is Peter Dinklage (Tyrion) for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Drama Series.<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-of-thrones-nominated-for-3-sag-awards/ Game of Thrones nominated for 3 SAG Awards!]</ref>
[[George R.R. Martin]] stated he would not be writing an episode, as he has done in every previous season, because he wants to focus on finishing ''The Winds of Winter'', the sixth novel in the [[A Song of Ice and Fire|book series]].<ref>[http://www.zap2it.com/videos/game-of-thrones-george-rr-martin-winds-of-winter-jeyne-westerling-prologue-258382]</ref> Meanwhile, [[Dave Hill]], the former assistant for Benioff and Weiss and the writer of the [[Histories & Lore]] short videos, was brought forward to write an episode after Benioff and Weiss were impressed with his story ideas involving Olly and Ygritte in the fourth season.
 
   
  +
Season 5 was nominated at the 2016 American Society of Cinematographers Awards. Cinematographer Fabian Wagner (BSC) was nominated in the "Episode of a Regular Series" category for the episode "Hardhome".<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-of-thrones-nominated-at-the-asc-awards/ Game of Thrones nominated at the ASC Awards]</ref>
The entire production crew that worked on Season 5, spread across several countries, consisted of roughly 1,000 people. Of these, about 750 worked in Northern Ireland - that is, about 250 worked exclusively in other countries, but many of those who worked at the production's home base in Northern Ireland also visited filming locations in other countries.<ref>''TV & Satellite'' magazine, April 2015</ref> Of these, the entire [[Costumes|costuming]] department includes about 100 people (including major designers, embroiderers, hairstylists, cleaners, cloth-agers, sorters and fitters, and metal armor forgers).<ref>[[Season 4]] Blu-ray commentary.</ref> As for the cast in Season 5, the show employed 166 actors who had speaking roles, and another 5,000 extras for crowd scenes.<ref>''TV & Satellite'' magazine, April 2015</ref>
 
   
  +
Season 5 was nominated at the 2016 Golden Globe Awards for Best Drama Series.<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-of-thrones-nominated-at-the-golden-globes/ Game of Thrones nominated at the Golden Globes!]</ref>
==== Credits ====
 
* [[David Benioff]]: executive producer
 
* [[D.B. Weiss]]: executive producer
 
* [[Bernadette Caulfield]]: executive producer
 
* [[Frank Doelger]]: executive producer
 
* [[Carolyn Strauss]]: executive producer
 
* [[George R.R. Martin]]: co-executive producer
 
* [[Vince Gerardis]]: co-executive producer
 
* [[Guymon Casady]]: co-executive producer
 
* [[Greg Spence]]: producer
 
* [[Christopher Newman|Chris Newman]]: producer
 
* [[Bryan Cogman]]: producer
 
* [[Lisa McAtackney]]: producer
 
* [[Michele Clapton]]: costume designer
 
* [[Deborah Riley]]: production designer
 
* [[Ramin Djawadi]]: composer
 
* [[Nina Gold]]: casting director
 
* [[Robert Sterne]]: casting director
 
   
  +
Season 5 won the 2015 Screen Actors Guild award for Outstanding Action Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a Comedy or Drama Series.<ref>[http://deadline.com/2016/01/sag-award-winners-2016-full-list-screen-actors-guild-1201693509/]</ref>
==== Writers ====
 
* David Benioff & D.B. Weiss: episodes [[The Wars to Come|1]], [[The House of Black and White|2]], [[High Sparrow (episode)|3]], [[The Gift (episode)|7]], [[Hardhome (episode)|8]], [[The Dance of Dragons|9]] and 10
 
* [[Dave Hill]]: [[The Sons of the Harpy|episode 4]]
 
* [[Bryan Cogman]]: episodes [[Kill the Boy|5]] and [[Unbowed, Unbent, Unbroken|6]]
 
   
  +
Season 5 won the 2016 Art Directors Guild Award for Art Direction in a One-Hour Period or Fantasy Single-Camera Series - specifically nominated for art direction in the episodes "[[High Sparrow (episode)|High Sparrow]]", "[[Unbowed, Unbent, Unbroken]]", and "[[Hardhome (episode)|Hardhome]]". The entire art direction team was nominated, and the award was accepted by lead Production Designer [[Deborah Riley]].<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-of-thrones-wins-the-art-directors-guild-award/]</ref>
==== Directors ====
 
* [[Michael Slovis]]: episodes [[The Wars to Come|1]] and [[The House of Black and White|2]]
 
* [[Mark Mylod]]: episodes [[High Sparrow (episode)|3]] and [[The Sons of the Harpy|4]]
 
* [[Jeremy Podeswa]]: episodes [[Kill the Boy|5]] and [[Unbowed, Unbent, Unbroken|6]]
 
* [[Miguel Sapochnik]]: episodes [[The Gift (episode)|7]] and [[Hardhome (episode)|8]]
 
* [[David Nutter]]: episodes [[The Dance of Dragons|9]] and 10
 
   
  +
Season 5 won four Video Effects Society Awards, for different effects in "The Dance of Dragons", "Hardhome", and the wide shots of [[Volantis]] in "High Sparrow".<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-of-thrones-wins-4-visual-effects-society-awards/]</ref>
==Episodes==
 
{| class="blacktable" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0"
 
! #
 
! Image
 
! Title
 
! Airdate
 
! Viewers
 
|-
 
| rowspan="2" | 41
 
| rowspan="2" | [[File:Game_of_Throne_Season_5_03.jpg|120px]]
 
| "[[The Wars to Come]]"
 
| April 12, 2015
 
| 8.00
 
|-
 
| colspan="3" | [[Cersei Lannister|Cersei]] and [[Jaime Lannister|Jaime]] adjust to a world without [[Tywin Lannister|Tywin]]. [[Varys]] reveals a conspiracy to [[Tyrion Lannister|Tyrion]]. [[Daenerys Targaryen|Dany]] faces a [[Sons of the Harpy|new threat]] to her rule. [[Jon Snow|Jon]] is caught in between [[Stannis Baratheon|two]] [[Mance Rayder|kings]].
 
|-
 
| rowspan="2" | 42
 
| rowspan="2" | [[File:Arya_at_door_of_House_of_Black_and_White.jpg|120px]]
 
| "[[The House of Black and White]]"
 
| April 19, 2015
 
| 6.81
 
|-
 
| colspan="3" | [[Arya Stark|Arya]] arrives in [[Braavos]]. [[Podrick Payne|Pod]] and [[Brienne of Tarth|Brienne]] run into trouble on the road. [[Cersei Lannister|Cersei]] fears for [[Myrcella Baratheon|her daughter’s]] safety in [[Dorne]] as [[Ellaria Sand]] seeks revenge for [[Oberyn Martell|Oberyn’s]] [[Second Trial by combat of Tyrion Lannister|death]]. [[Stannis Baratheon|Stannis]] tempts [[Jon Snow|Jon]]. An [[Mossador|adviser]] tempts [[Dany]].
 
|-
 
| rowspan="2" | 43
 
| rowspan="2" | [[File:Cersei and High Sparrow-5x03.jpg|120px]]
 
| "[[High Sparrow (episode)|High Sparrow]]"
 
| April 26, 2015
 
|6.71
 
|-
 
| colspan="3" | In [[Braavos]], [[Arya Stark|Arya]] sees the [[God of Death|Many-Faced God]]. In [[King’s Landing]], Queen [[Margaery Tyrell|Margaery]] enjoys her [[Tommen Baratheon|new husband]]. [[Tyrion Lannister|Tyrion]] and [[Varys]] walk the [[Long Bridge]] of [[Volantis]].
 
|-
 
| rowspan="2" | 44
 
| rowspan="2" | [[File:Sons of the harpy ending grey worm selmy.png|120px]]
 
| "[[Sons of the Harpy (episode)|Sons of the Harpy]]"
 
| May 3, 2015
 
|6.82
 
|-
 
| colspan="3" | The [[Faith Militant]] grow increasingly aggressive. [[Jaime Lannister|Jaime]] and [[Bronn]] head [[Dorne|south]]. [[Ellaria Sand|Ellaria]] and the [[Sand Snakes]] vow vengeance.
 
