For the past few years, HBO has kept Game of Thronesgoing by looking back further in its history. While that’s not changing for the rest of the 2020s, creator George R.R. Martin revealed the TV franchise knows it has to move forward, and indeed plans to do just that.
At a recent event in Iceland attended by Los Siete Reinos, the author revealed some of the “five or six” other spinoff projects in the works he’s involved in. Of those, “some” are sequels that’ll pick up where the original series left off back in 2019. HBO certainly seemed poised to continue the stories of Arya and Jon specifically, and he even had a spinoff announced. Those plans eventually fell through, while Martin teased last year that something could be percolating with Arya’s actor, Maisie Williams.
Beyond the just-renewed House of the Dragon and A Knight of Seven Kingdoms, Martin has previously talked up spinoffs for Aegon the Conqueror, the animated Nine Voyagesfocused on Corlys Velaryon, and a prequel focused on Queen Nymeria. (There might even be a movie too, remember?) A lot of Thrones, the apparent move on HBO’s end being to fill fans with enough prequels to soften them up for whatever’s next in Westeros. Has everyone moved on from hating the ending to where that’s possible? We’ll find out if such a follow-up ever actually gets announced, much less made.
2025 has been a bit of a holding pattern for Game of Thrones fans (even beyond whatever is perpetually happening, or not happening, with Winds of Winter). With no House of the Dragon and a long wait until early 2026 for the next Game of Thrones spinoff, Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, ravens from Westeros have been few and far between. But with HBO’s new plans, it’s hoping that the next three years will be much more plentiful.
This morning HBO confirmed that it had renewed both Knight of the Seven Kingdoms and House of the Dragon for new seasons, setting out an alternative release schedule that will see the shows both broadcast in 2026, before alternating releases in 2027 and 2028.
“We are thrilled to be able to deliver new seasons of these two series for the next three years, for the legion of fans of the Game of Thrones universe,” HBO head of Drama Series and Films Francesca Orsi said in a statement provided via press release. “Together, House of the Dragon and A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms reveal just how expansive and richly imagined George R. R. Martin’s universe continues to be. In January, I think audiences will be delighted by the inspiring underdog tale of Dunk and Egg that George and Ira Parker have captured so beautifully. And this summer, House of the Dragon is set to ignite once again with some of its most epic battles yet.”
To mark the announcement, HBO also released new images from both shows—check them out below.
Knight of the Seven Kingdoms is set to premiere January 18 next year, with the third season of House of the Dragon slated for a summer 2026 release window. After that, Knight‘s sophomore season will broadcast in 2027, and House‘s fourth season in 2028.
Although HBO did not confirm it in its renewal announcement today, showrunner Ryan Condal previously stated shortly after the conclusion of House of the Dragon‘s second season that the plan for the Targaryen-focused spinoff would remain to tell the story of the Dance of the Dragons across four seasons, bringing the series to an end in 2028.
What HBO has planned for the future of Game of Thrones beyond 2028 remains to be seen. If House does indeed finish that year, it might be time for another Westerosi spinoff to emerge—although it’s not been for a lack of ideas that another series hasn’t made it to production in the years since Game of Thrones itself came to a controversial end.
And if there isn’t? Well… at least we’ll have Windsat some point.
Game of Thrones fans rejoice because A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms just blessed us with a new trailer at New York Comic-Con. During a panel for The Hedge Knight hosted by Phase Hero’s Brandon Davis, attendees crowded in to see what the newest additions to the mammoth series would be. Interestingly enough, the route to the future lies directly in the past.
As HBO wants fans to know up front, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms begins before the original series that the entire Internet fell in love with. To be exact, the new show happens about 70 years after House of the Dragon, but 100 years before Game of Thrones! So, it’s a little bit of a mind-bender before you get a true handle of the timeline at play here. Needless to say, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms will deliver all that action and intrigue you’ve come to expect from this universe.
It’s a real wonder that these kinds of sprawling stories can now hit the air without worrying about the narrative complexity of the universe being too much for audiences. George R.R. Martin actually talked about that during the panel today. He called the stories “too big, too expensive” to realize on-screen in the past. But, clearly that’s changed!
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms brings Game of Thrones back to our screens
One of the big draws for A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms is how much the idea of a medieval tournament comes into play. During today’s panel, Martin explained that this aspect was always something he was looking forward to adapting. And, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms presented the perfect opportunity to really zoom in on these contests.
Expect some of that noise during The Hedge Knight as well. It’s shaping up to be a massive year for Game of Thrones fans. With multiple spinoffs seeing the light of day in short order, the land of Westeros is going to be anything but dull in the coming months.
Remember back in 2022 when you settled in to watch House of the Dragon‘s first episode? Here was a fresh start after Game of Thrones‘ disappointing final season. A clean slate, a new cast, a new (earlier) era of Westeros. But… the exact sameRamin Djawadi theme song?
It made sense on some level—it’s an awfully catchy bit of music—but it also felt a little bit repetitive. Good news for people hoping A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms will try something different: HBO’s latest journey to Westeros will not only not use that same opening theme, it won’t even have a theme at all.
Speaking to Entertainment Weekly, showrunner Ira Parker explained why that choice was made. It’s a way right from the start to let viewers know that this series is far more scaled down than Game of Thrones and House of the Dragon. Rather than the massive canvas both of those shows occupy, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms keeps a tight focus on Dunk and Egg, the characters who star in the George R.R. Martin stories it’s adapted from.
“All decisions came down to Dunk, trying to channel the type of person he is into every aspect of this show, even the title sequence,” Parker said. “The title sequences on the original [Game of Thrones] and House of Dragon are big and epic and incredible. Ramin Djawadi’s score is orchestral and large and beautiful. That’s not really Dunk’s MO. He’s plain and he’s simple and he’s to-the-point. He doesn’t have a lot of flash to him.”
Parker also said that unlike those other Westeros-set shows, which revolve around all the drama associated with fighting over who will get to claim the Iron Throne, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms—which is set 50 years after House of the Dragon, making it a later prequel to Game of Thrones—will keep its perspective pointed away from the upper classes. “To find a totally different version of this world that everybody seems to know so well was very, very appealing,” he said.
There aren’t any dragons left by the time A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms rolls around. (Obviously, it takes place some time prior to the emergence of a certain Mother of Dragons.) “The fact that we live in this world, though, where magic once existed is very interesting to me,” Parker said. “This is the ground and the grass that has seen dragons and dragon fire before. So everything is just like how the world is, but a little stranger, a little different.”
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms is having a New York Comic Con panel later this week, so presumably we’ll be learning a lot more—like its exact arrival date in 2026, for starters.
We did already know that Game of Thrones spin-offs A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms and House of the Dragon season three would arrive in 2026. But now we have more concrete details on when we’ll be heading back to Westeros—and the time between visits could be surprisingly short.
As Deadline reports, HBO and HBO Max head Casey Bloys offered some morsels for George R.R. Martin fans as part of an interview celebrating the outlet’s many Emmy wins. (Hell yeah, The Penguin star Cristin Milioti!)
According to the trade, House of the Dragon‘s return is “possibly in June,” based on Bloys’ estimate that “I think it’ll be just outside of [the 2026 Emmy eligibility window],” Bloys said; the window closes May 31.
But even earlier than that, the trade confirms, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms “will premiere in January.” That lines up with reports from May 2024 that the show, originally touted as dropping in 2025, would arrive in early 2026—though a month wasn’t specified at that time.
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms has already been confirmed to run six episodes. Just speculating here, but if it kicks off the first Sunday of January, it would run through the second week of February. If House of the Dragon arrives the first Sunday of June, that would be just 17 or so weeks between Game of Thrones-adjacent adventures.
Does that feel like overkill, or the right amount of time to maximize the hype? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.
Along the way, a conversation has also started about how those sex scenes are brought to life, and the significance of on-set intimacy coordinators… and now, House of the Dragon star Olivia Cooke is proving just how important that conversation is.
In a recent interview with iPaper to promote her work on the new Prime Video series The Girlfriend, Cooke offered heaps of praise for the show’s intimacy coordinators. She argued that they help her and other performers through what could otherwise be “really precarious and vulnerable situations” where you feel like “a chunk of yourself as been taken.”
“It’s amazing to me that people had to just fudge their way through those scenes before those people existed,” Cooke argued, before adding that, “[The embarrassment is amplified for] those who are just starting out and don’t have the vocabulary to say what they’re not comfortable with. And for women, who’ll often get labelled ‘difficult’ or ‘a bitch’ for speaking up.”
“[Good intimacy coordinators can] sense hesitation and become your voice,” Cooke continued, adding that, “[while] showing intimacy, passion is an integral part of reflecting the human experience.”
It Matters
For multiple reasons, I found Cooke’s take on the situation (and the fact that her quotes are going viral) to be really refreshing. Her comments are adding a bit more nuance into the larger sex scene debate, which has often gotten boiled down into the most outlandish extremes when hashed out on social media. Regardless of your personal feelings towards those kinds of scenes, it’s undeniable that something has changed in how they’ve come to life across the past few decades of popular culture.
Shifting gender politics both on and off the screen, the rise of the four-quadrant crowd-pleasing blockbuster, and the hiatus of a lot of mid-budget genres like the erotic thriller have led to onscreen sex scenes feeling few and far between, and therefore subject to more attention and scrutiny. (If you want an in-depth look at just how much things have changed, check out Karina Longworth’s excellent work on the “Erotic 80s” and “Erotic 90s” seasons of her film history podcast You Must Remember This.) Even just within the Game of Thrones franchise, which Cooke is now a part of, characters have engaged in sex scenes that have ranged from tender to extremely polarizing to upsetting… and audiences have responded with some form of pearl clutching practically every time.
That is a whole separate conversation in and of itself, but the fact of the matter is: sex scenes in movies and shows will (hopefully) never completely go away. Despite what the Internet might want you to believe, there will always be instances where those moments make sense “for the plot”: to crescendo the relationship between two people, to reveal integral moments of character, and sometimes to just have a bit of fun. And if (with the help of intimacy coordinators) the experience of bringing them to life is handled with nuance and care, just like what Cooke is describing, then that’s the best-case scenario.
Jenna Anderson is the host of the Go Read Some Comics YouTube channel, as well as one of the hosts of the Phase Hero podcast. She has been writing professionally since 2017, but has been loving pop culture (and especially superhero comics) for her entire life. You can usually find her drinking a large iced coffee from Dunkin and talking about comics, female characters, and Taylor Swift at any given opportunity.
Winter may never come — if HBO‘s release schedule continues to gestate at a glacial pace.
That’s among the running gags in the Saturday Night LiveCut for Time sketch titled “Blonde Dragon People,” which pokes fun at the network-streamer and its star prestige series House of the Dragon. In the six-minute-long video, a group of friends become increasingly confused with the show’s short runtime and long shooting schedule, extraordinarily similar-sounding names and continuity errors.
Dorgos, Dormos, Dargomos, Dorgon and Dorman are just a handful of the names that confuse the group, which comprises SNLstars Andrew Dismukes, Heidi Gardner, Devon Walker and newcomer Jane Wickline.
As they watch the show’s recap — as played by Chloe Fineman, Kenan Thompson, Bowen Yang and a heavily accented and nonsensical James Austin Johnson (clearly parodying Matt Smith’s Daemon Targaryen in HOTD) — the friends start to lose track of plot points, wondering why there’s a dog with “blonde dreads,” a stock video of a bat in place of a dragon and why “every person and city” has the “same weird name.”
“I mean even in Game of Thrones they gave us one guy named John,” Dismukes’ character remarks.
However, the host of Season 50’s premiere, Jean Smart, is given the most ridiculous lines yet, stating regally: “Yes, it is I, Dorgos, daughter of Doremos and sister of Daragmos, ruler of the seven five lands and keeper of the 11 three keys. Only I can reclaim the kingdom stolen from Doregmon, by the usurper Dormegon.”
She adds at another point, “You will never silence the people of East New Westersouth, from the isles of Rizzoli to the ranches of Hidden Valley,” referencing the drama show Rizzoli & Isles and popular ranch brand.
