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Game of Thrones directors revealed for mysterious season 6 Hardhome' director shooting next season's final two episodes by James Hibberd @JamesHibberd Posted June 25 2015 6:18 PM EDT If there wasnt enough mystery surrounding the next season of Game of Thrones, now theres a veteran of ABCs Lost joining the show too. Below is the list of directors for the sixth season of HBOs acclaimed fantasy hit. Three of the names are Thrones veterans, and two are newcomers to the series. Once again, each will helm two episodes. Here is the Thrones shooting plan: Jeremy Podeswa (Episodes 1 & 2): A veteran of Showtimes Tudors and HBOs Boardwalk Empire, Podeswa is returning to Thrones for the second year in a row. In season 5, he directed two episodes from the middle of the season, Unbowed, Unbent, Unbroken and Kill the Boy. Daniel Sackheim (3 & 4): Sackheim is new to Thrones with a long list of credits going back to being an associate producer on 1980s classic Miami Vice. Hes directed episodes of several Fox shows (The X-Files, Lie to Me, House) and most recently directed six episodes of FXs The Americans. Jack Bender (5 & 6): An intriguing new name, Bender is familiar to fans of ABCs Lost, having directed a whopping 38 episodes of the series, including many of the shows premieres and finales. Hes also helmed episodes of CBS Under the Dome, TNTs The Last Ship and Foxs Alcatraz. Mark Mylod (7 & 8): Mylod is a premium cable veteran of shows like Showtimes Shameless and HBOs Entourage. He directed the third and fourth episode of season 5, High Sparrow and Sons of the Harpy. Miguel Sapochnik (9 &10): This name will likely cause some speculation. Sapochnik really earned his GoT stripes by helming the stunning Hardhome episode last season, featuring a half-hour battle sequence with Jon Snow, the Wildlings and the White Walkers undead army. He also directed the seventh episode of the season, The Gift. That Sapochnik is helming the penultimate episode and the season 6 finale might suggest were in for another epic battle climax given his Hardhome acclaim. All the directors will surely be sworn to secrecy on the upcoming season, which is expected to be the first year that Thrones largely extends beyond the storyline in George R.R. Martins published novels. If youre wondering why each director films two back-to-back episodes, its due to the uniquely complex nature of the show that makes Thrones an extremely time-intensive directing gig. Various scenes from each episode could shoot weeks or even months apart, and in different countries tooso filming just one episode covers a large block of time that is most efficiently used for a second, and largely concurrent, Thrones assignment. When my agent called and said, These are the dates, I said No, you are wrong. Its not possible, Bender recently told THR after his season 6 participation was leaked. But thats how long it takes. Youre overlapping with another director. There are two full units. You are there for a long time. |
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