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The Bells (Game of Thrones)

"The Bells" is the fifth episode of the eighth season of HBO's medieval fantasy television series Game of Thrones. The 72nd and penultimate episode of the series overall, it was written by series co-creators David Benioff and D. B. Weiss, and directed by Miguel Sapochnik.[2] It first aired on HBO on May 12, 2019.

"The Bells"
Game of Thrones episode
Episode no.Season 8
Episode 5
Directed byMiguel Sapochnik
Written byDavid Benioff
D. B. Weiss
Featured musicRamin Djawadi
Cinematography byFabian Wagner
Original air dateMay 12, 2019 (2019-05-12)
Running time77 minutes[1]
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
← Previous
"The Last of the Starks"
Next →
"The Iron Throne"
Game of Thrones (season 8)
List of episodes

"The Bells" features the final battle for control of the Iron Throne, with an army led by Daenerys Targaryen commencing its assault on Cersei Lannister and the people of King's Landing. In the episode, Tyrion Lannister betrays Varys and reveals Varys's treason to Daenerys; Jaime Lannister is freed by Tyrion; Arya Stark and Sandor "The Hound" Clegane seek personal vengeance; Jon Snow prepares to lead the ground forces against the Lannister army; and Drogon, mounted by Daenerys, burns the city down. The episode received a polarized response from critics and audiences alike. Critics praised the episode's visuals, as well as the acting and direction, but criticized the pacing and logic of the story, as well as its handling of the character arcs of Tyrion, Jaime, Cersei, Grey Worm, Varys, and particularly Daenerys.

The episode received four Primetime Emmy Award nominations, including Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series for Lena Headey and Outstanding Production Design for a Fantasy Series, winning for Outstanding Fantasy/Sci-Fi Costumes and Outstanding Special Visual Effects.[3]

Plot edit

On Dragonstone edit

As Varys writes a letter about Jon Snow's true heritage, one of his "little birds" informs him that Daenerys continues to refuse food. He tells the child to "try again at supper". Soon after, Varys implores Jon to take the Iron Throne, but Jon refuses to betray Daenerys. Tyrion informs Daenerys of Varys' plot, and she has Drogon burn him alive. Later, Daenerys bemoans not having the love of the people in Westeros. Jon assures Daenerys that he loves her. However, when he halts their intimacy, Daenerys resigns herself to using fear to rule Westeros. Tyrion implores Daenerys to spare the commoners of King's Landing if the city bells ring, indicating surrender. Daenerys appears to accept. She then informs Tyrion that Jaime has been captured on his way to King's Landing and warns Tyrion not to fail her again.

Tyrion arrives at the Targaryen forces' camp and frees Jaime so that, if the capital falls, Jaime can take Cersei to Pentos and live safely in seclusion.

In King's Landing edit

The next day, Arya Stark and Sandor Clegane enter the Red Keep amongst the civilians Cersei is using as human shields. The battle begins: Daenerys and Drogon burn the Iron Fleet and the Golden Company, and destroy the city's defences. Grey Worm kills Harry Strickland, and Daenerys' army storms King's Landing. Outmatched, the Lannister forces drop their weapons and the city rings the bells in surrender. However, Daenerys does not accept the surrender and, atop Drogon, burns the city while her army participates in the massacre on the ground. Horrified by this turn of events, Jon unsuccessfully tries to stop his men from attacking, before he and Davos have them fall back as the city burns.

As Jaime makes his way to the Red Keep to rescue Cersei, he encounters and fights Euron. He mortally wounds Euron but is gravely injured himself. Sandor convinces Arya to give up vengeance against Cersei and they part ways as friends. As Cersei and Qyburn attempt to escape, Sandor arrives and kills the Queensguard in order to fight his brother, Gregor. Gregor kills Qyburn when he attempts to intervene and Cersei flees. They fight while the castle falls around them, with Gregor resistant to Sandor's attacks. Sandor tackles him through a collapsing wall and they fall to their deaths in the fires below. Jaime reunites with Cersei, but they find their escape passage is blocked by rubble. Jaime comforts Cersei as the Red Keep collapses on them and kills them.

Arya experiences the chaos on the streets in King's Landing as she tries to help in the evacuation and is soon knocked unconscious when a tower collapses near her. When she wakes up, she finds the city destroyed and deserted, with many corpses scattered amongst the ash and rubble. She then encounters Harry Strickland's white horse and rides it out of the city.

Production edit

 
 
Conleth Hill (left) and Rory McCann (right) made their final appearances in the series.

Writing edit

The episode was written by David Benioff and D. B. Weiss.

Filming edit

The episode was directed by Miguel Sapochnik. This was his final episode of the series.[citation needed]

For the filming of the episode, the city of Dubrovnik (the stand-in for King's Landing) was recreated on the backlot of their Belfast set. Filming Varys's death scene ultimately ended up taking seven months as rain kept postponing the shoot.[4]

In a promotional photo of the scene in which Jaime and Cersei embrace at the Red Keep, his right hand is visible instead of the metallic prosthetic the character received in season 4. In the actual episode, only the metallic hand is seen. The error in the image garnered attention in light of the previous episode's coffee cup mistake.[5][6]

Casting edit

Laura Elphinstone was cast as one of the inhabitants of King's Landing who helped Arya Stark during the dragon attack on the city.[7] The American football quarterback Aaron Rodgers appears in a cameo in this episode.[8]

Reception edit

Ratings edit

The episode was viewed by 12.48 million viewers on its initial live broadcast on HBO, surpassing "The Dragon and the Wolf" as the most-watched episode of the series. An additional 5.9 million viewers watched on streaming platforms, for a total of 18.4 million viewers.[9]

