House Of The Dragon: Season 1 Episode 5 Trailer
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We are officially halfway through the Game of Thrones spin-off. With only five episodes left, fans can expect the rest of the season to continue delivering episodes on a weekly basis. If House of the Dragon follows its usual schedule, this is when the final half of the season will air:
There's another bloody wedding making its way to the world of Game of Thrones. House of the Dragon isn't going to have a devastating Red Wedding situation on its hands, but there is trouble brewing for some characters as they try to celebrate an upcoming wedding. The trailer for the show's fifth episode was released on Sunday, following the debut of episode four, and it teases another wedding gone wrong.
At the end of the fourth episode of House of the Dragon, Rhaenyra is told that she will have to marry Laenor Velaryon in an effort to fortify their two houses. By marrying those two, the strongest houses in the realm will have another link between them, and Rhaenyra's claim to the throne will become even stronger.
One of the scenes in the trailer shows Ser Criston Cole fighting with another man, seemingly beating him while he's already on the ground. While we don't have context to that altercation yet, Criston and Rhaenyra do have an intimate connection. The pair slept together in the fourth episode, so Criston has seemingly become more than just Rhaenyra's bodyguard. That could easily become a reason for him to get in a fight at her wedding, a wedding that she has made clear she'd prefer not happen.
House of the Dragon received a straight-to-series order in October 2019, with casting beginning in July 2020 and principal photography starting in April 2021 in the United Kingdom. The series premiered on August 21, 2022, with the first season consisting of ten episodes. Five days after its premiere, the series was renewed for a second season. Sapochnik departed as showrunner after the first season, leaving Condal to serve as the sole showrunner for the second season.
Inspiration for the series came from English medieval history and the Anarchy, a war of succession after the death of Henry I of England between his nephew Stephen of Blois and only surviving child, Empress Matilda, who had fled to Normandy in the 12th century.[27][28][29] In January 2020, Casey Bloys, HBO's president of programming, stated that writing had begun.[30] Writers for the show include Condal and Sara Hess, who previously wrote for Deadwood and Orange Is the New Black.[31] Martin was also involved in the pre-production, providing input on storylines and reviewed scripts and rough cuts.[32] On August 26, 2022, less than a week after its premiere, the series was renewed for a second season.[33] On August 31, Miguel Sapochnik stepped down as director and co-showrunner for the second season, but remained an executive producer. Sapochnik stated, \"It was incredibly tough to decide to move on, but I know that it is the right choice for me, personally and professionally.\"[34] Alan Taylor, who directed Game of Thrones episodes, will join in season two and serve as an executive producer and direct.[35] Following the second season renewal, Bloys stated that the second season is expected to premiere in 2024.[36] Hess told Variety in late December 2022 that most of the season 2 had been written and will include a revenge plot against Alicent following the events of the first season finale.[37] The second season will consist of eight episodes.[38]
It was announced in September 2022 that Ramin Djawadi would compose the series score.[78]Djawadi composed the music for all eight seasons of Game of Thrones, which garnered him three Grammy Awards nominations and two Emmy Awards wins.[79][78] Djawadi and the showrunners opted to retain the original theme song, \"Game of Thrones Theme\", for House of the Dragon. The song debuted in the opening credits of the second episode.[80] In an interview with The A.V. Club, Djawadi stated that the original theme song was used to \"tie the shows together\".[81] For the first season, Djawadi, along with Condal and Sapochnik, watched each episode and made notes on when the music should occur and what mood the music should set.[82] Character motifs from Game of Thrones are also featured in House of the Dragon, including the Dragon theme \"Dracarys\".[83]
The production budget of the first season of House of the Dragon was nearly $200 million, which equates to under $20 million per episode.[88] In comparison, its parent series, Game of Thrones, cost around $100 million per season, beginning with nearly $6 million per episode from seasons one to five, around $10 million for every episode in seasons six and seven, and up to $15 million each episode in its eighth and final season, earning $285 million in profits per episode over its eight seasons.[89][90] According to Deadline Hollywood, the marketing budget was over $100 million, comparable to the budget for a blockbuster theatrical film.[91]
House of the Dragon premiered on August 21, 2022.[92] It is HBO's first new series to stream in 4K, Dolby Vision HDR and Dolby Atmos on its streaming platform HBO Max.[93] The first episode was released for free on YouTube on September 2, 2022.[94] The first-season finale was leaked online the week before the actual air date, with the full episode appearing on torrent sites.[95] According to HBO, the leak came from a Europe, the Middle East and Africa partner and it will \"aggressively\" monitor for additional leaks.[96]
