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"Lord Snow" is the third episode of the first season of the HBO medieval fantasy television series Game of Thrones. It first aired on May 1, 2011. It was written by series creators David Benioff and D. B. Weiss, and directed by series regular Brian Kirk, his directorial debut for the series. [1]
- Overview
- Synopsis
- Appearances
- Cast
- Quotes
- Behind the scenes
- In the books
"Lord Snow" is the third episode of the first season of Game of Thrones. It is the third episode of the series overall. It premiered on May 1, 2011 on HBO. It was written by David Benioff and D.B. Weiss, and directed by Brian Kirk.
In King's Landing
The royal party reaches King's Landing. Almost immediately, Lord Eddard Stark is asked to attend a meeting of the king's Small Council and to change his clothes, but he refuses to the latter. Before that he encounters Jaime Lannister in the throne room. Jaime is still unhappy that Eddard judged him dishonorable for killing the Mad King, the murderer of Eddard's father and brother, and for having the nerve to casually seat himself upon the Iron Throne after mayhem was through. Jaime is unrepentant about it. Eddard meets the council members: Lord Petyr "Littlefinger" Baelish, the king's Master of Coin and a friend of Eddard's wife from childhood; Grand Maester Pycelle, the king's adviser in all matters scientific and academic; Lord Renly Baratheon, the younger of the king's two brothers and Master of Laws; and Varys, a eunuch and the Master of Whisperers (the head of the king's intelligence network). Varys tells Eddard that the council members heard about his "troubles on the Kingsroad" and that they pray for Joffrey's recovery. Eddard grimly responds "It's a shame no one prayed for the butcher's boy", which visibly upsets Varys. Eddard is stunned to learn that the crown is six million gold dragons in debt, half of which is to Lord Tywin Lannister. To make matters worse, King Robert has just ordered a lavish tournament to celebrate Eddard's appointment. He resolves to advise Robert to cancel the tournament, but the council is doubtful that the king will listen. Queen Cersei talks to Joffrey about the incident on the river. She tells him that when he is king, the truth will be whatever he decides it will be. Joffrey thinks there will be trouble with the Starks, and promises that when he is king, he will double their taxes, force them to contribute to a standing army and, should they object, crush them and install someone loyal, such as his great-uncle Kevan, as Warden of the North. Cersei points out that the North is too vast and wild to be militarily conquered by outsiders, and a king needs to be more clever. She also advises him to be kind to his betrothed Sansa Stark to avoid stirring up trouble for later, and concludes that "Anyone who isn't us is an enemy." Arya and Sansa are still at odds over the incident with Joffrey and her direwolf. Eddard explains to Arya that Sansa was put in a difficult position by the king and queen, and while she shouldn't have lied, winning the long-term approval of Joffrey, her future husband, was important. Arya is unhappy with the situation, but Eddard mollifies her by allowing her to practice with her sword, Needle. Catelyn Stark and Ser Rodrik arrive at King's Landing and attempt to sneak into the city, but are spotted by one of Littlefinger's men. They are taken to meet Littlefinger at a brothel he owns, where Lord Varys is also waiting. He explains that one of his 'little birds' told him they were coming. Catelyn is angered by the way they've been treated, but asks Littlefinger for aid in finding the people who tried to have Bran killed. Littlefinger is able to answer this quickly stating that the elaborate dagger wielded by the assassin used to be his, but he lost it in a gamble with Tyrion Lannister. Littlefinger fetches Eddard to meet his wife, but Eddard suspects a trick and pushes Littlefinger up against a wall outside the brothel wanting to know what his game is. Catelyn then appears, and Eddard is pacified. After hearing her news, he vows to find the truth and expose the Lannisters to Robert. Littlefinger agrees to be his ally in this, for the affection he once bore Catelyn as a youngster. Ravens arrive at King's Landing with news of Bran's recovery. Cersei fears he will expose their secret, but Jaime comforts her, confident they can outwit a child if need be. Elsewhere, Robert swaps old war stories with Ser Barristan Selmy, a distinguished and famous knight and the commander of the Kingsguard. Summoning Jaime Lannister, Robert jokingly questions him about Aerys Targaryen's death, wondering if the Mad King died begging for mercy, but Jaime rather coldly replies that the master he betrayed died screaming the same words he'd been saying since the siege of King's Landing began: "Burn them all". Eddard has contracted a swordmaster, Syrio Forel, the former First Sword of Braavos, to teach Arya how to use her sword properly. Arya is thrilled, and 'the dance' begins. As Eddard watches them practice, his pleasure at seeing Arya happy sours when he realizes that a conflict between the Starks and Lannisters may be inevitable; his daughter may well be training herself for war.