To further confuse matters, in comes surprise guest Andy Samberg (who appeared earlier in the night as the Douglas Emhoff to Maya Rudolph’s Kamala Harris during the Cold Open) and musical guest Jelly Roll, who appear as Orlando Bloom’s Legolas and Sean Astin’s Samwise Gamgee from The Lord of the Rings, respectively.
As such, the sketch turns to poking fun at the streaming wars, with Smart remarking that their show is on Amazon Prime instead. Thompson then goes on a short historical tangent as he outlines the transition of HBO from HBO Now, then HBO Go, then HBO Max and now just Max, which Samberg’s character says “sounds bad.”
With the recap concluded, the television announces — in signature Westerosi font — that the new season has concluded. “I just looked it up. The next season doesn’t air until 2028. It’s like the Olympics,” Gardner bemoans.
But that’s OK, since fans can watch something called “Dragging Dragons” in the meantime, about drag queens dragging the costumes from the show “only on, weirdly, HBO Latino.”
About the fractured House Targaryen and taking place nearly 200 years prior to the events of Game of Thrones, House of the Dragon — which just completed airing its second season Aug. 4 after eight episodes — has been renewed for two more seasons for a total of four overall. A following installment is set for release in 2026, with production commencing early next year.
BEVERLY HILLS, CA – SEPTEMBER 21: Writer George R. R. Martin attends the HBO Luxury Lounge featuring Motorola and PANDORA Jewelry in honor of The 65th Primetime Emmy Awards at The Four Seasons Hotel on September 21, 2013 in Beverly Hills, California.
Apparently, Game Of Thrones creator George R.R. Martin isn’t happy with the way that HBO has adapted the Thrones prequel, House Of The Dragon. In a blog post that has since been deleted, Martin discussed what he felt went wrong in the show’s season 2, noting specific variations from his book, Fire & Blood, which the show is based on.
He was annoyed that House of the Dragon eliminated one character, a young child, Prince Maelor, from the story.
What Did George R.R. Martin Say?
The post read, per Variety, “When [showrunner] Ryan Condal first told me what he meant to do, ages ago (back in 2022, might be) I argued against it, for all these reasons… I did not argue long, or with much heat, however. The change weakened the sequence, I felt, but only a bit. And Ryan had what seemed to be practical reasons for it; they did not want to deal with casting another child, especially a two-year old toddler. Kids that young will inevitably slow down production, and there would be budget implications. Budget was already an issue on HOUSE OF THE DRAGON, it made sense to save money wherever we could. Moreover, Ryan assured me that we were not losing Prince Maelor, simply postponing him. Queen Helaena could still give birth to him in season three, presumably after getting with child late in season two. That made sense to me, so I withdrew my objections and acquiesced to the change. I still love the episode, and the Blood and Cheese sequence overall. Losing the ‘Helaena’s Choice’ beat did weaken the scene, but not to any great degree. Only the book readers would even notice its absence; viewers who had never read FIRE & BLOOD would still find the scenes heart-rending. Maelor did not actually DO anything in the scene, after all. How could he? He was only two years old. There is another aspect to the removal of the young princeling, however.”
He added, ““He is a small child, does not have a line of dialogue, does nothing of consequence but die… but where and when and how, that does matter.” He notes that without that death, some of the characaters actions either make less sense or carry less weight.
Does This Happen Often?
Occasionally, authors take issue with the way their books get adapted for the screen. It’s fairly well known that Stephen King did not like Stanley Kubrick’s adaptation of The Shining, saying, “I feel the same because the character of Jack Torrance has no arc in that movie. Absolutely no arc at all. When we first see Jack Nicholson, he’s in the office of Mr. Ullman, the manager of the hotel, and you know, then, he’s crazy as a s— house rat. All he does is get crazier. In the book, he’s a guy who’s struggling with his sanity and finally loses it. To me, that’s a tragedy. In the movie, there’s no tragedy because there’s no real change.”
Brian has been working in pop culture and media for about three decades: he’s worked at MTV, VH1, SiriusXM, CBS and Loudwire. Besides working as a writer and an editor-in-chief, he’s also appeared on air as a pundit, guested on radio shows and hosted podcasts. Over the years, he’s interviewed the surviving members of Led Zeppelin, the members of U2, Beyonce, Pink, Usher, Stevie Nicks, Lorde… and is grateful to have had the chance to interview Joe Strummer of the Clash and Tom Petty.
Hosts: Van Lathan, Charles Holmes, and Jomi Adeniran Producers: Aleya Zenieris, Jonathan Kermah, and Steve Ahlman Additional Production Support: Arjuna Ramgopal
Back in May, House of the Dragon writer Sara Hess said that the decision to scale back Season 2 from 10 to eight episodes “wasn’t really our choice.” Dragon’s audience didn’t have a choice either, but viewers have had their say since Sunday, and most seem to have sided with Hess. This season didn’t quite get to where book readers estimated it might end; Episode 8 would have worked great as the setup for a final couple of episodes, but it had way too many loose threads and half-fulfilled plot points to feel satisfying as a season finale. All in all, this was one of the more bizarrely structured seasons of TV I can remember—and unfortunately, the odd ending puts a damper on what had at one point been looking like a strong season.
Nevertheless, we’re here to take a look at all the lore, big questions, and book implications we can. Here are my thoughts on “The Queen Who Ever Was.”
Deep Dive of the Week: Everything Daemon’s Final Vision Tells Us About the Future of House of the Dragon
I must admit to a growing fatigue about the extent to which House of the Dragon has used prophecy to create character growth and move the story forward. In a 2000 interview, George R.R. Martin explained his own philosophy regarding the use of prophecy in storytelling, saying, “Prophecy is one of those tropes of Fantasy that is fun to play with, but it can easily turn into a straightjacket if you’re not careful.” He continued: “One of the themes of my fiction, since the very beginning, is that the characters must make their choices, for good or ill. And making choices is hard.”
But House of the Dragon is all-in on prophecy, and I’m grateful, at least, for the fodder it provides for this column. This week, we reach the culmination of Daemon’s Harrenhal arc, resulting in a rich vision in the godswood. Daemon gets glimpses of the future and even communes with Helaena, who herself has been rattled by visions from a young age. Let’s break down what it all means.
Before Daemon’s vision even begins, he sees an antlered figure disappear behind Harrenhal’s heart tree:
All images via HBO
This is a deep cut. Harrenhal lies on the north bank of the Gods Eye, the largest lake in Westeros. In the center of that lake is a mysterious island known as the Isle of Faces. This island has ancient significance. It’s where, many thousands of years prior to the events of House of the Dragon, the First Men and the children of the forest signed the Pact, ending a long war between the two. Faces were carved into the many weirwood trees on the island so that the gods could witness the pact, giving the island its name. It’s said that, in the current day, the Isle of Faces is the only place in the south of Westeros where a significant population of weirwoods still exists (there’s actually a very clear shot of the island and its trees in this episode when Rhaenyra and Addam arrive at Harrenhal). All the rest in the south have been cut down or burned.
In more recent times, a group known as the green men keep a “silent watch” over the island, per Catelyn in A Game of Thrones. “No one visits the Isle of Faces,” Bran tells us in A Storm of Swords. Thus, the green men are incredibly secretive to the point of possibly being apocryphal. Nursery tales claim that the green men have horns and dark green skin, though most maesters would say that they just wear headdresses of antlers and green garments.
We don’t even know what the green men do. There are rumors that some children of the forest still live on the Isle of Faces, and are protected by the green men. But no one knows for sure.
This particular green man is gone before Daemon—or we—can get too good a look at him. But for readers who’ve bought into the theory that Daemon may precede Brynden Rivers as the three-eyed crow, Westeros’s foremost greenseer, this sighting could cause a red alert. We’re very much in fan theory territory here, but this hypothesis seems much less far-fetched after “The Queen That Ever Was.”
Speaking of Brynden, this is where Daemon’s vision really begins: with a silver-haired figure encased in a tree. His wine stain birthmark gives him away: This is Brynden Rivers, the same greenseer who mentors Bran Stark in Season 6 of Game of Thrones (though Thrones omitted the birthmark). The birthmark is what gives him the moniker Bloodraven.
This is a vision of the future, as Brynden hasn’t actually been born yet. (He is also supposed to be missing an eye, a detail I imagine House of the Dragon omitted because it’d prompt some viewers to mistake him for Aemond). Bloodraven is actually Daemon’s great-grandson, and should appear in HBO’s forthcoming A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, which is set about 100 years after House of the Dragon.
Next up, a three-eyed bird flies in front of Bloodraven’s face:
I’m not much of a bird watcher, but to my eye this is a crow. That’s a neat detail—Thrones changed the bird to a raven, probably to avoid confusion when the Night’s Watch is so frequently referred to as “crows.” But in the books, Brynden appears to Bran as the three-eyed crow, not the three-eyed raven, and this is a nod to that.
Next up, a White Walker with an army of wights:
I don’t think that one needs much explanation. I do wonder if this is more or less what Aegon the Conqueror saw in his vision. I’m surprised this wasn’t the Night King himself.
Then, a couple of dragons lie dead on a battlefield:
These two are difficult to identify. Book readers could guess, but then we’d get into spoiler territory. And there is more than one potential explanation, especially if the show tweaks some things from the books.
Now, a figure walks through a battlefield littered with bodies:
As with the dragons, there are many explanations here. I’m almost certain this figure is Daemon, given that the character falls through the battlefield as a transition to the next scene, where Daemon is drowning in a black abyss:
Next up, the comet from Season 2 of Game of Thrones:
This comet, which also plays a big role in A Clash of Kings, is one of my favorite features in A Song of Ice and Fire. In that second novel in the series, everyone has their own explanation for what the comet means; at least a dozen different interpretations are given. Some are flat-out wrong (I don’t think the comet honored the new king Joffrey, who would go on to die in the very next novel), but others are left ambiguous. Maybe the comet really did herald the return of dragons—Daenerys’s were born shortly before its appearance. Maybe it really was sent by the Undying Ones to guide Daenerys to Qarth—Dany did follow its path there. Or maybe it’s a complete coincidence. Comets just show up sometimes.
We’ll never know for sure. But as a literary device, it provides a great signifier of how symbols and prophecies can be read in many different ways. It all depends on the character doing the interpreting.
Next up, Daenerys’s eggs in a bed of fire:
And then the dragon queen herself, emerging with her dragon hatchlings:
Now back to the present day, and the current dragon queen. Rhaenyra sits the throne:
And then, the trippiest part of this whole scene for me, when Daemon turns and comes face-to-face with Helaena. “It’s all a story, and you are but one part of it,” she says. “You know your part. You know what you must do.”
At this point, it’s revealed that Daemon isn’t just having a vision of Helaena as she exists in his head: Helaena herself is communicating with Daemon in real time from King’s Landing. Here the scene shifts to Helaena, as Aemond emerges to once again try to convince his sister to fly Dreamfyre into battle. She reveals that she knows that Aemond burned Aegon and let him fall from his dragon, essentially leaving him to die.
“Aegon will be king again,” she says. “He’s yet to see victory. He sits on a wooden throne. And you … you’ll be dead. You were swallowed up in the Gods Eye, and you were never seen again.”
Aemond says he could have Helaena killed. “It wouldn’t change anything,” she spits back.
Even casual viewers probably realize that Helaena has been right about pretty much everything she’s seen in her visions. Remember when she says in Season 1 that young Aemond will have to “close an eye” to claim a dragon? Yeah, she knows the future. And based on his facial expressions during this conversation, I think Aemond knows this about his sister.
There’s a whole free-will dilemma being cracked open by Daemon and Helaena here. Maybe part of the reason Helaena has been so passive is that, in seeing the future, she’s resigned herself to it. Maybe something similar has happened with Daemon: When Rhaenyra warns him not to leave her again, he answers, “I could not. I have tried.” (Rhaenyra notes that her own lot in life was “decided for me long ago.”) That’d largely violate Martin’s philosophy—that prophecies must remain vague enough that characters can be free to make difficult choices—but it seems to be the direction the show is heading in.