Critical response edit

General edit

On review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes, the episode has an approval rating of 49% based on 109 reviews, with an average rating of 6.3/10. The critical consensus reads: "Death, destruction, and the deterioration of Daenerys' sanity make 'The Bells' an episode for the ages; but too much plot in too little time muddles the story and may leave some viewers feeling its conclusions are unearned."[10] It is the second lowest-rated episode on Rotten Tomatoes, behind the finale "The Iron Throne".[11]

Lenika Cruz of The Atlantic wrote that although she found the special effects stunning and the acting spectacular, this was "the worst Game of Thrones episode ever" because the plot was either too obvious or illogical, with the massacre seeming "an unearned negation of the identity [Daenerys] had spent years building for herself".[12] Emily VanDerWerff of Vox found the episode grim and absent of sense, but credited director Miguel Sapochnik for "the gorgeous visuals [that] extended beyond the battle scenes." VanDerWerff praised the acting of the cast such as Maisie Williams, Lena Headey, Peter Dinklage, and Emilia Clarke; the latter two, she wrote, made their characters' actions believable even when they were illogical.[13] Alex McLevy of The A.V. Club wrote that the episode successfully demonstrated that "the chaos of war makes villains and victims of us all", with the "progression from exhilarating hope to tragic denouement [being] skillfully executed by director Miguel Sapochnik" with better large-scale choreography than in "The Long Night".[14]

Hugh Montgomery of BBC Culture wrote that characters such as Tyrion, Jaime, Daenerys, and Cersei were "definitively sacrificed to the show's scrambled plotting", and that Game of Thrones was previously "a show that intelligently delineated a senseless world", but that it was now nonsense.[15] VanDerWerff stated that Cersei and Jaime's deaths were not given much thought by the writers and were instead simply something to check off a list.[13] Kelly Lawler of USA Today, saying that the episode lacked substance and was an "absolute disaster", argued that Grey Worm, Daenerys and Varys took actions which were wildly out of character.[16]

Alan Sepinwall of Rolling Stone wrote that the episode's "technical genius" and "the visual clarity only made it easier to see how muddled the show has been, from both a narrative and character standpoint, in this home stretch", with the scorpions turning from accurate to useless, Euron surviving Drogon to have a "pointless fight with Jaime", the setting of Cleganebowl being invulnerable while the castle fell, Jaime easily entering the gated Red Keep, and the appearance of "seemingly hundreds of Dothraki" despite most of them apparently dying in 'The Long Night'.[17] Lawler also said that the writers "threw out their own rule book (suddenly the scorpions don't work and Drogon can burn everything?) to pursue gross spectacle".[16]

Several critics criticized the pacing of events; Lawler wrote that the pacing started off rushed,[16] while Spencer Kornhaber of The Atlantic said that the show was "sprinting through plot check marks".[18] Will Bedingfield of Wired also felt that the show rushed storylines, seeing the death of Varys as being without the climactic buildup previous seasons had.[19] Sarah Hughes of The Guardian said season eight had pacing problems and that this was because season seven also had pacing issues that ensured that the rest of the series would feel "breathless and rushed."[20]

Daenerys's arc edit

 
Critics generally considered Daenerys Targaryen's (Emilia Clarke) villainous turn in this episode unearned.[21]

Daenerys's turn from hero to villain was especially criticized, with many reviewers and fans feeling that, because she was built up as a morally good protagonist for seven seasons, it made no narrative sense, or that it was not executed properly within the provided timescale.[21][22][23][24] Mike Hogan of Vanity Fair said that although the show had been clear that Daenerys has a temper, "we have seen her balance that violence with mercy, kindness, and above all shrewdness."[25] Zack Beauchamp of Vox argued that Daenerys's previous cruelties were somewhat logical because she killed people who "committed crimes deserving of punishment" and Samwell Tarly's father and brother because they "refused to submit to her rule," but that there was no reason to go after harmless civilians. He said although the show had been "building toward Daenerys becoming the Mad Queen" and this route could have worked, "its execution was sloppy and rushed" and "it felt as if Daenerys had become a monster simply because the show needed her to become a monster, not because it was paying off a thoughtfully developed character turn."[26] Slate's Sam Adams said "the show spent far more time making Dany a hero" than building her up as the Mad Queen.[21]

The Atlantic staff opened, "Game of Thrones could have easily demonstrated the nasty reality of [Daenerys's] fight for Westeros without putting the choice to massacre innocents directly on her shoulders. Instead, 'The Bells' ended up painting one of the most pivotal plot points in the final season as an emotional lashing-out from a tired, lonely, paranoid young woman."[27] Kathryn VanArendonk of Vulture also criticized the episode for "ultimately hing[ing] on a trope as painfully stale as 'and then the scary powerful woman goes crazy'."[28] Eliana Dockterman of Time criticized the analyses of Daenerys's advisors as also playing "into the terrible trope of the crazed, power-hungry woman" and Tyrion's advice as having kept Daenerys from taking the Iron Throne much earlier and without as much bloodshed. She said she understood the idea of power corrupting "a heroic figure like Daenerys" and Daenerys falling prey to a messiah complex, but that the show needed to evolve her to that point like it evolved other characters to their points.[29] Alan Sepinwall of Rolling Stone stated that Daenerys's descent into madness is the kind of development that requires "at least another half of a regular-length GoT season to feel earned."[17]