|-
 
| rowspan="2" | 45
 
| rowspan="2" | [[File:Kill_the_boy_dany_.png|120px]]
 
| "[[Kill the Boy]]"
 
| May 10, 2015
 
|6.56
 
|-
 
| colspan="3" | [[Daenerys Targaryen|Dany]] makes a difficult decision in [[Meereen]]. [[Jon Snow|Jon]] recruits the help of an unexpected ally. [[Brienne of Tarth|Brienne]] searches for [[Sansa Stark|Sansa]]. [[Theon Greyjoy|Theon]] remains under [[Ramsay Bolton|Ramsay]]’s control.
 
|-
 
| rowspan="2" | 46
 
| rowspan="2" | [[File:ObaraS5E6.jpg|120px]]
 
| "[[Unbowed, Unbent, Unbroken]]"
 
| May 17, 2015
 
|
 
|-
 
| colspan="3" | [[Arya Stark|Arya]] trains. [[Jorah Mormont|Jorah]] and [[Tyrion Lannister|Tyrion]] run into slavers. [[Trystane Martell|Trystane]] and [[Myrcella Baratheon|Myrcella]] make plans. [[Jaime Lannister|Jaime]] and [[Bronn]] reach [[Water Gardens|their destination]]. The [[Sand Snakes]] attack.
 
|-
 
| rowspan="2" | 47
 
| rowspan="2" | [[File:JonSnowTheGift.jpg|120px]]
 
| "[[The Gift (episode)|The Gift]]"
 
| May 24, 2015
 
|
 
|-
 
| colspan="3" | [[Jon Snow|Jon]] prepares for conflict. [[Sansa Stark|Sansa]] tries to talk to [[Theon Greyjoy|Theon]]. [[Brienne of Tarth|Brienne]] waits for a sign. [[Stannis Baratheon|Stannis]] remains stubborn. [[Jaime Lannister|Jaime]] attempts to reconnect with family.
 
|-
 
| rowspan="2" | 48
 
| rowspan="2" | [[File:Wiki-wordmark.png|120px]]
 
| "[[Hardhome (episode)|Hardhome]]"
 
| May 31, 2015
 
|
 
|-
 
| colspan="3" | [[Arya Stark|Arya]] makes progress in her training. [[Sansa Stark|Sansa]] confronts an old friend. [[Cersei Lannister|Cersei]] struggles. [[Jon Snow|Jon]] travels.
 
|-
 
| rowspan="2" | 49
 
| rowspan="2" | [[File:Wiki-wordmark.png|120px]]
 
| "[[The Dance of Dragons]]"
 
| June 7, 2015
 
|
 
|-
 
| colspan="3" | Synopsis to be announced.
 
|-
 
| rowspan="2" | 50
 
| rowspan="2" | [[File:Wiki-wordmark.png|120px]]
 
| Season 5, Episode 10
 
| June 14, 2015
 
|
 
|-
 
| colspan="3" | Synopsis to be announced.
 
|}
 
   
==Image gallery==
+
==Home video==
  +
[[File:Season 5 box set DVD.jpg|thumb|Season 5 DVD box set cover]]
===Posters===
 