Despite the praise, the show's first season did receive criticism for the depiction of violence, pacing and cinematography. Reviewing the early episodes, Rolling Stone and Entertainment Weekly said the series leaned too much on grand imagery and lacked the breakout supporting characters that Game of Thrones had.[118][119] Before the premiere, Martin stated that the series is similar to a Shakespearean tragedy with each character being morally grey with no \"character everybody's going to love\".[120] The Guardian stated the \"dullness\" of the characters makes the series more of a period drama than an action-adventure fantasy.[121] The Los Angeles Times and The New York Times cited the constant actor changes as a reason for the lack of emotional attachment to characters.[122][123] The graphic violence in the season premiere with a failed caesarean section was criticized for being excessive and, according to USA Today, \"exploitive and in poor taste\".[124][125][126] The time jumps throughout the first season were also noted for being jarring and causing confusion,[127][128] while George R. R. Martin defended them as being \"handled very well\".[129][130] In addition, the dark cinematography in Episode 7 was a point of criticism from both critics and fans alike.[131][132] HBO responded that the dimmed lighting in those scenes was an \"intentional creative decision\".[133] Game of Thrones faced similar criticism regarding the lighting of scenes in Season 8, with one of the show's cinematographers stating it was a \"deliberate choice\".[134][135]
According to Nielsen, the episode had a viewership of 327 million minutes or an estimated 5.03 million viewers on HBO Max in the U.S. during its first day.[140][b] It later estimated that the episode was watched by 10.6 million viewers on HBO Max in the first four days, with the number increasing to 14.5 million when including the viewership on the main HBO channel.[141] Samba TV meanwhile stated that 4.8 million U.S. households streamed the episode in the first four days.[142]
Financially, the budget for The Rings of Power is almost $450 million more than House of the Dragon.[88] Both series fared successfully in the ratings.[162] According to Nielsen and first-party data, The Rings of Power's first two episodes had more than 1.25 billion minutes of streaming minutes after three days of availability. In comparison, a few hours after the episode two premiere of House of the Dragon, the show had reached more than 1.06 billion minutes of streaming minutes.[c][141][163] Following the season finale for House of the Dragon, weekly streaming viewership passed 1 billion viewing minutes for the first time.[163] According to Nielsen data, The Rings of Power has a higher percentage of older viewers, with more than 70% of viewers being over the age of 35.[164] In any given week, The Rings of Power tended to have more streams than House of the Dragon given that the viewership of House of the Dragon was split between those watching online and those watching on HBO channel while that of The Rings of Power was online only. However, following both series debuts, streaming viewership for The Rings of Power decreased over the first season, while House of the Dragon viewership increased. The viewership of individual episodes of House of the Dragon also tended to increase over a number of weeks after the episodes became available while that of The Rings of Power dropped sharply after the first two weeks.[165] Despite the age gap in viewership, commentators have stated one of the reasons both shows did well was the consistent release schedule that helped create social-media buzz.[166][167] Both shows have highlighted the \"streaming wars\" between both Amazon and HBO and the entertainment industry as a whole.[168][169][170]
House of the Dragon:Season 1Part 1Part 2InformationEpisodes10[1]Premiere\"The Heirs of the Dragon\"[1]Finale\"The Black Queen\"[1]Release datesAugust 21, 2022[2] toOctober 23, 2022[2]Production datesMarch 26, 2021[3] toFebruary 14, 2022[4]DVD/Blu-rayDecember 20, 2022[5]Episode guideNextSeason 2[6]The first season of House of the Dragon premiered on August 21, 2022. It consists of ten episodes.
George R.R. Martin explained in a blog post on February 20, 2022, how the series was developed from conception to assigning specific scripts for the first season. In the early production phase, Martin himself collaborated with Ryan Condal on a pilot script for the first episode, but when the Long Night prequel pilot was suddenly rejected in October 2019, HBO greenlit a full first season for House of the Dragon - skipping the pilot stage entirely, surprising even Condal. In the early \"brainstorming\" stages outlining the series as a whole beyond the first season, Condal and Martin had a \"mini writers room\" with screenwriters Claire Kiechel, Wes Tooke, and Ti Mikkel. All three did contribute to ideas for the series as a whole, but Kiechel and Tooke departed for other projects before the writing process on specific Season 1 scripts began (thus they were not part of the \"writers' room\" roundtable meetings in Season 1). Ti Mikkel, however, is a writing assistant to Martin, and remained as part of the writers' room meetings for Season 1 itself (though she is not credited with writing a specific episode, Martin mentions her alongside the others as part of the Season 1 writing staff). 59ce067264