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‘House of the Dragon’ Addresses GRRM’s ‘Least Favorite’ Scene From ‘Game of


  • Warning: Spoilers ahead for “House of the Dragon” season one, episode three: “Second of His Name.”
  • George R.R. Martin once said the smaller budget for “GoT” season one led to a disappointing scene.
  • Now “House of the Dragon” went all-in on an episode that creates Martin’s vision of a royal hunt. 

When HBO set out to tackle the monumental task of adapting author George R.R. Martin’s “A Song of Ice and Fire” novel series, no one knew for certain it would become one of the most popular TV shows of all time.

The first season of “Game of Thrones” had an average episode cost of about $6 million, according to Variety. And this smaller budget — especially compared to later seasons, with $15 million episodes — was the reason behind Martin’s least favorite moment in all eight seasons. 

Back in 2020, “Game of Thrones” reporter James Hibberd published a book about the HBO series called “Fire Cannot Kill a Dragon.” When speaking with Hibberd for the book, author Martin said King Robert’s royal hunt was totally different in the show than in his imagination.

“Where we really fell down in terms of budget was my least favorite scene in the entire show, in all eight seasons: King Robert goes hunting,” Martin said. “In the books, Robert goes off hunting, we get word he was gored by a boar, and they bring him back and he dies. So I never did [a hunting scene].”

“But I knew what a royal hunting party was like,” he continued. “There would have been a hundred guys. There would have been pavilions. There would have been huntsmen. There would have been dogs. There would have been horns blowing — that’s how a king goes hunting!”

Martin added: “He wouldn’t have just been walking through the woods with three of his friends holding spears hoping to meet a boar.”

A side by side image of King Robert Baratheon (Mark Addy) and King Viserys Targaryen (Paddy Considine) in

“Game of Thrones” and “House of the Dragon.”

HBO


The scene in “Game of Thrones” (from season one, episode six: “A Golden Crown”) was less than two minutes, and only included King Robert, Ser Barristan Selmy, Renly Baratheon, and Lancel Lannister. The men discussed having sex and the good old days (in Robert’s eyes anyways), and then all the rest of the hunting action takes place off screen. 

Showrunners David Benioff and D.B. Weiss had to make adaptation choices that would suit their tight budget. They added in many scenes of a few characters talking in rooms instead of filming expensive scenes of celebration and ceremony and battle that Martin had in his imagination.

But over 10 years later, the first “Game of Thrones” prequel series was greenlighted with a larger budget, coming in under $20 million per episode

The latest episode of ‘House of the Dragon’ brings a lavish parallel to the brief Kingswood scene in ‘Game of Thrones’ 

A view of a big red tent and a young woman riding a horse.

A shot of the set in season one, episode three of “House of the Dragon.”

HBO


In season one, episode three of “House of the Dragon,” we get to see the full production of a royal hunt in the Kingswood, complete with the pavilions and huntsmen and dogs that Martin spoke about in “Fire Cannot…



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