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Tag: Fire and Blood

  • Why House of the Dragon Changed One of the Most Gruesome Moments From the Book

    Why House of the Dragon Changed One of the Most Gruesome Moments From the Book

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    Last night’s second season premiere of Game of Thrones’ spinoff House of the Dragon tackled one of George R.R. Martin’s most infamous deaths—in a new way that surprised the fandom.

    In an interview with Variety, showrunner Ryan Condal explained the reasoning for the Max show’s departure from Martin’s original recollection of an event known by readers of Fire and Blood—the author’s historical explanation of Targaryen history in Westeros— as “Blood and Cheese,” named for two assassins who are responsible for the murder of Jaehaerys Targayren. In “A Son for a Son” Blood and Cheese take center stage, hired by Daemon (Matt Smith) to retaliate for the death of Rhaenyra’s (Emma D’Arcy) son Lucerys at the end of last season. We pick up on the duo’s journey to do the dastardly deed which, in the show, is much more directly orchestrated than in Fire & Blood, having Rhaenyra call for Aemond’s (Ewan Mitchell) death. 

    “One of the things that’s challenging about adapting Fire & Blood is that there is this intentionally conflicting narrative in the book where there are often these three different viewpoints on the history that don’t line up with one another,” Condal explained, “so it’s our job as adapters to try to find the objective line through this to bring the audience into the narrative as we see it having been laid out.” In the book, it’s a whole lot more messy—Blood and Cheese weren’t given a specific target, just Daemon’s orders for “an eye for an eye, a son for a son,” and so try to kill the first boy they find.

    “It felt like Rhaenyra, despite being in grief, she’s looking for vengeance, but she would choose a target that would have some kind of strategic or military advantage,” Condal continued. “Of course, if you did take out Aemond, not only would he be punished directly for his betrayal and murder of Luke, but it would eliminate the rider of the biggest dragon in the world, and immediately create an advantage for their side.” Jaehaerys still dies in House of the Dragon, but it’s presented more as due to Blood and Cheese’s incompetence—instead of finding Aemond, the assassins stumble upon his sister and wife, Queen Helaena, in her room with her twin children.

    In the books, Helaena actually offers up her youngest son, Maelor (who isn’t included in House of the Dragon due to how the show has condensed the timeline of Fire and Blood), only for Jaehaerys to be killed by Blood and Cheese anyway—but in the show, Helaena is forced instead to sacrifice him to save her daughter. “We knew it would be horrifying and brutal—we didn’t want it to be gratuitous or over the top,” Condal said of the murder. “The idea of that sequence was to dramatize a heist gone wrong. So we move off the center narrative of Daemon, Rhaenyra, Alicent and Aegon’s world, and suddenly, we’re following these two characters that we’ve just met in an alley in Flea Bottom. Daemon’s given them an assignment to go in and find Aemond Targaryen, and we’re following them, and we’re following them, and we’re not cutting away and we’re not going back to the other narratives—‘oh, God, what’s going to happen?’”

    House of the Dragon airs Sundays on HBO and Max.


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    Sabina Graves

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  • Everything We Know About ‘House Of The Dragon’ Season 2

    Everything We Know About ‘House Of The Dragon’ Season 2

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    House of the Dragon was renewed for season 2 before the second episode of the series even aired, as it’s the kind of hit HBO wanted, and a revival of the Game of Thrones universe now that the main show has ended. And it’s doing a great job making us forget about that last season of Game of Thrones itself.

    So we know season 2 is coming, likely at least a year from now, and with it, another ten episodes. Without getting into actual Fire and Blood book spoilers, here’s what we know about season 2 of House of the Dragon so far, via a new interview with Ryan Condal, the showrunner:

    • Condal says the narrative of season 1 was deliberately slowed down so we got to know the characters and got invested in them. I’d argue the show felt like it moved too fast with all the leaps forward in time, but I digress. Condal says: “We will get to the spectacle. But you have to understand these people’s complexities before they’re thrown into war.”
    • Condal also says that the show is going to shift into what the middle few seasons of Game of Thrones was like, which many would argue was the best era of that series: “Series two will hit the rhythms people came to expect from the middle run of Game of Thrones, but it will have been earned, and viewers will feel the tragedies because we put the work in.”
    • Finally, Condal says that they will try to incorporate “natural pathways into moments of levity” in the very, serious, dark show, but says that’s tough without a character like Tyrion. But he says he thinks Matt Smith is hilarious, and that Daemon might be the vessel for a bit of comedy in the future. Can a guy cutting another guy’s head in half be funny? The comedic timing of that was kind of on point (“he can keep his tongue”).

    What is not yet clear is whether House of the Dragon plans to wrap up the source material in one more season, or if there are larger scale plans to continue. Once upon a time, the idea was floated that this could turn into a Targaryen anthology series, past Fire and Blood and the Dance of Dragons, and go to different eras in the past and future of the house. But of course, that would require total recasting and starting from scratch in many ways. My guess is probably at least three total seasons to get through the current story with the current cast, but we’ll have to see. Of course, there are close to a half dozen other Game of Thrones prequels and spin-offs also in the works right now, and more of those will be arriving in the years to come.

    Again, there’s no date yet for season 2. Filming is supposed to start in late 2022, and we are…pretty much in late 2022, so that should be soon. Barring another pandemic, we should get back to a fairly normal production schedule, and the best guess is probably 1-1.5 years for a new season, as tends to be the norm for this sort of thing, but more on specific dates later.

    Update (10/24): Some more on actual release date timing. Since filming is about to begin at the end of this year, we can do some math. Filming for season 1 began in April 2021, and then the series was released 15 months later.

    So let’s assume filming begins as late as December 2022, to still get started before the end of this year, 15 months from then would be probably around March 2024, so no House of the Dragon in 2023 at all, and we’re looking more toward spring or even summer 2024, depending on how long filming and production takes. Some sources have said filming does not actually begin until next year, so it may be even longer.

    We do know now what exactly the break point is between seasons, given last night’s episode (spoilers follow). We essentially witnessed the birth of the Black Queen when Rhaenyra learns that her son and his dragon has been killed by Aemond, accident or no (those dragons, so unpredictable!). While she was attempting to avoid war, now we know that the war is about to begin in earnest after that provocation. And even if the Targaryens have more overall dragons, there’s something to be said about the Hightower clan owning the biggest single dragon in the world that can eat other ones for lunch. I have to imagine that’s going to come up again, whether Daemon can bring the other dragons to heel or not.

    Given that we have been promised something more like the middle run of Game of Thrones, that means bigger battles, as there really have barely been any yet, and no doubt more major deaths to come. But I would not expect to be seeing the second season any time before spring 2023, at this current rate.

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    Paul Tassi, Senior Contributor

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