Il y a un post très intéressant aujourd'hui dans les commentaires de WiC, de la part de leur "taupe", Rimshot, qui est embauché sur le tournage en tant que figurant. Je le remets ici (à ne pas trop diffuer ouvertement cependant, HBO est très strict sur les questions de confidentialités et Rimshot ne veut pas que ça s'ébruite de trop...)
Rimshot a écrit :The scene today was indeed Barriston and Eddard talking while looking at the dead body of Ser Hugh. We shot it in a small tent which was set up in a field beside the quarry at Magheramorne. There were 2 gold cloaks (the poor guys couldn’t sit down all day because of their costumes!) 2 silent sisters (who we were calling the scissor sisters all day!) and 3 tournament workmen including yours truly.The costumes are incredible. The Gold Cloaks are simply beautiful and wait until you see the Silent Sisters! As always, specific descriptions are a no no. I could see the Castle Black set from where we were and it looks amazing! Apparantly the Butchery there has real meat and the stench is awful! They have painted or done something to a very large portion of the quarry wall behind the set to make it white. It looks great. One of the Night Watch was at the unit base so I had a chat with him. He said it has been going well up there but the weather has caused them problems. By the way, the scene in Ballymoney was a Dothraki trekking scene.Anyway, we had a bit of a wait while the main unit finished at the Wall and then our scene was next. It was basically Ser Hugh dead on a table (Jefferson was on that table in armour for an hour!) while one sister stitched his neck wound and another cleaned his armour. Barriston and Eddard have a conversation (more or less the one that was described here) and they exit. The Gold Cloaks were guarding the tent. In the end they didn’t use any of the 3 workmen but me and another guy were used as stand-ins. I was a stand-in for Sean which is how I met him very briefly.So there you go!I’m back tomorrow when we begin 5 days of Tourney !(WIC please don’t put this on the front page)
J'avoue que j'aime beaucoup ce genre de témoignage qui permet de "sentir" un peu comment une série se fabrique