  +
[[File:Season 5 box set contents.jpg|thumb|Season 5 DVD box set contents on display.]]
  +
Season 5 became available for direct digital download (via iTunes) starting on August 31, 2015. This included the free behind-the-scenes featurettes previously released on the HBO Viewer's Guide website. The full season download was priced at $38.99 for HD, and $28.99 for SD (in US dollars).
  +
  +
Season 5 Blu-ray and DVD box sets were released on March 15, 2016. They are available for pre-order from Amazon.com, which prices the Blu-ray set at $72.98 and the DVD set at $53.99.<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/game-of-thrones-season-5-dvd-release-dates-announced/]</ref>
  +
  +
Features on the DVD release include:<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/new-details-game-of-thrones-season-5-dvd-box-set/]</ref>
  +
*Anatomy of an Episode: "Mother's Mercy"
  +
*The Real History Behind Game of Thrones – In a two-part series, historians and George R.R. Martin discuss the era known as “The Wars of the Roses” and other historical events that served as inspiration for his novels
  +
*Audio Commentaries – Twelve audio commentaries with cast and crew:
  +
**Episode 1: Michael Slovis, David Franco, Ciarán Hinds
  +
**Episode 2: Daniel Portman, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Gwendoline Christie
  +
**Episode 3: Deborah Riley, Anette Haellmigk, Michele Clapton
  +
**Episode 4: Natalie Dormer, Dean-Charles Chapman, Dave Hill, Mark Mylod
  +
**Episode 5: Michael McElhatton, Iwan Rheon, Gregory Middleton, Jeremy Podeswa
  +
**Episode 6: Maisie Williams, Tom Wlaschiha, Bryan Cogman
  +
**Episode 7: -
  +
**Episode 8:
  +
***Rowley Irlam, Kristofer Hivju, Kit Harington, Miguel Sapochnik
  +
***Steve Kullback, Joe Bauer, Christopher Newman
  +
***Fabian Wagner, Sean Savage, David Morgan
  +
**Episode 9:
  +
***David Nutter, Iain Glen, Peter Dinklage
  +
***Robert McLachlan, David Worley, Ben Wilson, Bernadette Caulfield
  +
**Episode 10: Lena Heady, David Nutter, D.B. Weiss, David Benioff
  +
  +
*Four deleted scenes
  +
*The behind-the-scenes featurettes for Season 5 already released for free online, including new character and location profiles, and the "A Day in the Life" production documentary.
  +
  +
The Blu-ray release with Digital Copy includes all of the features on the DVD set, plus:
  +
*A digital copy of the entire season
  +
*An "in-Episode Guide" will also be included (possibly a copy of the online version).
  +
*''[[Histories & Lore]]'' Season 5 - the next installment in the series of animated featurettes exploring the mythology a
  +
*''[[The Dance of Dragons]]'' - an "in-depth featurette" on the civil war that tore Westeros in half 170 years before the TV series, in which Targaryen fought Targaryen and [[dragon]] fought dragon (as Shireen explained in episode 5.9).nd backstory of Westeros and Essos. Consists of 14 separate videos.
  +
  +
The "Dance of Dragons" featurette is actually a super-sized animated featurette, like the regular ''Histories & Lore'' series, but 20 minutes long to summarize the entire narrative of the civil war. Moreover, numerous cast members whose characters died before Season 5 and didn't appear in it are returning to reprise their roles, providing in-universe voiceover narration:<ref>[http://www.ign.com/articles/2015/12/21/first-look-at-game-of-thrones-the-dance-of-dragons-animated-feature First Look at Game of Thrones: The Dance of Dragons Animated Feature]</ref>
  +
  +
*[[Pedro Pascal]] as Prince [[Oberyn Martell]]
  +
*[[Harry Lloyd]] as [[Viserys Targaryen (son of Aerys II)|Viserys Targaryen]]
  +
*[[Mark Addy]] as King [[Robert Baratheon]]
  +
*[[Michelle Fairley]] as [[Catelyn Stark]]
  +
*[[Jack Gleeson]] as King [[Joffrey Baratheon]]
  +
*[[Kerry Ingram]] as Princess [[Shireen Baratheon]]
  +
  +
===Deleted scenes===
  +
Four separate deleted scenes from Season 5 are included in the DVD box set release.<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/new-details-game-of-thrones-season-5-dvd-box-set/]</ref> None of them contain significantly new information, and have little to no impact on longer story arcs - with the exception of the longest of the four, a scene from the Season 5 premiere between Missandei and Grey Worm which provides substantially more setup for their ongoing romantic relationship subplot.
  +
  +
*Missandei tells Grey Worm she fears for his safety (1 minute 30 seconds long) - an extended version of the scene from episode 5.1 "[[The Wars To Come]]" in which [[Missandei]] talks to [[Grey Worm]] while he's suiting up in his armor with the other [[Unsullied]], it fits in between when Missandei says "I wanted to speak to you" (then the other Unsullied leave) and she says that [[White Rat]]'s body was found in a brothel. Missandei cautions Grey Worm that the Unsullied are trained not to feel fear, but the [[Sons of the Harpy]] are insurgents who wear masks, ambushing from the shadows then retreating to the shadows so they don't even have to face the Unsullied's combat prowess. She urges that she is afraid for his life, that he will be killed in a random attack. They exchange many knowing looks throughout, their mutual attraction unspoken through the awkward words they exchange. Missandei tells Grey Worm he must be careful and fight to protect himself: he looks concerned but he says he fights for Queen Daenerys. Then the scene continues as in the aired version, she asks why many Unsullied like White Rat have been visiting brothels (as they are eunuchs), but he says he doesn't know and leaves.
  +
*Daario mocks Grey Worm (1 minute long) - from episode 5.2 "[[The House of Black and White]]": [[Daario Naharis]] had just returned to [[Meereen]] and is joining [[Grey Worm]] and some of his [[Unsullied]] in the narrow alleys of the city. Daario asks if he's happy to see him and Grey Worm admits yes, he can help them patrol the streets. Daario then begins lightly mocking Grey Worm by asking how [[Missandei]] is doing, and given Grey Worm's status as a [[eunuch]], implies that he'd have problems satisfying her sexually - but as a friend, Daario would always be willing to step in to fulfill her needs which Grey Worm cannot satisfy. Grey Worm pauses and glares at him as the other Unsullied stop, but Daario finally gets the hint that his joking isn't funny, so he sheepishly changes the subject and says yes, it is good that the queen has him and his men back helping the Unsullied. The scene then proceeds to the portion that actually aired, with Daario saying that the Unsullied to too conspicuous for rooting out an insurgency in a city, they're meant for pitched battles, and their lack of fear means they aren't good at guessing where frightened rebels would try to hide.
  +
*Jaime and Bronn en route to Dorne (1 minute long) - A longer version of the scene from episode 5.4 "[[Sons of the Harpy (episode)|Sons of the Harpy]]" in which [[Jaime Lannister]] and [[Bronn]] are discussing their mission. Instead of starting with Bronn asking "Why are we on a merchant ship?", it starts with Bronn cleaning his sword when Jaime comes below. Jaime criticizes that Bronn isn't being thorough enough and the blade needs more oil, but Bronn says a lowly [[Mercenary|sellsword]] like him isn't usually in a position to be sentimental about weapons; he says he once saw a man in the Stormlands go back onto the battlefield to retrieve his lucky sword and he got an arrow through the eye for his troubles. Jaime counters that Bronn would care more if he had a proper high quality sword. Bronn sardonically agrees that yes, if he were wealthy enough to afford an expensive sword, he's probably focus more time on caring for it - which he finally ''was'' on the verge of being rich, living at [[Castle Stokeworth]], before Jaime dragged him along on this voyage. Jaime insists that a man like Bronn would get bored with a life of leisure and no fighting: Bronn says that's easy for Jaime to say, but he was rather looking forward to having a life of leisure. The scene then proceeds as it did in the aired version, with Bronn changing the subject to ask why they're on a merchant ship, and Jaime explaining they will leave the ship by rowboat in the night to sneak in to Dorne as it passes.
  +
*Tormund and Alliser Thorne meet again (1 minute long) - apparently from episode 5.5 "[[Kill the Boy]]", a stillshot of the scene was actually released as a promo image for that episode when it aired. The scene follows up on how [[Tormund]] nearly killed Ser [[Alliser Thorne]] during the [[battle for the Wall]]. Now, Tormund is being lead in chains through the courtyard of [[Castle Black]]. As Ser Alliser Thorne walks past he coldly confronts him. Alliser scornfully notes that they're keeping him alive, giving him food and a roof over his head, and asks Tormund if he knows what they'd be doing to Tormund if it were his decision. Tormund dryly guesses it would be something unpleasant - but because that isn't happening, Thorne must not be in charge anymore. Alliser silently looks annoyed then leaves.<ref>[http://watchersonthewall.com/new-deleted-scene-foretells-jon-snows-fate/ Alliser and Tormund deleted scene]</ref>
  +
  +
==In the books==
  +
{{Main|Differences in adaptation/Game of Thrones: Season 5}}
  +
The season generally follows the fourth and fifth novels ''A Feast for Crows'' and ''A Dance with Dragons'', and also contains scenes based on the last chapters of the third novel ''A Storm of Swords'', and a few scenes based on the first novel ''A Game of Thrones'' and on sample chapters of the upcoming sixth novel.
  +
  +
==Gallery==
  +
===Videos===
  +
====Trailers====
  +
<gallery bordersize=none>
  +
Game of Thrones Season 5: The Sight: Jon Snow and Mance (HBO)
  +
Game of Thrones Season 5: The Sight: Brienne and Podrick (HBO)
  +
Game of Thrones Season 5: Trailer 2 - The Wheel (HBO)
  +
Game of Thrones Season 5: Preview (HBO)
  +
Game of Thrones Season 5: Preview 2 (HBO)
  +
Game of Thrones: GoTBetrayals Promo (HBO)
  +
Game of Thrones Season 5: Sinners Promo (HBO)
  +
Game of Thrones Season 5: Future Promo (HBO)
  +
Game of Thrones Season 5: Enemy Promo (HBO)
  +
Game of Thrones / Official Season 5 Recap Trailer (HBO)
  +
</gallery>
  +
  +
====Artisan Pieces====
  +
<gallery bordersize=none>
  +
Game of Thrones Season 5: Artisan Piece 1: The Weapons of Dorne (HBO)
  +
Game of Thrones Season 5: Artisan Piece 2 - Set Design (HBO)
  +
Game of Thrones Season 5: Artisan Piece 3 - Stunts (HBO)
  +
</gallery>
  +
  +
====Behind the scenes====
  +
<gallery bordersize=none>
  +
Game of Thrones Season 5: Meet the Sand Snakes (HBO)
  +
Game of Thrones: Season 5 - Creating Weirwood Leaves (HBO)
  +
Game of Thrones Season 5: New Characters & Locations (HBO)
  +
</gallery>
  +
  +
====The Buzz====
  +
<gallery bordersize=none>
  +
The Buzz: Game of Thrones Season 5 Premiere (HBO)
  +
GoTPremiereSF Live Stream: Emilia Clarke (HBO)
  +
GoTPremiereSF Live Stream: D.B. Weiss & David Benioff (HBO)
  +
GoTPremiereSF Live Stream: Conleth Hill (HBO)
  +
GoTPremiereSF Live Stream: Peter Dinklage (HBO)
  +
Game of Thrones: Red Carpet San Francisco Recap (HBO)
  +
Game of Thrones: Comic-Con 2015 (HBO)
  +
</gallery>
   
===Promos===
+
===Images===
 
<gallery position="center">
 
<gallery position="center">
 
Game of Throne Season 5 08.jpg
 
Game of Throne Season 5 08.jpg
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Maisie-williams-outake-127103.jpg
 
Maisie-williams-outake-127103.jpg
Jon-and-Mance-2.jpg|Jon negotiating with Mance.
+
Jon and Mance wars to come.jpg|Jon negotiating with Mance.
 
GOT Season 5 10.jpg
 
GOT Season 5 10.jpg
 
GOT Season 5 09.jpg
 
GOT Season 5 09.jpg
 
GOT Season 5 08.jpg
 
GOT Season 5 08.jpg
 
GOT Season 5 07.jpg
 
GOT Season 5 07.jpg
  +
House of black and white drogon dany.jpg
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The Gift 02.jpg
 
The Gift 02.jpg
 
The Gift 01.jpg
 
The Gift 01.jpg
  +
TyrionandDaenerys.jpg
</gallery>
 
  +
Mother’s Mercy 07.jpg
 
  +
Mother’s Mercy 06.jpg
==Video gallery==
 
  +
Mother’s Mercy 05.jpg
<gallery widths="300" position="center" spacing="small" bordercolor="transparent" hideaddbutton="true">
 
  +
Mother’s Mercy 04.jpg
File:Game of Thrones Season 5 Trailer (HD)
 
  +
Mother’s Mercy 03.jpg
Game of Thrones Season Five Trailer - Fannotation
 
  +
Mother’s Mercy 02.jpg
Game_of_Thrones_Season_5_Trailer_2
 
  +
Mother’s Mercy 01.jpg
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
   
 
==References==
 
==References==
{{Reflist|2}}
+
{{Reflist}}
  +
[[Category:Seasons|5, Season]]
 
  +
===Notes===
[[Category:Season 5| ]]
 
  +
{{Notelist}}
[[Category:Game of Thrones]]
 
  +
  +
==External links==
  +
*{{AWOIAF|Game of Thrones - Season 5}}
  +
*{{HBO|game-of-thrones/season-5}}
  +
*{{WP|Game of Thrones season 5|''Game of Thrones'' season 5}}
  +
  +
<!--Navboxes-->
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{{Game of Thrones}}
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{{World of Westeros}}
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[[Category:Game of Thrones: Season 5| ]]
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[[Category:Seasons of Game of Thrones|5]]
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[[Category:Seasons released in 2015|4.12]]
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[[zh:第五季]]

Latest revision as of 12:48, 3 April 2024

Game of Thrones: Season 5[1] is the fifth season of Game of Thrones. It consists of ten episodes. It premiered with "The Wars To Come" on April 12, 2015 on HBO, and concluded with "Mother's Mercy" on June 14, 2015. It is based on A Feast for Crows and A Dance with Dragons, the fourth and fifth novels of A Song of Ice and Fire by George R.R. Martin.

