House of the Dragon: release date, cast, and everything else we know

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House of the Dragon, the Game of Thrones prequel series, is just months away. It finally has a release date, and there's even a short trailer showcasing what’s to come, too. Though there's still quite a long wait, there's plenty of information out there about the new HBO show – and we've rounded it all up right here.


The series is set around 300 years before the events of Game of Thrones, and is based on George R. R. Martin's novel Fire & Blood. It will focus on House Targaryen and their civil war, which became known as the Dance of the Dragons. Below, we've got the lowdown on who's who in the cast, quotes from showrunner Miguel Sapochnik, all that's out there about the plot, the trailer, and, of course, some information on the dragons themselves. That's just the start, too, so scroll on to get up to speed on all things House of the Dragon.


House of the Dragon will premiere on HBO and HBO Max on August 21, 2022. It'll premiere a day later in the UK on Sky.


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Filming wrapped on the show in February 2022 and House of the Dragon is currently in post-production, according to George R.R. Martin's blog. "Exciting news out of London – I am informed that shooting has WRAPPED for the first season of House of the Dragon," he wrote. "Yes, all ten episodes. I have seen rough cuts of a few of them, and I'm loving them."


As for any other series set in the Thrones universe, HBO's Casey Boys previously gave an update on the spinoffs: "House of the Dragon is the only one shooting," he said. "All the other ones are in various stages of development. People may think we have 10 series shooting at the moment. There's one that will be on the air in 2022. We'll see how the other scripts come along."



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The first teaser trailer for House of the Dragon is here. In it, we get a good look at the more lethal looking Iron Throne, as well as the series' key characters, and what looks to be plenty of intense drama. "Gods, kings, fire, and blood. Dreams didn't make us kings, dragons did," says Matt Smith's Daemon Targaryen in a voiceover. Check it out above. 


Who's in the House of the Dragon cast?


Fabien Frankel (who recently appeared in the Netflix and BBC One crime series, The Serpent) will play Ser Criston Cole, common-born, Dornish son to the Steward of the Lord of Blackhaven. Variety describes Cole as having "no claim to land or titles; all he has to his name, his honor, and his preternatural skill with a sword".




Graham McTavish, star of Outlander, confirmed to Stylist that he has a role in the series – but didn't give anything else away: "I'm enjoying that, yes," he said. "I'm really having a lot of fun. We've just started. It's a very big project, so we're getting to know each other. They're lovely people. It's great, but I can't tell you too much. I can't tell you really anything about the story! But it involves a lot dragons." Speculation after McTavish was reportedly glimpsed onset in costume has pointed to Harrold Westerling, Lord Commander of the Kingsguard (H/T Radio Times). 


Steve Toussaint, Rhys Ifans, Eve Best, and Sonoya Mizuno also recently joined the project. Toussaint will play Lord Corlys Velaryon, a powerful lord of House Velaryon (a Valyrian bloodline as old as House Targaryen) and the most notorious nautical adventurer in the history of Westeros with the world's largest navy. 


Ifans will play Otto Hightower, the loyal Hand of the King, while Best will be Princess Rhaenys Velaryon, a dragonrider and wife to Lord Corlys Velaryon. Mizuno, meanwhile, will play Mysaria, a woman who arrived in Westeros with nothing, but rose through the ranks to become the most trusted ally of Prince Daemon Targaryen, the heir to the throne.


Then we've got Emma D'Arcy and Matt Smith, who will play Princess Rhaenyra Targaryen and Prince Daemon Targaryen respectively, while Olivia Cooke has signed on to play Alicent Hightower. The two Targaryen royals play key roles in the climactic Dance of the Dragons, the Targaryen civil war that takes up a large chunk of George R.R. Martin's Fire & Blood, the novel on which House of the Dragon is based.