Myles McNutt of The A.V. Club said that Daenerys's final arc comes down to two aspects – story development and character development. He said Daenerys burning down King's Landing is a logical and effective way of ending the story on a thematic level, adding that how "it reshapes the rest of the episode is a striking reframing of the violence that has defined the show." Character-wise, he felt that the choice was "undeniably trickier" because one might be led to believe that Daenerys's choice was purely reflexive when it was instead due to "a collection of life experiences that left her believing that ruling with fear was the only path ahead of her." He said "the writers failed to create the necessary structure for [the villainous turn]" and they could have better highlighted Daenerys's destiny as a villain by referencing things such as her prophecy in Qarth.[30] Variety's Daniel D'Addario also argued that it made sense that Daenerys would burn the city because her "tactics have always been more deeply rooted in dominance than in empathy."[21] Arguing that the change in Daenerys's arc has likely been planned by George R. R. Martin from the beginning, Vox's Andrew Prokop stated, "If Game of Thrones ended with a triumphant Daenerys Targaryen heroically taking the Iron Throne, it wouldn't be Game of Thrones. This is the show of Ned Stark's death. This is the show of the Red Wedding. This is the ending it was headed toward all along."[31]

Screen Rant's Alexandra August felt that "ultimately it comes down to your interpretation of Dany's arc and how much that interpretation was diluted by pacing, execution and cultural context, if at all." She pondered different ways she felt the show could have pulled off the arc better, such as Daenerys only choosing to kill Cersei, but concluded that there would eventually be someone else to push her over the edge regardless.[32] Also stating that "there are many ways to interpret" Daenerys's decision to burn the city, Megan Garber of The Atlantic said that maybe it was the Targaryen madness having settled in, or her ruthlessness taking over, or a "crazy edit" by the writers, or a decision "that some innocents must die in the present so that many more can live peacefully in the future," or maybe that Daenerys "having recently lost her second dragon and the apparent loyalty of those left in her orbit, she simply made a blunt calculation about power and what will be required to attain it." Garber said that "ambiguity is a powerful tool in storytelling," but that "it is also a difficult one to wield well," and that "Dany is a savior, and Dany is a monster, and it is impossible to know where one ends and the other begins." To Garber, this uncertainty made Daenerys's actions all the more horrific because logic will not always win and "justice won't always save the day."[33]

Showrunners David Benioff and D. B. Weiss attributed Daenerys's decision to burn the city to having lost almost all of her friends and advisors, no longer trusting Jon Snow, and wanting to reclaim the home that her family built. Benioff said that Jon also being unable to return her affections because they are related played a factor. Weiss stated, "I think that when she says, 'Let it be fear,' she's resigning herself to the fact that she may have to get things done in a way that isn't pleasant." Benioff said that the ruthless side to Daenerys had always been there and that "if Cersei hadn't betrayed her, if Cersei hadn't executed Missandei, if Jon hadn't told her the truth [...] if all of these things had happened in any different way, then I don't think we'd be seeing this side of Daenerys Targaryen."[34] Emilia Clarke said, "Every single thing that's led her to this point, and there she is, alone."[35] VanArendonk expressed disappointment that Weiss and Benioff explained Daenerys's actions as due to her emotions, instead of some "twisted, empathetic logic".[28] Emma Baty of Cosmopolitan also criticized the showrunners' response, stating, "Totally, totally. A woman is definitely prone to ending thousands of innocent lives just because her dad did the same, even though in the entire series, she's been insistent on not becoming that person. That checks out!"[35]

Audience response edit

People magazine's Aurelie Corinthios said, "Despite the major plot developments, viewers were left wanting more from a series that has spent the last eight seasons meticulously building up complex characters." She added that "others defended the episode, arguing that while the action was definitely 'rushed,' the main elements still made sense. Plus, didn't we always know we wouldn't get a happy ending?"[36] Lauren Hill of Chicago Tribune relayed that the episode "had fans very divided. Some are upset by the character arcs of certain fan favorites while others saw this coming for quite some time."[37]

Reviewers made note of negative fan reactions, especially to Daenerys's arc. Estelle Tang of Elle stated that many "commented how unbelievable it was for Dany to turn into a violent vengeance-seeker this far into the show's run."[38] Esquire's Gabrielle Bruney said viewers felt that the writers threw out her character development.[39] The Hollywood Reporter staff stated that "many Game of Thrones viewers see Daenerys' acts as nothing short of a character assassination, laying blame for the treatment of the Dragon Queen, Cersei and the series' other powerful women at the feet of creators David Benioff and Dan Weiss."[24] Mehera Bonner of Cosmopolitan wrote that "fans are absolutely devastated" by the episode and that they bemoaned "how the show has been completely ruined by sloppy writing and terrible decisions." She said, "While you could argue that we should have seen a lot of this coming, many fans were... [I don't know]... just hoping for better? Better than Daenerys becoming a Mad Queen just because it's in her family history and better than Jaime reverting to his season 1 personality just because it’s the easy way out."[40]

A petition to HBO for a remake of the eighth season of Game of Thrones "that makes sense" was started on Change.org after the preceding episode "The Last of the Starks" aired, but went viral following the initial broadcast of "The Bells".[41] The petition described showrunners David Benioff and D. B. Weiss as "woefully incompetent writers".[42][43][44] As of May 18, 2019 (i.e., the evening before the series finale), it has amassed over 1 million signatures.[41][44][45] The petition was labelled as "ridiculous" by actor Isaac Hempstead Wright (who plays Bran Stark),[46] and "rude" by actor Jacob Anderson (who plays Grey Worm).[47] Sophie Turner (who plays Sansa) said that "there's always been crazy twists and turns" on Game of Thrones and "so Daenerys becoming something of the Mad Queen — it shouldn't be such a negative thing for fans. It's a shock for sure, but I think it's just because it hasn't gone their way." She argued, "All of these petitions and things like that — I think it's disrespectful to the crew, and the writers, and the filmmakers who have worked tirelessly over 10 years, and for 11 months shooting the last season."[48]

