HBO's 'House of the Dragon' Episode 7 begins at a funeral and ends with even more death. Here's what happened and who died in Episode 7.
The two sides of the civil war are now set: Daemon and Rhaenyra will square off against the Hightowers—hopefully next week. She and Daemon then conspire to have Laenor killed, allowing Rhaenyra to wed Daemon, uniting House Targaryen, adding more dragons to Rhaenyra’s side, and possibly forcing alliance with the Velaryon’s, given Daemon will be father to their remaining kin. Viserys immediately understands the severity of the insult; he is maybe the only one in the Kingdom oblivious to the truth of the “slander.” He asks Aemond to tell him where he heard the rumor. Princess Rhaenyra Targaryen (Emma D’Arcy), who is the named heir of the King, and And finally, there is Daemon, the eternal meddler who, even at the funeral of his wife, is already making eyes with Rhaenyra. Another meddler in the family power battle is Larys Strong (Matthew Needham), who has already killed the real father of Rhaenyra’s children (his own brothe) along with his own father, the Hand, helping House Hightower retake more control. House of the Dragon has become [Succession](https://www.menshealth.com/entertainment/a38515903/alan-ruck-succession-interview/) with wigs. Otto Hightower (Rhys Ifans), now reinstated as Hand of the King, will try to advance Aegon’s claim. —er, we mean—House of the Dragon. The formula: set the episode during a wedding or a funeral or an extravagant bachelor party or a trip to another country or some combination of these. Well, we’re at least on the eve of that war by the end of Episode 7. While the power struggle works well in modern New York City—and should translate into fictional medieval throne claims—the dynamic now begins to drag (and drag hard) by Episode 7.
On the 7th episode of HBO's Game of Thrones spin-off, guests at a funeral express their grief through sex and violence. Fantasy royals: they're just like ...
In a surprising departure from the book, Laenor and Qarl catch a break! - This show has a nagging tendency to kill off characters it introduces in the same episode: Lady Rhea, Ser Joffrey, Ser Harwin, Lady Laena. The voiceover we get is Daemon and Rhaenyra. The show doesn't want to give away that Laenor is in on the ruse quite yet, so what it shows us instead is Daemon killing the page. Rhaenyra pivots by calling the king's attention to the fact that Aemond treasonously questioned the parentage of Jayce, the heir to the throne. (Reader, watching this the first time, I really thought that she signed his death warrant with those words; "RIP LAENOR," I wrote in my notes.) They share a moment of sincere mutual affection; he resolves to let Ser Qarl go and re-dedicate himself to her as a true companion, if nothing else. She takes off and tests his dragonriding skillz, but he's up to the task. Corlys and Rhaenys get a nice scene in which the show re-establishes something it's already established — namely, that Rhaenys has her head on straight, and would have made a great queen. Which makes for a nice moment to step back and note how differently the show is presenting its two sets of royal twerps. There is a fireworks factory in our future, reader, and our bus is just now pulling out of the school parking lot. The king, the queen and their kids Aegon, Aemond and Helaena. That said, this episode kicks off by giving every freaking character listed above a long moment to gaze meaningfully at another character, and with a cast this huge, this process takes a hell of a long time.
The various dispersed Targaryens descend on Driftmark, and bring with them their genetically endowed abilities to be uniquely awful. A recap of episode 7 of ...