Premise

The fifth season of HBO's smash-hit, Emmy Award-winning Best Drama Series Game of Thrones - an epic story of duplicity and treachery, nobility and honor, conquest and triumph.[1]

Overview

Purple Wedding

King Joffrey Baratheon, poisoned at his own wedding.

Deadtywin

Tywin Lannister shot dead on the privy by his own son Tyrion.

The War of the Five Kings, once thought to be drawing to a close, is instead entering a new and more chaotic phase. Westeros is on the brink of collapse, and many are seizing what they can while the realm implodes, like a corpse making a feast for crows.

Cersei refuses to share her plans

With Tywin dead and Tyrion gone, Queen Regent Cersei is now Head of House Lannister and tasked with the burden of continuing her father's legacy.

Tywin Lannister is dead, shot on the privy by his long-abused dwarf son Tyrion. The crazed boy-king Joffrey Baratheon, Tywin's grandson, is also dead after being poisoned at his own wedding, and succeeded by his younger and more pliable brother, Tommen. Queen Cersei Lannister succeeds her father as the head of House Lannister, and once again takes over as Queen Regent, as Tommen has yet to come of age. Cersei has been blocked by several powerful men over the years, including her husband King Robert Baratheon and his friend Eddard Stark, but due to her betrayals they are both dead. Now with even Tywin and Joffrey dead, and Tyrion fleeing the realm, there are no more checks on Cersei's power, and she is essentially the Ruling Queen of the Seven Kingdoms in all but name. However, Cersei is neither a master strategist nor a skilled diplomat (unlike her father and brother) and she faces mounting crises that would have strained even their abilities.

House Lannister and its allies have managed to crush House Stark, but in many ways it was a pyrrhic victory. The Iron Throne was already in massive debt to foreign banks before the war even began, and the Lannisters' immense wartime spending increased the crown's debts to crippling levels. The Lannisters must now desperately attempt to placate the Iron Bank of Braavos, by far the largest of the foreign banks, and the one which the crown owes most of its huge debts to.

Houndaryarideaway

The Riverlands have been reduced to a burned-out wasteland by the war.

The game of thrones is, unfortunately, not a simple game of cyvasse in which the pieces can be quickly reassembled: vast swathes of Westeros have been devastated by civil war, and it may take a full generation for them to rebuild. The Riverlands, where most of the war was fought, have been reduced to a burned out husk. Nominally the Lannisters and their House Frey allies control the Riverlands, but it has been reduced to a lawless and corpse-filled devastation, hardly controlled by anyone. Winter is fast approaching, but instead of stockpiling harvests the past few years, the great lords have been busy destroying one of the main breadbasket regions of the Seven Kingdoms. Combined with the realm's massive debts to foreign banks, starvation level conditions are starting to set in for the smallfolk across the realm. Outraged by the willful indifference of their rulers to their well-being for so long, commoners are starting to fall back onto old cultural touchstones, channeling their frustration into religious fanaticism. A popular disgust movement spreads across Westeros, and makes its way to the capital.

Margaery wearing Cersei style clothes in Season 5

A power-struggle is growing between Cersei Lannister and Margaery Tyrell, now married to King Tommen.

Adding to these woes is the increasing rivalry between the Lannisters and their Tyrell allies, specifically between Cersei and Margaery Tyrell. The Lannisters only managed to win on the battlefield with the armies and food resources won by their alliance with the House Tyrell of the Reach. Now that Tywin is dead, and Margaery is soon to be King Tommen's queen, the Tyrells are no longer pretending to be polite to the Lannisters, but openly demanding greater concessions and key positions of power. With half of the Lannister armies slaughtered by Robb Stark during the war, their financial resources depleted, and the Tyrells controlling the only major breadbasket region untouched by the war, the Lannisters are having to face the reality that the Tyrells hold numerous advantages over them. Just as Robert Baratheon became king only to become dependent on the support of the Lannisters, the Lannisters have now become dependant on the Tyrells.

Tyrion and Varys in Pentos

Tyrion and Varys flee to the Free Cities after Tyrion kills Tywin.

Without the political acumen of Tywin or Tyrion, Queen Regent Cersei struggles to address these major challenges. Adding even further to her woes is that the king's Small Council has been gutted, with Hand of the King Tywin dead, Master of Coin Petyr Baelish leaving for the Eyrie, and both Tyrion and Master of Whisperers Varys fleeing the capital city. Of the original Small Council when the Lannisters first seized power, only Grand Maester Pycelle remains.

Besides the Reach, only the regions which have remained neutral so far still have all of their armies and resources intact: the Vale, ruled by House Arryn, and Dorne, ruled by House Martell. With nearly all the other Great Houses defeated or half-exhausted, the fresh armies of the Vale and Dorne can drastically alter the political playing field, depending on which side they choose to join.

Littlefinger and Alayne Season 5 trailer

Petyr "Littlefinger" Baelish, the true catalyst of the Stark-Lannister war, now rules as regent of the Vale, gathering his strength - and joined by his ward "Alayne".

The ultimate result of the war was to exhaust the Starks, Lannisters, and other Great Houses of the Seven Kingdoms - exactly as Petyr "Littlefinger" Baelish had planned. The secret architect of the conflict, it was Littlefinger who was responsible for poisoning Robert's Hand, Jon Arryn, by conspiring with his own wife Lysa Arryn. Littlefinger then engineered the betrayal of Eddard Stark, only to later assist Olenna Tyrell in assassinating King Joffrey at his own wedding. Baelish has now murdered Lysa, mere days after wedding her, and seized power over the Vale as regent for her young son. For the moment, Baelish remains in the Vale, consolidating his new hold over the Vale lords through his stepson Robin and his position as Lord Protector of the Vale. Alongside Baelish is the black-haired "Alayne", his ward and "niece" - secretly, Sansa Stark, who fell into Littlefinger's custody after he helped her escape her long imprisonment at Joffrey's royal court.

Doran, Ellaria, Areo & Sand Snakes

The Dornishmen are furious over the death of Oberyn Martell in a duel with Gregor Clegane.

Sand Snakes send Cersei Myrcella's lion pendant

Oberyn's daughters threaten Cersei by sending her a dead viper with her daughter Myrcella's lion pendant stuffed in its mouth.

In the deserts of the deep south of Westeros, the people of Dorne demand vengeance for the death of Prince Oberyn, who died in a trial by combat at the hands of Ser Gregor Clegane. Leading the call to enter the war against the Lannisters are Oberyn's paramour, Ellaria Sand, and the eldest of his eight daughters: Obara, Nymeria, and Tyene. But Doran Martell, the Prince of Dorne and Oberyn's older brother, continues to urge restraint. Further complicating the matter is that early in the war, the Lannisters bribed the Martells into staying neutral by offering a marriage-alliance, sending Cersei's daughter Myrcella to Dorne to betroth her to Doran's son Trystane. Myrcella is still a ward living in Dorne's capital, Sunspear.

Stannis attacks

King Stannis Baratheon's forces unexpectedly arrived at the Wall to save the Night's Watch from Mance Rayder.