Awards and nominations edit

Year Award Category Nominee(s) Result Ref(s)
2019 Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series Lena Headey Nominated [49]
Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards Outstanding Fantasy/Sci-Fi Costumes Michele Clapton, Emma O'Loughlin, and Kate O'Farrell Won [50]
Outstanding Production Design for a Narrative Period or Fantasy Program (One Hour or More) Deborah Riley, Paul Ghirardani, and Rob Cameron Nominated
Outstanding Special Visual Effects Joe Bauer, Steve Kullback, Adam Chazen, Sam Conway, Mohsen Mousavi, Martin Hill, Ted Rae, Patrick Tiberius Gehlen, and Thomas Schelesny Won

References edit

  1. ^ "S8 E5: The Bells". HBO. Home Box Office, Inc. Retrieved May 27, 2022. 1 HR 18 MIN
  2. ^ "The Bells". HBO. Home Box Office, Inc. Retrieved May 27, 2022.
  3. ^ "71st Emmy Awards Nominees and Winners". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Retrieved January 11, 2021.
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  5. ^ Corinthios, Aurelie (May 13, 2019). "Another Game of Thrones Gaffe? Fans Think Jaime Lannister's Hand Grew Back to Hug Cersei". People. Retrieved May 13, 2019.
  6. ^ Christina Maxouris (May 14, 2019). "Fans may have caught another 'Game of Thrones' editing error -- but not in the episode". CNN. Retrieved May 14, 2019.
  7. ^ O'Connor, Roisin. "Game of Thrones season 8: Line of Duty star Laura Elphinstone cameos in Arya Stark scenes". The Independent.
  8. ^ Desta, Yohana (May 13, 2019). "Game of Thrones: Aaron Rodgers Made a Sneaky Cameo in the Big Battle". Vanity Fair.
  9. ^ ‘Game Of Thrones’ Viewership Scorches Records With Series & HBO High As Finale Looms. Deadline. May 14, 2019.
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  26. ^ Beauchamp, Zack (May 12, 2019). "How Game of Thrones did Daenerys wrong". Vox. Retrieved May 13, 2019.
  27. ^ Sims, David; Cruz, Lenika; Kornhaber, Spencer (May 12, 2019). "Game of Thrones Delivers Its Most Cataclysmic Episode". The Atlantic. Retrieved May 13, 2019.
  28. ^ a b VanArendonk, Kathryn (May 13, 2019). "Game of Thrones Finally Got Its Mad Queen". Vulture. Retrieved May 14, 2019.
  29. ^ Dockterman, Eliana (May 13, 2019). "How Daenerys Finally Turned Into the Mad Queen on Game of Thrones". Time. Retrieved May 13, 2019.
  30. ^ McNutt, Myles (May 12, 2019). "Game Of Thrones brutally asserts that the game in question will have no winner (experts)". The A.V. Club. Retrieved May 15, 2019.
  31. ^ Prokop, Andrew (May 15, 2019). "Game of Thrones' King's Landing horror fittingly reveals what the show has always been about". Vox. Retrieved May 15, 2019.
  32. ^ August, Alexandra (May 15, 2019). "Game Of Thrones: Dany Was Always A Mad Queen (We Just Didn't Want To Admit It)". Screen Rant. Retrieved May 15, 2019.
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  36. ^ Corinthios, Aurelie (May 13, 2019). "Game of Thrones Fans Slam Penultimate Episode: 'Laziest Writing I've Ever Seen'". People. Retrieved May 14, 2019.
  37. ^ Hill, Lauren (May 13, 2019). "'Game of Thrones' Season 8 Episode 5: Did you love it or hate it? Fans are divided". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved May 14, 2019.
  38. ^ Tang, Estelle (May 13, 2019). "Best Tweets and Memes About Mad Queen Daenerys Targaryen in Game of Thrones Season 8". Elle. Retrieved May 13, 2019.
  39. ^ Bruney, Gabrielle (May 13, 2019). "Game of Thrones Fans Aren't Happy About What Daenerys Did in Episode Five". Esquire. Retrieved May 13, 2019.
  40. ^ Bonner, Mehera (May 13, 2019). "People Absolutely Hated Last Night's 'Game of Thrones' Episode". Cosmopolitan. Retrieved May 13, 2019.
  41. ^ a b Lee, Jess (May 18, 2019). "Game of Thrones fan petition asking for HBO to remake season 8 hits 1 million signatures". Digital Spy. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  42. ^ "Game of Thrones petition: 500,000 demand series eight remake". BBC News. May 16, 2019. Retrieved May 17, 2019.
  43. ^ Fieldstadt, Elisha (May 16, 2019). "Nearly 800,000 'Game of Thrones' fans sign petition for remake of season 8". NBC News. Retrieved May 17, 2019.
  44. ^ a b Lewis, Sophie (May 18, 2019). "Over 1 million angry "Game of Thrones" fans petition to remake season 8". CBS News. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  45. ^ Roeper, Richard (May 20, 2019). "'Game of Thrones' finale review: Enthralling series comes to a satisfying end". Chicago Sun Times. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  46. ^ Wigler, Josh (May 17, 2019). "'Game of Thrones' Final Season: Stars Look Toward the "Very Clever" Series Final". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  47. ^ Daly, Rhian (May 17, 2019). "'Game Of Thrones' star weighs in on petition to remake season 8: "I think it's rude"". NME. Retrieved May 18, 2019.
  48. ^ Egner, Jeremy (May 20, 2019). "Sophie Turner on 'Game of Thrones,' 'Disrespectful' Fan Reactions and Sansa's End". The New York Times. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  49. ^ Beachum, Chris (July 29, 2019). "Lena Headey ('Game of Thrones') 2019 Emmy Awards episode revealed for Best Drama Supporting Actress (Exclusive)". GoldDerby. Retrieved August 10, 2019.
  50. ^ Hill, Libby (September 14, 2019). "Complete Creative Arts Emmy Awards 2019 Winners List: 'Game of Thrones' Torches Competitors". IndieWire. Retrieved September 24, 2019.

