“Game of Thrones,” HBO’s hit drama based on George R.R. Martin’s much-loved “Song of Ice and Fire” fantasy series, can be counted on for a few things: severed heads, insider intrigue, mythical creatures, and a huge and confusing cast of characters. Oh, and naked women. Lots of them.
Frequent and often outlandish, the show’s eroticism often overshadows or distracts from the actual story. It’s not just me: After the copious amounts of T&A during the show’s first season reached a nadir of absurdity with a now-notorious scene involving two prostitutes pleasuring each other, Onion AV Club television critic Myles McNutt was moved to coin the term “sexposition” to describe the way the show’s producers often arbitrarily shoehorn sex into the narrative as a way to cover up potentially snooze-inducing exposition.
The second season isn’t much better. April 8’s episode, “The Night Lands,” depicted a three-way peep show of sorts that seemed to serve no purpose except to show as many kinds of heterosexual sex in as short a time span as possible. And on April 14, just two weeks after the new season began, NBC’s “Saturday Night Live” ran a faux promo joking that “Throne’s” success is partly attributable to the involvement of a creative consultant named Adam Friedberg, a fictional 13-year-old boy.
HBO is by no means the only cable channel to traffic in gratuitous nudity, but it may be the most notorious, what with a backlist that includes “Rome,” “Deadwood” and “The Sopranos.” But unlike those shows, “Game of Thrones” is based on a much-loved and closely analyzed series of books, which means that fans can — and do — compare the scenes Martin imagined with the ones that show-runners D.B. Weiss and David Benioff often arbitrarily insert.
These scenes seem not only forced but exploitative. As Huffington Post television critic Mo Ryan put it in a review: “Sometimes ‘Game of Thrones’ uses sexual scenes to shed light on character. But quite often, it shows naked women because it can.” It is telling that few, if any, of the series’ most fully realized and complex female characters — and there are many — are ever shown naked, with the exception of Emilia Clarke’s Daenerys Targaryen and the just-introduced Margaery Tyrell (Natalie Dormer). And it’s probably no coincidence that as the character of Ros — a titian-haired prostitute played by Esme Bianco — becomes more nuanced, the less the series requires her to disrobe.
Television critic Alyssa Rosenberg, a writer for the political and pop culture Web site Think Progress, disputes the proposition that sex and nudity that don’t appear in the book serve no purpose in the series. “I feel nudity is a driver of personality more than the show gets credit for” in Season 1, Rosenberg says. “And I guess I don’t mind seeing women naked at the same time that the show is giving them personality and humanity they don’t have in the novels.”
One could also argue that the series’ creators are only trying to communicate Westerosi society’s disregard for the lives of women or trying to establish a connection between the way they are objectified and the accompanying, constant threat of assault, but the show’s softly lit and erotic staging of any scene involving a naked woman evokes Playboy of the 1960s and ’70s more than it underscores sexual politics or a culture of violence. “While readers wade through sex, violence, and even sexual assault as part of the ruthlessness of Martin’s fictional world, television audiences can seemingly only handle two out of three,” wrote the Daily Beast’s Jace Lacob last June.
As for the men, well, they aren’t asked to bare all very often, if ever. By my count, it has happened only once, to actor Alfie Allen (brother of pop singer Lily) who plays the turncoatish and arrogant Iron Islander Theon Greyjoy. But Allen’s nude body is not presented as pleasurable eye candy; viewers are not persuaded to desire him but to despise him. And the man straight female fans are arguably most likely to want to see disrobe, Kit Harrington’s Jon Snow, is likely to remain bundled up in the animal skins and iron armor favored by his military brotherhood, the Night’s Watch.
Said one Twitter user, @Aurelia_Nicole, “I understand sex as a currency in Westeros but I need it to be a bit more egalitarian.”
Like the writers of “SNL,” I’m trying to have a sense of humor about “Game of Thrones” — or, at the very least, look on the bright side of all the breast-baring. It’s a great source of unintentional humor, for starters. I can often tell by the sort of dress a female character is wearing whether she is likely to disrobe. (If it has buttons, they will come undone.) I marvel at the semi-medieval society’s standards for personal grooming, which seem to anticipate the Brazilian waxes of the late 20th and early 21st centuries: I call the pubic hair pattern so often seen on Westerosi women “the King’s Landing Strip.”
