Perhaps she’s crossing a name off her list. Even though there’s only one remaining episode of Game of Thrones, there. Where is that assassin, anyway? She has an old score to settle and doesn’t expect to return to Winterfell afterward. Editor’s note: The following contains spoilers for Game of Thrones Season 8, Episode 5, The Bells. The episode will run 1 hour and 20 minutes, which is just two minutes shy of “The Longest Night,” since Arya (Maisie Williams) doesn’t need to kill the Night King again. Weiss wrote the upcoming Episode 5 with go-to big battle director Miguel Sapochnik directing. But nope, he’s still a Northerner at heart, and has the direwolves on his armor to prove it. Jon would not lie about that, and even if he were to tempted to make a claim, he would have by now. Her last conversation with him shows that she doesn’t trust his true motives, which is pretty sad since he’s more Ned Stark’s son than Rhaegar Targaryen’s in attitude and integrity. Perhaps she left him behind on purpose thinking she could take King’s Landing with her two dragons and remaining Unsullied. Jon’s bombshell about his true heritage no doubt shook her. 'The Last of Us': Everything You Need to Know About HBO's Adaptationīut there could be something else at stake. 'The Lord of the Rings': Everything You Need to Know About Amazon's Big Money Adaptation
‘Game of Thrones’ Main Title Designers Break Down Season 8’s New, Dramatic Opening Credit Sequence Daenerys Targaryen ( Emilia Clarke) and Jon Snow ( Kit Harington) have an important conversation before their attack on King. 'Game of Thrones': The Logistics Behind That Brutal Dragon Shot, Explained Daenerys Targaryen and Jon Snow in Game of Thrones Season 8, Episode 5. Had she learned nothing from the hundreds who died in the War of Winterfell? Yes, this has been her one, single-minded goal her whole life, but that’s all the more reason to actually figure out a military strategy and, you know, not underestimate the enemy. Of course, part of this is because Daenerys is in a rush to finally take the Iron Throne, not even waiting for the Northmen or even her own partner Jon Snow (Kit Harington) to recover. If that weren’t bad enough, her best female friend, translator, and confidant Missandei (Nathalie Emmanuel) is taken and then summarily executed by Cersei Lannister (Lena Headey), which isn’t just demoralizing for the Queen of Dragons, it’s heartbreaking for Grey Worm (Jacob Anderson.) After getting ambushed by Euron’s fleet, she loses yet another one of her children, Rhaegal, when he’s brutally shot down from the sky by new and improved Scorpions. On “Game of Thrones,” Daenerys Targaryen (Emilia Clarke) has suffered a crushing blow to her side after she was all but assured of victory.