
*Spoilers from season 4*
It didn’t stand out as much to me in the last episode, but this one really jogs my memory for how many of the season 5 plots didn’t fully pan out for me. Back when these episodes first aired, I remember being excited about a number of the storylines—for a lot of them, though, the execution wound up being more of a letdown. Let’s get into it.
Arya has arrived in Braavos, where she seeks out her old friend/assassin, Jaqen H’ghar. Brienne and Podrick have an unexpected encounter on the road. When one of the Sons of the Harpy is caught, Daenerys takes counsel on what to do with him. After the brutal death of Oberyn Martell last season, Cersei worries about her daughter’s continued safety in Dorne, and with good reason—Ellaria is out for blood. The Night’s Watch elect a new Lord Commander.
- When Arya arrives at the temple of the Faceless Men, she begs to be let in, saying, “Please! I crossed the Narrow Sea. I have nowhere else to go” – I love the Faceless Man’s simple response, “You have everywhere else to go.”
- As usual on Game of Thrones, we see that the stalwart characters are no match for the cunning characters. Brienne has the truth on her side, but it’s child’s play for Littlefinger to twist it around and make her look bad.
- It’s funny—for years, Anton Lesser was “Qyburn from Game of Thrones” to me. But when he popped up in this episode, my brain immediately went “Partagaz!” The power of Andor!
- I believe this is our first look at Doran Martell, played by the always-welcome Alexander Siddig. As Ellaria itches to avenge Oberyn, Doran demonstrates one similarity he and his late brother shared when he flatly tells her, “We do not mutilate little girls for vengeance. Not here. Not while I rule.”
- Tyrion and Varys are in the traveling portion of their storyline, so not much happening here – I do like Varys drawling, “Are we really going to spend the entire road to Volantis talking about the futility of everything?”, to which Tyrion replies, “You’re right, no point.” Ha!
- My favorite stuff at the Wall in this episode, once again, are the scenes with Shireen. This time, her reading lessons are with Gilly instead of Ser Davos, and I really like the conversation they have about greyscale.
It’s not the best episode for Daenerys. With the prisoner, her advisors variously urge execution and mercy, haste and caution, and things somehow wind up with the least desirable outcome. And I’m sure part of it is because I’m biased toward Grey Worm and against Daario, but it annoys me when Daario repeatedly lectures Grey Worm while searching for the Sons of the Harpy, belaboring how this is a job so much more suited to Second Sons rather than Unsullied. With Daario, it sometimes feels like the show is trying too hard to make fetch happen, and I definitely don’t like them doing it at Grey Worm’s expense.
This is the first episode where Joel Fry appears in two sequences instead of just one. Although that doesn’t actually amount to more screentime for Hizdahr, we get to see him in a new context, which is interesting. In his previous episodes, nearly all of his dialogue has been just with Daenerys. But sitting on Dany’s council, we see him interact with other characters—particular Mossador, a former slave. Unsurprisingly, Mossador is advocating the hardest for the prisoner to be executed, wanting to send a blunt message to the Sons of the Harpy. Hizdahr never actually says what he wants to happen to the man—again with his savviness in front of Dany—instead making tempering arguments like, “Why should [a poor freeborn man] want to bring back slavery? What did it ever do for him?”
In this way, Hizdahr is still careful about the things he chooses to say, but he’s a little less precise in how he speaks here, getting slightly heated. From Mossador’s side, the “former slave speaking to former slaveholder” dynamic is clear. While it’s not as pronounced from Hizdahr’s side, it is evident that he’s less patient with Mossador than he is with anyone else. There’s an air of entitlement that can’t help coming out a bit as they’re going back and forth. Nice work on Fry’s part, showing the contrast to how intentional and calculated Hizdahr is in his private audiences with Dany in earlier episodes.
Also, Hizdahr pulls out the “I’m the head of a Great Family” card when that is the opposite of a selling point to every other person in the room. For all his talk about how willing he is to adjust to Dany’s brave new world, old habits die hard.

