*Major spoilers for episodes 1 and 2*
*CW: rape*
When I looked up Joel Fry’s IMDb after season 1 of Our Flag Means Death, I recalled him as the friend from Yesterday, but I couldn’t place him as this Game of Thrones character. To be fair, Game of Thrones had frillions of characters, and the majority of Fry’s screentime is in season 5, when my interest in the show in general started to wane. I’ve since placed which character this was, in a sort of, “Oh right, him,” kind of way—we’ll see if he leaves more of an impression on me this time around.
Note: I’m just going to write these reviews from the perspective of someone who knows Game of Thrones reasonably well. There are just too many characters and plotlines to contextualize every one.
In the wake of Joffrey’s murder, Tyrion has been arrested and Sansa has disappeared. Cersei is grieving her son, while Tywin is already looking for ways to press an advantage. Farther north, Arya and the Hound are uneasy traveling companions, Sam worries about Gilly’s safety at the Wall, and the Night’s Watch debate how to handle recent attacks from the wildlings. Meanwhile, over in Essos, Daenerys has taken command of the army of the Unsullied. She’s now set her sights on freeing the city-state of Meereen.
This is the sort of episode where no character gets more than one or two sequences of scenes. There are over half a dozen different plots going on here, and we kind of check in briefly with all of them. Game of Thrones did this a lot. Rather than go into much detail on each one, I think I’ll just hit the highlights of my favorite parts. For this show, it might be the best way to handle the non-Joel Fry stuff.
- I’ve always liked Margaery Tyrell, and her and Lady Olenna together are great. When Margaery laments that she’s had two husbands—one gay, one a sadist—and they were both murdered, Olenna scoffs, “Nonsense! Your circumstances have improved remarkably.”
- Tywin is stone cold, wasting no time in beginning the work of molding Tommen into the kind of king he can control. Tommen and Cersei are literally standing over Joffrey’s dead body, and Tywin is like, “All right, my boy, lesson time!” Unrepentant bastard from start to finish.
- In Stannis’s storyline, I always preferred Ser Davos (Liam Cunningham!) and Shireen over him, and their reading lesson in this episode is very sweet. That said, I really do like this line from Stannis – “If I do not press my claim, my claim will be forgotten. I will not become a page in someone else’s history book.”
- It’s a shame that Joel Fry is only in a couple season 4 episodes, because this is the season with the wonderful Oberyn Martell in it. Like probably a lot of people, this wasn’t the first thing I saw Pedro Pascal in, but it was the one that made me take notice of him. He’s endlessly great as Oberyn, and Indira Varma matches him note for note as Ellaria. Here, I like how Oberyn describes being bi—“When it comes to war, I fight for Dorne. When it comes to love, I don’t choose sides”—and he has a really strong scene with Tywin.
- Tyrion also has a strong story this season, with the murder accusation and his trial. Peter Dinklage kills it throughout. In this episode, the whole scene of Podrick visiting Tyrion in prison is great. I’m touched that Tyrion forces Podrick not to return for his own safety, and I love this line – “Whenever something bad happens to me, I assume it’s my sister who had a hand in it. But say what you will of Cersei, she loves her children. She is the only one I’m certain had nothing to do with this murder—which makes it unique, as King’s Landing murders go.”
- Another way this episode follows a very typical Game of Thrones format is to end on a big badass Daenerys scene. Her arrival in Meereen makes a big splash—she doesn’t brook their insults against her, and she makes it very clear who she is and what she does. Also, this loving diatribe about Jacob Anderson’s delivery of Astapori Valyrian (from David J. Peterson, the linguist who created it,) recently came back across my dashboard, so I was even happier than usual to get a few crumbs of Grey Worm. Not to mention, Anderson absolutely wowed me in season 2 of Interview with the Vampire!
All that said, this episode has a very major downside: it’s the one where Jaime rapes Cersei in the sept over their son’s dead body, and then prominent people involved with the scene went, “Well, actually…” about it. Even for a show that traffics a lot in sexual violence, this was gross.
As for Joel Fry? Well, very little to say so far. Per IMDb, he’s playing Hizdahr zo Loraq. In his debut episode, he has one scene and zero lines, part of the crowd watching Daenerys’s big entrance in Meereen. From his dress, we know he’s one of the Masters. Like the other slaveholders of Meereen, his wordless reactions are first unconcerned/cocky, then grow more somber as Dany shows them what she’s about.
The one thing I will say is that, even though he doesn’t have any lines, the show does indicate that Hizdahr is going to be someone. As the Masters watch Dany, we get multiple shots focusing on his reaction, including some close-ups. It has a “watch this space” feel—like Hizdahr’s presence here is a placeholder, so when he shows up to actually do something, you can be like, “I’ve seen that guy before!”
Accent Watch
Nothing yet. Will report back when he speaks!
Recommend?
In General – A cautious yes. Game of Thrones fell off quite a bit by the end, but at this point, I was still pretty into it. However, this comes with the huge caveat that the show has lots of graphic violence and sex, including sexual violence.
Joel Fry – Too early to say.
Warnings
Violence (including sexual violence,) sexual content, language (including sexist insults,) strong thematic elements (including incest,) violence against animals, and drinking.



