Early in “The Long Night,” the third episode of Game of Thrones’
eighth season, we see a series of the most gorgeous images I can
remember on this show. Melisandre magically lights the arakhs of the
Dothraki. From Arya and Sansa’s vantage point on the Winterfell walls,
we watch as flames ripple and blaze across the inky battlefield. The
lights of the Dothraki flicker from afar, both from the air and from Jon
and Daenerys’s hilltop perch. Against the deep black, the bright pinpricks look like a swarm of luminescent fish with an almost tidal pulse.
Then,
in a dark haze, the Dothraki slam against the wall of mindless wights
as the triumphant theme music becomes muffled. We pull back to the
castle, where, for many long seconds, the camera keeps us anchored with
those left behind, aware of the horror just beyond the black onscreen
horizon. The noise of the wind picks up, hushing the distant sounds of
screams and chomping. The camera pans across the faces of every
character we know at Winterfell, as they watch a mere handful of riders
return.
It
only struck me later that this scene meant nearly all the Dothraki in
Westeros have died — as have, presumably, a large chunk of all the
Dothraki fighters in the world, since all the khalasars knelt to
Daenerys after the inferno at Vaes Dothrak.
“Valar
morghulis,” Melisandre says to Grey Worm, just before the Dothraki
march off. “All men must die.” This didn’t hold true for our core
central characters, who, contrary to everyone’s best guesses, escaped the fray mostly unscathed. So why did this massive sacrifice of human life barely register emotionally?
The
Dothraki are a people whose culture we spent seasons immersed in,
alongside Daenerys. Their depiction may have flirted too strongly with
noble savage tropes, and they haven’t been much of a real, felt presence
for some time. But Dany spent years growing up with them. She underwent their rituals;
she accepted their blood riders as her own. Yes, the show set her apart
from the Dothraki in some crucial ways besides her Westerosi heritage —
she dared to style herself a female khal, and later, by slaughtering
all the khals at Vaes Dothrak, she showed that she was beyond the very
notion of khals — but she was still deeply embedded in that society. And
in Sunday’s episode, there wasn’t a single Dothraki we recognized. Only
Jorah Mormont, who translated Melisandre’s martial command to lift
their swords for the lighting and then rode out with them. The editing
even suggests that it’s the threat to Jorah —
whose horse we see limping back to the castle immediately before we cut
to Daenerys — that spurs her to break away from Jon and fly out with
Drogon, not the loss of tens of thousands of people who overcame their
fear of “poison water” to follow her across the Narrow Sea.
For roughly 70 hours, the central question of Game of Thrones
has been: “Who will sit on the Iron Throne?” Yet it has also
occasionally reminded us there’s more to ruling than sitting in the big
poky chair, and that to occupy that singular position of authority comes
with a responsibility, or at least a kind of tethering, to your people —
the “many” to your “few,” as the High Septon once put it. Those moments
when our central characters, nearly all highborn, rub up against the
common folk not only tell a story about the relationship between the
governors and the governed, but also reveal the limits of narrative and
perspective in the show’s endgame.
The
masses of the ruled have occasionally been a force the highborn must
reckon with, though they’re typically just that: a force, an
undifferentiated group. They’re a resource: Witness the many
conversations about how many fighting men, women, children, and
sellswords each side has. Or they take resources, as Sansa very practically noted in the season-eight premiere.
They can be rhetorical pawns: Viserys Targaryen, and his sister
Daenerys after him, are forever referring to hypothetical crowds who cry
for them to return to Westeros and break the Baratheon and Lannister
reign. We’ve seen them rise up like a mob, as the renegade Night’s Watch rangers did at Craster’s Keep in season three, or as the starving refugees did in King’s Landing in season two,
ripping apart the old High Septon like a hungry flock of wights. The
people were a sneering backdrop of religious and resentful frenzy during
Cersei’s season-five walk of shame.
Olenna Tyrell and her granddaughter Margaery believed the people need
to be managed and placated; Cersei claims they’re a threat that must be
perpetually cowed. Are either of those cynical philosophies correct? The
Tyrell line has been extinguished and Cersei’s ability to rule seems
dubious, even if she is the final Big Bad, but maybe that just means
neither of them have been very good at putting their political
philosophies into practice.