At Winterfell
At Winterfell, Bran has awoken but has no memory of his accident. His injuries have left him bedridden and unlikely to walk again. Old Nan, the oldest servant in the castle, tells Bran stories to pass the time, but he doesn't want her usual heroic stories about the likes of Ser Duncan the Tall. She instead speaks of the White Walkers and the coming of a vast winter that will blanket the world. When Robb pays a visit, Bran asks his brother if it is true that he will never walk again. Robb reluctantly says this is so. Bran remarks that he would rather be dead.
At the Wall
At Castle Black, the primary redoubt of the Night's Watch in the shadow of the Wall, Jon Snow shows his worth to the trainer, Ser Alliser Thorne, by besting several fellow members of the Watch in the practice yard. Thorne is disgusted at the poor performance of the others but has no praise for Jon either, dubbing him Lord Snow and describing him as "the least useless person here". Watching over the new recruits with Lord Commander Jeor Mormont, Tyrion notes Thorne's stern and unusual ways, but Jeor doesn't care as he only requires Thorne to turn the "thieves and runaways" into men of the Night's Watch. Later on, several of the other recruits gang up on Jon, but the situation is defused by Tyrion. Tyrion points out to Jon that none of the other recruits had the benefit of a skilled master-at-arms to train them, and that Jon is alienating them through his standoffish attitude and superior combat skills. Benjen Stark meets Jon atop the Wall and tells him he is going on a ranging in the Haunted Forest. He refuses to take Jon with him, telling him he isn't ready, and that here rank and nobility mean nothing. Every man must earn everything he gets. Before departing, Benjen stops by the eating area to say farewell to Yoren, a fellow Night's Watchman who scouts for new recruits in the capital. Benjen also scolds Tyrion for his naivety regarding what is north of the Wall and states that Tyrion has no authority to say what is or isn't beyond the Wall as he hasn't been out there himself. Later, Tyrion discusses north of the Wall with Jeor Mormont and his chief adviser, the ancient and blind Maester Aemon. Jeor asks for Tyrion to intercede at court and get the Watch more men as they are dangerously undermanned. Aemon warns that the Stark words are right. Winter is coming. It will be more harsh and terrible than any in living memory. More dangerous things than just wildlings might come with it. After all, one of their number swore that the White Walkers had returned ... right up to the moment Ned Stark cut his head off. Tyrion admits his skepticism that supernatural creatures might exist, but he agrees to bring word to his queen. Before departing for King's Landing, Tyrion fulfills an old ambition by climbing to the top of the Wall and urinating off the edge of it. He and Jon share a moment of fellowship before Tyrion departs for the capital in the company of Yoren.
Firsts
•Royal Steward •Petyr Baelish •Varys •Renly Baratheon •Grand Maester Pycelle •Old Nan •Jeor Mormont •Pypar •Ser Alliser Thorne •Grenn •Lancel Lannister •Ser Barristan Selmy •Rakharo •Yoren •Aemon •Syrio Forel
Starring
•Sean Bean as Eddard Stark •Mark Addy as Robert Baratheon •Nikolaj Coster-Waldau as Jaime Lannister •Michelle Fairley as Catelyn Stark •Lena Headey as Cersei Lannister •Emilia Clarke as Daenerys Targaryen •Iain Glen as Jorah Mormont •Aidan Gillen as Petyr Baelish •Harry Lloyd as Viserys Targaryen •Kit Harington as Jon Snow •Sophie Turner as Sansa Stark •Maisie Williams as Arya Stark •Isaac Hempstead-Wright as Bran Stark •Richard Madden as Robb Stark •Jack Gleeson as Joffrey Baratheon •and Peter Dinklage as Tyrion Lannister
Also starring
•Jason Momoa as Drogo
Guest starring
•Conleth Hill as Varys •James Cosmo as Jeor Mormont •Owen Teale as Ser Alliser Thorne •Jamie Sives as Jory Cassel •Ian McElhinney as Barristan Selmy •Ron Donachie as Ser Rodrik Cassel •Joseph Mawle as Benjen Stark •Francis Magee as Yoren •Julian Glover as Pycelle •Gethin Anthony as Renly Baratheon •Peter Vaughan as Aemon •Miltos Yerolemou as Syrio Forel •Margaret John as Old Nan •Susan Brown as Mordane •Robert Sterne as Royal Steward •Mark Stanley as Grenn •Josef Altin as Pypar •Luke McEwan as Rast •Elyes Gabel as Rakharo •Amrita Acharia as Irri •Eugene Simon as Lancel Lannister •Paul Portelli as a drunk man •Nikovich Sammut as Gold Cloak #1 •Seamus Kelly as Gold Cloak #2 •Emily Diamond as a King's Landing whore
Jaime Lannister: "It must be strange for you, coming into this room. I was standing right here when it happened. He was very brave, your brother. Your father too. They didn't deserve to die like that; nobody deserves to die like that."