Alicent is ignorant of the larger implications, but it’s not hard to draw a connection between Rhaenyra’s glimpse of the dagger and her hasty proposal to Daemon. The Daemon-Rhaenyra-Will-They-Or-Won’t-They saga comes to an end, with the gentlest of sex scenes in the dunes, and the bloodiest of ceremonies on the rocks. The scene is also a clever mirror of how the adults handle the same accusations and slights. Imagine if House of the Dragon would slow down, just a bit, and let us live in uncertainty. And the scuffle-turned-slashing in the bowels of High Tide is decidedly instigated by Aemond, despite the fact that he is outnumbered and doesn’t have a weapon. • Speaking of, when Daemon and Rhaenyra walk down the Driftmark beach, she confesses her frustration at how he left her. For all the obvious reasons, House of the Dragon had to go big with its dragons, and Vhagar, the biggest prize of all, had to be shown off in all her glory in order for us to understand the stakes of Aemond’s gain. When Viserys insists that Rhaenyra repeat the “vile insult” Aemond hurled at her son, Alicent assumes she will have Rhaenyra cornered, that once the princess says out loud that the lineage of her children has been questioned, Viserys will have to publicly reckon with this crisis of legitimacy. For all its contrivance (why would the sickly king make this journey to attend the funeral of his estranged brother’s wife?) this episode gets one thing right that we’ve missed out on until now: It slows the tempo down to a conversational crawl and digs into the little slights and shared looks. The formerly tame Targaryen is now an asshole of the highest rank, joining his big brother Aegon in the pantheon of Terrible TV Tots. (Aegon is also a pre-teen lush.) Viserys’s mind is wearing down like his degrading body — at one point he calls Alicent “Aemma.” And whoever planned this event didn’t think to offer victuals to the mourners — or to throw it in a sensible, indoors location. A standard television-episode plotting method: Use the first act to create chaos between characters, the second act to heighten it, and the third to bring all the major players together at a party/event/function, where different pairs can mingle and stew, and the tension can finally come to a boil.
Prepare for a furious family reunion as Targaryen tensions come to the boil in an exceptionally satisfying episode of House Of The Dragon.
[House Of The Dragon - Episode 7 Review2h ago - One Wedding And A Funeral: prepare for a furious family reunion as Targaryen tensions come to the boil.](/articles/house-of-the-dragon-episode-7-review) [Horizon Zero Dawn May Be the Next Sony First-Party Game to Get a PS5 Remake/Remaster3h ago - Horizon Zero Dawn was first released on PS4 in 2017.](/articles/horizon-zero-dawn-ps5-remaster-reportedly-in-the-works-alongside-a-multiplayer-game) [Key Members of Disco Elysium Developer Have Left the Company In an 'Involuntary' Manner22h ago - Despite this news, Luiga says "things with the [Disco Elysium] sequel are actually sweet enough." But it’s also a choice that causes devastation for Rhaenys and Corlys, stripped of both their children, and Rhaenyra’s sons, who have lost two fathers and gained only one. Importantly, to show that there is good in the Targaryens and you don’t have to be Luke Skywalker to feel it, there are moments of real warmth in this episode, something this season had sometimes lacked. It’s an absolute barnstormer of a scene, the centerpiece of not just this episode but the series so far, showing the battle lines being drawn between Alicent’s “greens” and Rhaenyra’s “blacks” – so called for their house colors. It is a “kindness,” as Daemon calls it, to set Laenor free, and one that will create new and more fearsome whispers around both him and Rhaenyra. But in usurping Laena’s ride he prompts a devastating fight with his two girl cousins – the dragonless Rhaena (Eva Ossei-Gerning) had hoped to claim her mother’s dragon – and with Rhaenyra’s sons, who are supportive of the girls (first cousins once removed at that point; stepsiblings by episode’s end. Rhaena lashes out first, but Aemond holds his own and is threatening a prone Jacaerys (Leo Hart) with a rock when Luce slashes him with a knife and cuts out his eye. It’s a nicely subtle discussion of their allegiances that acknowledges the complicated position they’re in, and the fact that – more than perhaps anyone – they have much to lose in a Targaryen struggle for power. Our scene is Lady Laena’s funeral, where Targaryens and Velaryons gather for the first time in years (Laena’s body is assigned to the shallows, surprisingly: odd that a seafaring people would essentially sink their coffins just offshore). But some squinting shows a restored Otto, still conscious of his Hand pin, ordering a drunken Aegon to bed, and missing priggish little Aemond (Leo Ashton) as he heads out to claim Laena’s dragon, Vhagar. Corlys and his wife, Rhaenys (Eve Best), meanwhile, have a fascinating discussion about legacy: does it matter that Rhaenyra’s children are not of their blood? Daemon and King Viserys (Paddy Considine) exchange a few words, their first in years, and Daemon notes Viserys’ rapid decay in a way that’s either mocking or sympathetic – or perhaps a little of both, as is his way.
In Episode Seven, nearly the entire cast is present for Laena's funeral at Driftmark. The gathering includes Rhaenyra, Laenor, their two eldest sons, Daemon, ...