External links edit

  • "The Bells" at HBO.com
  • "The Bells" at IMDb

bells, game, thrones, bells, fifth, episode, eighth, season, medieval, fantasy, television, series, game, thrones, 72nd, penultimate, episode, series, overall, written, series, creators, david, benioff, weiss, directed, miguel, sapochnik, first, aired, 2019, b. The Bells is the fifth episode of the eighth season of HBO s medieval fantasy television series Game of Thrones The 72nd and penultimate episode of the series overall it was written by series co creators David Benioff and D B Weiss and directed by Miguel Sapochnik 2 It first aired on HBO on May 12 2019 The Bells Game of Thrones episodeEpisode no Season 8Episode 5Directed byMiguel SapochnikWritten byDavid BenioffD B WeissFeatured musicRamin DjawadiCinematography byFabian WagnerOriginal air dateMay 12 2019 2019 05 12 Running time77 minutes 1 Guest appearancesPilou Asbaek as Euron Greyjoy Anton Lesser as Qyburn Hafthor Julius Bjornsson as Gregor Clegane Laura Elphinstone as Nora Marc Rissmann as Harry Strickland Rosie McClelland as King s Landing Citizen Aaron Rodgers as King s Landing CitizenEpisode chronology Previous The Last of the Starks Next The Iron Throne Game of Thrones season 8 List of episodes The Bells features the final battle for control of the Iron Throne with an army led by Daenerys Targaryen commencing its assault on Cersei Lannister and the people of King s Landing In the episode Tyrion Lannister betrays Varys and reveals Varys s treason to Daenerys Jaime Lannister is freed by Tyrion Arya Stark and Sandor The Hound Clegane seek personal vengeance Jon Snow prepares to lead the ground forces against the Lannister army and Drogon mounted by Daenerys burns the city down The episode received a polarized response from critics and audiences alike Critics praised the episode s visuals as well as the acting and direction but criticized the pacing and logic of the story as well as its handling of the character arcs of Tyrion Jaime Cersei Grey Worm Varys and particularly Daenerys The episode received four Primetime Emmy Award nominations including Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series for Lena Headey and Outstanding Production Design for a Fantasy Series winning for Outstanding Fantasy Sci Fi Costumes and Outstanding Special Visual Effects 3 Contents 1 Plot 1 1 On Dragonstone 1 2 In King s Landing 2 Production 2 1 Writing 2 2 Filming 2 3 Casting 3 Reception 3 1 Ratings 3 2 Critical response 3 2 1 General 3 2 2 Daenerys s arc 3 3 Audience response 3 4 Awards and nominations 4 References 5 External linksPlot editOn Dragonstone edit As Varys writes a letter about Jon Snow s true heritage one of his little birds informs him that Daenerys continues to refuse food He tells the child to try again at supper Soon after Varys implores Jon to take the Iron Throne but Jon refuses to betray Daenerys Tyrion informs Daenerys of Varys plot and she has Drogon burn him alive Later Daenerys bemoans not having the love of the people in Westeros Jon assures Daenerys that he loves her However when he halts their intimacy Daenerys resigns herself to using fear to rule Westeros Tyrion implores Daenerys to spare the commoners of King s Landing if the city bells ring indicating surrender Daenerys appears to accept She then informs Tyrion that Jaime has been captured on his way to King s Landing and warns Tyrion not to fail her again Tyrion arrives at the Targaryen forces camp and frees Jaime so that if the capital falls Jaime can take Cersei to Pentos and live safely in seclusion In King s Landing edit The next day Arya Stark and Sandor Clegane enter the Red Keep amongst the civilians Cersei is using as human shields The battle begins Daenerys and Drogon burn the Iron Fleet and the Golden Company and destroy the city s defences Grey Worm kills Harry Strickland and Daenerys army storms King s Landing Outmatched the Lannister forces drop their weapons and the city rings the bells in surrender However Daenerys does not accept the surrender and atop Drogon burns the city while her army participates in the massacre on the ground Horrified by this turn of events Jon unsuccessfully tries to stop his men from attacking before he and Davos have them fall back as the city burns As Jaime makes his way to the Red Keep to rescue Cersei he encounters and fights Euron He mortally wounds Euron but is gravely injured himself Sandor convinces Arya to give up vengeance against Cersei and they part ways as friends As Cersei and Qyburn attempt to escape Sandor arrives and kills the Queensguard in order to fight his brother Gregor Gregor kills Qyburn when he attempts to intervene and Cersei flees They fight while the castle falls around them with Gregor resistant to Sandor s attacks Sandor tackles him through a collapsing wall and they fall to their deaths in the fires below Jaime reunites with Cersei but they find their escape passage is blocked by rubble Jaime comforts Cersei as the Red Keep collapses on them and kills them Arya experiences the chaos on the streets in King s Landing as she tries to help in the evacuation and is soon knocked unconscious when a tower collapses near her When she wakes up she finds the city destroyed and deserted with many corpses scattered amongst the ash and rubble She then encounters Harry Strickland s white horse and rides it out of the city Production edit nbsp nbsp Conleth Hill left and Rory McCann right made their final appearances in the series Writing edit The episode was written by David Benioff and D B Weiss Filming edit The episode was directed by Miguel Sapochnik This was his final episode of the series citation needed For the filming of the episode the city of Dubrovnik the stand in for King s Landing was recreated on the backlot of their Belfast set Filming Varys s death scene ultimately ended up taking seven months as rain kept postponing the shoot 4 In a promotional photo of the scene in which Jaime and Cersei embrace at the Red Keep his right hand is visible instead of the metallic prosthetic the character received in season 4 In