Yet there is something wearying and numbing about the series’ relentless oogling of the female form. It’s a constant reminder and reinforcement of the fact that pop-culture creators make content mainly for heterosexual men and then, maybe, for everyone else. They get tiring, these continued nods to the male gaze. (The implication is either that women aren’t watching or that the women who are watching have no interest in erotic eye candy of their own.) They’re also alienating, particularly when the sex seems to serve no purpose other than to titillate. My cluck-clucks of disapproval are as much about the situating of women as sex objects as they are about my own sudden and reluctant prudishness.



I watch this series and agree with the above description. Every bit of it. It really does go over the top (and bottom) by leaps and bounds. Perhaps the nakedness is intended to offset the vulgar brutality of warring males and they show how they must attack and kill people to be big wheels in the barbaric society. While women, once again, can rule any tribe of males mearly with nakedness and anatomy. Now who is the more intelligent of the species?
” Now who is the more intelligent of the species?”
Neither, since we’re talking physical strength and physical beauty. It could also be argued those types of women are drawn to powerful men for safety and comfort. Even then, as Sansa has found, it’s not all knights and chivalry.
Or, we can simply argue that the SHOW is based on the BOOKS, and the show is trying to be reasonably true to the source material.
You do realize it’s based on the books, do you not? And that the sex in the books is actually MORE graphic than this? It’s pretty true to the novels. Now, you’re not showing that you’re all that intelligent because you can’t even frame your opinion within a proper context.
Exactly, like the girl pictured above playing Daenerys, in the book she doing all this nudity at the ripe old age of 14. The books are good, but there is a lot more things to pick on than the nudity. I only wish that George Carlin were still alive so he could properly respond to Anna Holmes who wrote this prudish article.
You read the book, really? If so than you would know that it was toned down, alot. Some “scenes” from the book would get an x-rating if they were acted out. In fact there are sever scenes that would land you in Jail if you even hinted at filming them .
If you don’t like the show then *gasp* don’t watch it. Apparently no one has watched Spartacus if they think it’s too much. It is not a show with a G rating. If you want G go watch Gnomeo and Juliet or Bambi….
Yes, after reading many of the prior comments, I have to ask the same thing? Many of those griping talk of watching the series…. Whaaaaa? If you can’t handle it, I’m sure you can find some reurns of Little House or The Waltons to bore yourself to sleep.
Lol too true, but then again some of those old shows wouldn’t be allowed to even be made today, like All in the Family for example. No nudity there, but Archie Bunker sure had a lot of things to say about the different races.
Another old show that would probably be made, but nothing like the original …… M*A*S*H ………. especially with today’s such concern too be “Politically Correct”.
Hey, if The Waltons, Little House, All in the Family, MASH, were so boring, then why are they re-running it every day around the world? Television has a lot to learn about entertainment if they think they can get by on crap like The Soprano’s and Game of Throne’s.
And you have a lot to learn if you think you know how to use an apostrophe!
Once Again….DONT WATCH!!!!
Just shaking my head.
*sigh*
If you have ever read the books the sex and violence is actually pretty toned down compared to the books. And in the world it is portraying it is appropriate. US viewers need to really grow up.
Most of the US viewers think this article was terrible, and agree with all of your points except the one about US viewers needing to grow up.
The US has a need to expose all sorts of things like this. They freak out at the first naked breast they see, when all the other countries are like “oh.. a breast.. okay whatever”. I don’t know if it is the US’s infatuation with it, or the need to be so damn politically correct, but there is something wrong when massacring thousands in the most brutal of ways is okay, but when an exposed breast is shown even for a second all hell breaks loose.
David, that is because this country has for years been run by the churches and politicians that do things behind closed doors and secretively only to chastise anyone else that may do something they disagree with. Its their way to control things. This country has always believed that any form of nudity unles it is in an Art Museum, is DIRTY!!!..Sad but true…..Also one of the maine reasons the US has more sexual assaults and sexual aggressions towards women and children than in most of the countries in the world.