She asks Daemon to be her next husband to strengthen their claim to the throne, but her uncle reminds her that they cannot be wed as long as Laenor is alive. Grabbing Viserys's dagger and making a beeline to Lucerys herself, Alicent is stopped by Rhaenyra, who whispers that the kingdom now, "sees you as you are." It seems like no one is making a single good decision in Westeros, which can only mean that the kingdom is all going to shit when King Viserys finally keels over. Those cheering for the incestuous relationship can rejoice, however, as the uncle and niece both kiss and have sex after Rhaenyra quips that she is "no longer a child." Vhagar threatens to kill the brat after he wakes her up from a nap, but he holds out his hand and says some stuff in Old Valyrian. The King tells him that the gods are cruel for taking Laena so early, and Daemon retorts that it seems that the gods have been especially cruel to him. Aemond climbs up to the dragon's harness and commands her to fly. Rhaenyra feels that Daemon abandoned her at King's Landing, but he reminds her that she was only a child at the time. Speaking to Daemon for the first time in 10 years, Rhaenyra says that her marriage to Laenor is losing purpose. Daemon naming one of his daughters "Rhaena" is also one of the creepiest ways he's shown his affection for his niece yet. [Ser Criston Cole](https://www.esquire.com/entertainment/tv/a41311865/ser-criston-cole-house-of-the-dragon/), King Viserys, his three children with Queen Alicent, and Otto Hightower, who has once again been made the Hand of the King. [Milly Alcock is no longer playing the young princess Rhaenyra](https://www.esquire.com/entertainment/tv/a41387548/house-of-the-dragon-actors-change/), those in Westeros grieve over three characters who left us as quickly as they entered.
A man with long blonde hair stands against a wall with his arms folded. What did you do, Daemon? Credit: HBO ...
He isn't hiring Ser Quarl to kill Laenor; he's paying him to be part of his and Rhaenyra's plan to fake Laenor's death so that a) he can marry Rhaenyra, and b) Laenor can live the life he wants with Ser Quarl across the Narrow Sea. As Rhaenyra says earlier in the episode, "The sea is an escape." Did Ser Quarl double-cross Daemon and Rhaenyra after all so he could smuggle Laenor across the Narrow Sea with him? Rhaenyra and Daemon getting married in front of their children just like they'd planned, while Ser Quarl flees to board a boat alongside none other than — twist! An unspecified time later Ser Quarl enters Lord Corlys Velaryon's (Steve Toussaint) home, waits for Laenor, and then loudly confronts him in front of the fireplace. Rhaenyra knows that when King Viserys (Paddy Considine) is out of the picture, her claim to the Iron Throne will likely be threatened by Alicent's children.
This week's episode wove an enormous amount of objectively bonkers goings-on into a mostly credible hour of drama, with one big exception.
I wonder how many royal genealogists the Targaryens have driven to early retirement and/or madness. As Viserys fades, his desperation to keep his family somewhat intact is both pitiable — any semblance of unity will surely die with him — and poignant, a kind of raging against the dying of the light for a ruler who senses that his efforts will be futile and his legacy a wash, at best. As for where that intensity came from, I guess we’re supposed to take it on faith that the 10 years we didn’t see instilled a murderous rage within her. I rarely bring up things from the book because I assume most people who watch “Dragon” haven’t read it, so the show needs to stand on its own. Speaking of Aemond, Leo Ashton, the young actor who plays him, deserves credit for making him so convincingly unnerving from the beginning, with his disquieting dead-eyed stare. I suppose the confrontation was designed to once again foreshadow the conflict to come between these women. So I’m slightly concerned about what “Dragon” becomes when he and Viserys inevitably shuffle off the stage. Most of us, I suspect, have been party to family secrets or some other inconvenient truth that people close to us have held at bay by the sheer force of their own denial. But “he’s got a strange moral compass of his own,” the actor said. Alicent was apoplectic about her husband’s continued indulgence of Rhaenyra and understandably undone by Aemond’s injury. Along the way, we saw the dropping of several narrative shoes. Make your apologies and show good will to one another.”
Laura Miller: Nadira! Have you ever been to a family reunion more tense and dismal than the funeral and wake of Laena Velaryon? It seems like the whole first 15 ...