the actual episode only the metallic hand is seen The error in the image garnered attention in light of the previous episode s coffee cup mistake 5 6 Casting edit Laura Elphinstone was cast as one of the inhabitants of King s Landing who helped Arya Stark during the dragon attack on the city 7 The American football quarterback Aaron Rodgers appears in a cameo in this episode 8 Reception editRatings edit The episode was viewed by 12 48 million viewers on its initial live broadcast on HBO surpassing The Dragon and the Wolf as the most watched episode of the series An additional 5 9 million viewers watched on streaming platforms for a total of 18 4 million viewers 9 Critical response edit General edit On review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes the episode has an approval rating of 49 based on 109 reviews with an average rating of 6 3 10 The critical consensus reads Death destruction and the deterioration of Daenerys sanity make The Bells an episode for the ages but too much plot in too little time muddles the story and may leave some viewers feeling its conclusions are unearned 10 It is the second lowest rated episode on Rotten Tomatoes behind the finale The Iron Throne 11 Lenika Cruz of The Atlantic wrote that although she found the special effects stunning and the acting spectacular this was the worst Game of Thrones episode ever because the plot was either too obvious or illogical with the massacre seeming an unearned negation of the identity Daenerys had spent years building for herself 12 Emily VanDerWerff of Vox found the episode grim and absent of sense but credited director Miguel Sapochnik for the gorgeous visuals that extended beyond the battle scenes VanDerWerff praised the acting of the cast such as Maisie Williams Lena Headey Peter Dinklage and Emilia Clarke the latter two she wrote made their characters actions believable even when they were illogical 13 Alex McLevy of The A V Club wrote that the episode successfully demonstrated that the chaos of war makes villains and victims of us all with the progression from exhilarating hope to tragic denouement being skillfully executed by director Miguel Sapochnik with better large scale choreography than in The Long Night 14 Hugh Montgomery of BBC Culture wrote that characters such as Tyrion Jaime Daenerys and Cersei were definitively sacrificed to the show s scrambled plotting and that Game of Thrones was previously a show that intelligently delineated a senseless world but that it was now nonsense 15 VanDerWerff stated that Cersei and Jaime s deaths were not given much thought by the writers and were instead simply something to check off a list 13 Kelly Lawler of USA Today saying that the episode lacked substance and was an absolute disaster argued that Grey Worm Daenerys and Varys took actions which were wildly out of character 16 Alan Sepinwall of Rolling Stone wrote that the episode s technical genius and the visual clarity only made it easier to see how muddled the show has been from both a narrative and character standpoint in this home stretch with the scorpions turning from accurate to useless Euron surviving Drogon to have a pointless fight with Jaime the setting of Cleganebowl being invulnerable while the castle fell Jaime easily entering the gated Red Keep and the appearance of seemingly hundreds of Dothraki despite most of them apparently dying in The Long Night 17 Lawler also said that the writers threw out their own rule book suddenly the scorpions don t work and Drogon can burn everything to pursue gross spectacle 16 Several critics criticized the pacing of events Lawler wrote that the pacing started off rushed 16 while Spencer Kornhaber of The Atlantic said that the show was sprinting through plot check marks 18 Will Bedingfield of Wired also felt that the show rushed storylines seeing the death of Varys as being without the climactic buildup previous seasons had 19 Sarah Hughes of The Guardian said season eight had pacing problems and that this was because season seven also had pacing issues that ensured that the rest of the series would feel breathless and rushed 20 Daenerys s arc edit nbsp Critics generally considered Daenerys Targaryen s Emilia Clarke villainous turn in this episode unearned 21 Daenerys s turn from hero to villain was especially criticized with many reviewers and fans feeling that because she was built up as a morally good protagonist for seven seasons it made no narrative sense or that it was not executed properly within the provided timescale 21 22 23 24 Mike Hogan of Vanity Fair said that although the show had been clear that Daenerys has a temper we have seen her balance that violence with mercy kindness and above all shrewdness 25 Zack Beauchamp of Vox argued that Daenerys s previous cruelties were somewhat logical because she killed people who committed crimes deserving of punishment and Samwell Tarly s father and brother because they refused to submit to her rule but that there was no reason to go after harmless civilians He said although the show had been building toward Daenerys becoming the Mad Queen and this route could have worked its execution was sloppy and rushed and it felt as if Daenerys had become a monster simply because the show needed her to become a monster not because it was paying off a thoughtfully developed character turn 26 Slate s Sam Adams said the show spent far more time making Dany a hero than building her up as the Mad Queen 21 The Atlantic staff opened Game of Thrones could have easily demonstrated the nasty reality of Daenerys s fight for Westeros without putting the choice to massacre innocents directly on her shoulders Instead The Bells ended up painting one of the most pivotal plot points in the final season as an emotional lashing out from a tired lonely paranoid young woman 27 Kathryn VanArendonk of Vulture also criticized the episode for ultimately hing ing on a trope as painfully stale as and then the scary powerful woman goes crazy 28 Eliana Dockterman of Time criticized the analyses of Daenerys s advisors as also playing into the