News| Jul 22, 2016

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For the finale of season six of HBO’s smash-hit Game of Thrones, Rising Sun Pictures faced a formidable challenge: replicate the sprawling city of King’s Landing and its central shrine, the Great Sept of Baelor, and then burn them to the ground in a magical, green-hued inferno.


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New to the Game of Thrones production team, RSP created visual effects for several episodes of the show’s recently concluded sixth season. Most of the work centered on King’s Landing and the Sept as artists produced photo-realistic CG set extensions and architectural enhancements that were blended with location footage to create the luxurious, walled city overlooking the sea.

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“King’s Landing is based on Dubrovnik, a Croatian city on the Adriatic that has many beautiful, medieval buildings,” recalls VFX Producer Richard Thwaites. “A lot of our early work involved wide views of the city, as well as internal and external views of the Sept (which is based on Fort Manoel in the Maltese town of Gżira).” For several of those shots, artists also filled city environments with animated digital crowds, representing members of a religious cult led by the High Sparrow.

The goal throughout was not only to match the look of the practical locations, but to do so in a way that appeared thoroughly real. “Game of Thrones is a fantasy, but the aesthetic is highly realistic,” explains VFX Supervisor Hubert Maston. “The realism carries through in the design, the weight and dimension of the architecture and the atmosphere of the environments.”

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In the season finale, the Great Sept of Baelor and a large portion of King’s Landing is destroyed as the widowed Queen Cersei Lannister exacts revenge on her rivals. A store of wildfire below the Sept ignites, causing an explosion that fills its tunnels with flames. The blast brings down statues of the city’s seven kings. Everyone inside the building is killed and the Sept collapses. Nearby structures are also engulfed in the inferno.

“One reason that the scene is so shocking is that it seems so real,” says Thwaites. “The explosion happens from inside out and seems so powerful that you believe it can take out everything in its surroundings.”

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Achieving that level of realism was made more difficult by the wildfire’s signature green hue. “The fire you are used to seeing is a mix of very hot colors…orange, yellow, bright red,” explains Maston. “When you turn it green, it doesn’t seem so hot. We had to completely reimagine it to create fire that looks like fire and yet not like fire at the same time. We remapped the light, color and texture and, through trial and error, came up with a look that is both aesthetically pleasing and convincing.”

The explosion also causes the demise of the High Sparrow. Flames bursting through the Sept’s mosaic floor, incinerating him. “It’s a fully digital replacement,” notes Thwaites. “It has muscle, skin, bones and internal organs…all of which blow up in just a few frames.”

“The fire works its way through his body in layers,” Maston adds. “You see his skin peeling off and bones breaking off. It was pretty gruesome but a key moment for the final episode in the season.”

The initial airing of the finale drew the largest audience in the show’s history. Rising Sun Pictures did its part to ensure loyal fans had plenty to marvel at.