Eddard Stark: "But you just stood there and watched."
Jaime: "Five hundred men just stood there and watched. All the great knights of the Seven Kingdoms, you think anyone said a word, lifted a finger? No, Lord Stark. Five hundred men and this room was silent as a crypt...except for the screams, of course, and the Mad King laughing. And later, when I watched the Mad King die, I remembered him laughing as your father burned...it felt like justice."
Eddard: "Is that what you tell yourself at night? You're a servant of justice? That you were avenging my father when you shoved your sword in Aerys Targaryen's back?"
Jaime: "Tell me, if I'd stabbed the Mad King in the belly instead of the back, would you admire me more?"
Eddard: "You served him well. When serving was safe."
General
•The episode takes its title from a mocking nickname given to Jon Snow by Ser Alliser Thorne. •The soundtrack playing over the credits is a rendition of Arya's theme. There was no official release for it. •This episode is dedicated to the memory of Margaret John, who plays Old Nan, and who sadly passed away on 2 February 2011 after a brief illness. •During the Small Council scene, Renly hands Ned Stark a scroll containing the announcement of the tournament and the prizes for the winners, which he then reads off as "40,000 gold dragons for the champion, 20,000 for the runner-up, and 20,000 for the best archer". Pycelle then asks if the crown can afford 80,000 Gold Dragons in prize money. If you pause when Ned first unrolls the scroll, its contents are actually clearly legible: it goes on to say that there is a 20,000 Gold Dragon prize for "Combat with Swords and Clubs", which makes for a total tournament debt of 100,000 Gold Dragons. It is unclear why this discrepancy occurred. •Littlefinger states that the Crown is six million in debt, half of it to Tywin, without specifying to whom the other half is owed. In a later episode, it is revealed that one of the main creditors of the Crown is the Iron Bank of Braavos. •In the parallel book scene, Littlefinger states that the Crown owes more than six million gold pieces, and specifies the main creditors: most of the debt is owed to House Lannister, and the rest to the Iron Bank, the Tyrells, several Tyroshi trading cartels (together), and the Faith. In the fourth novel, it is revealed that the debt to the Faith is nearly one million. •It is doubtful Robert could have spent so much money in fifteen years, even with all his entertainments. In "Walk of Punishment", Bronn suggests that Littlefinger might have embezzled the treasury; if Bronn's speculation is correct, it could be an additional motive for the Assassination of Jon Arryn - to prevent him from inspecting the ledgers. •The Dothraki word that Irri is heard teaching Daenerys, "athjahakar", is the Dothraki word for "pride". It is derived from "jahak", the long braid worn by Dothraki warriors which they take great pride in, as they only cut their braids when defeated. •When the Royal Steward greets Eddard Stark and says that Grand Maester Pycelle has called a meeting of the Small Council, the steward mispronounces "maester" as "my-stir"; the correct pronunciation is actually "may-stir". This was reportedly a common mistake on set which took the cast some time to get right. •When Joffrey complains to Cersei that every lord in the realm commands his own soldiers raised from his feudal lands, he comments that he feels this is primitive, "no better than the Hill tribes." This is the first mention of the hill tribes of the Mountains of the Moon which ring the Vale of Arryn, though they won't be encountered on-screen until two episodes after this, in "The Wolf and the Lion". •Joffrey also mentions "uncle Kevan": Kevan Lannister first appears on-screen five episodes from this in "The Pointy End". Of course, Joffrey is speaking loosely, as Kevan is actually his mother's uncle and therefore his great-uncle (it's common in real-life to refer to great-uncles as just "uncle"). •Old Nan offers to tell Bran a story about Ser Duncan the Tall. This is the first time in the show Duncan, also known as "Dunk", is mentioned; he is one of the main characters in the Tales of Dunk and Egg prequel novellas, which take place 89 years before the events of Game of Thrones (there are time skips between novellas in the series, and George R.R. Martin has said that he wants to continue them all the way up to the deaths of the characters, about 50 years before Game of Thrones). Ser Duncan visited Winterfell in one of his adventures, and it is speculated that Old Nan met him in her youth. •The scene between Robert, Barristan, and Jaime, the scene between Tyrion, Yoren, and Benjen, and the scene between Jorah, Rakharo and Irri were written at the last minute because the rough-cut of the episode was running short, and filmed in post-production re-shoots. Note that all of these scenes are interior shots which didn't need to be filmed on-location. •Robert says that he killed a Tarly at the Battle of Summerhall. According to the books, the Tarlys did not participate in that battle; instead, they fought against Robert (and defeated him) in the Battle of Ashford. •It is never revealed in the show who sent the assassin to kill Bran and who is the real owner of the dagger. In A Clash of Kings Catelyn is told to whom Littlefinger lost the dagger; in A Storm of Swords two characters figure out, based on circumstantial evidence, who sent the assassin. •For full information, see the articles about the "Valyrian steel dagger" and "Catspaw". •Since Jaime and Cersei are not POV characters in the first novel, their conversation in this episode about Bran does not occur on-screen in the novels; it is mentioned in a flashback in A Storm of Swords, when Jaime becomes a POV character. •This is the first episode in which no deaths occurred. •It is also the only episode in this season with no deaths. •This makes it also the first episode without deaths before the start of the War of Five Kings.