terrible trope of the crazed power hungry woman and Tyrion s advice as having kept Daenerys from taking the Iron Throne much earlier and without as much bloodshed She said she understood the idea of power corrupting a heroic figure like Daenerys and Daenerys falling prey to a messiah complex but that the show needed to evolve her to that point like it evolved other characters to their points 29 Alan Sepinwall of Rolling Stone stated that Daenerys s descent into madness is the kind of development that requires at least another half of a regular length GoT season to feel earned 17 Myles McNutt of The A V Club said that Daenerys s final arc comes down to two aspects story development and character development He said Daenerys burning down King s Landing is a logical and effective way of ending the story on a thematic level adding that how it reshapes the rest of the episode is a striking reframing of the violence that has defined the show Character wise he felt that the choice was undeniably trickier because one might be led to believe that Daenerys s choice was purely reflexive when it was instead due to a collection of life experiences that left her believing that ruling with fear was the only path ahead of her He said the writers failed to create the necessary structure for the villainous turn and they could have better highlighted Daenerys s destiny as a villain by referencing things such as her prophecy in Qarth 30 Variety s Daniel D Addario also argued that it made sense that Daenerys would burn the city because her tactics have always been more deeply rooted in dominance than in empathy 21 Arguing that the change in Daenerys s arc has likely been planned by George R R Martin from the beginning Vox s Andrew Prokop stated If Game of Thrones ended with a triumphant Daenerys Targaryen heroically taking the Iron Throne it wouldn t be Game of Thrones This is the show of Ned Stark s death This is the show of the Red Wedding This is the ending it was headed toward all along 31 Screen Rant s Alexandra August felt that ultimately it comes down to your interpretation of Dany s arc and how much that interpretation was diluted by pacing execution and cultural context if at all She pondered different ways she felt the show could have pulled off the arc better such as Daenerys only choosing to kill Cersei but concluded that there would eventually be someone else to push her over the edge regardless 32 Also stating that there are many ways to interpret Daenerys s decision to burn the city Megan Garber of The Atlantic said that maybe it was the Targaryen madness having settled in or her ruthlessness taking over or a crazy edit by the writers or a decision that some innocents must die in the present so that many more can live peacefully in the future or maybe that Daenerys having recently lost her second dragon and the apparent loyalty of those left in her orbit she simply made a blunt calculation about power and what will be required to attain it Garber said that ambiguity is a powerful tool in storytelling but that it is also a difficult one to wield well and that Dany is a savior and Dany is a monster and it is impossible to know where one ends and the other begins To Garber this uncertainty made Daenerys s actions all the more horrific because logic will not always win and justice won t always save the day 33 Showrunners David Benioff and D B Weiss attributed Daenerys s decision to burn the city to having lost almost all of her friends and advisors no longer trusting Jon Snow and wanting to reclaim the home that her family built Benioff said that Jon also being unable to return her affections because they are related played a factor Weiss stated I think that when she says Let it be fear she s resigning herself to the fact that she may have to get things done in a way that isn t pleasant Benioff said that the ruthless side to Daenerys had always been there and that if Cersei hadn t betrayed her if Cersei hadn t executed Missandei if Jon hadn t told her the truth if all of these things had happened in any different way then I don t think we d be seeing this side of Daenerys Targaryen 34 Emilia Clarke said Every single thing that s led her to this point and there she is alone 35 VanArendonk expressed disappointment that Weiss and Benioff explained Daenerys s actions as due to her emotions instead of some twisted empathetic logic 28 Emma Baty of Cosmopolitan also criticized the showrunners response stating Totally totally A woman is definitely prone to ending thousands of innocent lives just because her dad did the same even though in the entire series she s been insistent on not becoming that person That checks out 35 Audience response edit People magazine s Aurelie Corinthios said Despite the major plot developments viewers were left wanting more from a series that has spent the last eight seasons meticulously building up complex characters She added that others defended the episode arguing that while the action was definitely rushed the main elements still made sense Plus didn t we always know we wouldn t get a happy ending 36 Lauren Hill of Chicago Tribune relayed that the episode had fans very divided Some are upset by the character arcs of certain fan favorites while others saw this coming for quite some time 37 Reviewers made note of negative fan reactions especially to Daenerys s arc Estelle Tang of Elle stated that many commented how unbelievable it was for Dany to turn into a violent vengeance seeker this far into the show s run 38 Esquire s Gabrielle Bruney said viewers felt that the writers threw out her character development 39 The Hollywood Reporter staff stated that many Game of Thrones viewers see Daenerys acts as nothing short of a character assassination laying blame for the treatment of the Dragon Queen Cersei and the series other powerful women at the feet of creators David Benioff and Dan Weiss 24 Mehera Bonner of Cosmopolitan wrote that fans are absolutely devastated by the episode and that they bemoaned how the show has been completely ruined by sloppy writing and terrible decisions