But let’s set the philosophy aside and ask a more straightforward question: Is the show straight up spoiling itself with these visions?
I’ll let showrunner Ryan Condal answer that. In a virtual Q&A with press on Monday, he explained that spoilers aren’t at the top of his mind as he writes the show:
“We’re not pretending that nobody has read Fire & Blood, and that there’s not a Wikipedia that’s there one Google link away if you want to find out what happened,” Condal said. “We dispensed with the idea that there were going to be surprises on that level right at the beginning and writing the series.”
He also noted that it would have been silly to pretend that Viserys wouldn’t die at the end of Season 1—every viewer could see that coming from miles away. Granted, there’s a difference between the audience knowing the fate of the current king on a show that is clearly about a succession crisis, and the audience knowing the fates of characters who could potentially resolve that crisis. Still, Condal continued: “I will just say that, just because a thing is told to you doesn’t mean it’s going to happen exactly that way. And we’ve seen obviously in history and all that be misinterpreted before, both in the world of Fire & Blood, and in the world of A Song of Ice and Fire.”
So maybe these visions will come to pass exactly as Daemon and Helaena have seen them, and this story will turn out to be about the journey and not the destination. Or maybe the visions aren’t as set in stone as we may think.
After multiple episodes of teasing, Rhaena … still hasn’t claimed Sheepstealer, the dragon that has left Dragonstone to seek fresh mutton in the Vale. But it seems very likely that she’ll do so—and that she was probably meant to do so this season before the episode count was reduced—which surely has book readers curious and sad about a fan favorite character from Fire & Blood: Nettles.
Nearly a month ago, Martin published a particularly cranky blog post. The post contained various thoughts on dragons, including a long defense of some of his dragon-related literary decisions. For example, Martin gave his dragons two legs and two wings because “no animal that has ever lived on Earth has six limbs. Birds have two legs and two wings, bats the same, ditto pteranodons and other flying dinosaurs, etc.”
He also wrote a long paragraph detailing how his dragons are not nomadic and would never be found outside Dragonstone. He specifically said that they wouldn’t be found in the Vale. Here’s the relevant paragraph:
My dragons are creatures of the sky. They fly, and can cross mountains and plains, cover hundreds of miles … but they don’t, unless their riders take them there. They are not nomadic. During the heyday of Valyria there were forty dragon-riding families with hundreds of dragons amongst them … but (aside from our Targaryens) all of them stayed close to the Freehold and the Lands of the Long Summer. From time to time a dragonrider might visit Volantis or another Valyrian colony, even settle there for a few years, but never permanently. Think about it. If dragons were nomadic, they would have overrun half of Essos, and the Doom would only have killed a few of them. Similarly, the dragons of Westeros seldom wander far from Dragonstone. Elsewise, after three hundred years, we would have dragons all over the realm and every noble house would have a few. The three wild dragons mentioned in Fire & Blood have lairs on Dragonstone. The rest can be found in the Dragonpit of King’s Landing, or in deep caverns under the Dragonmont. Luke flies Arrax to Storm’s End and Jace to Winterfell, yes, but the dragons would not have flown there on their own, save under very special circumstances. You won’t find dragons hunting the riverlands or the Reach or the Vale, or roaming the northlands or the mountains of Dorne.
This commentary is so pointed that I have to think Martin had a heads-up about where House of the Dragon was going. In Episode 6, Sheepstealer showed up in the Vale and presented a deviation from Martin’s source material—and book readers started speculating that the show was replacing Nettles with Rhaena.
In Martin’s book, a vagabond girl named Nettles claims Sheepstealer. All of the recent Rhaena action from the Vale has been a show invention, which seems to telegraph the direction the show is moving in. This is all a bit of a shame, as Nettles is unlike any other dragonrider in A Song of Ice and Fire. She’s a bastard girl born to a dockside sex worker in Driftmark. The book describes her as “black-haired, brown-eyed, brown-skinned, skinny, foul-mouthed, fearless.” And remember, in the books the Velaryons are not Black—they have typical Valyrian features: pale skin, silver hair, purple eyes. Nettles has no known Valyrian ancestry and no Valyrian features whatsoever—the only rider in all of A Song of Ice and Fire without so much as a hint of “the blood of the dragon.”
Nettles is, apparently, one of Martin’s favorite characters. A couple of years ago, a fan asked Martin whether there were characters from Fire & Blood that he’d like to write more about. He answered Nettles, rhetorically asking, “Where does she come from? Where does she go to? What is her life like?”
I have to stop here to avoid spoiling Nettles’s story, which will likely become Rhaena’s story next season. This decision is prudent in some ways—combining characters is a classic book-to-screen adaptation move for a reason, and Rhaena is underused and often forgotten in Fire & Blood. But it does represent a dramatic shift in how each medium views dragonriders. House of the Dragon is taking Fire & Blood’s Broom Boy—its promise that dragonriding isn’t just for Valyrians—and is dashing it in favor of a character whose last name is literally Targaryen.
Will this cause problems down the line? Not that I can tell based on how the plot unfolds in the book. But Martin ended his blog post by writing, “Ignore canon, and the world you’ve created comes apart like tissue paper.”
Meet Sharako Lohar
We knew that Sharako would appear this season thanks to casting news, and in the finale she finally makes her debut. Tyland and the greens think the Triarchy could be key to winning this war, and Lohar leads their fleet. So who is this mud-loving, polygamous admiral?
Well, Sharako isn’t fleshed out much in the books. Dragon’s creators have swapped Sharako’s gender for the show, but in the books the character commands a fleet of 90 warships. It’s not clear exactly how many Corlys Velaryon has at his disposal, but as is made clear on both the page and the screen, Sharako’s fleet is powerful enough to at least challenge the Sea Snake’s.
It also appears that the show is merging Lohar with another character, Racallio Ryndoon, who was part of the force that fought Daemon in the Stepstones many years earlier. The tip-off that these two characters are being merged is the detail that Sharako keeps multiple wives—an attribute that the book ascribes to Racallio. In fact, Racallio is one of the wildest characters in all of A Song of Ice and Fire. I just have to let Fire & Blood’s description do the character justice:
Surprisingly little is known of his youth, and much of what we believe we know is false or contradictory. He was six-and-a-half feet tall, supposedly, with one shoulder higher than another, giving him a stooped posture and a rolling gait. He spoke a dozen dialects of Valyrian, suggesting that he was highborn, but he was infamously foul-mouthed too, suggesting that he came from the gutters. In the fashion of many Tyroshi, he was wont to dye his hair and beard. Purple was his favorite color (hinting at the possibility of a tie to Braavos), and most accounts of him make mention of long curling purple hair, oft streaked with orange. He liked sweet scents and would bathe in lavender or rosewater.
That he was a man of enormous ambition and enormous appetites seems clear. He was a glutton and a drunkard when at leisure, a demon when in battle. He could wield a sword with either hand, and sometimes fought with two at once. He honored the gods: all gods, everywhere. When battle threatened, he would throw the bones to choose which god to placate with a sacrifice. Though Tyrosh was a slave city, he hated slavery, suggesting that perhaps he himself had come from bondage. When wealthy (he gained and lost several fortunes) he would buy any slave girl who caught his eye, kiss her, and set her free. He was open-handed with his men, claiming a share of plunder no greater than the least of them. In Tyrosh, he was known to toss gold coins to beggars. If a man admired something of his, be it a pair of boots, an emerald ring, or a wife, Racallio would press it on him as a gift.
He had a dozen wives and never beat them, but would sometimes command them to beat him. He loved kittens and hated cats. He loved pregnant women, but loathed children. From time to time he would dress in women’s clothes and play the whore, though his height and crooked back and purple beard made him more grotesque than female to the eye. Sometimes he would burst out laughing in the thick of battle. Sometimes he would sing bawdy songs instead.
Racallio Ryndoon was mad. Yet his men loved him, fought for him, died for him. And for a few short years, they made him a king.
So yeah, get ready for more Sharako in Season 3!
Where is Otto?
For the first time since Episode 2, we get a glimpse of the man who did more than any other to put this entire war into motion. Way back at the beginning of the season, Otto, who’d been dismissed as Aegon’s hand, was supposed to head to Highgarden to rally the Tyrells to the greens’ side, as they had yet to formally declare for either faction. Then he disappeared, and we later learn that Alicent’s letters to him went unanswered.
Now we know the reason for Otto’s silence: He’s in prison … somewhere.
There are no book insights—and no book spoilers—to be had here. In Fire & Blood, Otto remains in King’s Landing after Aegon fires him. And he’s instrumental in winning the Triarchy over to the greens, though he does so by way of raven, not by mud fight. If the showrunners were determined to give Otto more to do, the obvious decision would have been to send him to Essos. At his age, he might not have been able to wrestle in the muck, but he could have been given some interesting scenes. Sending him somewhere unknown instead, and revealing he’s locked away, creates a big mystery. Color me intrigued!
Total speculation: The most likely location for Otto is Honeyholt, the seat of House Beesbury in the Reach. We know that the Beesburys declared for the blacks after their lord Lyman Beesbury was killed back in Season 1. If he passed through Beesbury lands on his way through the Reach, they would have been inclined to take him prisoner.
The problem with that theory? Honeyholt lies west of Highgarden. So if Otto met with the Tyrells first, he would have had to continue to Oldtown to cross paths with the Beesburys. And if he made it to the Tyrells, why not give him a scene or two at Highgarden?
The other problem: Otto should be much too smart to get himself captured this way. It’d be out of character for him to attempt to march through territories that are openly at war with him. In the “Inside the Episode” video that aired after the finale, Condal remained tight-lipped about Otto, saying, “We don’t know quite where he is or what happened to him.”
Finally, justice for the Tyroshis
Book readers have long had a bit of a sore spot about how Game of Thrones muted Martin’s lively world. Especially in later seasons, a world that is full of color became a mess of grays and blacks. I’m talking about literal wardrobe choices and how Thrones slowly moved away from the bright sigils and eccentric outfits described in Martin’s writing in exchange for a dreary palette that was supposed to convey how dark and serious the story was becoming.
Nowhere was this sort of change more stark than in the depiction of Daario Naharis, the Tyroshi sellsword who accompanies Daenerys for a few seasons. Here’s how Daario was described in A Storm of Swords:
Daario Naharis was flamboyant even for a Tyroshi. His beard was cut into three prongs and dyed blue, the same color as his eyes and the curly hair that fell to his collar. His pointed mustachios were painted gold. His clothes were all shades of yellow; a foam of Myrish lace the color of butter spilled from his collar and cuffs, his doublet was sewn with brass medallions in the shape of dandelions, and ornamental goldwork crawled up his high leather boots to his thighs. Gloves of soft yellow suede were tucked into a belt of gilded rings, and his fingernails were enameled blue.
And in the show, we got … two pretty-looking generic dudes (thanks to an actor change), one clean-shaven, one bearded:
Well, the blue-hair enthusiasts got their wish this week. With Tyland in Essos, we see quite a few people who bear a striking resemblance to book Daario. I mean, just look at this guy:
Heck, we got two blue-haired Tyroshis:
Big episode for blue-haired representation and for everyone who enjoys a good splash of primary color.
The Board Before Us
The Triarchy is on the board thanks to Tyland’s prowess in the mud-fighting pit. That’s the biggest change to the map in a while, and it gives the greens the naval power to match the blacks. Though Aemond and Co. still have a major dragon deficit (and are facing a reunified Daemon and Rhaenyra), the greens made up some significant ground. Here’s how it all looks:
Next Time On …
That’s it for House of the Dragon Season 2. But we did get a full seven-second look at A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, coming next year:
I encourage you to read Tales of Dunk and Egg, the three novellas that will serve as the basis for this next series. They’re possibly my favorite bit of writing in all of A Song of Ice and Fire. Just absolute delights. And they’re short.
If you like to skip to the good part, HBO’s House of The Dragon must be testing your patience with its pacing. Season 2 has just ended and the war has been deferred to season 3, which showrunner Ryan Condal has confirmed is going to be full-blown war.