The most dire situation in Westeros, however, is in the North and at the Wall. The massive assault against Castle Black by the wildling army of Mance Rayder was defeated at the last moment by the surprise arrival of Stannis Baratheon and his remaining forces. Stannis withdrew from his island stronghold Dragonstone to reach the Wall by sea, to defend the realm of which he feels he is the only rightful king. With his home territories in the Stormlands overrun, Stannis needs to win the allegiance of Robb Stark's defeated bannermen, to rally the North again as a springboard against Lannister rule, as well as the support of Jon Snow, who therefore must walk a political tightrope between Stannis and his vows, since the Night's Watch is sworn to strict political neutrality. Though the battle against the wildlings is all but over, the Night's Watch is in its own dire conditions. With almost all of the Watch's top officers either killed or missing, among them Lord Commander Jeor Mormont and First Ranger Benjen Stark, the organization has been left leaderless during this time of crisis, and therefore will have to navigate a contentious election for a new Lord Commander. All the while, the White Walkers and their ever-growing army of the dead are bearing down on the Wall itself, intent on spilling over it to destroy the lands of men beyond, who remain ignorant of the long-forgotten but all-too-real danger.

Red wedding roose robb

Roose Bolton personally killed Robb Stark at the Red Wedding, and was appointed the new Warden of the North as a reward.

Snow

Roose's sociopathic son Ramsay is now Lord of Winterfell under his father, and has "remade" Theon Greyjoy into his broken servant, Reek.

The main armies of the Northern Houses, however, were slaughtered in the south at the Red Wedding, and the large main army of House Bolton has just returned to the North following the recapture of Moat Cailin. The Boltons switched to the Lannister side during the betrayal at the Red Wedding, during which their leader Lord Roose Bolton personally killed Robb Stark, and they have been installed as the new rulers of the North in the name of King Tommen and the Lannisters. With the other Northern Houses defeated and weakened, the Lannister-backed Bolton army can now suppress any feeble opposition to their rule. Meanwhile, Roose's sociopathic bastard son Ramsay Snow - now legitimized as Ramsay Bolton - is the new Lord of Winterfell under his father, reoccupying the castle which he personally burned out previously. With the Boltons in power, Ramsay is now free to commit numerous atrocities throughout the North, such as flaying men alive and hunting and killing young women for sport.

However, the struggle for the North is not yet over. Various areas of the North's western coast are still held by Ironborn invaders under Balon Greyjoy, who chose to crown himself as King of the Iron Islands and attack the North during Robb Stark's march south rather than ally with him against the Lannisters. Balon's son and heir, Theon, who himself was a ward of Lord Eddard Stark and one of Robb's closest advisors, turned on the Starks and led the assault himself but was betrayed by his own men and is now a prisoner of the Boltons, having been brutally flayed, tortured, and psychologically broken by Ramsay himself, who has reduced Theon to his personal slave, "Reek".

Stannis Baratheon in Castle Black with Jon Snow

Jon must deal not only with the Watch but also with Stannis.

Aemon part of jon s judging

The Night's Watch faces a difficult election for a new Lord Commander.

Titan of Braavos

The Free City of Braavos.

East of Westeros, after murdering his own father, Tyrion Lannister has fled across the Narrow Sea to the Free Cities, his future intentions unknown even to himself. Accompanied by Varys, he arrives in the east, unaware that the erstwhile Master of Whisperers might yet have secrets to reveal. Further north, meanwhile, representatives from the Iron Throne travel to the Free City of Braavos to assuage the Iron Bank's frustrations about all of the money the Lannisters owe. Unbeknownst to all, Arya Stark has also fled to Braavos, due to a favor she was owed for saving the life of one of the mysterious guild of assassins in Braavos known as the Faceless Men.

6f038a22773525ec3a2a270f79f892c3

Daenerys Targaryen has been forced to chain up her uncontrollable dragons.

Dragons imprisoned

The dragons chained in a cavern underneath Meereen.

Further east in Slaver's Bay, Daenerys Targaryen's hold over Meereen has become very precarious, as ruling the city is becoming much more difficult than conquering it was. Sectarian violence is rampant between the former slaves and former slave-masters, revenge attacks are on the rise, and the resurgent slavers at Yunkai are rallying all those who oppose her. Daenerys's three dragons, now growing to dangerous size, have become uncontrollable and she can no longer rely upon them to defeat her enemies on the battlefield. Drogon burned a child to death while he was hunting and fled the city, forcing Daenerys to chain up the remaining two dragons in the caverns underneath the city. In addition, Daenerys is still distraught over the recent revelations concerning her once-trusted advisor Jorah Mormont, whom she exiled from the city as punishment. Her remaining advisors Ser Barristan Selmy, Missandei, and the sellsword Daario Naharis attempt to help hold her reign together. But unbeknownst to Daenerys, word has finally spread to Westeros that the last living Targaryen heir has hatched three live dragons. No longer a mere curiosity halfway across the world, several different factions in Westeros are now pondering how Daenerys and her dragons will factor into the already confusing and multi-sided civil war still tearing the Seven Kingdoms apart. Envoys are beginning to head east to court Daenerys's allegiance: but those who try to dance with dragons run the risk of being burned.

Episodes

Episode Image Title Air date
1[9] Thrones S05E01 "The Wars To Come"[9] April 12, 2015[3]
2[17] Thrones S05E02 "The House of Black and White"[17] April 19, 2015[3]
3[12] Thrones S05E03 "High Sparrow"[12] April 26, 2015[3]
4[10] Thrones S05E04 "Sons of the Harpy"[10] May 3, 2015[3]
5[11] Thrones S05E05 "Kill the Boy"[11] May 10, 2015[3]
6[18] Thrones S05E06 "Unbowed, Unbent, Unbroken"[18] May 17, 2015[3]
7[13] Thrones S05E07 "The Gift"[13] May 24, 2015[3]
8[19] Thrones S05E08 "Hardhome"[19] May 31, 2015[3]
9[14] Thrones S05E09 "The Dance of Dragons"[14] June 7, 2015[3]
10[20] Thrones S05E10 "Mother's Mercy"[20] June 14, 2015[3]

Cast

Main page: Game of Thrones: Season 5/Cast

Starring

Guest starring

Crew

Regular directors Neil Marshall, Alex Graves, Alik Sakharov, and Michelle MacLaren are not returning for Season 5. Notably, this is also the first time since Season 2 that no episodes are directed by the executive producers, David Benioff and D.B. Weiss. MacLaren's departure also makes Season 5 the first since Season 2 with no female director. MacLaren is the only female director who ever worked on the TV series, producing two episodes in Season 3 and another two in Season 4.

George R.R. Martin stated he would not be writing an episode, as he has done in every previous season, because he wants to focus on finishing The Winds of Winter, the sixth novel in the book series.[21] Meanwhile, Dave Hill, the former assistant for Benioff and Weiss and the writer of the Histories & Lore short videos, was brought forward to write an episode after Benioff and Weiss were impressed with his story ideas involving Olly and Ygritte in the fourth season.

The entire production crew that worked on Season 5, spread across several countries, consisted of roughly 1,000 people. Of them, about 750 worked in Northern Ireland - that is, about 250 worked exclusively in other countries, but many of those who worked at the production's home base in Northern Ireland also visited filming locations in other countries.[22] Of these, the entire costuming department includes about 100 people (including major designers, embroiderers, hairstylists, cleaners, cloth-agers, sorters and fitters, and metal armor forgers).[23] As for the cast in Season 5, the show employed 166 actors who had speaking roles, and another 5,000 extras for crowd scenes.[24]

Producers

Writers

Directors

Production

Adaptation

Main page: Game of Thrones#Adaptation process and catching up with the books

While developing Season 4, Benioff admitted that "Season 5 gives him nightmares"[25]. However, once they actually had outlined the season, Benioff and Weiss revealed "the fear started to dissipate." They also claimed the season would be "drawing heavily" from A Feast for Crows and A Dance with Dragons, the fourth and fifth books of George R.R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire saga.[26]

The book series was originally planned as a trilogy (A Game of Thrones, A Dance with Dragons and The Winds of Winter), but Martin realized his plot of "book one" would have to be expanded into three novels (A Game of Thrones, A Clash of Kings and A Storm of Swords), which means the first three books are "Act One" of a three Act story. In fact, the climax of A Storm of Swords concludes many of the plot lines begun in A Game of Thrones. Furthermore, what Martin originally planned as the middle novel grew too vast to be published as a single tome, so he cut it into two books that take place concurrently: in very rough terms, the fourth one (A Feast for Crows) follows all of the characters in the Seven Kingdoms while the fifth one (A Dance with Dragons) covers the storylines that take place elsewhere (such as the Night's Watch at the Wall, Tyrion as he escapes to the Free Cities, and Daenerys in Slaver's Bay). Season 5 will present the events featured in these two books in chronological order, intercutting between the two clusters of storylines.