One of the most upsetting things about Alicent to me is that she had such potential to be an iconic Big Bad, but I find her to be mostly … She should have had the tact to not call for the mutilation of an 8-year-old, especially since she’s smart enough to know that it truly is her sons who are the antagonizing asshats that start all of the messes she blames Rhaenyra’s sons for. She gets absolutely nothing out of trying to harm Luke, just the reputation for being a madwoman. I do want to note that there is a crazy amount of sitting-on-a-guy-and-beating-his-face-in going on in this show, and now even the kids are doing it! In a way, this world is the hardest on people like Alicent, Criston Cole, and Laenor, those who have a code of morality or honor. Still, he’s a child, and acting out of a sense that everyone is against him and everything he wants in life will have to be taken by force. And I fully understand his longing for a dragon, both because it would give him stature in a world where he is obviously disregarded and because who wouldn’t want to fly? On the other hand, Rhaenyra is doing what she has to do to protect herself and her children. Most people seem to blame him for the disasters that have befallen his reign because he’s “weak.” But if we’re going to blame Viserys for not being “strong” enough, we can’t also condemn a character like Aemond for fulfilling what constitutes strength in his world. Once the accusations of Rhaenyra’s sons’ bastard parentage were launched by and in front of the highest-ranked successors to the crown, the cat was officially out of the bag. Lots of bad behavior, from Aegon boozing it up and leering at the serving wenches, to Aemond’s dragon-stealing and assault on his cousins, to Alicent’s dreadful reaction in the castle, to Rhaenyra’s extremely cold-hearted ordering of the assassination of the husband who’s just pledged his devotion to her and her reign. Literally no one in this bunch is getting what they want, least of all poor old Viserys, who just wants them to stop all the infighting, even though his own actions are at the root of it all.
Princess Rhaenyra and Queen Alicent's conflict spills first blood in the 'Game of Thrones' prequel's most tense episode yet.
And not just any real one, but the realest one: Vhagar, the biggest and oldest living dragon in all of the known world, the last survivor of Aegon’s Conquest, and the only creature still alive who was around to see Valyria at its height. Sight unseen from the rest of their family, Rhaenyra and Daemon sleep together on the beach, drawing comfort from one another in ways only Targaryens (and a certain pair of Lannister twins) know. Now, the Sea Snake’s pursuit of the crown has left their surviving child Laenor (John Macmillan) in great danger, even more imminent than they realize. Set entirely on the titular island House Velaryon calls home, the extended Targaryen royal family comes together in “Driftmark” for the funeral of one of their own: Laena Velaryon (Nanna Blondell), killed during last week’s episode, having selected a fiery demise at the maw of her dragon Vhagar over dying in childbirth. Despite urging from his brother the king, ready to put their troubled past behind them, Daemon blisters at the prospect of returning to the Seven Kingdoms. If Emilia Clarke’s Daenerys came of age during the time of Rhaenyra (Emma D’Arcy) and Alicent (Olivia Cooke), she would know the truth: not only can fire kill a dragon, the mere scent of dragon smoke could threaten the entire species altogether.
Taking place after a 10-year time jump, it saw the first blood of the inevitable Targaryen civil war being spilled. That was thanks to Lorys Strong who, in a ...
We always knew House of the Dragon would build to a Targaryen civil war. Laenor had been who-knows-where during the chaos, and says regretfully that he "should have been there." As the montage ends, we see the hastily organized wedding of Rhaenyra and Daemon. The Hand of the King goes to see his daughter in her chambers. "I love Laenor," we hear Rhaenyra say over the montage. "I promise you, in time you and I will prevail," he says. The king yells for Alicent to stop, and even Otto Hightower tells his daughter to release the blade. There were a lot of important happenings in that episode, but a lot of the viewing experience was just acclimating to the time jump. "There is a debt to be paid," she says. A confused Lucerys exclaims that his father is still alive, and Aemond tells Jacaerys to tell his younger brother the truth about their father. That was thanks to Lorys Strong who, in a mix of devotion to the queen and blackmail , organized a hit on his brother Harwin and father, Lyonel. She then flies in the air and does a cool loop.
Episode 7 of House of the Dragon ended on a bang, but what actually happened to Laenor Velaryon? We break down that ending.