Commentary
Actors Isaac Hempstead Wright, Maisie Williams, and Sophie Turner provide an audio commentary for the episode on the DVD and Blu-ray releases. •The young actors sing along with the main theme during the title sequence. •Sean Bean was noted by the younger actors for secreting chocolate bars on his person and sneaking them to his young co-stars during filming. •Conleth Hill apparently enjoyed trying to put Sophie Turner off during her close-ups. •English-accented Sophie Turner and Irish-accented Jack Gleeson would imitate one another's accents for amusement between takes. •Isaac Hempstead Wright's only scene with Jack Gleeson was a mock battle scene in the pilot, where Bran and Tommen have a mock fight while Joffrey and Robb watch on (this scene occurred in the book). This was not used in the final episode. •The argument between Arya and Sansa at the breakfast table was Sophie Turner's first scene filmed for the first season. Maisie Williams dented the table with the knife so badly it had to be rotated several times to hide the marks from the camera. •Mark Addy spooked one of the horses in the king's arrival scene in the first episode with his laugh, while he was talking to Isaac Hempstead Wright. •Mark Addy's prosthetic beard was apparently easily removable so he could eat lunch without ruining it. •Eugene Simon taught Maisie Williams and Sophie Turner some magic tricks between takes. •Emilia Clarke was allowed to pick one of four horses for Daenerys's use in the series. •Harry Lloyd was responsible for introducing the iPhone game Fruit Ninja to the cast. It went on to become a craze on set, with cast and crew competing to see who could get the highest score. •Joseph Mawle told Maisie Williams and Sophie Turner that if acting was easy, everyone would be doing it, so not to be worried if they found scenes hard because the producers had reasons for choosing them and they would be able to do the job. •The producers considered asking Miltos Yerolemou to shave his hair off to match the appearance of Syrio Forel in the books, but decided he looked better with his hair. Author George R.R. Martin himself would later say in another Season 1 commentary that he didn't care about such minor differences, being more concerned with the satisfying performance of the actor.
•The episode is adapted from the following chapters of A Game of Thrones:
•Chapter 18, Catelyn IV.
•Chapter 19, Jon III.
•Chapter 20, Eddard IV.
•Chapter 21, Tyrion III.
•Chapter 22, Arya II.
- 2 min
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Ned appears in the doorway to watch quietly. At first, he smiles at his daughter's talent, but his pleasure fades quickly as he realizes that Arya could very well be preparing for war. Stream Season 1 Episode 3 of Game of Thrones online or on your device plus recaps, previews, and other clips.
May 1, 2011 · Season 1, Episode 3. Jon impresses Tyrion at Castle Black; Ned confronts his past and future at King’s Landing; Daenerys finds herself at odds with Viserys
Apr 25, 2011 · The Starks and Royal Family arrive in King’s Landing. Ned learns what his role as the Hand of the King entails, as Catelyn secretly joins him to share disturbing news.
Jon wins an ironic nickname, " Lord Snow," while Tyrion trades quips with the Lord Commander of the Night's Watch, Jeor Mormont, called "the Old Bear," about Ser Alliser's (lack of) efficacy as a trainer. Mormont also mentions that a raven arrived for Jon from Winterfell that morning.
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May 1, 2011 · Lord Snow: Directed by Brian Kirk. With Sean Bean, Mark Addy, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Michelle Fairley. Jon begins his training with the Night's Watch; Ned confronts his past and future at King's Landing; Daenerys finds herself at odds with Viserys.