On the one hand, this combination of novels could easily span two seasons, since it would be longer than A Storm of Swords, which was adapted into the third season and most of the fourth one. On the other hand, whereas the Red Wedding happens around the middle of the third novel and provided a convenient climax for Season 3, there are no similarly game-changing or climactic events in the middle of A Feast for Crows or A Dance with Dragons —both of which are slower-paced than the previous novels anyway.

Some of those two novels had already been advanced to Season 4 (everything after Daenerys took Meereen, everything after Brienne left King's Landing to look for Sansa, Sansa's story after Lady Lysa's death, Bran's whole story and the Fall of Moat Cailin), while other storylines were delayed to Season 6 (the Ironborn and Riverlands subplots, Arya's blind period and Sam arriving at Oldtown.) Ultimately, however, the bulk of these books was still adapted into Season 5. Despite some condensations, Jon Snow at the Wall, Cersei and the Tyrells in King's Landing, Tyrion heading to Meereen, and Daenerys in Meereen cover most of the major plot points which happened to each of them. The Stannis and Bolton storylines in the North, however, was extremely condensed. Both were reasonably close to what happened in the novels until about the second half of Season 5. In the novels, Stannis leaves the Wall to begin his campaign in the North only about one third of the way into the fifth book, after which it and the Boltons at Winterfell become one of the primary focuses of the narrative. The Sansa and Brienne storylines (entirely separate in the novels, both from each other and from the Bolton storyline) were also condensed. The writers also adapted some of the Dorne subplot, but with such limited screentime dedicated to it that the main parts of it didn't appear, nor did several major characters, such as arguably the storyline's main character —Doran's daughter and heir, Arianne Martell, who is actually a POV narrator. Tyrion's storyline as he was heading east to Meereen introduced a major new subplot involving a major political shakeup in the Free Cities, but this was cut completely from Season 5, and it will probably be omitted in the future.

Filming

Location scouting for Season 5 took place in Croatia and Spain. Filming in Croatia would continue in and around Dubrovnik, Split, and Žrnovnica, and expand to new locations around Imotski and Šibenik.[27] The Spanish locations which were scouted are in Andalusia, namely the Alhambra of Granada, the Alcázar of Seville and the Alcázar de los Reyes Cristianos of Córdoba.[28][29][30]

On July 2, 2014, U.S. ambassador to Spain James Costos confirmed at an economic forum meeting that Game of Thrones would be filming in the country. HBO later confirmed the same day that Seville was selected as the primary filming location, as well as other sites in the surrounding province of Seville.[31] The Alcázar of Seville served as the Water Gardens, the seaside palace of House Martell located just outside of Sunspear, the capital of Dorne. The Alcázar is the oldest palace still in use in Europe, acting as a part-time residence for the present Spanish royal family. The site was first fortified in 712, and the Almohads expanded it in the twelfth century, making it a royal residence in 1248. Extensive additions were also made in subsequent centuries. It was declared a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1987. The Alcázar was previously used in Ridley Scott's 2005 film Kingdom of Heaven as the filming location for the court of the king of Jerusalem.[32]

Locations were scouted in Seville as well as the nearby town of Osuna.[33] Fresco Film Productions put out an open casting call via Facebook for extras in the area.[34] Rosario Andújar, the mayor of Osuna, stated in El Mundo that the scouted locations include the Plaza de Toros (a bull ring with sandstone walls, over a century old), the university (built in 1548, with four towers and influenced by the Italian Renaissance, La Colegiata (a church founded in 1535), and the Canteras de Osuna (the old quarries that supplied stone for the town).[35]

On July 3, 2014 it was reported that filming would briefly return to Iceland, but would not feature any major characters, instead focusing on landscape shots. Line producer Snorri Þórisson confirmed that the show intended to film a battle in Iceland in the month of November, but that with rewrites, the scene grew too large. It is difficult to film protracted battle scenes in Iceland during the fall due to the very limited daylight hours.[36] It is unclear if this was a reference to the Massacre at Hardhome or the battle in the ice.

On July 13, 2014, it was confirmed that filming would begin in September in the town of Šibenik, Croatia, which largely represented Braavos. St. James Cathedral was used as the basis for the headquarters of the Iron Bank of Braavos.[37] The cathedral is the center of Croatia's Catholic Church and the see of the Šibenik diocese. The basilica, which is in the UNESO World Heritage list, is widely considered to be the most important example of Renaissance architecture in the country.

On July 27, 2014, in an interview with Sophie Turner, she confirmed that she would start filming in Belfast on Wednesday July 30.[38]

On August 9, 2014, it was confirmed that the production team in Spain would be filming in one of Osuna's active bull-fighting rings, the Plaza de Toros, but that actual filming in the ring might not take place until October.[39] Bull fights are held at the Plaza de Toros annually, events which end with bulls actually being killed in the arena.[40]

On August 11, 2014, WatchersOnTheWall.com reported that 86 year-old actor actor J.J. Murphy died a matter of days after filming his first scenes as Denys Mallister, the commander of the Shadow Tower, the westernmost active castle on the Wall.[41] The same day, Benioff and Weiss made an official statement via HBO's twitter account that the role would not be recast: "We will not be recasting J.J. Murphy. He was a lovely man, and the best Denys Mallister we could have hoped for. And now his watch is ended."[42] In the end, Murphy's role was brief and Mallister had no lines of dialogue. This makes Denys the second posthumous character appearing in the TV series (as well as the second cast member who has died): actress Margaret John, who played Old Nan, died only two months before Season 1 premiered, though all of her scenes had already been completed.

On August 24, 2014, WatchersOnTheWall.com reported that filming would again return to Diocletian's Palace in Croatia. This site was an ancient Roman palace built by emperor Diocletian in the fourth century. Despite the name, it resembles a fortress more than a palace (in fact, only half of it was Diocletian's residence, and the other half housed a large military garrison.) The cellars of the palace were previously used as the underground passageways in Meereen during Season 4, and they were used for this purpose again.[43]

On September 3, 2014, Kristian Nairn (Hodor) revealed that he would not be returning in Season 5: "We're not actually in Season Five, by the way. We have a season off. We have a year’s hiatus...Solely because, I imagine, our storyline is up to the end of the books. - So I get a year off now."[44] Although Isaac Hempstead-Wright, who plays Bran, seemed to imply he would be back[45], it was later confirmed Bran would indeed not be in the fifth season.[46] On October 6, 2014, Art Parkinson (Rickon) confirmed that he and Natalia Tena (Osha) would not be returning in Season 5.[47]

On October 14, 2014, Game of Thrones production units were observed filming in Córdoba, Spain, at the Roman Bridge of Córdoba[48], a famous landmark in the Historic Center of Córdoba built in the first century BC. The bridge has been restored and renovated several times across the ages, and now only two of the arches are from the original Roman construction. Benioff and Weiss confirmed the bridge would represent the Long Bridge of Volantis.[49]

That same week, Benioff and Weiss spoke in a special event at the Teatro Central de Sevilla. They confirmed that there would be flashbacks in Season 5, despite their previous assertions that there would never be flashbacks on the TV show.[50] They did experiment with using flashbacks in the unscreened pilot, but afterwards felt that it broke up the dramatic pacing. The books themselves do not have straightforward "flashback scenes", but POV narrators will remember or recall past events at length (i.e. when Jaime explains why he actually killed the Mad King, in "Kissed by Fire"). In the end, season five featured a single scene of this sort: the first episode opened with a flashback to when Cersei was young and visited Maggy.