Massive spoilers ahead for House of the Dragon season 2 finale and Fire & Blood!
With the Riverland armies of the Blacks poised to take over King’s Landing for their Queen, Rhaneyra’s new dragonriders, and the support of the Starks, Arryns, and Freys, it looks like the Blacks might have the upper hand. But the Greens still have Aemond and Vhagar, and the Hightower host with Prince Daeron and his dragon Tessarion marching forth to join Criston Cole and Gwayne Hightower. And the Triarchy has joined the Greens too, intending to break the Gullet blockade by Velaryon ships.
For those impatient to find out what happens next, here’s the entire timeline of the Dance of the Dragons as we know it from George R.R. Martin’s Fire and Blood.
A Full Timeline of the Targaryen Civil War
Prelude to the Dance
(Ollie Upton/HBO)
This spans everything that happens in House of The Dragon season 1, from Viserys naming Rhaneyra his heir (and snubbing his brother Daemon) and telling her about the prophecy of Aegon’s A Song of Ice and Fire dream, to him marrying his daughter’s closest companion, Alicent Hightower, and having four children by her—Aegon, Helaena, Aemond, and Daeron.
Rhaenyra, though married to Ser Laenor Velaryon, has three sons—Jacaerys, Lucerys, and Joffrey Velaryon—presumed to be bastards by Ser Harwin Strong, and not by her husband. After the death of Lady Laena Velaryon, the second wife of Prince Daemon Targaryen, and her brother, Ser Laenor, Daemon and Rhaenyra marry, and have three more children—Aegon the younger, Viserys, and a stillborn daughter, Visenya. And Prince Aegon is married to his sister, Princess Helaena, and in the series, they have twins, Prince Jaehaerys and Princess Jaehaera.
The Dance of the Dragons begins
The Dance of the Dragons begins with King Viserys’ death. Queen Alicent claims that on his deathbed, her husband changed his mind and named Aegon king. Within hours of the king’s death, the Small Council is convened, where the Hand of the King, Ser Otto Hightower, reveals the plot to put Aegon on the Iron Throne instead of Rhaenyra. Many council members like Tyland Lannister and Ser Criston Cole support the coup, except for Lord Lyman Beesbury who is then killed on the spot.
Ravens are sent out to call for pledges of allegiance, and those who deny are put to the sword. Princess Rhaenys Targaryen, who is in the Red Keep, is imprisoned in her chambers until she can declare for Aegon.
The two coronations
The Lord Commander of the Kingsguard, Ser Criston Cole crowns King Aegon II with the Valyrian steel crown of Aegon the Conqueror, and his sister-wife Helaena becomes the new Queen. Princess Rhaneys escapes, riding her dragon Meleys right into the ceremony, causing a stampede and destruction to express her displeasure at the usurping, before flying away.
Rhaenyra is unaware of her father’s passing until Princess Rhaenys reports of Aegon’s coronation. Ser Steffon Darklyn of the Kingsuard arrives at Dragonstone bearing the golden crown of King Jaehaerys I and Viserys I, which Daemon then places upon Rhaenyra’s brow, crowning her the true Queen of the Seven Kingdoms. Prince Jacaerys is crowned the Prince of Dragonstone, as is customary for the royal heir, and Prince Lucerys is now the heir to the throne of Driftmark.
A son for a son
(HBO)
Both Targaryen rulers send their family members on dragons as emissaries to other lords and ladies to seek their allegiance. Both Prince Aemond Targaryen and Prince Lucerys Velaryon arrive at Storm’s End to seek Lord Borros Baratheon’s support for Aegon and Rhaenyra, respectively. When they begin fighting, an irritated Borros dispatches them, but their fight continues in the air, on dragons. Aemond’s Vhagar chomps on Luke’s much younger dragon, Arrax, over Shipbreaker’s Bay, killing them both.
When news of Luke’s death is received, Aegon throws a feast to honour his brother, while Ser Otto and Alicent berate him for his rash behaviour. Rhaenyra is broken over her son’s death, and Prince Jacaerys somewhat blames himself for suggesting the idea of sending Luke as an emissary. Daemon decides to retaliate. In an event known as ‘Blood & Cheese’, Daemon seeks Mysaria’s help to seek out a Gold Cloak and a ratcatcher in the castle’s employ to kill Prince Aemond, as revenge. A son for a son.
However, unable to find Aemond, Blood and Cheese brutally behead the two-year-old prince Prince Jaehaerys, son of King Aegon II and Queen Helaena.
The fallout from Blood and Cheese and capture of Harrenhal
(HBO)
The death of the young prince spreads ill will against Rhaenyra and causes strife in the kingdom, with people choosing sides between the Blacks and the Greens. The Battle of the Burning Mill is the first mini-skirmish, fought between the Black-supporting House Blackwood and the Green-supporting House Bracken, with centuries of enmity already between them.
Rhaenyra is angry at Daemon for his cruelty and disregard for her authority, and he leaves in anger for Harrenhal in a bid to claim the castle for his wife. Ser Simon Strong, the castellan, gives it up without a fight, honouring the oath sworn by his nephew Lord Lyonel Strong.
(HBO)
The Velaryon fleet creates a blockade in the Gullet in Blackwater Bay, barring merchant ships from entering King’s Landing, causing a scarcity of resources in the capital. An execution attempt is orchestrated on Queen Rhaenyra by one of the Cargyll twins of the Kingsguard, Ser Arryk, who is in service of King Aegon and Ser Criston. His twin, Ser Erryk, is in the Queensguard of Rhaenyra. The two brothers fight, Ser Erryk manages to kill his brother and protect his queen, but then kills himself out of guilt.
After being berated for his stupid plan, King Aegon fires his grandsire, Ser Otto Hightower as his Hand because he believes his approach isn’t aggressive enough for war, and replaces him with Ser Criston Cole. Ser Otto is said to have returned to his house’s seat in Oldtown, where Alicent’s fourth son, Prince Daeron, had been fostering with the Hightowers.
The Battle of Rook’s Rest
Ser Criston Cole, along with Ser Gwayne Hightower, begins sacking castles in the Crownlands that support Rhaenyra, starting with Duskendale, the seat of House Darklyn. Lord Gunthor Darklyn, the nephew of Ser Steffon Darklyn of the Queensguard, is beheaded. The next target is Rook’s Rest, the seat of House Staunton since their lord has a seat on Rhaenyra’s council.
Queen Rhaenyra dispatches Princess Rhaenys on her dragon Meleys, the Red Queen, to Rook’s Rest. However, it’s a trap set by Cole, with Prince Aemond and his formidable dragon Vhagar, lying in wait to attack. But before they can, King Aegon II flies in on his dragon Sunfyre and begins fighting Rhaenys and Meleys. The latter are experienced fighters and manage to hurt Sunfyre, but then Aemond commands Vhagar’s dragon flame at them, burning even Aegon and his dragon Sunfyre grievously.
In the aftermath, a weakened Meleys is attacked and killed by Vhagar, and she and her rider, the Queen That Never Was, Rhaenys Targaryen, plummet to their deaths. A partially burnt Aegon and badly wounded Sunfyre fall in the woods. While HOTD implies that Aegon is brought back to King’s Landing and Sunfyre is dead, in Fire & Blood, Sunfyre is still at Rook’s Rest, wounded and recuperating.
In the absence of King Aegon II, the Small Council passes on the Dowager Queen Alicent’s request, and chooses Aemond as the Prince Regent and Protector of the Realm.
The Red Sowing
(HBO)
In the aftermath of Rhaenys’ death, Rhaenyra makes a heartbroken and angry Lord Corlys Velaryon her Hand to keep his support. He eventually accepts. Having lost two dragons, Rhaenyra needs more dragonriders. Prince Jacaerys suggests calling upon dragonseed (Targaryen bastards) to attempt to claim the riderless dragons on Dragonstone to add to their strengths. The Red Sowing or Sowing of the Seeds begins, in secrecy.
Two dragonseed from King’s Landing, a blacksmith called Hugh (son of Saera Targaryen) and a drunkard called Ulf (claiming to be a bastard brother of Viserys and Daemon) claim the dragons Vermithor and Silverwing, respectively. Lord Corlys Velaryon’s bastard son Addam of Hull claims his half-brother Ser Laenor Velaryon’s dragon, Seasmoke.
In the book, we have the wild dragon Sheepstealer claimed by a girl (parents unknown) named Nettles, who eventually gets close to Daemon Targaryen. However, House of The Dragon is taking a different route, and her character seems to have been merged with Daemon’s daughter, Rhaena Targaryen, who is sent to The Vale by Rhaenyra along with her younger sons and a few dragon eggs, but could claim Sheepstealer instead in season 3.
Battle of the Gullet
Rhaenyra’s younger sons Aegon and Viserys are aboard the ship, the Gay Abandon, en route Pentos, when the Triarchy’s ships capture their’s on their way to breaking the Velaryon ships’ Gullet blockade. Young Aegon’s dragon Stormcloud is mortally wounded (and dies) but is able to carry Aegon back to Dragonstone. Viserys, with only a dragon egg, is left behind and captured by Admiral Lohar but presumed dead by the Blacks.
To rescue his brother, Prince Jacaerys flies on his dragon Vermax to the Battle of the Gullet, with the dragonseeds by his side. They burn the Lysene pirate ships, but Vermax is mortally wounded, Prince Jace is unable to escape, and dies. The Lysene pirates sack Spicetown and High Tide, and destroy the Lord Corlys’ castle completely with fire. However, they too suffer major losses and are unable to fight in the Targaryen civil war again. The Velaryon fleet is also severely reduced but they still persist.
Battle of the Honeywine
A fortnight after Gullet is the Battle of the Honeywine, where certain houses of the Reach that do not support the Greens, such as Houses Beesbury (as revenge for Lord Lyman’s death in the Small Council), Flowers, Tarly, and Costayne, block the Hightower host from both sides so it’s unable to retreat anywhere. But Prince Daeron flies in on his dragon Tessarion (the Blue Queen) and manages to save the day.
Battles of the Red Fork, Acorn Hall, and Lakeshore (Fishfeed)
(HBO)
On Aemond’s behest, he and Criston Cole march on Harrenhal where they believe Daemon is, but find the castle empty, thinking they’ve won. Aemond orders Ser Simon Strong and his family executed, but takes the seer Alys Rivers as his bedmate. Daemon is marching toward King’s Landing to join Rhaenyra in taking the capital.
Meanwhile, three separate battles are fought by the Black and Green armies. At Red Fork, an army of westermen led by Jason Lannister defeats an army of River lords. However, Lord Jason perishes. Three days later, Lord Tarbeck (also a western lord) is killed at the battle of Acorn Hall. Lord Lefford then takes charge of the westermen army and leads them towards Harrenhal to join Aemond and Cole.
However, they are waylaid by armies of the north and the Riverlands, which include Houses Dustin, Frey, Blackwood, and others, in one of the bloodiest land battles in the Targaryen war. The Battle of Lakeshore (or Fishfeed) decimates the Lannister armies.
The Fall of King’s Landing
(HBO)
Taking advantage of Aemond and Vhagar’s absence, and angry over the death of her son and heir, Queen Rhaenyra finally storms into King’s Landing with her dragons, her husband Daemon Targaryen, and the Velaryon fleet. The capital falls to her without resistance. Queens Alicent and Helaena are taken prisoner, and Ser Otto Hightower is executed. Tyland Lannister is subjected to grievous torture to make him reveal where he hid the Crown’s gold but to no avail.
Rhaenyra strikes a deal with Dalton Greyjoy of the Iron Islands and makes him the Master of Ships. The Ironborn fleet ravages the westerlands, which don’t have the Lannister army to protect them anymore, and even tries to get into Lannisport unsuccessfully.
At Harrenhal, there’s a rift between Aemond and Cole, unable to decide what to do next. Cole takes the army and marches south to join Prince Daeron, who is marching with the Hightower armies to a town in the Reach called Tumbleton. Aemond continues to burn the Riverlands with Vhagar as a way to incite Rhaenyra.
