
Samwell Tarly (John Bradley) and Gilly (Hannah Murray) were far away from the scene of the crime when Jon Snow was murdered, but it doesn't mean they don't have a long journey ahead.
- Share this article on Facebook
- Share this article on Twitter
- Share this article on Email
- Show additional share options
- Share this article on Print
- Share this article on Comment
- Share this article on Whatsapp
- Share this article on Linkedin
- Share this article on Reddit
- Share this article on Pinit
- Share this article on Tumblr
On Game of Thrones, triumph and tragedy rarely pass without explosive results — quite literally, in the case of Cersei Lannister (Lena Headey) torching her enemies in King’s Landing during the season six finale, “The Winds of Winter.”
But there are the occasional moments of subtle, smaller victories. See: Samwell Tarly (John Bradley), who appeared in only three episodes during season six, but arguably accomplished more personal achievements than anyone else. At the end of season five, Sam left the Night’s Watch just in time to avoid certain doom alongside the betrayed-and-briefly-killed Lord Commander Jon Snow (Kit Harington), instead heading south alongside girlfriend Gilly (Hannah Murray) and her infant son. Sam’s ultimate goal was twofold: protect his loved ones and begin training as a maester of the Citadel in Oldtown, the second largest city in Westeros.
Sam’s path toward Oldtown was slow and not without distraction. In the sixth episode of the season, Sam returned home to Horn Hill and reunited with his cruel father Lord Randyll (James Faulkner), weathering worse insults and injuries than he sustained even in battle against White Walkers and wildlings. But he stood stronger on the other side of the attack, snatching his house’s ancestral sword Heart’s Bane (a Valyrian blade, for those keeping track of such things) and finally leaving for Oldtown.
At long last, Sam reached Oldtown during the season finale, last seen giddily gazing upon the thousands and thousands of books in the Citadel’s enormous library. What Sam couldn’t have noticed, but many viewers certainly observed, was the massive gyroscope hanging inside the Citadel — the spitting image of the gyroscope at the heart of the Game of Thrones opening credits, prompting several theories about its importance in the grand scheme of the show.
John Bradley spoke with The Hollywood Reporter about Sam’s triumphant and relatively short season, his feelings on Heart’s Bane’s future use and his thoughts on the Citadel’s connection to the show’s title sequence.
Sam leaves Castle Black for Oldtown in the season five finale. In the season six finale, he finally arrives at his destination. What’s coursing through Sam’s mind as he stares out at the cityscape of Oldtown for the first time?
It’s a combination of two things, really. It’s a double-whammy of pleasure. It’s not only on the surface level of looking forward to everything he now has to potentially look forward to in his future — i.e., being in an environment he’s always dreamed of being in, an environment he was so kept away from for all of his young life. He knew he was a latent academic who loved books, was obsessed with knowledge and the application of knowledge, but his father of course was somebody who shunned all of that on principle, believing you could solve all problems through violence, and academia had no practical application in the real world. Now, Sam’s finally in a position where he’s accepted and his skills are accepted. All of the certain attributes he possesses are worth something in this place, kind of for the first time. Even at Castle Black, he learned a lot there and was able to apply that knowledge a little bit, but he was still a bit of a fish out of water there. It’s such a macho environment, with an emphasis placed on physical prowess, so he felt like a bit of a stranger there. Now he’s in a place where everybody’s like him. Everybody’s an academic. Everybody’s devoted to learning and devoted to knowledge. I think for the first time, he’s arrived at a place where he feels at home with himself and doesn’t have to pretend to be anything he’s not. Everyone there will accept him for who he is, because they’re exactly the same as he is.
He has all of that to look forward to, but there’s also a sense of achievement. When we first meet Sam, his ambitions for life are so modest. People wonder if Sam would be a good leader if he was given the Iron Throne, but he wouldn’t ever want it. It’s out of his even peripheral vision. All he wants in life is to be loved, be accepted and do the things he enjoys. It’s not about power in the world. It’s about the power of taking control of his own life. He’s in a position now where he’s achieved a lot of those things. He’s now in this environment, he’s fallen in love and that’s something he never would have guessed would even be possible — not only because of all the psychological boundaries he has in place, and his introverted nature and his lack of confidence, but also the fact that he’s even geographically somewhere that was so far away from women. He must have thought there was no chance he would ever fall in love. Being such a romantic deep down, that must have really had a weight, the thought he would never experience that. So the achievement of falling in love, keeping the person he loves close to him and going to a place where he’s accepted — they’re all ambitions he never thought he could achieve. It’s a pipe dream. You find him at the end of season six having achieved all of that through one method or another. It’s been a very slow and progressive success story for Sam.
When he’s gazing out at the Citadel’s library for the first time, seeing this phenomenal array of books and texts, he’s smiling. In your view, that’s Sam reflecting not just on the knowledge and wisdom standing before him, but everything standing behind him as well?
Yeah, I’d say so. It feels like the beginning of the rest of his life. I think it feels that he’s struggled to find a home all of his life. Even at home, the environment he was born in, with the people all around him, he never felt at home there. He always felt very different, and very much an other. He didn’t feel like he had a place there.
And that feeling is only reinforced further during Sam’s trip back to Horn Hill this season.
Exactly. You see that even though he was raised out of that family environment by his father, and was banished away from the home and told to go up North, so far away from the environment he grew up in, surrounded by criminals and thieves and rapists … you do get the impression that Sam had more of a place at Castle Black than in his own home. Even though he was sent away from home, he still found his place at Castle Black easier than he found at home, because he had Jon. He found in Jon everything he was missing: a friend who cared for him, and a bit of a father figure as well. When he went home, you can see that Sam is an even further fish out of water than he was while at Castle Black. When he arrives at the Citadel, we see Sam coming home. You have a sense that for the first time in his life, he feels comfortable. He feels like he’s in an environment where he can be accepted. Over the course of season five, you did see a slow narrative of Sam conniving his way out of Castle Black and over to the Citadel. He’s worked very hard to get here. He worked very hard to appeal to Jon, get Jon elected as Lord Commander of the Night’s Watch, so that Jon’s in a position to make that decision for Sam. The entire season five narrative for Sam was about getting Gilly and Baby Sam out of Castle Black, into the Citadel, and being in the environment where he can make a difference.
And this really is about making a difference. It’s not that he wants to go to the Citadel to spend the rest of his life there and have a comfortable life. I think he genuinely feels he can make a difference, and he wants to, because he’s a very good and proactive character. He knows he can’t make a difference in the conventional way, or on the battlefield. But he can make a difference here. It’s all about Sam becoming self-aware and understanding his limitations and knowing his strengths can’t be served at Castle Black. When he gets to the Citadel, he’s feeling the achievement of everything he experienced so far finally landing and having its payoff, but also the start of a whole new sense of potential for him. He feels there’s information here that can be applicable to the greater good. He feels he’s in charge of his own role within that structure. He found his role, and he knows now that he can effect things, rather than constantly being effected by things. He feels he’s at the point where he can change things for the better and change things for the greater good.
Follow THR‘s Game of Thrones coverage for more deep dives, interviews and news.
THR Newsletters
Sign up for THR news straight to your inbox every day