![]() Though most viewers probably thought that Arya's alleged bastard brother Jon Snow (Kit Harington) would be the one to bring down the Night King, in the end, it's Arya who leaps from the darkness just as the Night King approaches her omniscient younger brother Bran Stark (Isaac Hempstead-Wright). Still, Arya definitely had us worried for a minute. Luckily, Sansa and Arya catch on to Lord Baelish's (Aiden Gillen) scheme to tear them apart, and conduct a scheme of their own. After all, there are so few members of the Stark family left, and it would be detrimental to their cause if they were to start turning on each other. While it's true that the sisters may not have gotten along well in the past, the idea of Arya threatening Sansa's life is just unsettling, not to mention out of character. Arya then calmly hands Sansa the knife and walks out of the room, leaving Sansa trembling in fear. I could even become you." Arya then takes a knife from a table and stalks closer to Sansa, as she wonders out loud what it might be like to wear Sansa's face. I can become someone else - speak in their voice, live in their skin. When Sansa questions Arya about the faces, Arya tells her, "With the faces, I can choose. Arya catches her in the act, and gives her a bone-chilling, not-so-veiled threat. on HBO.Meanwhile, In Episode 6, "Beyond the Wall," Sansa sneaks into Arya's room, where she is shocked to find Arya's collection of faces. The season finale of Game of Thrones airs Sunday, June 14 at 9 p.m. But in which way exactly their story is going to continue? No idea.” ![]() “My theory is that it’s all part of a bigger plan - that he decided to be in the first place to meet Arya. He’s often asked how someone so gifted could end up in the back of that wagon in Season 2. “That’s still an explanation that George R.R. Jaqen’s past is just as mysterious as his future. Wlaschiha doesn’t know (or pretends to not know - who can tell with Faceless Men?) what’s in store for Jaqen and Arya, but he has some ideas: “I think he’s got big plans with her and in order to have her ready,” he says. “He probably would be willing to bend a rule or two but… would he kill her? Hopefully, he’ll never get into a situation where he needs to.” Of course, the fate of Stannis’s daughter, Shireen, suggests that that’s exactly the sort of situation the show thrives on. If it came down to choosing between serving the Many-Faced God and protecting the girl - say he were to swear an oath to kill her - which would he choose? “I never really thought about that,” he says, laughing. While he’s clearly a mentor to her, the Faceless Men are assassins. Says Wlaschiha, “Sometimes it was very quiet in the green room because we were trying to beat records.”Īnother thing keeping the character interesting is his relationship with Arya. Off screen, he and Maisie Williams have a much more casual relationship than Jaqen and Arya’s teacher-student dynamic - and part of that’s due to their mutual love of the mobile game 2048. Though “people will come up to me and talk in the third person,” he says. And, since German fans are more reserved than, say, the Spanish (where the actors’ hotel was often under siege by admirers), he hasn’t had the sort of weird encounters that some of the other Game of Thrones stars have experienced. The German actor appreciates the higher profile Thrones has given him. As soon as they finish filming this week, he says, “I’m going to binge-watch the entire season.” Which means he hasn’t had time to see any Game of Thrones, where he plays the enigmatic assassin/teacher Jaqen H'ghar. He’s just come from the set of the Prague-based procedural Crossing Lines, where they’ve been working overtime for weeks. “Don’t tell me! I haven’t watched anything!” says Tom Wlaschiha with mock horror.
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