House of the Dragon first look review – this epic Game of Thrones prequel is a roaring success

The long-awaited follow-up to the fantasy drama is here – and it’s every bit as great as its predecessor in its heyday. It’s fun, fantastic-looking and seems set to get us hooked all over again

The Iron Throne has been taken out of storage and returned to the Great Hall of the Red Keep. The wardrobe department has de-mothballed its finest furs and thrown them round the shoulders of a new cast. The creator of High Valyrian, David J Peterson, has likewise been brought out of hibernation to supply new dialogue.

And there be dragons.

Yes! The long-awaited prequel to the epic fantasy series Game of Thrones, which dominated the televisual landscape for eight riotously expensive seasons is here. It is derived from parts of author George RR Martin’s 2018 bestseller Fire and Blood (the release was a bittersweet moment for fans who hoped he had been completing the Song of Ice and Fire book series from which Game of Thrones was adapted, rather than writing a prequel). House of the Dragon, then, is the tale of the Targaryens who began the whole bally thing.

Everyone who wasn’t in Game of Thrones or filming The Crown when principal photography started is here. House of the Dragon begins in the ninth year of King Viserys I Targaryen’s reign (played by Paddy Considine) – and about 200 years before we TV viewers first set foot in Westeros. His wife is pregnant. Their firstborn was a daughter, Rhaenyra (Milly Alcock), so everyone in the Seven Kingdoms is hoping for a male heir. Some of us at home are kind of hoping for another girl, otherwise Viserys’s arrogant, bellicose younger brother – and heir presumptive – Prince Daemon (Matt Smith) is going to kick off and there will be more plot than anyone knows what to do with.

Alas and alack. After a spectacularly bloody and pain-meds-free birth, mother and baby (boy) die. The King’s Hand, Ser Otto Hightower (Rhys Ifans) gives his boss five minutes to grieve before ordering his comely teenage daughter Alicent (Emily Carey) into her late mother’s dress and Viserys’s chamber to make herself useful to the king. This is a post-#MeToo prequel, so they bond over their shared griefs and his stone model of the Seven Kingdoms rather than dish up one of the rapey sex scenes so beloved of GoT. God, feminists ruin everything.

So here’s a pickle! Viserys knows – though he gets very narked when members of his council point it out to him – that Daemon is fundamentally unsuited to governing the realm. But he’s only got a lousy girl-child with any kind of claim to the throne instead. What to do, what to do? Nothing that makes anyone too happy, that’s for sure.

By the end of the first hour, all the main pieces are in play, countless political, domestic and actual storms are brewing, old alliances are being broken, new ones formed and treachery is never more than a spear’s length away. House of the Dragon looks set fair to become the game of political seven-dimensional chess that its predecessor was, designed to reward diehard fantasy fans in full measure without alienating the masses that will propel it to the top of the ratings.

For the avoidance of doubt and anxiety, the first hour also contains:

  • Bloody beatings

  • Bloody deaths

  • Terrible wigs

  • Extensive exchanges in High Valyrian

  • Boobs and bums in brothels (take THAT, feminists!)

  • Incesty vibes (AGAIN!)

  • A king’s council filled with self-interested twunts and one good man

  • Countless brewing political, domestic and actual storms

  • Alliances, counter-alliances, treacheries and broken loyalties

  • All the money up on screen

  • Dragons

By the end of the second hour, you can add more dragons, more extended exchanges in High Valyrian, a dragon’s egg, some decapitations, a hand in maggots, more bums and boobs, some arterial spray, narrative twists and turns that are still comprehensible (though we are still in the early stages and you can feel the barely controlled crowds of more jostling in the wings), a potential forbidden-love interest for Rhaenyra, and sailors fed to crabs – a lot more frightening than it sounds, actually.

In short, all is as it was in GoT’s heyday. Fun, propulsive, looking great and sounding passable. And that, after the bizarrely poor finale to what had been a roaring success of a show, is a relief. There are also signs that in the remaining eight episodes there will be much more of the magnificent Eve Best as Viserys’s cousin Rhaenys, known since her thwarted ascension to the Iron Throne as the Queen Who Never Was and I suspect to the writers as And One Who Might Be After All. Overall, a good time is coming.

  • Episode one of House of the Dragon airs on Sky Atlantic at 9pm on Monday 22 August in the UK. In the US, it’s available on Sunday 21 August at 9pm on HBO and HBO Max.

Contributor

Lucy Mangan

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
New trailer for Game of Thrones prequel is released
A fiery teaser for House of the Dragon reveals HBO’s much-hyped follow-up to the long-running fantasy hit

Benjamin Lee

05, May, 2022 @4:08 PM

Article image
House of the Dragon review – this Game of Thrones prequel is gorgeous, opulent television
George RR Martin’s world struts its way back on to our screens with utter confidence and brio. As captivating as it is gruesome, it’s like a greatest hits playlist of Westeros at its meatiest

Rebecca Nicholson

22, Aug, 2022 @9:15 PM

Article image
Production begins on season two of House of the Dragon
Fantasy prequel to Game of Thrones, starring Matt Smith and Emma D’Arcy, being filmed at UK studio

Jane Clinton

11, Apr, 2023 @10:07 PM

Article image
House of the Dragon finale review – this meticulous series saved its best episode for last
This knotty, character-based Game of Thrones prequel took a while to get there, but it’s set up an explosive second season. Hopefully it stops featuring gratuitously insensitive childbirth

Stuart Heritage

24, Oct, 2022 @9:10 PM

Article image
House of the Dragon: what can we expect from the Game of Thrones prequel?
With just a month to go, more details are emerging on arguably the most anticipated new TV series of the year

Stuart Heritage

20, Jul, 2022 @2:29 PM

Article image
House of the Dragon recap: episode five – a Red Wedding to rival Game of Thrones
The King and Rhaenyra go on a marital mission to Driftmark … and at the ensuing wedding, the rats get a fine bloody feast indeed

Tom Huddleston

19, Sep, 2022 @9:10 PM

Article image
Bums away! Has House of the Dragon given up on sex?
Game of Thrones was borderline pornographic in its usage of nudity, but – except for Matt Smith’s backside – its prequel has been far more chaste. Has Westeros had its #MeToo moment?

Tom Huddleston

07, Sep, 2022 @11:12 AM

Article image
House of the Dragon recap: episode four – sex and laughs return to Westeros at last
Rhaenyra endures hilarious proposals from older men and young lads, but finds her solace elsewhere. What a surprising, even miraculous piece of television

Tom Huddleston

12, Sep, 2022 @9:10 PM

Article image
House of the Dragon recap: episode two – the crabs are coming!
The Crabfeeder’s tiny army proves even more horrifying than Game of Thrones’ undead, while the dragon-riding princess Rhaenyra emerges as our hero

Tom Huddleston

29, Aug, 2022 @9:05 PM

Article image
Game of Thrones prequel: what can we learn from the first images?
The first stills from House of the Dragon, the new series within George RR Martin’s fantasy universe, promise more of the same but also a tease of something new

Stuart Heritage

05, May, 2021 @7:20 PM