It is clear that this is the moment that he and Rhaenyra formulate a plan to fake Laenor's death. Some believe that Laenor found a new lover and Qarl was jealous, while others believe that Qarl killed Laenor on behalf of Daemon, given that Daemon wed Rhaenyra not too long after this. When Rhaenyra and Daemon are speaking, she tells him that she loves Laenor, and Daemon tells her to grand him a kindness and set him free. During his conversation with Rhaenyra, he confesses that he has not been the perfect father to their children and promises to be a better father and husband in the future. When the Velaryons rush into the hall, all they see is a burnt corpse in the fireplace with Laenor's boots on. But on the first watch, it seems like Daemon is acting on behalf of both himself and Rhaenyra, hiring Qarl to kill Laenor. It is clear that this is not a man she wants to see dead, so Laenor does not die. He outright tells Rhaenyra that he sometimes hates the gods for making him how he is, but she reassures him that she does not, and he is a good man with honor. We see in this episode that Alicent makes a snide remark referring to Laenor's sexuality in front of everyone, and we know that homosexuality is heavily stigmatized in Westeros. In order to marry Rhaenyra, Laenor must be out of the picture, but does that mean that he dies? But, first, they have to take care of the one thing in their way: her husband. Rhaenyra (Emma D'Arcy) has arrived with Laenor (John Macmillan) and their two older sons, met by the Velaryons, including Rheanys (Eve Best) and Corlys (Steve Toussaint).
Westerosi funerals turn out to be just as dramatic as Westerosi weddings on another excellent House of the Dragon.
ET on HBO and HBO Max in the U.S. But they say history is written by the winners, and the new (old) Hand of the King already has an alternative take on Alicent’s outburst. But action clearly does need to happen on House of the Dragon, I just wish it were more carefully paced out so that an enormous moment like Ser Laenor’s survival feels cathartic and not like an episode rushing through plot to maintain its years-long storytelling mission. Much like these reviews themselves (sorry, everyone), the average House of the Dragon episode tends to run out of narrative steam at the end. Between Otto and Larys Strong (who helpfully offers to gouge a kid’s eye out himself for Alicent this week) the Queen appears to have the market cornered on devious bastards. Similarly, Alicent’s lunging for the Valyrian catspaw dagger and subsequent attack of Rhaenyra is another element that seems ripe for laughable melodrama. Jacaerys (Leo Hart) wordlessly moves to comfort Baela (Shani Smethurst) and Rhaena (Eva Ossei-Gerning), only for them to wordlessly grasp his hand to comfort him instead on the loss of his real father, Ser Harwin Strong. Of course, a monster is on the way – a surprisingly literal one. [The Hollywood Reporter revealed](https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-news/house-of-the-dragon-miguel-sapochnik-leaving-1235208276/) that Sapochnik (who directed some of Game of Thrones‘ most action-packed installments like [“The Battle of the Bastards”](https://www.denofgeek.com/tv/game-of-thrones-battle-of-the-bastards-review/) and [“Hardhome”](https://www.denofgeek.com/tv/game-of-thrones-season-5-episode-8-review-hardhome/)) would be leaving the series that he developed alongside co-showrunner Ryan Condal before season 2. Though the Stranger is a persistent, unwanted guest in Westeros, most funerals on this show are of the perfunctory variety for old background characters like Hoster Tully or Jon Arryn. In listening to Sapochnik on the most recent episode of the [official House of the Dragon podcast](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HS_zQGKkUMY), however, it really does seem like the guy just needs a break. And the continuity behind the camera can’t have been a coincidence.
In a House of the Dragon episode with Rhaenyra Targaryen (Emma D'Arcy) and Alicent's (Olivia Cooke) coming Dance of the Dragons, and exploring how Laenor ...
