
A Sheep, a Wild Dragon, and a Prince Lost at Sea: House of the Dragon’s New Season Begins
The third season of HBO’s prequel opens with the Battle of the Gullet, a naval clash that reshapes the Targaryen civil war and reignites debate over the show’s departures from George R.R. Martin’s source material.
A lone sheep grazes on a green hill. It is a brief, pastoral image that opens the third season of House of the Dragon, and as German media noted, sheep rarely fare well in this world. The calm is shattered when Rhaena Targaryen, a dragonless daughter of Daemon, finally claims the wild beast Sheepstealer in the Vale, a moment that propels her into the heart of the war. Her first flight, however, is no triumph. Soaring into the Battle of the Gullet to aid her family’s fleet, she loses control of the dragon, which attacks friend and foe alike, sowing chaos that allows enemy ships to bring down Prince Jacaerys Velaryon and his dragon Vermax with a grappling hook and a volley of crossbow bolts.
The naval engagement, depicted as the largest in Westerosi history, marks a decisive turn in the Dance of the Dragons. Rhaenyra Targaryen loses not only a son but her heir, a loss that, according to Latin American entertainment sites, transforms her into a leader bent solely on vengeance. The episode also introduces Ormund Hightower, a new power player described by showrunner Ryan Condal as the “Tywin Lannister of this world,” and sees the death of the Triarchy’s admiral Sharako Lohar at the hands of Alyn of Hull. For viewers in India, where the series streams on JioHotstar and episodes drop at 6:30 am IST on Mondays, the premiere was a major event after a two-year hiatus, with local press providing detailed release calendars and character guides.
The adaptation choices have drawn sharp scrutiny from critics in the United States and Britain. The most significant change is the erasure of Nettles, a lowborn Black character who tames Sheepstealer in Martin’s Fire & Blood through patience and mutton offerings. In the show, her role is absorbed by Rhaena, a decision that US commentators note streamlines the cast but also removes a rare non-Targaryen dragonrider and alters the emotional texture of the battle. British reviewers, while acknowledging the episode’s technical virtuosity—the camera moves from land to air to water with a grace that matches the mythical creatures—have expressed disappointment that the series continues to prioritise spectacle over the earthy wisdom and discursive pleasure of its predecessor, Game of Thrones.
Across Latin America, the focus has been more on the practicalities of viewing: HBO Max released the full episode calendar, confirming eight weekly instalments culminating on 9 August, with the premiere running a special 72 minutes. The region’s entertainment press has framed the season as a return to the violent, dragon-heavy action that audiences craved after a second season heavy on political manoeuvring. In India, the show’s arrival on JioHotstar was bundled into broader weekly streaming guides, signalling its place as a marquee title in a crowded OTT market.
The episode closes on an image that lingers: the body of Prince Jacaerys floating inert in the sea, a young man who had locked his mother in her chamber to keep her from the battlefield, now himself a casualty of the chaos unleashed by a newly minted dragonrider. It is a moment that, as one US critic observed, dares the audience to enjoy the long-awaited spectacle while making the cost unmistakably clear.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 4 languages
The third season opens with the spectacular Battle of the Gullet, a naval clash that deals a painful blow to Rhaenyra's faction. The episode also introduces Cregan Stark, solidifying the alliance with the North. Episode guides and release calendars accompany the triumphant return of the series.
First dragons, then democracy: the series returns with an imposing sea battle, but the gaze remains ironic and detached. Sheep meet a bad end, as always, and something is finally happening in Westeros. The spectacle is appreciated with a certain skepticism, amid political intrigue and long waits.
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