Expect to see these characters play major roles in the events of House of the Dragon, and given their lasting presence in the book, it's likely we'll see them across several seasons. Though, as Game of Thrones proved, TV series aren't always 100 per cent faithful to their source work. Interestingly, young versions of two of these characters have been cast – Milly Alcock has joined the lineup as a younger version of Rhaenyra Targaryen, while Emily Carey will be the young Alicent Hightower.


Cooke has spoken a little about the series, saying there will not be any gratuitous violence against women, which Thrones was accused of on multiple occasions. “I wouldn’t feel comfortable in being a part of anything that has just egregious graphic violence towards women for no reason whatsoever, just because they want it to be tantalizing in a way that gets viewers," she said. "I was lucky enough to read the [prequel] script before, and it has changed a lot from the first few seasons [of Thrones]. I don’t think they’d be in their right minds to include any of that any more.”


In October, the series' lead was announced: Paddy Considine as King Viserys I, an ancestor of everyone's favorite Mother of Dragons, Daenerys Targaryen. Viserys is chosen by the Lords of Westeros to succeed the Iron Throne and apparently wants to innocently carry on his grandfather's legacy. However, as the original series showed us, good men don't always make good leaders.


Fire & Blood features a lineup of Targaryen rulers from Aegon I to his sons, Aenys I and Maegor I, all the way up to Aegon III. We expect even more silver-haired dragonriders to take the reign as casting details continue opening up in the (presumably) near future.




HBO recently cast its first Lannisters, with returning Game of Thrones actor Jefferson Hall joining House of the Dragon as twins Jason Lannister and Ser Tyland Lannister, Lord of Casterly Rock and Hand of the King for Aegon III Targaryen, respectively. 


The latest round of casting news also reveled that Ryan Corr (Wolf Creek 2, The Water Diviner) has been cast as Ser Harwin "Breakbones" Strong, who HBO describes as "the strongest man in the Seven Kingdoms." Meanwhile, David Horovitch (Miss Marple) will play Grand Maester Mellos, one of King Viserys's close advisors.


Graham McTavish (The Hobbit, Netflix's Castlevania, Preacher) has been cast as Ser Harrold Westerling, loyal member of the Kingsguard. Bill Paterson (Amazing Grace, Miss Potter) is playing Lord Lyman Beesbury, Lord of Honeyholt and Master of Coin on King Viserys's small council. Gavin Spokes (She Stoops to Conquer, Utopia, Warrior Kings) is Lord Lyonel Strong, Lord of Harrenhal and the King's Master of Laws, and Matthew Needham (Stutterer) is set to portray Larys Strong, son of Lyonel Strong.


When is the House of the Dragon set?

Matt Smith in House of the Dragon


The beginning of House of the Dragon will date back to roughly 300 years before the events of Game of Thrones. That might seem like a while back, but it's actually much more recent history than the canceled Naomi Watts prequel, which was set to take place "thousands of years" before Game of Thrones and explore the early history of ancient houses as well as the origin of the White Walkers.


Considering Westerosi societies were very much thriving, and turbulent as ever, during the timeline containing House of the Dragon, expect to see political interworkings akin to Game of Thrones explored in the prequel series. Whereas the canceled prequel would've more likely focused primarily on fantasy elements, House of the Dragon is based on a book very much centered around ancestral hierarchies, warring nations, and a massive civil war. That should equate to a prequel series more tonally similar to Game of Thrones, a show as much about dragons as the dark underbellies of society and the ruling class.




For the uninitiated, House Targaryen is very much affiliated with dragons, going all the way back to Aegon the Conqueror's fire-breathing conquest over the seven kingdoms where House of the Dragon picks up.


What's the House of the Dragon story?

A still from Game of Thrones


House of the Dragon is based on Fire and Blood, a novel by George RR Martin covering the rise and fall of the Targaryen dynasty as recorded by a maester in pre-Game of Thrones time. Since that book has been out for about two years, we have a pretty good idea of what we can expect to see from House of the Dragon's plot.


