What Game of Thrones taught me?
Having been nudged by my friends for
long, I decided to start watching the series, ‘Game of Thrones (GoT)’. To say
that it is gripping is a 2 floors below-basement statement (not just an understatement).
If someone tells you that they started watching GoT, more often than not, they
will be sleep deprived for the next couple of days. The story line is a refreshing
departure from the tried and tired American city based youngsters and their
woes. It is set in an entirely different era and the filmography really transports
you to a time long gone by.
But what really upset my expectations
was 'death' in GoT. It is so blunt and frequent. The first time it happens, you
wonder if the writer of the story has committed a grave mistake. You are
shocked to see that a character whom you thought was pivotal to the story is
done away with such abruptness. There is not even as much as a fifteen minutes
of shock or remorse from the other characters. Then you forgive the writer for
the sin for the story goes on with all its layers and nuanced intrigue in
place.
You continue watching the series and
BANG! the next death. You are reminded of the deceit you felt the first time.
You feel the series cannot go on! It is about 1:30 AM. You wonder if it is
worth watching the series any more. But the love for story and the way in which
the end of each episode is designed keeps you going. The next time it happens,
you aren’t shocked as much. Slowly you realize that you are getting used to the
deaths.
May be it is this closeness to life
that the series has in this regard which makes it so intriguing. Isn’t death as
shocking and as untimely in life too? How often have we heard that a death was
completely unexpected and that it couldn’t have happened at a worse time? We
also think a death brings our lives to a grinding halt. But life goes on. As
much pain a death causes to our churned minds and as much remorse it engulfs
our souls with, we move on. The world moves on; quite often reminding us of our
acute in-consequence in the larger scheme of things of the universe.
Apart from the reality of death, there
is much more that Game of Thrones manage to portray perfectly about life. Be it
the complexities of human relationships, the addiction to power and money, the
lack of trust, the intense love and the equally intense betrayal, of
friendships, of families, of traditions, of clans and much more. But what stays
with me is the unpretentious portrayal of death without any paraphernalia
whatsoever.
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