Skip to main content

Game of Thrones season 6 premiere: Melisandre’s big reveal, explained


HBO
Spoilers for the season premiere of Game of Thrones are below.
The sixth season premiere of Game of Thrones, titled “The Red Woman,” ended with a major shocker for viewers, as the titular character — the Lady Melisandre — revealed that she’s been keeping a very big secret since she first appeared on the series.
As unveiled in the episode’s final scene, Melisandre has been keeping her appearance magically disguised all along. Her true visage isn’t that of 39-year-old actress Carice van Houten — instead, she is immensely older.
 HBO
Oh hai.
It’s a revelation that certainly makes us look at some earlier scenes — like Melisandre’s seduction of Stannis Baratheon back in season two and attempted seduction of Jon Snow in season five — in a new light.
And it’s another example of magic taking a more prominent role in Game of Thrones as the series moves toward its conclusion. (There will likely only be two more seasonsafter this one, according to showrunners David Benioff and D.B. Weiss.)
The big question, of course, is whether Melisandre’s magic is powerful enough to raise the late Jon Snow from the grave. And while we didn’t get an answer to that this week, Jon’s body remains intact and in prime condition for some magical reanimation.
Overall, though, this twist won’t be a surprise to the most avid fans of the series — it was set up well by George R.R. Martin’s books, and van Houten actually said her character was over 100 years old in an interview back in 2012.

How can Melisandre change her appearance?

Well, she’s a witch with magic powers! But, more specifically, in the books we get more details on this type of magic, which is called a “glamor.”
In the most recent book, A Dance with Dragons, Melisandre tells Jon Snow that the Lord of Light has given her the power to create illusions:
“Call it what you will. Glamor, seeming, illusion. R’hllor is Lord of Light, Jon Snow, and it is given to his servants to weave with it, as others weave with thread.”
Later on in the book, Arya Stark gets a brief explanation about glamor magic too, from her mentor in the Faceless Men:
“Mummers change their faces with artifice,” the kindly man was saying, “and sorcerers use glamors, weaving light and shadow and desire to make illusions that trick the eye.”
Melisandre puts those powers to use in that book. She reveals to Jon that she had faked the dramatic execution by burning of wildling king Mance Rayder by substituting another wildling in his place and “glamoring” his appearance to look like Mance. (This kinda-confusing plot line was omitted by the HBO show.)
Furthermore, she reveals that certain objects with a strong connection to a person can be used to strengthen the illusion. In Mance’s case, he’s wearing the Lord of Bones‘s “bone armor” to look more like him.
“The bones help,” said Melisandre. “The bones remember. The strongest glamors are built of such things. A dead man’s boots, a hank of hair, a bag of fingerbones. With whispered words and prayer, a man’s shadow can be drawn forth from such and draped about another like a cloak. The wearer’s essence does not change, only his seeming.”
In Melisandre’s case, the magical object helping her weave her illusion is that ruby necklace she usually wears.
 HBO
We also learn that glamor magic isn’t easy for her — it takes serious effort. “They need never know how difficult it had been, or how much it had cost her,” she thinks.

So just how old is Melisandre?

As soon as Melisandre’s glamor powers were introduced in A Dance with Dragons, book fans began speculating that she was disguising her own appearance. And there was a big clue that she was older than she seemed in a chapter told from Melisandre’s point of view, in which she thinks that she “had practiced her art for years beyond count.”
The following year, Melisandre was introduced in the HBO series — and actress Carice van Houten seems to have been told about Melisandre’s advanced age from the start, likely to help inform her performance.
We know this because van Houten has been a bit loose-lipped about this secret. “I don’t how old she is, but she’s way over 100 years,” she casually revealed in that 2012 interview.
Not long afterward, an actor with a bit part early in season two — he tried to poison Melisandre, but the poison had no effect — revealed that van Houten had told him on set that, by his account, she’s “400 years old.”
“In between takes, I said to her, ‘I’m not quite up to speed on this, why don’t you die?’ And she said, “I’m 400 years old.” And I thought, oh, well, fair enough, that’s a lesson learned. If you’re trying to poison somebody, check first that they’re not 400 years old.”
In addition to that, showrunner David Benioff revealed in this week’s “Inside the Episode” segment that, as per an early conversation with George R.R. Martin, Melisandre is “several centuries old.”
As to whether that impressive display of magic will allow her to resurrect Jon Snow, though — we’ll have to wait until next week to find out.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

There’s a new heir to the Iron Throne, and nobody on ‘Game of Thrones’ noticed

Tommen has a new successor. Good luck getting anyone in King’s Landing to care, apparently. Caution! Spoilers immediately ahead for  Game of Thrones  Season 6, Episode 2, ‘Home.’ Go watch it, it’s a really good one.  The body count in Westeros is really starting to pile up — and the return of one resurrected Lord Commander  doesn’t begin to make a dent in the numbers. In Season 6’s first two episodes, three of the Seven Kingdoms’ most powerful leaders have been usurped and unceremoniously tossed on the scrap heap: Roose Bolton (along with his wife and hours-old heir), Balon Greyjoy (last of the participants in the War of the Five Kings and the last of the leeches burned in the fire by Melisandre) and Prince Doran Martell of Dorne (that guy in the bathrobe and wheelchair). But the most important death is the one that barely got any attention: the poisoning of Princess Myrcella Baratheon, sister to King Tommen and official heir to the Iron Throne. ...

The Political Science of Game of Thrones

If there is one thing Machiavelli’s  The Prince  needed, it was more dragons. Alas, it would have been so easy! All he had to do was mention Saint George. Although the closest Machiavelli came to discussing these mythic beasts was a brief shout-out for Chiron the centaur , such omissions make HBO’s  Game of Thrones  and George R. R. Martin’s  A Song of Ice and Fire  all the more interesting in today’s classroom. After all, if Daenerys Targaryen were a Poli Sci major today, she’d have every reason to throw down her textbooks and demand: “Where are my dragons!” Where  are  her dragons? That’s a good question. I say they belong in her classes alongside Hannibal’s elephants. It may sound ridiculous to reference works of fantasy in order to better explain politics, but such a practice is as old as Plato’s dialogues on Atlantis. After all, what is a well-written fictional character other than a device for better understanding ourselves? One...

Game of thrones season 7 episode 6 script : A Dragon dies... [ Contains Spoilers ]

Here's the script for episode 6: [ These are translations from FD(Freaky Doctor)'s videos on Youtube ] Content may or may not be 100% accurate, I’m just translating what Friki has posted. I know this episode has been translated already but given my fluency in Spanish and English I think I could add or improve on some things. I’ve translates things as Friki spoke, whether the scenes are in the correct order or not, I personally do not know. If I’ve made any mistakes please feel free to correct me. The second to last episode is also the second longest episode of this season, clocking in at 71 mins according to IMDB Frikidoctor tells what happens in the north first and then goes on to tell what happens in other parts of Westeros so if you see some time jumps during the north storyline there are scenes in between these I just don’t know which ones since he doesn’t mention it and I wanted to translate as he spoke but I find it better the way he did it, even though A LOT h...