The Most Expensive Game Of Thrones Episodes Ever
If you're going to chronicle multiple families waging war with one another using swords and [...]
S2E9 - "Blackwater"
As the second year of the series came to a close, fans had seen plenty of massive set pieces and battle sequences, but "Blackwater" gave fans combat on a scale that hadn't yet been seen in the show, blowing audiences' minds with its production value.
In the episode, Stannis Baratheon aimed to take King's Landing back from the son of his brother, Joffrey Baratheon, by force using a fleet of ships. Using strategically placed, explosive "wildfire," many of the ships were blown away, leaving Stannis' army to launch an assault that felt like the battle of Helm's Deep from The Two Towers.
With the series being in only its sophomore season, its budget was much smaller than it is today, it didn't have as much money to play with forcing the producers to ask HBO for an extra $2 million to bring its budget up to $8 million for the one episode.
One of the show's creators, David Benioff, revealed to Entertainment Weekly in April of 2014, "For budgetary reasons, we came very, very close to having all the action take place off-screen, the way plays have handled battle scenes for a few thousand years."
prevnextS5E8 - "Hardhome"
As its fifth year drew to a close, fans began to take note of the series' tendency to save the year's most epic confrontation for the second-to-last episode, which is what made the huge scale of "Hardhome" so enjoyable.
With the episode coming to a close, Jon Snow arrived to help shepherd the Wildlings through the wall to avoid the White Walkers, but the small squadron of the Night's Watch were thrown in over their heads as the White Walkers descended upon the community, killing and maiming Wildlings by the thousands.
Much like all the other individual episodes in the franchise, the budget for this specific episode is unknown, but Kit Harington's explanation to Entertainment Weekly in 2015 about how he shot his role of Snow hints at how complicated the shoot was.
"It was three to four weeks of shooting for a sequence that should add up to [more than] 20 minutes," Harington revealed. "We shot less than a minute a day! It's so CGI-heavy it's unlike anything I've ever done on Thrones."
prevnextS5E10 - "Mother's Mercy"
The penultimate episode of each season might typically feature the most impressive action sequences, but with Season 5, it was a specific effect featured in the season finale that pushed the budget over the top.
When speaking at a panel at SXSW 2017, Game of Thrones creators Dan Weiss and David Benioff revealed that this episode featured the most expensive single death in the whole series.
Throughout Season 5, Arya Stark was training to become a faceless assassin, but she turned her back on her duties to fulfill a personal vendetta to kill Meryn Trant, using the old "fingers into the eyeballs" trick.
Benioff made sure to stress, "She couldn't really poke out his eyes," while speaking at the convention, with the death requiring practical effects, CGI, and elaborate choreography to pull off the brutal sequence.
prevnextS6E9 - "Battle of the Bastards"
Many of the most brutal villains in pop culture over the past decade have been the stars of Game of Thrones, with Ramsay Bolton being one of the most sadistic.
With Jon Snow and his army descending on his former home of Winterfell to take on Ramsay Bolton and his army, the stage was set for a massive conflict that promised to be the biggest battle the show had ever seen.
When speaking with Entertainment Weekly in March 2016, writer-producer Bryan Cogman confessed, "It's definitely the biggest [action sequence yet]." He added, "We've always wanted to get to a place — story-wise and budget-wise and time-wise and resource-wise — where we would be able to do a proper battle, with one army on one side, one army on another side."
Reportedly, the show's producers attempted to cut the budget from the season's other nine episodes to bulk up this episode as much as they could. The season had a budget of $100 million and ran ten episodes, so if other episodes were trimmed, it's more than likely this episode cost far more than $10 million, making it the most expensive episode of the series.
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