Butcher’s Ball
This is the battle where Criston Cole dies. ‘Nuff said?
Marching towards the Reach with a vastly reduced army, Criston Cole encounters “feasting corpses,” staged bodies to taunt the greens throughout their path. Finally, south of God’s Eye lake, the Riverlands and northern armies ambush Cole’s army. Cole’s offer to surrender is rejected, after which he offers to fight the three lords leading the charge in single combat. However, before the fight can begin, he is felled by arrows. The remainder of his army is slain, thus earning this battle the name, Butcher’s Ball.
This is one of the biggest blows to the Greens’ cause. But is the war over yet? Not even close!
The Dragonseed Betrayers at the First Battle of Tumbleton
Remember the concerns about the dragonseed’s loyalty? At the first battle of Tumbleton, the Black army is fighting against the Greens’ Hightower army, when they are joined by the dragonseed Hugh Hammer and Ulf the White. However, the two betray the Blacks and defect to the Greens for reasons unknown. Along with Prince Daeron’s dragon Tessarion, Hugh’s Vermithor and Ulf’s Silverwing burn the town of Tumbleton.
The betrayal drives Rhaenyra to paranoia about the loyalty of Addam, who is now a Velaryon along with his brother Alyn, after Lord Corlys had petitioned Rhaenyra to legitimise his bastards so he could name Addam the heir to Driftmark. Rhaenyra orders Addam imprisoned, but he escapes on Seasmoke after being alerted by Corlys, for which Corlys is then thrown into prison.
The Fall of Dragonstone
aegon telling his dragon is dead first before telling he’s alone when he only had sunfyre on his last battle now he’s not around 🙁 wish they include how he reacts for the first time cause who the fuck told him pic.twitter.com/y5NGiBaV4I
— elia ˎˊ˗ tom glynn carney’s defense attorney. (@msglynncarney) August 5, 2024
After escaping from King’s Landing, Lord Larys has smuggled a disguised King Aegon II into Dragonstone, where he finds that his assumed dead dragon Sunfyre is alive. Reunited, they manage to find some supporters who hate Rhaenyra, and take control of a poorly defended Dragonstone. Baela Targaryen tries to escape on her dragon Moondancer. However, in a dance between the dragons, King Aegon loses his legs. His dragon Sunfyre blinds Baela’s dragon and eventually kills Moondancer. A burnt and injured Baela is taken captive.
Battle Above the God’s Eye
In the book, Daemon is supposed to be in Maidenpool when Aemond is burning through the Riverlands, along with the dragonseed Nettles, with whom he grows close. Some accounts claim they are lovers, some that they were like father and daughter. And after the dragonseeds’ betrayal, when Rhaenyra orders Nettles dead, he lets her escape on Sheepstealer to somewhere far away. However, in House of The Dragon, Nettles has been merged with his daughter Rhaena Targaryen, so it’ll be interesting to see how that shapes up.
Daemon decides to go to Harrenhal and await his nephew, Aemond. It is said that for thirteen days, Daemon waits in the godswood of the castle, slashing the weirwood tree once each day. On the fourteenth day, Aemond arrives with a pregnant Alys on Vhagar, drops her off at Harrenhal with a kiss, and then he and Daemon fight above the God’s Eye lake.
As their dragons attack each other, both falling towards the lake, Daemon jumps from Caraxes to drive his sword Dark Sister into Aemond’s other eye, killing him. That’s how Aemond’s skeleton is also found days later in the lake, still strapped to Vhagar’s with the sword in his eye socket. Caraxes dies beneath the walls of Harrenhal. However, Daemon’s body is never found, and some stories claim he escaped. Maybe it has to do something with the prophecy?
It is also believed that on or around the same time as the Battle of the God’s Eye, Helaena Targaryen jumps to her death.
The King’s Landing Riot and Storming of the Dragonpit
With Lord Corlys imprisoned, Rhaenyra loses the support of the Velaryon fleet. Upon Helaena’s death, which some believe to be murder, riots break out in King’s Landing over grief for the beloved queen. The Gold Cloaks are killed, a random bastard hedge knight is crowned king, and a newly emerging, overzealous prophet called ‘the Shepherd’ leads an angry mob to believe that Rhaenyra can no longer protect them.
The mob storms the Dragonpit to kill the dragons. Rhaenyra’s third son, Joffrey Velaryon tries to ride her dragon Syrax to the pit, perhaps to stop the riot, but dragons don’t usually let another rider ride them without their rider present. She throws him off, and it kills him. The rioters kill the dragons in the pit, including Joffrey’s dragon Tyraxes, Helaena’s dragon Dreamfyre (who burns many before dying), and even Rhaenyra’s dragon, Syrax.
With the city lost, Rhaenyra is advised by the council to flee with her only surviving son, Aegon, to Duskendale.
Second Battle of Tumbleton
(HBO)
After learning of the King’s Landing riots, the Hightower army at Tumbleton wants to make a move on the city and crown the only remaining Green leader, Prince Daeron, as the Prince of Dragonstone, since King Aegon was still AWOL. However, the dragonseed Hugh and Ulf act pouty, claiming they deserve better than just small lordships in exchange for their services in the war.
Hugh Hammer rides Vermithor, now the largest dragon in the realm, and proclaims himself king, with Ulf supporting his claim out of greed. A few of the lords of the Reach, including Lord Unwin Peake, along with Daeron, plot to kill the two dragonseed.
However, before this can happen, Addam Velaryon, on his dragon Seasmoke, an army of Rivermen and House Tully, attacks the Hightower armies’ lowered defenses. One of the plotters kills Hugh Hammer. Prince Daeron also died in the battle. Addam and Seasmoke fight the dragons Vermithor and Tessarion, with Vermithor ripping off Seasmoke’s head, and killing Addam Velaryon as well. Both Vermithor and Tessarion also die.
Ulf the White sleeps through the battle, but is eventually poisoned to death. Though riderless, Silverwing survives the Dance and goes on to live as a wild dragon for several years after. The Greens’ army has no leader or dragon; therefore, Lord Peake leads it in a retreat.
King Aegon II vs. Queen Rhaenyra at Dragonstone
Rhaenyra and her son Aegon are not given asylum anywhere after fleeing from King’s Landing. She is forced to sell her golden crown to get passage on a ship to Dragonstone for herself and the few men who remain to protect her.
On Dragonstone is Aegon II. His men killed Rhaenyra’s entourage, and it is finally Aegon and Sunfyre versus a dragon-less Rhaenyra. Aegon feeds Rhaenyra to his dragon Sunfyre, while her son Aegon the Younger has to watch. He is eventually taken hostage, as Aegon II plans to return to King’s Landing to claim the Iron Throne. Sunfyre finally succumbs to his wounds, having served his rider well.
The return of the king
(HBO)
In the period between Rhaenyra’s departure and the arrival of Aegon II to King’s Landing, there is utter chaos at the capital, with several pretenders to the throne rising from the smallfolk. However, Lord Borros Baratheon captures King’s Landing in Aegon’s name. He releases all the prisoners Rhaenyra had put in the black cells, including Queen Alicent and Lord Corlys Velaryon, who is raised to Aegon’s Small Council.
King Aegon II returns to King’s Landing and finds out that his only surviving heir is his daughter, Princess Jaehaera, who had been a ward at Storm’s End. At the behest of his mother, he agrees to marry the daughter of Lord Borros Baratheon. Although from House of The Dragon, we know that Aegon’s genitals were severely damaged during Rook’s Rest, so this bit might not be included in the series.
At the behest of Lord Corlys, Alicent reluctantly agrees to betroth Princess Jaehaera to Rhaenyra’s son, Aegon the Younger. Aegon II wants Alyn Velaryon (now heir to Driftmark) to swear fealty to him, or he threatens to behead Baela Targaryen, who remains his prisoner and is kept in chains. But luckily, it doesn’t come to it, because Lord Larys arranges for Baela to be whisked away to safety.
The final battle
(HBO)
The Lads, a group of young Riverlands leaders that include Benjicot Blackwood, Lord Oscar Tully, and Alysanne Blackwood, march with their armies towards King’s Landing. Lord Baratheon arrives from King’s Landing to head them off, and manages to kill a few before dying himself. With the capital city now defenseless, the Lads decide to capture it, with Cregan Stark’s northern army and the army from The Vale joining to strengthen their numbers.
The end of the Dance of the Dragons
(HBO)
With the Lads at their doorstep, Lord Corlys advises King Aegon II to surrender the city to them and join the Night’s Watch. However, Aegon wants to chop a body part of his nephew, the younger Aegon, to send a message to the Lads. Before he can do this, someone—possibly Lord Larys—poisons Aegon II and kills him. Alicent is once again imprisoned. When Cregan Stark takes charge of King’s Landing, he frowns upon the treachery and hangs 22 men suspected of regicide, including Lord Larys (thus ending the line of House Strong); however, Lord Corlys is spared after pleas are made on his behalf at court.
With the death of King Aegon II, the Dance of the Dragons, spanning two years, finally comes to an end. Rhaenyra’s son, Aegon III is crowned king, and Princess Jaehaera is his queen, while a bunch of lords that are loyal to the realm, including Lord Corlys Velaryon and Lord Tyland Lannister, are made regents that will rule the kingdom on young Aegon’s behalf. Alicent is still alive, yet not of sound mind. She refuses to attend the royal wedding of her grandchildren and is confined to one part of the Red Keep, where she descends into madness, until her death from a sickness that takes over the city some years later.
Key players who survived the Targaryen civil war include Lord Corlys Velaryon, who lived long until his very natural death at a ripe old age. His legitimised bastard Alyn Velaryon was Lord of Driftmark for many years after and undertook several voyages that would’ve made his father proud. He was the one who returned the presumed dead Prince Viserys II to King’s Landing, who would eventually become king after his brother Aegon III passed away. Viserys II is the grandsire of Brynden Rivers, the Three-Eyed Raven that Daemon saw in his vision. It is through Viserys II’s line that Rhaegar Targaryen and Daenerys Targaryen would be born.
Baela and Rhaena Targaryen both survive and live lavish lives, with Baela eventually marrying Alyn Velaryon and having a couple of children with him, and Rhaena in a political marriage with Lord Corwyn Corbray. After his death, Rhaena marries Lord Garmund Hightower, with whom she has six daughters, who would’ve been the ancestors of Margaery Tyrell, the wife of King Joffrey I, and later, King Tommen I Baratheon.
Notes
Bear in mind that House of The Dragon doesn’t always follow the book because GRRM wrote it like a collection of accounts as opposed to hard facts. This has allowed HOTD the creative liberty to fill in the gaps with its interpretation of what could’ve actually happened, what the characters’ true motivations were, and even play with the timelines a bit.
The show’s pacing, which has been criticised for being too glacial and filler-heavy, will take two more seasons, according to showrunner Ryan Condal, to finish telling the Dance of The Dragons story.
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Oh, brother, where to start? Last night was the season finale of House of the Dragon and, well, the only word that comes to mind is ‘underwhelmed.’ I think pretty much everyone can agree on that description but I’m being much less harsh than some. Sue me for not wanting to wait 2 years for the fighting dragons show to finally show us fighting dragons. This episode would’ve been a fantastic penultimate one, but as a season finale, we all got short-changed. Anyway, SPOILERS FOR THE HOUSE OF THE DRAGON SEASON 2 FINALE AHEAD so scroll these memes at your own risk.
Say hello to Lohar. In the season finale of House of the Dragon, Tyland Lannister (Jefferson Hall), King Aegon’s Master of Ships, is tasked with shoring up the Triarchy in support of Team Green. But before the Triarchy pledges their men and their ships to Tyland, he must first win over the eccentric Lohar, who commands the fleet. Although making a late entrance into the season, Lohar, portrayed by Abigail Thorn, makes quite an impression in the finale, challenging Tyland to a mud wrestling competition and then making a raunchy request.