The book picks up with Aegon's Conquest, which marked the very beginning of a new world order, the establishment of King's Landing as the world capital, and the physical formation of the Iron Throne. 


Together with the help of his twin sisters, Rhaenys and Visenya (not to mention their three dragons), Aegon Targaryen I successfully subdued six of the seven kingdoms of Westeros, whether by conquest or their voluntary submission. The only kingdom to prevail unconquered was Dorne, which Rhaenys left unharmed after finding its castles abandoned and only women and children occupying its seat.


From there follows a turbulent run of Targaryen kings and queens; good, evil, and everywhere in between; leading up to the great civil war between Aegon II and his half-sister Rhaenyra over their father Viserys I's throne. That long struggle endured for two years, through which several large-scale battles were fought until both Aegon II and Rhaenya died mysterious and grizzly respective deaths.


The resulting power void fell to the young Aegon III to occupy, which resulted in the death of "the last dragon." The end of Fire and Blood doesn't lead directly into the events of Game of Thrones, closing out roughly 150 years before the fateful day Robert Baratheon shows up at King's Landing to enlist Ned Stark as Hand of the King. The gap between the end of Fire and Blood and the beginning of Game of Thrones hasn't been written about in depth, but Martin has said he plans on writing Fire and Blood part 2 when he's finished the A Song of Ice and Fire series.




Game of Thrones followed the books closely and with little deviation for the first four seasons, after which substantial changes to the characters and plot were made at least partly due to the source work not being finished at the time. For those reasons, it's hard to tell how faithfully House of the Dragon will tell the stories from Fire and Blood. With Martin at the helm and Fire and Blood published in its entirety, it's a good bet the show and book will align quite nicely.


While not giving anything away about the plot, HBO content chief Casey Bloys has said the series "looks spectacular," adding: "The cast that Miguel [Sapochnik] and Ryan [Condal] have put together looks good." 


If you're wondering about the dragons, have no fear: there'll be a lot of them in the series. "I've always thought this was a cool story, it's one I like, so I'm looking forward to seeing it come alive on screen," Martin told The Stuff Dreams Are Made Of podcast. "And of course I'm looking forward to the dragons. Obviously, I love the dragons. We had three of them in Game of Thrones, but now we got like 17 of them. And hopefully, they'll each have their own personalities, they'll be instantly recognizable when you see them, the colors and all of that because the dragons do have personalities in the books, and it'll be great to see that come alive. And the dragon riders. That's all pretty cool."


We spoke to co-showrunner Miguel Sapochnik about his sci-fi movie Finch, and the director compared that movie to the prequel series: "[They're] very, very, very different. As I said, Finch is two actors and a dog. House of the Dragon is lots of dragons and lots of actors. [Laughs] They're very different experiences. But the practice is the same if you're a director, which is I always ask myself in any project that I'm involved in, whose story is it? Whose point of view is it? What am I trying to say, and is that getting in the way of telling the story? So I approach things from the same perspective. I think that making Finch was a welcome respite from making Game of Thrones and House of the Dragon. But it doesn't mean that I wasn't on set now and then, with an RV and a dog and a couple of actors, and I didn't wish that I had a dragon there too."


The scale sounds massive, and that's backed up by the reported budget – according to Variety, the show costs "under $20m an episode."


Sapochnik also talked to The Hollywood Reporter about how the tone of House of the Dragon will differ from Game of Thrones. "I think we were very respectful of what the original show is," he commented. "It wasn't broken, so we're not trying to reinvent the wheel. House of the Dragon has its own tone that will evolve and emerge over the course of the show. But first, it's very important to pay respects and homage to the original series, which was pretty groundbreaking. We're standing on the shoulders of that show and we're only here because of that show. So the most important thing for us to do is to respect that show as much as possible and try and complement it rather than reinvent it." 


He added: "This is something else, and should be something else. It's a different crew, different people, different tone. Hopefully, it will be seen as something else."



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