The
show has teased the notion that the game of thrones our central
characters are playing doesn’t actually matter to the little people.
“The common people pray for rain, health, and a summer that never ends,”
says Jorah Mormont in season one.
“They don’t care what games the high lords play.” Of course, the people
are always impacted by regime changes, whether in fictional worlds or
in real countries, and whether the chroniclers — or the regime itself —
choose to pay attention. The common people may not care about the exact
machinations of highborn political intrigue, but they have been affected
by it plenty, even if the fallout for themselves, their families, and
their communities is typically given little screen time. “Things were
different when Hoster Tully ruled the Riverlands,” reminisces the farmer
who hosts Arya and the Hound in season four. “Now with the Freys,
raiders come plundering, steal our food, steal our silver.” Three
seasons later, the Hound will find their corpses, apparent victims of
starvation and suicide.
For all the show’s grand sweep and the multiple lands, there’s never really been any space made for a kind of Upstairs, Downstairs
look at the lives of the common people when they’re not interacting
with the highborn. Davos Seaworth, Gendry, Bronn, Missandei, and Grey
Worm all have risen to become major characters because of their
continued proximity to the lordly, but the only commoners they interact
with are each other. (Does anyone remember Davos’s beloved wife Marya?
Does Davos remember Davos’s beloved wife Marya?) Meanwhile, we’ve seen a
number of the lowborn — the prostitutes Shae and Ros, the wildling
Osha, the former slave and handmaiden Dorreah
— summarily dispatched when they interfered with the game.
Collectively, these character arcs both illustrate the devastation
political scheming can wreak on the common people and keep Game of Thrones’ narrative tightly centered on the ruling class.
It’s
painful to see the Dothraki, in particular, snuffed out in “The Long
Night” because Daenerys, out of all the rulers on this show, has the
unique humility to wonder how her people might view her. “Perhaps they
didn’t want to be conquered,” she says nervously to Jorah
in the season-three finale, as they wait to see whether the Yunkish
slaves will greet her after she has taken their city. Jorah says that
Daenerys in fact “liberated them” and the Yunkish seem to agree, as they
hoist her above their heads and call her Mhysa, or “mother.” (It’s a
word that, as Missandei points out, comes from Old Ghiscari — a ghostly scrap of language from an older empire and, presumably, older conquerors.) It may be giving Game of Thrones too much credit to assume that the white-savior aesthetics of that particular scene
are meant to make us queasy, but in the seasons we’ve spent tracing
Daenerys’s political evolution, the story of her relationship to her
subjects seems like one we shouldn’t close out so fast if there’s any
chance that she’s the last ruler standing.
More
than any other character in power, Daenerys has come face to face with
the disproportionate impact she has on those she leads. In season one,
she witnesses Khal Drogo’s khalasars brutalize the captive women of
Lhazareen and puts an end to it — and when her husband is then cursed by
Mirri Maz Duur’s blood magic, she sees how the subjugated may enact their revenge. In Meereen, in a season-four episode called “The Children” (a title that references the Children of the Forest but also the relationship Dany has claimed to her people), she receives a line of supplicants
struggling with the fallout of her new occupation: an old man who
wishes to sell himself back into slavery, to regain the respect and
safety he once had as a teacher; a distraught shepherd whose young
daughter was burnt to death by Drogon.
Jon
Snow is, I would argue, the only other royal leader shown as having any
kind of intimate knowledge of the non-highborn people he leads. Perhaps
it’s because neither he nor Dany grew up as part of a family that
they’re drawn to the figurative extended family of their subjects,
whether presented as children (Daenerys) or brothers (Jon). Jon is not the best military strategist
and he doesn’t even really want to be king, but because he began his
story outside the highborn centers of power, he’s gained a leadership
advantage by spending long stretches of time with the Night’s Watch and
the wildlings, like a Prince Hal who never actually knew he was a prince.