This person literally doesn’t know anything about the books and really has no business writing this article. The author is so poorly versed in the books it’s incredible. I question how anyone gets to write on a professional level while showing such blatant disregard for fact checking, but this is 2012 and that’s simply the way of things these days. What an awful, moronic, clueless article. I’m mad I read this drivel.
ert
Same old thing,If I don’t like it then you shouldn’t watch it.if you don’t like it then change the channel.
Nudity and debasement of women are used in the books to show how women were viewed in the fictional realm presented in the series. With that said, I was a little taken aback by the sheer amount of nudity in the first season, just because it is so obvious when watching it on TV as opposed to it being referenced in a book. In the book it might mention someone is nude once at the top of a page, but you don’t think about it while the conversation or action starts. With a TV show it is pretty obvious throughout the entire scene. However, looking back in the books, most of the times where there is nudity in the series, there is at least a passing reference to it in the book as well.
Hot Nude Babes, Baby Dragons, Powerful and influential Dwarves , Giant 100 plus story walls separating good from Evil, deceit, death lust and power..someone needs to go away and shut it.
The slowness of the release of the book series turned me off from it prior to the current novel. If Martin keeps his current writing pace, HBO is going to either run out of material before he releases the next novel OR they’re going to have to make it up on their own on the fly. And no, I haven’t seen the series. Hard to get HBO when all you have is an old fashion aerial.
“Hard to get HBO when all you have is an old fashion aerial.”
There’s this fancy new-fangled thing we call the interwebs…
I say it needs more sex/violance like the books.
I don’t have the problem with the nudity at all. I did expect some as it is HBO and there was plenty of sex in the books. There are plenty of warnings for the mature content at the start of every episode. If you don’t like it don’t watch it. This complaining comes off as rather prudish.
Bull I don’t agree with any of this article. Honestly one of the mainstays of the book is incest and surprise surprise sex is an integral part of life, as a avid female viewer I am in no way offended.
As someone else says if you don’t like it, don’t watch it.
Apparently this reviewer isn’t familiar with the books, because the series is tame compared to some of the sex and violence in the novels. This series isn’t made for children. It’s for adult fans that should know what to expect. I think HBO has done a great job. It will never be as good as your imagination, but then again, nothing ever is.
I bet Chuck Longo, is going to send a nasty email to HBO & call for an all out ban on this show in Bangor next.
Too bad this man hater couldn’t just sit back and enjoy it. Then again what would she complain about?
At least half of the die-hard fans of the books that I know are women (and I know a lot of die hard fans of the books). None of them have complained about the naked women in the show. None of them are lesbians. What can we take away from those facts? This article is much ado about nothing. Get over it. The boobs don’t detract from the story, or overshadow the story. They’re just there, to set the tone for the world the story is set in. If the boobs (and the King’s Landing Strips) are ruining the show for you, stop watching. If you don’t stop watching, obviously the boobs and strips aren’t really that big of a deal, so again, get over it.
look it’s very simple. if you don’t like the nudity, then pick up the remote and push the button to change the channel. you could also try just reading a book. but writing a whole article on why you dislike the amount of sex on the show is just plain ridiculous. oh yeah, you forgot to mention the incest and homosexual activity that’s also present in the show.
Seems to me she’s lamenting the dearth of penises (penii?) as much as anything else. She’s certainly keeping a tallywhacker tally. And by the way, Anna, did you ever actually watch “Deadwood?”
Isn’t that how these shows work? True Blood, Game of Thrones, The Borgias…. it’s not for kids or prudes, people.
I’ve never thought the nudity/sex took away from the story at all. There’s so much going on beyond that that it’s impossible for me to get lost staring at some girls breasts. As others have said; if you want to see a lot of nudity then watch Spartacus on Starz. Most of the women on GoT that are nude are playing prostitutes while I can’t recall ANY main female speaking character not showing something. Anyway, if seeing breasts in a bordello honestly takes away from the story for you then maybe you need to re-examine some things.
The male nude count is wrong. Hodar the servant in House Stark had full frontal in Season 1