In George R. R. Martin’s Fire & Ice, the reference book which serves as the basis for House of the Dragon, Sharako Lohar is a male admiral that rules over a fleet of ships for the Triarchy. But on House of the Dragon, Lohar’s gender seems to be more fluid. Lohar’s comrades refer to their commander using he/him pronouns when telling Tyland that he needs to win over the admiral to secure the Triarchy fleet. “The commander of our fleet must agree to go with you. His name is Lohar,” says one captain. “The sailors are fiercely loyal to him. If he does not lead them they will not fight.” Tyland Lannister agrees to entertain this Lohar, assuming that he he will meet yet another gruff, male ship captain in Essos.
Enter Lohar: a tall, female-presenting person with long, Targaryen-adjacent hair and a bit of an attitude. Lohar does not explicitly state their gender, seeming to relish Tyland’s apparent confusion, and adding to the mind games by intentionally mispronouncing Tyland’s name. But Thorn, at least, refers to her character using she/her pronouns. “VERY excited to announce this – I’m joining the cast of HBO’s House of the Dragon I play Sharako Lohar – she’s the Triarchy’s new commander and you can see her in action soon,” she posted on X.
During their tete-a-tete, Lohar challenges Tyland. “I will not sail with a man who cannot best me,” Lohar says. Later in the episode, we learn that the proposed competition is a wild bout of mud wrestling, with Lohar and Tyland engaging in hand to hand physical combat. By the end of their tussle, it’s clear that Tyland has emerged victorious and won the respect of Lohar.
Over a celebratory feast, Lohar’s respect for Tyland turns into something deeper and more intimate. After Tyland sings a little ditty before their meal, Lohar is clearly infatuated with the Lannister, and agrees to sail with the Lannister and fight for Team Green. But war is not the only thing on Lohan’s mind. “You are a handsome man and have proven your worth and your virility,” Lohar says to Tyland. “I wish to have children by you.” A confused Tyland asks Lohar to clarify what they mean. Lohar states their intentions plainly: “I want you to fuck my wives.” A bewildered Tyland is nothing but a gentleman, asking, “How many?” The finale ends with the unlikely duo of Lohar and Tyland aboard a ship, leading a fleet of ships into battle.
Abigail Thorn, who plays Lohar, is a British performer and YouTuber who is relatively new to the acting space. In 2021, Thorn came out as a trans woman in the YouTube video Coming Out As Trans – A Little Public Statement, and has been a vocal advocate for trans rights and healthcare. This year, she also appeared on the Star Wars television series The Acolyte.
Although Lohar only just joined the fray, we should have more time with them and their wives next season. HBO just announced that House of the Dragonwill continue for two more installments, with season three to begin production in early 2025 and season four to close out the series. Fire & Ice might provide a peek at what the future may hold for the Lohar and Tyland. (Warning: spoilers for potential House of the Dragon content follow.)
In the book, Lohar and Tyland lead a naval attack on Team Black and the Velaryon fleets, led by Lord Corlys (Steve Toussaint). The ensuing skirmish, called the Battle of the Gullet, is a bloody and terrible battle that claims the lives of many major House of the Dragon players including Jaceyrs Velaryon and his dragon, Vermax. Lohar makes it out alive, claiming the young prince Viserys as a prisoner and selling him to a Lysene magister named Bambarro Bazanne. While Lohar makes it out of the Battle of the Gullet, according to Fire and Ice, they are eventually murdered due to a personal matter involving a courtesan called The Black Swan.
The season finale of House of the Dragon is here, and Chris Ryan, Joanna Robinson, and Mallory Rubin are here to give you their instant reactions to all of the drama in Westeros. From Ulf’s courtly faux pas to Daemon coming through in Harrenhal to another unexpected reunion, Talk the Thrones will be there!
Hosts: Chris Ryan, Joanna Robinson, and Mallory Rubin Production: Jack Wilson, Felipe Guilhermino, Nick Kosut, Tony Perry, Bobby Gibbons, John Richter, Ryan Todd, Chia Hao, Aleya Zenieris, Arjuna Ramgopal, Steve Ahlman, Jomi Adeniran, Abreanna Corrales, and Yvonne Wang
The queens have come up with their very own gambit. On the finale of House of the Dragon season two, “The Queen That Ever Was,” Team Black and Team Green assemble their armies as Dowager Queen Alicent (Olivia Cooke) and Queen Rhaenyra Targaryen (Emma D’Arcy) meet once again in secret. During their fateful encounter, Alicent makes an offer Rhaenyra can’t refuse—but it comes at a significant price for the dowager queen.
Before Alicent and Rhaenyra’s clandestine meet-up, both queens were gearing up for the great war to (finally) begin. After receiving a raven from Ser Simon (Simon Russell Beale) questioning Daemon’s fidelity, Rhaenyra flew to Harrenhal to see herself whether Daemon was loyal. Thankfully, Alice Rivers (Gayle Rankin) granted Daemon (Matt Smith) a vision of the future—including white walkers, war, and even the mother of dragons Daenerys Targaryen (Emilia Clark)—that inspired him to pledge his loyalty to Rhaenyra and cast his dreams of taking the iron throne aside.
As Daemon and his army prepare to fight for Team Black, Team Green receives a new crop of soldiers courtesy of Tyland Lannister (Jefferson Hall) and his mud wrestling prowess. Tyland has convinced the Triarchy to pledge their men to King Aegon (Tom Glynn-Carney) and Team Green, but only if he wins over Lohar (Abigail Thorne), the fighters’ eccentric leader. After an epic mud wrestling battle, Lohar pledges all of their men to Team Green and, as a bonus, is so taken with Tyland that they ask him for another favor: “I want you to fuck my wives,” says Lohar.
While Tyland is asked to sire children, Alicent is asked to sacrifice one of hers. In an echo of their secret meeting in episode three, Alicent travels to Dragonstone to plead with Rhaenyra to stop the brewing war. Alicent tells Rhaenyra that she no longer wants her family to rule Westeros, and offers Rhaenyra the opportunity to come to King’s Landing and take the Iron Throne without any bloodshed or battle. Rhaenyra points out that if she were to take the throne, she’d be forced to publicly depose and murder King Aegon II—Alicent’s eldest son. In a devastating moment, Alicent is forced to make a decision: will she sacrifice her son for the good of the realm? By the end of their exchange, it seems Alicent has agreed to Rhaenyra’s terms, and she leaves Dragonstone with the knowledge that she sentenced Aegon to death.
What Alicent doesn’t know is that the crippled Aegon is no longer in King’s Landing. After being humiliated by Rhaenyra’s new, lowborn dragon riders, an embarrassed Prince Regent Aemond (Ewan Mitchell) takes out his rage on innocent citizens, burning down the entire village of Sharp Point with his dragon Vhagar. The regent prince’s warpath inspires Larys (Matthew Needham) to tell Aegon that it’s time to flee the Red Keep. “The prince regent is going to killl you,” Larys tells a bedridden and miserable Aegon. And with that, the unlikely duo set off to escape King’s Landing across the narrow seas.
The end of season two provides more questions than answers. Which army has the upper hand, Team Black or Team Green? What will Rhaenyra and Alicent do if they come to King’s Landing and find that Aegon has absconded? Will Rhaenyra’s new dragon riders stay loyal to her? We won’t know until the next season of the already-renewedHouse of the Dragon returns to HBO.
Kieran Bew knows the power of good facial hair. He credits the look for Hugh Hammer’s success taming the massive Vermithor in House of the Dragon’s seventh episode of the season, “The Red Sowing.”
“I had a big beard, and everybody was discussing whether I should shave it off or not,” Bew says. “And I just said: I love Vermithor’s design of his teeth, sort of looking like they’re going in all different directions; like if he bit you, it would be the most painful thing, almost like being trapped in an Iron Maiden or something. And I felt like it was a slightly funny joke about people who have dogs, end up looking like their dogs.”
Bew was aware that Hugh’s whole season arc was leading up to his showdown with Vermithor, and aware of how many aesthetic choices were there to set up the depth of the decision to go to Dragonstone: He kept the beard, and his hair the same color as Daemon’s (if not Viserys’), with a bit of Bew’s own natural hue mixed own. And as he watched Hugh’s agitation with the ruling class of King’s Landing grow, Bew found the role in little beats, like being so desperate for food that he punches a fellow commoner to get a bag.
To him, the scenes were “always like a skeleton” for the larger character arc. But like any good actor (or, as is the case with interpreting a lot of Fire & Blood’s textbook-like account, historian), it was his job to piece together the lived humanity between that.
“To get given a scene where my character is revealing to his wife something enormous […] and he’s arguing to go on a suicide mission,” Bew marvels. “That’s how much he’s decided to keep that a secret. Because of shame, because of how [his mom] behaved, because of his upbringing, because of how painful it was.
“He’s been trying to do something else. And now he’s saying: Actually this is the only thing I can do. I’m in so much pain; I’ve got to do something, I’ve got to do this.”
And so, Bew took all that energy into that final scene of episode 7, where Rhaenyra’s plans to find Vermithor a rider go awry. To him, Hugh’s desperation — to do something, to matter — was near suicidal, even if he’s still afraid in the moment. “He’s come all this way, the stakes are so high, he thinks the dice is slightly loaded in his favor. But it’s still fucking terrifying,” Bew says. “How do you strategize against something that can move so quickly and squash you and drop people on your head on fire?”
Of course, his delay had some upside. “The one thing about [it] going to shit is: the odds improve.”
For inspiration for what the ultimate moment of connection should feel like for Hugh and the Bronze Fury, Bew drew from his time on set — specifically, approaching a crew member’s little Yorkshire terrier on set, who kept trying to go for the tennis ball eyes of pre-CG Vermithor.
“At the moment of claiming, it has to be this, where this dog likes me, this dog is connecting to me,” Bew says, acknowledging there is a difference between a tiny terrier and a dragon the size of four houses. “It’s a connection that’s, like, that delicate. But before we get there, it’s overwhelming. And it’s terrifying. And it requires throwing everything in.”
And in Bew’s mind, everything about the way Hugh claims Vermithor comes from that desperation. Unlike other dragons, Vermithor is looking for a rider who can, as the saying goes, match his freak. So it’s no surprise that Hugh’s aggressive approach spoke to the mighty dragon, given that nothing about the way Hugh claims Vermithor is selfless, in that regard — even stepping in as the dragon targets another Targaryen bastard. After all, there’s nothing like the fear of failure to turn something impossible into a race.
“He’s been pushed to this. Something about growing up underneath the shadow of the aristocracy, the family that he has been rejected from that he’s not part of — he’s not only not part of it, he’s connected to it in a way that is full of shame, that he’s angry about,” Bew says. “If Vermithor chooses her, then what happens to me?”
Almost 9/10 times when someone calls a movie or a show “too woke,” I do a hard ignore, lest there be an unsavory exchange of words. But when the show in question is a medieval fantasy like House of the Dragon, you can’t help but give a second thought to its morality.
When Game of Thrones first landed on our TV screens, we were all rightly shocked because we’d never seen something so ruthless, brutal, and, erm … incestuous. When Ned Stark lost his head and when the seemingly good guys committed war crimes without blinking an eye, it was accepted because that’s how savage, survival-driven, and problematic the medieval times were. Patriarchy reigned supreme. Men were beasts, and women weren’t all that great, either. Every character was fifty shades of grey.
(HBO)
There were enough complaints of violence-porn on screen against the series that when House of the Dragon arrived and chose to refrain from it, there was a collective sigh of relief. The female gaze in the sex scenes was welcome, and so were the anti-war statements that the show was subtly making by having its female characters like Alicent, Rhaenyra, and Rhaenys refrain from rash violence while doing everything they could to keep the peace.
And yet, one user on Reddit pointed out that House of The Dragon wasn’t letting its characters be medieval enough. And their observations weren’t all that off.
Leaked spoilers ahead for House of the Dragon season 2 finale in the Reddit post!
The author of the post lists six reasons for claiming what they do, all of which point out how multiple characters like Aegon, Aemond, or Rhaenyra are shamed for doing something that would actually be quite acceptable for medieval society, especially during a time of war. Two points, in particular, stood out to me—the aversion to war and the smallfolk thinking they deserve the same comforts as the God-like Kings and Queens that rule over them.