There are so many standing sets built for the show in Season 5 that the production is starting to run out of space. Increasingly, new sets are built in smaller areas, making it more difficult for Directors of Photography to set up lighting and backings. The smaller interiors are filmed at Banbridge, while the larger spaces are housed at Titanic Studios.[51]

Awards

Game of Thrones Season 5 won a record-breaking 12 times in the 2015 Emmy Awards, including Best Drama.[52]

Season 5 won awards in four major categories:

Season 5 also won in eight technical categories, awarded at the Creative Arts Emmys:

  • Outstanding Special Visual Effects – "The Dance of Dragons"
  • Outstanding Makeup For A Single-Camera Series (Non-Prosthetic) – "Mother’s Mercy"
  • Outstanding Production Design For A Narrative Contemporary Or Fantasy Program (One Hour Or More) – "High Sparrow" – Deborah Riley, Production Designer
  • Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing For A Drama Series – "The Dance of Dragons"
  • Outstanding Casting For A Drama Series – Casting Directors Nina Gold, Robert Sterne, and Carla Stronge
  • Outstanding Sound Editing For A Series – "Hardhome"
  • Outstanding Sound Mixing For A Comedy Or Drama Series (One Hour) – "Hardhome"
  • Outstanding Stunt Coordination For A Drama Series, Limited Series Or Movie – Rowley Irlam, Stunt Coordinator

Many major critics and review sources, however, reacted to the wins by expressing that Season 5 was probably the weakest season of Game of Thrones to date - compared to its own prior seasons. This led to discussion about whether the Emmy voting system was skewed or out of touch. Two general positions developed:

  • The first group of critics felt that Season 5 did not deserve these Emmy wins (particularly Best Drama) in and of itself, but it has become common practice for the awards to be given to series that are "due" - series that should have won in prior awards years but were overshadowed by competition from other series. Game of Thrones never won Best Drama in its first four seasons - even after the climactic and critically very well received events of the third and fourth seasons, when it was competing against other shows such as Breaking Bad or Mad Men which were also considered to be in their prime. While Season 4 of Game of Thrones gained widespread praise, it competed at the Emmys against the universally praised final season of Breaking Bad (even Benioff and Weiss have said they are massive fans of what Breaking Bad achieved). These critics argued, in short, that Season 5 was not Emmy-worthy material but the win was meant to make up for past seasons when they should have won. This led to further criticisms of the broader pattern of voting for series that are considered to be "due" for a win even if their current material doesn't deserve it.
  • The second camp of critics, while feeling that Season 5 was the weakest season of Game of Thrones to date, expressed that this was only in comparison to the very high standard set by its own prior seasons - and moreover, because many other critically praised shows such as Breaking Bad were no longer airing, Season 5 of Game of Thrones simply faced weaker competition - in which case, these critics felt that Season 5 indeed deserved to win on its own merits, given that the awards are relative to other shows that are airing in a given year.

Either way, many post-Emmy critical reviews felt the need to express their view that Season 5 was the weakest season of the TV series so far (by its own standards), and ponder if it deserved such accolades in and of itself. These included: The Los Angeles Times, USA Today, Rolling Stone, Vulture, Vanity Fair, Variety, Entertainment Weekly, Deadline, TheGuardian.com, Collider, BusinessInsider, io9, BuddyTV.com, Bustle, and HitFix, among others.

TechInsider was bewildered that Benioff and Weiss won the Best Writing for a Drama Series award for the Season 5 finale "Mother's Mercy", given that it contained the strange and non sequitur line from Tyene Sand, "You want a good girl, but you need the bad pussy!" - which while not from the novels, is now officially part of a script that won an Emmy award for Best Writing.[53]

No major critical reviews of record expressed a view that Season 5 was actually better than the prior four seasons that did not win such awards.

Season 5 was nominated for two Writer's Guild of America Awards: the first for Drama Series, and the second for Episodic Drama (specifically Benioff and Weiss for the Season 5 finale, "Mother's Mercy").[54]

Season 5 was nominated in the 2016 Producer Guild Awards, for the Norman Felton Award for Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television (Drama). The specific nominees are David Benioff, D.B. Weiss, Bernadette Caulfield, Frank Doelger, Carolyn Strauss, Bryan Cogman, Lisa McAtackney, Chris Newman, and Greg Spence.[55]

Season 5 was nominated in two categories at the 2016 Screen Actors Guild Awards. The first nomination is for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series. The second nomination is Peter Dinklage (Tyrion) for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Drama Series.[56]

Season 5 was nominated at the 2016 American Society of Cinematographers Awards. Cinematographer Fabian Wagner (BSC) was nominated in the "Episode of a Regular Series" category for the episode "Hardhome".[57]

Season 5 was nominated at the 2016 Golden Globe Awards for Best Drama Series.[58]

Season 5 won the 2015 Screen Actors Guild award for Outstanding Action Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a Comedy or Drama Series.[59]

Season 5 won the 2016 Art Directors Guild Award for Art Direction in a One-Hour Period or Fantasy Single-Camera Series - specifically nominated for art direction in the episodes "High Sparrow", "Unbowed, Unbent, Unbroken", and "Hardhome". The entire art direction team was nominated, and the award was accepted by lead Production Designer Deborah Riley.[60]

Season 5 won four Video Effects Society Awards, for different effects in "The Dance of Dragons", "Hardhome", and the wide shots of Volantis in "High Sparrow".[61]

Home video

Season 5 box set DVD

Season 5 DVD box set cover

Season 5 box set contents

Season 5 DVD box set contents on display.

Season 5 became available for direct digital download (via iTunes) starting on August 31, 2015. This included the free behind-the-scenes featurettes previously released on the HBO Viewer's Guide website. The full season download was priced at $38.99 for HD, and $28.99 for SD (in US dollars).

Season 5 Blu-ray and DVD box sets were released on March 15, 2016. They are available for pre-order from Amazon.com, which prices the Blu-ray set at $72.98 and the DVD set at $53.99.[62]

Features on the DVD release include:[63]

  • Anatomy of an Episode: "Mother's Mercy"
  • The Real History Behind Game of Thrones – In a two-part series, historians and George R.R. Martin discuss the era known as “The Wars of the Roses” and other historical events that served as inspiration for his novels
  • Audio Commentaries – Twelve audio commentaries with cast and crew:
    • Episode 1: Michael Slovis, David Franco, Ciarán Hinds
    • Episode 2: Daniel Portman, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Gwendoline Christie
    • Episode 3: Deborah Riley, Anette Haellmigk, Michele Clapton
    • Episode 4: Natalie Dormer, Dean-Charles Chapman, Dave Hill, Mark Mylod
    • Episode 5: Michael McElhatton, Iwan Rheon, Gregory Middleton, Jeremy Podeswa
    • Episode 6: Maisie Williams, Tom Wlaschiha, Bryan Cogman
    • Episode 7: -
    • Episode 8:
      • Rowley Irlam, Kristofer Hivju, Kit Harington, Miguel Sapochnik
      • Steve Kullback, Joe Bauer, Christopher Newman
      • Fabian Wagner, Sean Savage, David Morgan
    • Episode 9:
      • David Nutter, Iain Glen, Peter Dinklage
      • Robert McLachlan, David Worley, Ben Wilson, Bernadette Caulfield
    • Episode 10: Lena Heady, David Nutter, D.B. Weiss, David Benioff
  • Four deleted scenes
  • The behind-the-scenes featurettes for Season 5 already released for free online, including new character and location profiles, and the "A Day in the Life" production documentary.

The Blu-ray release with Digital Copy includes all of the features on the DVD set, plus:

  • A digital copy of the entire season
  • An "in-Episode Guide" will also be included (possibly a copy of the online version).
  • Histories & Lore Season 5 - the next installment in the series of animated featurettes exploring the mythology a
  • The Dance of Dragons - an "in-depth featurette" on the civil war that tore Westeros in half 170 years before the TV series, in which Targaryen fought Targaryen and dragon fought dragon (as Shireen explained in episode 5.9).nd backstory of Westeros and Essos. Consists of 14 separate videos.

The "Dance of Dragons" featurette is actually a super-sized animated featurette, like the regular Histories & Lore series, but 20 minutes long to summarize the entire narrative of the civil war. Moreover, numerous cast members whose characters died before Season 5 and didn't appear in it are returning to reprise their roles, providing in-universe voiceover narration:[64]

Deleted scenes

Four separate deleted scenes from Season 5 are included in the DVD box set release.[65] None of them contain significantly new information, and have little to no impact on longer story arcs - with the exception of the longest of the four, a scene from the Season 5 premiere between Missandei and Grey Worm which provides substantially more setup for their ongoing romantic relationship subplot.