[the royal children](https://www.polygon.com/23368925/house-of-the-dragon-kids-who-rhaenyra-alicent-daemon-jace-joffrey-aegon) that goes from bad to worse in — ahem — the blink of an eye. It’s enough to make [Viserys’ (Paddy Considine)](https://www.polygon.com/23328660/house-dragon-viserys-iron-throne-cut) plea for a return to the family’s status quo seem almost comically out of touch, a referee trying to stop World War II with a whistle. Again the episode chooses a ritual — the most elementally basic, the literally Biblical tradition of an eye for an eye — as the focus of its conflict. Through the ritualistic demand we get a glimpse of the real Alicent, a confused and frightened woman left in a permanent state of panic by her father’s abuse. Rhaenyra’s secret marriage to her [uncle Daemon (Matt Smith)](https://www.polygon.com/e/23144854) serves to inflate her reputation as a ruthless power player, and sir Laenor’s duel with his lover Qarl (Arty Froushan) provides cover for their bittersweet escape from the bloody power games of the royal court. The scene is lit and shot like something out of Neil Marshall’s [The Descent](https://www.polygon.com/hulu/2020/4/18/21224924/best-horror-movies-on-hulu), torchlight flickering over the faces of the young heirs to the Targaryen dynasty as their childish squabble rapidly turns bloody, fists and feet giving way to rocks and knives. While [House of the Dragon](https://go.redirectingat.com?id=66960X1516586&xs=1&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.hbomax.com%2Fseries%2Fhouse-of-the-dragon%3Foffer_id%3D5%26transaction_id%3D102c87c7%255B%25E2%2580%25A6%255D4ed39326beedc6012ca%26utm_source%3DVox%2BMedia%26utm_medium%3Daffiliate&referrer=polygon.com&sref=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.polygon.com%2F23383650%2Fhouse-dragon-episode-7-review-laenor)’s seventh episode does a great deal to show Westeros sliding uncontrollably toward what will surely prove a calamitously bloody war, its own body count is comparatively modest by [the series](https://www.polygon.com/house-of-the-dragon)’ standards. From the somber but politically charged opening funeral scene to the darkly majestic and disturbing claiming of [the dragon Vhagar](https://www.polygon.com/e/23145224) by the young prince Aemond (Leo Ashton), “Driftmark” moves at an effortless clip. [Miguel Sapochnik](https://www.polygon.com/23331775/house-of-the-dragon-miguel-sapochnik-leaving-showrunner-alan-taylor) and writer Sara Hess pull it off with aplomb. His delight at her evident unwellness is perhaps the episode’s most sickening sight, a further deception concealed behind his somber façade and the arcane traditions of the royal court. [fake Ser Laenor’s (John Macmillan) death](https://www.polygon.com/e/23144583), is a case study in the episode’s preoccupation with social rituals as a means of concealing and revealing truth. Laena’s funeral provides her uncle with a chance to launch a veiled barb at Rhaenyra (Emma D’Arcy) over the parentage of her sons.
"Hand turns loom; spool of green, spool of black; dragons of flesh weaving dragons of thread."
This episode of House of the Dragon could very well be titled 'Breaking Bad' as several characters take one heck of a turn and things heat up.
[particular episode of HoD](https://gamerant.com/house-of-the-dragon-honorable-characters/) does is to make sure that the audience who thought a person was one way was actually another. [House of the Dragon wouldn't suffer from CGI issues](https://gamerant.com/house-of-the-dragon-hbo-correct-viral-cgi-blunder/). That's one of the nice touches that this show was able to do with all the focus on the main characters. If not for half the episode being so dark that it was hard to see, this might be one of the best episodes of either show. As it is, it continues to make this HBO Max spinoff one of the best programs of the year. There was also the music that was definitely supposed to be romantic that made this one of the most One of the things this But it doesn't make up for all the rest of the scenes where it's incredibly hard to see what's going on or why the viewers should care. There is something to be said for the darkness when it comes to one particular scene and that's when Aegon decides to ride his aunt's former dragon. It also seems that there's plenty that took place that's going to impact the rest of the Daemon's wife has died, after it became clear that she wasn't going to survive childbirth and that the baby wasn't surviving either, she ordered her dragon to burn her alive. One of the interesting things this episode does, especially in the first half of the show, is to show quite a bit of the scenes in the nighttime, without much light at all.
Kathryn VanArendonk is a critic who writes about TV and comedy. She gets mad when people say TV is a ten-hour movie. The night scenes in “Driftmark” were shot ...
It was the kids' time to shine in the latest episode of 'House of the Dragon' and it's clear familial conflict and drama has already taken hold of this ...