(HBO)
By making Rhaenyra and Alicent the initial moral markers of the story, House of the Dragon is trying to show a gradual decline and breaking of those morals for maximum emotional impact. Both of these characters are mothers with the instinct for protection and peace and are risk and conflict-averse. But of course, when sh*t hits the fan, their anger overruns any moral responsibility they feel towards their people, and the war still happens.
However, as the post’s author points out, people of those times, especially in such positions of power, would never think twice about the collateral damage in war or waging a war itself. Just look back at Game of Thrones and you’ll see how even someone as maternal as Catelyn Stark didn’t think twice before amassing an army and letting her firstborn lead it to avenge her husband’s execution. War was an inevitability in those times, and being a woman didn’t mean you were a pacifist who would judge others for causing so much bloodshed.
(HBO)
This point is a strong argument against the entire Harrenhal arc for Daemon Targaryen, who, through his visions, is being therapized into feeling remorse for something as basic as wanting to rule. It’s natural for members of royal families to harbor that ambition and be jealous when someone else gets it, especially when that person is your weaker sibling or your wife because feminism didn’t exist and women in those times were not considered fit to rule!
The other point about the socio-economic disparity that the smallfolk took offense at might be a stretch because, of course, a king can’t (or rather, shouldn’t) be feasting when his subjects are dying from a lack of resources. Once again, though, the argument persists that in those times, it was completely normal for the royal family to continue living a life of luxury during a war instead of opening their kitchens and treasuries to the poor.
So yes, House of the Dragon is uncharacteristically sanitized and moral for a medieval-inspired fantasy. Perhaps this is to make the immoral choices stand out in stark contrast, which would then make the downfall of a once god-adjacent House Targaryen seem even more tragic.
What do you think?
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House of the Dragon is back, and the Dance of the Dragons is underway. The Targaryen war of succession will come down to control—who can control their impulses, their sycophants, and, yes, their dragons. With each passing episode, The Ringer will examine how Westeros’s key players are aligning their pieces on the board. As the saying goes, chaos can be a ladder. Welcome to the House of the Dragon power rankings.
The penultimate episode of House of the Dragon’s second season,“The Red Sowing,” is pretty much made for power rankings. Every episode of Dragon and Game of Thrones is ultimately about power, but this one presents its power dynamics more clearly than most. Often, in this franchise, shifts in standing are communicated subtly, with words or a glance. Other times, though, characters convey dominance or obeisance with an unmistakable, full-body display—the human equivalent of a dog rolling over, vulnerable belly to the sky.
I’m talking, of course, about bending the knee.
Early in Episode 7, newly minted dragonrider Addam of Hull bends the knee to Rhaenyra. “You kneel quickly for a man so suddenly elevated,” she says—wary, but eager to add to her air power.
Later, at Harrenhal, Willem Blackwood brags, “They who bent the knee to the usurper have been brought to heel.” Then he bends the knee to his new liege lord, Oscar Tully … who promptly orders his execution. Willem is still doing a deep knee bend as Daemon cuts off his head.
Finally, Vermithor and Silverwing bend their knees, and their necks, to Hugh and Ulf, respectively. (Dragons do have knees, right?)
All of which reminded me (sorry) of something Donald Trump Jr. recently said about conservative media mogul Rupert Murdoch. “There was a time where if you wanted to survive in the Republican Party, you had to bend the knee to him or to others,” Trump Jr. toldAxios earlier this month. “I don’t think that’s the case anymore.”
Even if Murdoch is no longer kneel-worthy, Trump Jr.’s preferred running mate for his father, JD Vance, gave his first post-nomination interview to a Murdoch-owned outlet, Fox News. Vance’s, well, sudden elevation prompted numerous mentions of knee-bending by political pundits, such as this one by New York Times columnist David French: “Trump loves it when his previous critics bend the knee, and few people have bent the knee more deeply than Vance.”
A decade ago, most of America was blissfully ignorant of everything Trump Jr. said. But there’s no way he would’ve used the specific phrase “bend the knee” on, say, the last season of The Apprentice in 2010, right? Game of Thrones didn’t premiere until 2011. And seemingly thanks to Thrones (and, perhaps, A Song of Ice and Fire),these days, everybody “bends the knee.”
Thrones haslongbeenastaple of political discourse. (If you think Vance’s stances have been divisive, check out what one of the Democratic VP hopefuls just said.) But it’s not just the political class that’s newly enamored of this saying. The culture’s increasing knee-diness is evident in this graph from the Google Books Ngram Viewer, which displays data through 2019:
Search traffic tells the same story, via Google Trends:
What if we compare “bend the knee” to a similar phrase?
Kissing the ring is out. Bending the knee is in. (By the way, if you’re wondering why “kiss the ring” popped in 2012, you can credit DJ Khaled. That 2017 spike for “bend the knee” was all Jon and Dany.)
George R.R. Martin didn’t come close to coining “bend the knee,” the way that he seems to have coined, say, the specific phrase “sweet summer child” (with its modern meaning of “naïve”). But he’s certainly made us say it much more often. Words are wind—another phrase Martin has seared into our brains—but wind can fan a fire, and every reference to knee bending reminds us that the world has collectively bent the knee to Martin’s (and HBO’s) creations. Which is, after all, why you’re reading these words … which are supposed to be about ranking characters.
1. Rhaenyra Targaryen
In a single episode, Rhaenyra doubled the number of dragons at her disposal on Dragonstone. And we’re not talking tiny ones, like Daeron’s dragon, who reportedly took wing this week in Oldtown. These are combat-ready, adult dragons, including one who’s almost as massive as Vhagar (and may be more fierce). Before receiving these reinforcements, Rhaenyra said, “I have only Syrax who may give Aemond a second thought.” But by the end of the episode, Rhaenyra has more dragons than she knows what to do with, and Aemond and Vhagar are forced to turn tail.
Not only did Rhaenyra assemble enough riders to turn Dragonstone into a no-fly zone for Team Green and potentially establish air superiority over the mainland, she did so by addressing another longstanding deficiency: her subpar political instincts. This week, she showed some serious savvy and spine by ignoring the naysayers—including Bartimos Celtigar, the dragonkeepers, and her own son and heir—recognizing the merits of Mysaria’s suggestion, and making Vermithor come when she called. She overcame her own prejudices in the interest of expediency and showed an unsuspected knack for pregame pep talks. Clear eyes, full hearts, quick fuse!
On top of all that, Rhaenyra—unbeknownst to her—gained the allegiance and swords of the Riverlords, who supported her despite Daemon’s attempt to soft-launch himself as king. Perhaps her troubles with her coup-curious consort are coming to an end. Plus, she got to meet some of her extended family! Sadly, most of her relatives’ visits didn’t last long. Family gatherings can be so incendiary. This one wasn’t heartwarming, but it was, well, warm.
2. Bastards
Episode 7 was quite a come-up for bastards, one of Westeros’s traditionally downtrodden groups. As a bastard born myself, I salute the ascendance of my fellow out-of-wedlock kids; Addam, Hugh, and Ulf may be illegitimate, but they proved that they’re legit. Even if Rhaenyra was just grinning and bearing the bastards in her midst, they came up clutch enough that the queen couldn’t front about the bastards bailing her out. Who knew that in this war among the highborn, the baseborn would prove so pivotal? (Other than millions of readers of Fire & Blood.)
Of course, things didn’t go great for every bastard: In Westeros, events that start with “The Red” and end with “-ing” must be bad news for someone. As is often the case, the sowing wasn’t so bad, but the reaping was a problem.
Me sowing: Haha fuck yeah!!! Yes!!
Me reaping: Well this fucking sucks. What the fuck.
If I have any critique of Rhaenyra, who was Reaganing this week, it’s that the bastard barbecue in the Dragonmont may have been avoidable. I couldn’t help but notice that she and her retinue got well out of range of Vermithor’s flames before Silver Denys’s ill-fated dragon-taming attempt. Why not send out the aspiring dragonriders one by one to decrease casualties and increase the chances of a successful bonding, instead of making them cluster together for maximal collateral damage and then barring their escape? I don’t expect Rhaenyra to care about the bastards’ well-being, but you’d think she’d care about upping the odds of finding a match.
3. Hugh Hammer
How Hugh like me now? When this episode started, Hugh was an unpaid contractor in King’s Landing, bereaved and bereft. Now he commands the baddest dragon on Team Black, if not in all the land. Unlike Ulf, he looks the part of a dragonlord, but he didn’t master Vermithor just by being a nepo baby with the right Valyrian midi-chlorian count. He won his dragon—and, perhaps, his fortune—by being bold and courageous. “I have to do something!” he exclaimed. Well, that was certainly something. His next chat with Kat should be a fun one.
4. Addam of Hull
“We spent the whole of our lives in the shadow of the Sea Snake’s great castle,” Addam complained last week. Now he has his own room in an even greater castle. Corlys said it: “How you have come up in the world.”
Addam doesn’t just have a way with Seasmoke; he also has a way with words. As the first of the non-Targaryens to claim a dragon, Addam had the toughest time convincing Rhaenyra of his intentions. But by pledging his loyalty and bending his knee, he opened the queen’s closed mind to the possibility of “an army of bastards.” “The order of things has changed, Your Grace,” Mysaria says to Rhaenyra. This Ad(d)am actually changed the hierarchy of power.
Pulling off the “impossible” stunt of claiming a dragon—and being rewarded with a sweet cloak, plus some time off work—was nice enough. But after last week’s lament about the Sea Snake—“Me he ignores … as he always has”—you know that “Well done” from Daddy was the greatest prize of all. Hey, people have probably done more dangerous things for parental approval.
5. Ulf the Dragonlord
So, Ulf wasn’t just boasting about being the blood of the dragon for the free drinks. Yes, he had to be peer pressured into leaving King’s Landing, and sure, he covered himself in mud more than glory when he accidentally stumbled into Silverwing’s lair. But Baelon’s sot of a son—at least, he’s believed to be Baelon’s—is now a genuine dragonrider who ends the episode by soaring over the city where he once huddled among the smallfolk. It’s a pleasure to see someone flying just for fun, for once.
It’s nice work if you can get it. Still, it’s sort of a letdown that you evidently don’t have to do anything to claim a dragon. Hugh, at least, stood up to Vermithor and faced his dragon down. Ulf literally falls down in front of his dragon, yet Silverwing accepts him. I know Silverwing is laid-back by dragon standards, so maybe she sees the more mellow Ulf as a kindred spirit, but shouldn’t claiming a dragon be like breaking a horse or taming an ikran—a task that requires some skill or bravery? I guess it’s sort of a soulmate thing, but the bond would be more meaningful to me if it had to be built up over time or earned through an act that revealed the rider’s character. And shouldn’t you have dragonriding lessons before you go joyriding—kind of uncontrollably, to be fair—over Blackwater Bay? How much art is there to dragonriding, really?
That nitpick aside: There’s undoubtedly an art to depicting dragons on-screen, and the combination of HBO’s budget and its VFX artists’ skill made this episode a masterstroke in that respect. And though there’s only so much depth to the dragonseeds, the series has made major strides toward rectifying the first season’s lack of lowborn characters.
6. Mysaria
So, uh … are Mysaria and Rhaenyra going to talk about that (truly) spontaneous face-sucking sesh from last week, or are they just going to pretend it didn’t happen? Granted, these two have many matters other than making out on their minds. But if Mysaria thought Rhaenyra looked good with a sword at her side last week, you can’t tell me that the sight of the queen cowing a dragon and intimidating Aemond didn’t do it for her.
Whether or not Rhaenyra and Mysaria smooch again, Mysaria has once again demonstrated her platonic utility to the queen and solidified her status as Team Black’s most valuable adviser. You have to hand it to her: Keeping track of fourscore Targaryen progeny—some of whom don’t look at all like typical Targaryens—is a nifty feat of sleuthing and surveillance. It’s not like she has 23andMe.
