House Of The Dragon S01e04 Satrip May 2026
Olivia Cooke (now taking over as adult Alicent) delivers a quiet storm. Her discovery of Rhaenyra’s secret (via a spy in the brothel) and her confrontation with Viserys is heartbreaking. She genuinely loved Rhaenyra as a friend, but duty and fear have turned that love into bitter vigilance. The episode ends with Alicent walking into the feast in a green dress —the color of the Hightowers’ war call—signaling she is no longer Rhaenyra’s ally but her enemy. Iconic television moment.
Ramin Djawadi’s score shifts from heroic to seductive and melancholy. The nighttime streets of King’s Landing feel alive and grimy. The brothel sequence is lit by firelight and shadows, making desire feel both thrilling and threatening. What Doesn’t Quite Work 1. The Time Jump Feels Abrupt This episode jumps months ahead after the Stepstones war. While necessary, the transition from Rhaenyra as a grieving (potential) lover of Ser Criston to her being openly flirtatious with Daemon feels slightly rushed. A middle scene showing her boredom at court would have helped. house of the dragon s01e04 satrip
“King of the Narrow Sea” is the episode where House of the Dragon stops being a good political drama and becomes a great tragic one. It’s uncomfortable, seductive, and sets the stage for the war to come. Watch it for Alcock and Smith’s fearless performances, and stay for the moment a friendship dies in a dress. Olivia Cooke (now taking over as adult Alicent)
Paddy Considine continues to shine. Viserys is caught between father and king. He knows Daemon manipulated Rhaenyra, but he also knows punishing her would expose the scandal. His solution—forcing Rhaenyra to marry Laenor Velaryon—is politically smart but emotionally devastating. The scene where he confronts Rhaenyra (“You are my political headache”) is raw and real. The episode ends with Alicent walking into the
A brief, jarring cut from the brothel to the next morning—it needed 10 more seconds of emotional fallout.
Here’s a review of House of the Dragon Season 1, Episode 4, “King of the Narrow Sea,” focusing on key plot points, character development, and themes. (Note: “Satrip” appears to be a typo for the episode title; I’ll review the actual episode.) “King of the Narrow Sea” is the episode where House of the Dragon fully ignites. After three episodes of setup—succession disputes, heir tournaments, and the Stepstones war—this episode strips away the battles and pageantry to focus on one thing: unchecked desire and its political consequences. It’s tense, intimate, and deeply uncomfortable in the best way. What Works 1. Rhaenyra and Daemon’s Dynamic The core of the episode is the uncle-niece relationship. Matt Smith and Milly Alcock have electric chemistry. Their night out in King’s Landing—disguised among the common folk, watching a play, then venturing into the city’s pleasure houses—is both liberating and reckless. Daemon awakens something dangerous in Rhaenyra: not just sexual curiosity, but a taste of true freedom from duty. The scene where he nearly seduces her in the brothel (before stopping himself) is deliberately ambiguous—did he lose control or gain it? Either way, it’s a masterclass in tension.