It
helps Jon’s case that the wildlings, as a people, have been more
fleshed out than other groups — perhaps because they’re the only
non-feudal society we’ve spent time with in this world. Individuality
and self sovereignty are part of the wildlings’ essential self
conception: They follow their tribal lords loyally, but this is
something they choose as “free folk,” not vassals or “kneelers.” Though
the Dothraki and the Ironborn also choose their leaders based on shows
of power and military strength, the wildlings are the only people who
seem to choose not only who will lead them, but when and whether they
will even have a King-Beyond-the-Wall.
Now that the surviving wildlings are firmly won to the Northern cause,
their prominence as a culture has too faded. As the show has started
winding down and narrowing its focus, they’re largely represented in
this tale by Tormund Giantsbane, the closest thing they have left to a
king.
George R. R. Martin once spoke to Rolling Stone about his desire to “answer” J.R.R. Tolkien and The Lord of the Rings with
a tale about post-conquest tax policy and natural disaster planning,
and how a king learns to rule his people and his country well. But in
that same interview, he distanced himself from the sociopolitical
interests of “modern historians” and made his focus clear. “I’m
interested in the stories,” he said. “The kings, the princes, the
generals and the whores, and all the betrayals and wars and
confidences.”
Within Game of Thrones, we see this type of tale in “The Bloody Hand,” the ripped-from-the-headlines, flatulent riff of The War of the Five Kings
that Lady Crane’s troupe performs in Braavos. In the audience, the
commoners hoot and hiss, weep and clutch their pearls at the depictions
of Robert’s death, Tyrion’s marriage to Sansa, and Joffrey’s demise —
all of which the play slants in favor of the current ruling family. Even
Arya, who actually knows the royals involved,
can’t help getting caught up in the drama and advises Lady Crane on how
to deepen her portrayal of Arya’s sworn enemy, Cersei. (Namely: Get
vengeful.)
As Game of Thrones itself nears the end, this formerly globe-spanning story has begun to feel a bit like The Bloody Hand.
Before, the show trusted us with multiple plotlines and what seemed
like a thousand players. Now it has tightened its focus on a core group
of mostly royal characters roaming two castles. Just as Lady Crane’s
play, with its recasting of events we actually “witnessed,” draws our
attention to the fact that a story isn’t just about what happened but
how you choose to tell it, these final episodes have made me highly
aware of the creative team’s shaping, selectively bloody hand.
The
show has always kept the highborn at the center of its story. But for
the past season or so, as it’s closed its narrative ranks, it has also
felt like it’s protecting the ones it cares about from the kind of harm
it used to dole out freely. We’re a long way from the stinging deaths
once deployed not only to shock us, but to destabilize our notion of
what this story is and where it’s going. Plenty of characters have died,
but they peeled off neatly, as if the show needed to shed some extra
baggage before the endgame. It’s telling that the only recent death that
had any kind of Ned Stark-ish, Red Wedding jolt was Viserion’s — and he
is, I’ll remind you, not a human being.
Which brings us back to the Dothraki. In a behind-the-scenes documentary
about the production of the “The Long Night,” producer Chris Newman
discusses the challenges of holding and keeping viewers’ attention
during the longest battle ever captured on film.
“The core of it is the people you care about,” he says. “You want to
care about the people that are fighting, so every effort is made to make
sure you center the conflicts around the people you know.”
We
know Jon, we know Dany, we know Jaime, we know Sansa and Arya. That’s
why every Stark, every Lannister, and every Targaryen — any royal who
might be important to the political endgame — remains miraculously
standing. But we do not know the Dothraki — not really, not anymore.
The
Dothraki taught their khaleesi how to be fierce, how to be loyal, how
to lead. They brought her across the Narrow Sea to reclaim her family’s
lost throne. Now that they’ve served their purpose in her story, they’re
riding off into that dark, long night. The kind of sequel I dream of — a
social novel where immigrant Dothraki riders marry Westerosis and raise
generations of multiracial children in a new, strange land — will just
have to come from my own fan-fiction folder. In this story, our watching
of the Dothraki has ended.
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