"If you buy the super-extended, super-charged Game of Thrones box set that comes out," he said, "the death of Ser Pounce will be in there. Weiss teased fans with the possibility of some cat-death deleted footage. Ser Pounce's death was so horrible we couldn’t even put it on the air." "So she came up with her most diabolical. "Cersei hated the name 'Ser Pounce' so much she could not allow him to survive," Benioff said. Yes, according to D&D, Ser Pounce is dead, murdered by Cersei. Now, this one may be a joke (let’s face it, it’s probably a joke), but as it comes direct from showrunners Benioff and Weiss themselves, we’re going to have to accept it as canon. We earn a commission for products purchased through some links in this article. In fact, it's so significant, it might be the reason we've still never seen it. But the miscarriage sequence really should have stayed in, because it completely transforms Cersei's season-eight story arc. Possibly because season seven had another birth sequence, part of Jon Snow's lineage reveal. Unlike everything else on this list, the season seven deleted scenes still haven't been made available but descriptions can be found on YouTube, and one of them is fairly significant.Īs it turns out, a miscarriage scene was scripted and shot but ultimately cut from the show.
Was she pregnant or wasn’t she? Fans were confused by her tearful moment in the season eight premiere when Euron promised to put a baby in her (charming) and she glugged some Arbor wine (despite her turning down wine in front of Tyrion is what clued him into her pregnancy in the first place).īut with her pregnancy continuing to be a plot point throughout the season, surely they’d have told us if the baby didn’t exist?Īs it turns out, the show knew exactly what happened to Cersei and Jaime's baby, it just didn’t want to tell us. In either case, like a good Mother of Dragons, I’m always in control.There was plenty of debate amongst fans during Game Of Thrones’ final season around Cersei’s baby.
“If it’s gratuitous then I will discuss with a director on how to make it more subtle. “In drama, if a nude scene forwards a story or is shot in a way that adds insight into characters, I’m perfectly fine with it,” she clarified on Instagram afterward. That’s a point Clarke also emphasized last year, when tabloids erroneously reported that she couldn’t stand her Thrones sex scenes. “Taking off my clothes is not the easiest thing, but with the magic of the effects, I don’t have to do a season one and go on a cliff and do it,” she explains. Clarke’s part of Sunday’s scene was shot on a closed set in Northern Ireland, which was then edited together with wider angles shot at the Vaes Dothrak set in Spain. “I’m just feeling genuinely happy I said ‘Yes.’ That ain’t no body double!”Īs Clarke notes, though Game of Thrones has a reputation for being a show about “tits and dragons,” she herself hadn’t done a nude scene on the show for three years.
“T his is all me, all proud, all strong,” Clarke told EW. But after Emilia Clarke’s climactic nude scene on Sunday’s episode of Game of Thrones - which saw Clarke’s Daenerys Targaryen burn down a Dothraki temple with a dozen khals inside, then emerge from the wreckage like a fiery version of Botticelli’s Venus - the actress wants to be clear that no digital trickery was used. Thanks to modern technology, it’s now possible to fake nude scenes by digitally pasting an actor’s head on top of a double’s body, leaving pervy viewers unclear about whose breasts they’re actually seeing.