  • Missandei tells Grey Worm she fears for his safety (1 minute 30 seconds long) - an extended version of the scene from episode 5.1 "The Wars To Come" in which Missandei talks to Grey Worm while he's suiting up in his armor with the other Unsullied, it fits in between when Missandei says "I wanted to speak to you" (then the other Unsullied leave) and she says that White Rat's body was found in a brothel. Missandei cautions Grey Worm that the Unsullied are trained not to feel fear, but the Sons of the Harpy are insurgents who wear masks, ambushing from the shadows then retreating to the shadows so they don't even have to face the Unsullied's combat prowess. She urges that she is afraid for his life, that he will be killed in a random attack. They exchange many knowing looks throughout, their mutual attraction unspoken through the awkward words they exchange. Missandei tells Grey Worm he must be careful and fight to protect himself: he looks concerned but he says he fights for Queen Daenerys. Then the scene continues as in the aired version, she asks why many Unsullied like White Rat have been visiting brothels (as they are eunuchs), but he says he doesn't know and leaves.
  • Daario mocks Grey Worm (1 minute long) - from episode 5.2 "The House of Black and White": Daario Naharis had just returned to Meereen and is joining Grey Worm and some of his Unsullied in the narrow alleys of the city. Daario asks if he's happy to see him and Grey Worm admits yes, he can help them patrol the streets. Daario then begins lightly mocking Grey Worm by asking how Missandei is doing, and given Grey Worm's status as a eunuch, implies that he'd have problems satisfying her sexually - but as a friend, Daario would always be willing to step in to fulfill her needs which Grey Worm cannot satisfy. Grey Worm pauses and glares at him as the other Unsullied stop, but Daario finally gets the hint that his joking isn't funny, so he sheepishly changes the subject and says yes, it is good that the queen has him and his men back helping the Unsullied. The scene then proceeds to the portion that actually aired, with Daario saying that the Unsullied to too conspicuous for rooting out an insurgency in a city, they're meant for pitched battles, and their lack of fear means they aren't good at guessing where frightened rebels would try to hide.
  • Jaime and Bronn en route to Dorne (1 minute long) - A longer version of the scene from episode 5.4 "Sons of the Harpy" in which Jaime Lannister and Bronn are discussing their mission. Instead of starting with Bronn asking "Why are we on a merchant ship?", it starts with Bronn cleaning his sword when Jaime comes below. Jaime criticizes that Bronn isn't being thorough enough and the blade needs more oil, but Bronn says a lowly sellsword like him isn't usually in a position to be sentimental about weapons; he says he once saw a man in the Stormlands go back onto the battlefield to retrieve his lucky sword and he got an arrow through the eye for his troubles. Jaime counters that Bronn would care more if he had a proper high quality sword. Bronn sardonically agrees that yes, if he were wealthy enough to afford an expensive sword, he's probably focus more time on caring for it - which he finally was on the verge of being rich, living at Castle Stokeworth, before Jaime dragged him along on this voyage. Jaime insists that a man like Bronn would get bored with a life of leisure and no fighting: Bronn says that's easy for Jaime to say, but he was rather looking forward to having a life of leisure. The scene then proceeds as it did in the aired version, with Bronn changing the subject to ask why they're on a merchant ship, and Jaime explaining they will leave the ship by rowboat in the night to sneak in to Dorne as it passes.
  • Tormund and Alliser Thorne meet again (1 minute long) - apparently from episode 5.5 "Kill the Boy", a stillshot of the scene was actually released as a promo image for that episode when it aired. The scene follows up on how Tormund nearly killed Ser Alliser Thorne during the battle for the Wall. Now, Tormund is being lead in chains through the courtyard of Castle Black. As Ser Alliser Thorne walks past he coldly confronts him. Alliser scornfully notes that they're keeping him alive, giving him food and a roof over his head, and asks Tormund if he knows what they'd be doing to Tormund if it were his decision. Tormund dryly guesses it would be something unpleasant - but because that isn't happening, Thorne must not be in charge anymore. Alliser silently looks annoyed then leaves.[66]

In the books

Main page: Differences in adaptation/Game of Thrones: Season 5

The season generally follows the fourth and fifth novels A Feast for Crows and A Dance with Dragons, and also contains scenes based on the last chapters of the third novel A Storm of Swords, and a few scenes based on the first novel A Game of Thrones and on sample chapters of the upcoming sixth novel.

Gallery

Videos

Trailers

Artisan Pieces

Behind the scenes

The Buzz

Images

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Game of Thrones: Season 5. HBO. Retrieved February 25, 2023.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Game of Thrones. HBO. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  3. 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 GAME OF THRONES (HBO). The Futon Critic. Retrieved February 23, 2023.
  4. Game of Thrones: The Complete Fifth Season (2016).
  5. HBOWatch Staff (October 7, 2015). Game of Thrones Season 5 Available on Blu-ray, DVD March 15, 2016. HBO Watch. Retrieved December 15, 2023.
  6. 6.00 6.01 6.02 6.03 6.04 6.05 6.06 6.07 6.08 6.09 6.10 6.11 6.12 6.13 6.14 6.15 6.16 6.17 6.18 6.19 6.20 6.21 6.22 6.23 6.24 6.25 6.26 6.27 6.28 Game of Thrones: Season 5, Episode 1: "The Wars To Come" (2015).
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 Game of Thrones: Season 5, Episode 2: "The House of Black and White" (2015).
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 Game of Thrones: Season 5, Episode 3: "High Sparrow" (2015).
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 The Wars To Come. HBO. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 Sons of the Harpy. HBO. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 Kill the Boy. HBO. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 High Sparrow. HBO. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 The Gift. HBO. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 The Dance of Dragons. HBO. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
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  16. Game of Thrones wraps filming for Season 5
  17. 17.0 17.1 The House of Black and White. HBO. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  18. 18.0 18.1 Unbowed, Unbent, Unbroken. HBO. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  19. 19.0 19.1 Hardhome. HBO. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  20. 20.0 20.1 Mother's Mercy. HBO. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
  21. [2]
  22. TV & Satellite magazine, April 2015
  23. Season 4 Blu-ray commentary.
  24. TV & Satellite magazine, April 2015
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  32. Spain confirmed as a location for Game of Thrones Season 5
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  39. Game of Thrones season five filming in Spain rumored to have already begun ; Portstewart filming completed
  40. Westeros.org Twitter account (Warning: graphic video of bulls being stabbed to death)
  41. Actor J. J. Murphy dies after beginning filming for Game of Thrones season 5
  42. Official statement from the creators of GameofThrones
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  44. Kristian Nairn not to appear in Game of Thrones Season 5
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  47. Art Parkinson Confirms Rickon, Osha Still AWOL
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  51. Season 5 Blu-ray commentary
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  54. Game of Thrones nominated for two WGA Awards!
  55. Game of Thrones nominated for two WGA Awards! Game of Thrones nominated for PGA award and Jon Snow among the most influential characters of 2015
  56. Game of Thrones nominated for 3 SAG Awards!
  57. Game of Thrones nominated at the ASC Awards
  58. Game of Thrones nominated at the Golden Globes!
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  64. First Look at Game of Thrones: The Dance of Dragons Animated Feature
  65. [28]
  66. Alliser and Tormund deleted scene

Notes

  1. In "The Wars To Come," Cersei Lannister states that she is promised to Rhaegar Targaryen. Rhaegar is married to Elia Martell by 278 AC; therefore, Cersei must have met Maggy prior to 278 AC.
  2. In "Winter Is Coming," which takes place in 298 AC, Sansa Stark tells Cersei Lannister that she is 13 years old and Bran Stark tells Jaime Lannister that he is 10 years old. Arya Stark was born between Sansa and Bran, making her either 11 or 12 in Season 1. The rest of the Stark children have been aged up by 2 years from their book ages, so it can be assumed that she is 11 in Season 1. Arya is 18 in Season 8 according to HBO, which means at least 7 years occur in the span of the series; therefore, each season of Game of Thrones must roughly correspond to a year in-universe, placing the events of Season 5 in 302 AC.

External links