7. Oscar Tully
Well, now we know how House Tully has kept the factious Riverlords in line: by applying a deft diplomatic touch that young Oscar seems to have inherited. Lord Oscar isn’t quite as precocious as Lady Lyanna Mormont, but he seems like an old hand at reading a room of proud rivermen. In private, he professes uncertainty about whether his vassals will heed his authority, but once the spotlight is on him, he performs flawlessly while projecting a winsome humility that the Targaryens lack. He even audaciously dresses down Daemon to his face, in front of a noble audience, knowing that Daemon can do nothing if he wants to walk away with a win.
“I hope to begin well, and go on from there,” Oscar tells his bannermen. Well, the beginning is going great. Why can’t Oscar be king? Can we get this kid a dragon?
8. Alyn of Hull
Addam is a dragonrider; might Alyn possess that power, too? He doesn’t know, nor does he care to find out. “I am of salt and sea,” he says when Corlys implies that maybe both of his bastard sons could bolster Rhaenyra’s dragon depth chart. “I yearn for nothing else.” You have to respect someone who understands their strengths and knows what they want in life, but even if he’d rather do his job in the background, Alyn’s low-profile life is probably behind him.
9. Corlys Velaryon
Corlys is Rhaenyra’s hand, so in general, events that help her also help him. And in this case, his sons are instrumental to her success—though he hasn’t publicly acknowledged them as his sons. Maybe it’s High Tide—er, high time—that he did. Rhaenys is dead, and Laenor’s long gone; now that Rhaenyra is indebted to Addam and Alyn and the Targaryens’ bastards have been brought into the fold, what reason does he have to hide them? “The Sea Snake would sooner have High Tide claimed by the sea than call us his sons,” Alyn told Addam last week. That was before Addam mounted a dragon and Alyn smuggled two other future riders to Dragonstone. Come on, Corlys: Let the father-son bonding begin.
10. Jacaerys Velaryon
Jace has been a voice of reason and an effective emissary for the blacks, even when Rhaenyra was rudderless, but their roles reverse this week when his mom’s new plan puts him on tilt. I get it: All that talk about bastards, and the sight of so many dragonseeds who look more quintessentially Targaryen than he does, are dredging up some insecurities. So is suddenly finding his dragon so outclassed. Pouting isn’t a good look on him, but hopefully it’s healthy that he and his mother had the Harwin talk; sometimes it’s good to get these things out there.
Perhaps Jace is right to be skeptical; we’ll see whether Rhaenyra’s pride goes before a fall. But Jace: You have to win the war before you stress about succession. Also, the smallfolk are saving your side’s ass, yet you’re calling underprivileged people “mongrels”? Come on, man. This is the Dance of the Dragons, not Project 2025.
11. Daemon Targaryen
Daemon accomplished his mission—uniting the Riverlands—but he did so, inadvertently, by uniting the region against him. He also suffered the indignity of a tongue-lashing from a whelp of a lord Daemon had dismissed in their last meeting. And thenhe dispensed “justice” by murdering a man for following his own orders.
Willem’s bloody demise extended a violent motif from this season. The first episode started with giving head and ended with taking one. In Episode 2, Jaehaerys’s killer, Blood, got caught head-handed, then had his head bashed in. In Episode 4, Daemon envisioned beheading young Rhaenyra. And this week, he decapitated Blackwood, who was doing Daemon’s bidding. By swinging his sword, Daemon tacitly admits that he deserves death.
“I don’t need their love,” Daemon says. “I need their swords.” Unlike Oscar, he doesn’t realize that gaining the former might make obtaining the latter more likely—or that people fight harder for causes they care about. However, he does show some signs of growth. In his latest Harrenhal hallucination, Daemon visits Viserys as an old man. “You always wanted it, Daemon,” the decrepit king says, holding out his crown clasped in one bony hand. “Do you want it still?” To his credit, Daemon doesn’t take it. Maybe he’s ready to give up the ghost, so to speak, and rededicate himself to supporting Viserys’s rightful heir.
12. Larys Strong
Larys showed a lousy nose for news in dismissing Ironrod’s intel about Seasmoke’s new rider—unless he’s trying to sabotage Aemond—but who wants to be the bearer of bad whispers, anyway? The real problem for Larys isn’t one whiff on a whisper; it’s that he’s hitched his star to a king who hardly has the will to live. Having been rebuffed in his bid to be Aemond’s hand, Larys pivoted to currying favor with the nominal monarch, whom he thinks will welcome his help adjusting to a less mobile life. Now his own survival and advancement depend on Aegon’s—hence the strict regime Larys has prescribed in his informal capacity as the king’s drill sergeant/personal trainer/physical therapist. I see the vision, but I’m not sure Larys picked the right pupil. He does lend a hand to Aegon in this episode, but it could be awhile before Aegon is in any kind of condition for him to serve as one.
13. Grand Maester Orwyle
Orwyle has little power, per se, but he’s a healer—and in wartime, those are much in demand. I don’t see why he has to take orders from Larys, though, so he should probably put his foot down. Larys tends to respond to that.
14. Aegon Targaryen
The good news is that the king is conscious and semi-ambulatory. The bad news is that he doesn’t want to be. Also, he has to be hidden away, lest his not-so-loving subjects see how weak and disfigured their monarch has become. The greatest indignity, though, is that he takes a spill during physical therapy because his cane cracks. Aegon styles himself King of the Andals, the Rhoynar, and the First Men, Lord of the Seven Kingdoms, and Protector of the Realm. Is a solid walking stick too much to ask?
15. Aemond Targaryen
Tough look for my guy One-Eye. Not only is his brother (slowly) on the mend, endangering his regency, but his Small Council is much smaller than usual. Worst of all, he’s no longer invincible on Vhagar, whose Swiss-cheese wings and wattle are making her look a little old. Until this week, the blacks could’ve triple-teamed Vhagar and still stood to lose, so great was Vhagar’s size and strength advantage over any of Rhaenyra’s individual dragons. But even Vhagar wouldn’t survive a six- or seven-on-one attack—especially not with Vermithor, who’s nearly as large, in the mix. With her revamped roster, Rhaenyra could put the Vhagar Rules into effect while holding a dragon or three in reserve. As his 180 at the end of this episode shows, Aemond knows it. If he nears Dragonstone, he’ll be at great risk … but if he flies anywhere else in the realm, he’ll leave the city exposed.
16. Alicent Hightower
“Nothing is clean here,” Alicent says, staring at a rat that looks at home in her chambers. It can’t have helped that her son had the ratcatchers killed … but who bears more blame for Aegon’s ascent to the throne than Alicent? It would seem that the list of things that aren’t clean includes the dowager queen’s conscience, and understandably so.
In an effort to cleanse that much, at least, Alicent goes glamping in the Kingswood with Rickard Thorne and tries to wash away her sins. When she emerges from the figurative baptism, she finds she’s in no rush to return to court. When Thorne—who seems a little less enthused about this outdoors adventure—asks, more or less, when she means to release him from roughing it, Alicent answers, “I’m not yet certain I do.”
At least Alicent got some screen time this week, unlike estranged slam piece Criston Cole, who’s missing in action. (I can’t say that I missed the man.) She’s plummeting in the power rankings; if she falls much further, she might cease to merit Kingsguard protection, and she’d have to go glamping alone. But her demotion would be worth it if it came with a corresponding drop in the misery rankings. Maybe this dark night of Alicent’s soul will be for the best: Hasn’t she done enough damage, to Westeros and herself? If proximity to the crown is crushing, as Daemon’s vision of Viserys says, then Alicent is probably better off away from the rats and the rat race.
T-17. Baela and Rhaena Targaryen
“It must be the dragon who speaks,” Rhaenyra says in Episode 7. Evidently it mustn’t be either Baela or Rhaena who speaks, because neither of them had a line this week. At least Rhaena is hot on Sheepstealer’s trail, not that Team Black seems to need more dragons right now. Back in Episode 6 of Season 1, Rhaena griped, “Father ignores me.” Good news: If Addam of Hull’s example is any guide, there’s no better way to get a distant dad’s attention than to claim a dragon. Then again, in that same Season 1 episode, Rhaena’s late mother told her, “If you wish to be a rider, you must claim that right.” So maybe Rhaena’s doing it aaaall for Leyna Laena.
19. King’s Landing Security
First, Daemon sneaked into King’s Landing and hired assassins to kill a member of the royal family within Maegor’s Holdfast. Next, Rhaenyra herself sneaked into the sept to see Alicent, right under the noses of the dowager queen’s guards. Now 80 dragonseeds have sneaked out of the city at Rhaenyra’s behest. By contrast, it took an identical twin of a Kingsguard member for the greens to (briefly) breach the blacks’ defenses. Granted, it’s easier to lock down Dragonstone than the capital city, but is there no limit to the incompetence of King’s Landing security and counterintelligence? I’d say “heads must roll,” but as we established, a lot of heads have rolled already.
20. Hugh’s Daughter
Farewell, Whatever Your Name Was. I’ll miss the mopping of your feverish brow, but I guess you died on the way back to your home planet. I’m sorry that the lettuce Hugh stole last week wasn’t enough to sustain you.
Hosts: Chris Ryan, Joanna Robinson, and Mallory Rubin Production: Jack Wilson, Felipe Guilhermino, Chris Wohlers, Kevin Cureghian, Bobby Gibbons, Jonathan Frias, Ryan Todd, Tony Perry, Cory McConnell, Aleya Zenieris, Arjuna Ramgopal, Steve Ahlman, Jomi Adeniran, Abreanna Corrales, and Yvonne Wang
When we have that shot underwater of Olivia’s beautiful red hair moving into the camera, I wanted everyone to say she’s gone. And then she moves and she opens her eyes. And then there’s this magical thing that happens where you see what she’s seeing and she sees the bird in the sky and you’re like, she’s free as a bird.
This episode introduced viewers to a brand new character in Oscar Tully (Archie Barnes). He makes a really big splash and puts Daemon (Matt Smith) on the defensive. Can you talk a little bit about that scene?
Archie, what a young, special talent. It’s so hard to find these young actors that can really own a space. We needed an actor that was going to be Like, how can you stand up to Matt Smith? I remember when Archie and I first started talking about the scene, he was like, “I’m so nervous. How would I ever take control of all of these houses? I’m so young. How would Daemon respect me?” We started talking about the layers of that. “Well, why are you the head of house? How do you think you were raised?”
If you are growing up in the house Tully, and you are a child of the lord you’re going to work in the room where your masters run the Riverlands. You’re going to have actually been in the room since you were a a little boy.
You know every one of those river lords better than anyone else in that Godawood. You’ve spent time with every one of them. You’ve heard them barter sheep, barter money, you’ve negotiated fights from the side of that table. So you’re not coming in to meet Daemon cold. You’re coming in to meet Damon as an intelligent, experienced, young leader.
I got to hand it to Archie, because that’s the homework he did. When he showed up on the day, it was awesome during the rehearsal to see Matt kind of, like, chuckle a little bit. You can kind of see it in his performance. He has this, like, “you’re way more than I thought.” [Oscar] earns the respect of Damon Targaryen and that’s really special.
What should we come away from this episode thinking going into the finale?
Coming off of that final shot with Rhaenyra and her army of nuclear weapons, the Queen has more dragons than have ever been held there. I think what we’re worried about is, is Daemon aligned or not? He’s got a big army that just joined his forces. Is that army for the Queen Rhaenyra? Is it for, the King Daemon Targaryen? Or is it for someone else? What’s going to happen there?
I think Aemond is set up in such a way that he’s lost faith in his small council, and he feels like he needs to take matters into his own hands, and we don’t know how far Aemond is willing to go. And what’s Alicent going to do now that she’s been baptized? She’s heading right back to that Dowager’s suite. What’s her plan? Is she going to do something to stop the war on her end? And what’s her approach in diplomacy?
When we come out of episode seven, we basically have a loaded gun. That was the concept that Ryan [Kondall] and Sara [Hess] has talked about constantly. The tee up for the finale of this season has to be about all the guns that are pointed at each other in a standoff. We have to feel like the stakes are as high as they can get, and at any second, those guns are going to go off and it’s going to be messy. I’m hoping that we feel really nervous at the end of this episode.