She said While you could argue that we should have seen a lot of this coming many fans were I don t know just hoping for better Better than Daenerys becoming a Mad Queen just because it s in her family history and better than Jaime reverting to his season 1 personality just because it s the easy way out 40 A petition to HBO for a remake of the eighth season of Game of Thrones that makes sense was started on Change org after the preceding episode The Last of the Starks aired but went viral following the initial broadcast of The Bells 41 The petition described showrunners David Benioff and D B Weiss as woefully incompetent writers 42 43 44 As of May 18 2019 i e the evening before the series finale it has amassed over 1 million signatures 41 44 45 The petition was labelled as ridiculous by actor Isaac Hempstead Wright who plays Bran Stark 46 and rude by actor Jacob Anderson who plays Grey Worm 47 Sophie Turner who plays Sansa said that there s always been crazy twists and turns on Game of Thrones and so Daenerys becoming something of the Mad Queen it shouldn t be such a negative thing for fans It s a shock for sure but I think it s just because it hasn t gone their way She argued All of these petitions and things like that I think it s disrespectful to the crew and the writers and the filmmakers who have worked tirelessly over 10 years and for 11 months shooting the last season 48 Awards and nominations edit Year Award Category Nominee s Result Ref s 2019 Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series Lena Headey Nominated 49 Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards Outstanding Fantasy Sci Fi Costumes Michele Clapton Emma O Loughlin and Kate O Farrell Won 50 Outstanding Production Design for a Narrative Period or Fantasy Program One Hour or More Deborah Riley Paul Ghirardani and Rob Cameron NominatedOutstanding Special Visual Effects Joe Bauer Steve Kullback Adam Chazen Sam Conway Mohsen Mousavi Martin Hill Ted Rae Patrick Tiberius Gehlen and Thomas Schelesny WonReferences edit S8 E5 The Bells HBO Home Box Office Inc Retrieved May 27 2022 1 HR 18 MIN The Bells HBO Home Box Office Inc Retrieved May 27 2022 71st Emmy Awards Nominees and Winners Academy of Television Arts amp Sciences Retrieved January 11 2021 Price Joe May 13 2019 Game of Thrones Shares Behind the Scenes Look of How The Bells Was Made Complex Retrieved May 14 2019 Corinthios Aurelie May 13 2019 Another Game of Thrones Gaffe Fans Think Jaime Lannister s Hand Grew Back to Hug Cersei People Retrieved May 13 2019 Christina Maxouris May 14 2019 Fans may have caught another Game of Thrones editing error but not in the episode CNN Retrieved May 14 2019 O Connor Roisin Game of Thrones season 8 Line of Duty star Laura Elphinstone cameos in Arya Stark scenes The Independent Desta Yohana May 13 2019 Game of Thrones Aaron Rodgers Made a Sneaky Cameo in the Big Battle Vanity Fair Game Of Thrones Viewership Scorches Records With Series amp HBO High As Finale Looms Deadline May 14 2019 The Bells Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media Retrieved June 10 2019 Every Game of Thrones Episode Ranked by Tomatometer Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media October 20 2021 Retrieved May 31 2022 Sims David Cruz Lenika Kornhaber Spencer May 12 2019 Game of Thrones Delivers Its Most Cataclysmic Episode The Atlantic Retrieved May 13 2019 a b VanDerWerff Emily May 13 2019 4 winners and 10 losers from Game of Thrones next to last episode The Bells Vox Retrieved May 15 2019 McLevy Alex May 12 2019 Westeros faces a disastrous final battle on the penultimate Game of Thrones newbies The A V Club Retrieved May 15 2019 Montgomery Hugh Game of Thrones The Bells review BBC Culture Retrieved May 13 2019 a b c Lawler Kelly May 13 2019 Game of Thrones recap The series just burned itself to the ground USA TODAY Retrieved May 13 2019 a b Sepinwall Alan May 13 2019 Game of Thrones Close Up Arya Dazed and Confused Rolling Stone Retrieved May 15 2019 Kornhaber David Sims Lenika Cruz Spencer May 12 2019 Game of Thrones Delivers Its Most Cataclysmic Episode Yet The Atlantic Retrieved May 14 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Charara Sophie Will Bedingfield May 13 2019 Why The Bells is the worst Game of Thrones episode ever Wired UK ISSN 1357 0978 Retrieved May 14 2019 Hughes Sarah May 13 2019 Game of Thrones recap season eight episode five The Bells The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved May 14 2019 a b c d August Pang Chieh May 13 2019 The Best Takes On Daenerys Controversial Decision On Game Of Thrones Digg Retrieved May 15 2019 Dockterman Eliana May 20 2019 Game of Thrones Had an Opportunity With Daenerys Targaryen The Show Squandered It Time Retrieved May 20 2019 VanDerWerff Emily May 17 2019 Why everybody s so mad about Daenerys Targaryen Vox Retrieved May 19 2019 a b Game of Thrones Final Season Draws Backlash Over Portrayal of Female Characters The Hollywood Reporter May 13 2019 Retrieved May 13 2019 Hogan Mike May 12 2019 Game of Thrones Season 8 Episode 5 Recap Daenerys s Pivot to Vengeance Vanity Fair Retrieved May 13 2019 Beauchamp Zack May 12 2019 How Game of Thrones did Daenerys wrong Vox Retrieved May 13 2019 Sims David Cruz Lenika Kornhaber Spencer May 12 2019 Game of Thrones Delivers Its Most Cataclysmic Episode The Atlantic Retrieved May 13 2019 a b VanArendonk Kathryn May 13 2019 Game of Thrones Finally Got Its Mad Queen Vulture Retrieved May 14 2019 Dockterman Eliana May 13 2019 How Daenerys Finally Turned Into the Mad Queen on Game of Thrones Time Retrieved May 13 2019 McNutt Myles May 12 2019 Game Of Thrones brutally asserts that the game in question will have no winner experts The A V Club Retrieved May 15 2019 Prokop Andrew May 15 2019 Game of Thrones King s Landing horror fittingly reveals what the show has always been about Vox Retrieved May 15 2019 August Alexandra May 15 2019 Game Of Thrones Dany Was Always A Mad Queen We Just Didn t Want To Admit It Screen Rant Retrieved May 15 2019 Garber Megan May 13 2019 The Only Thing Worse Than a Mad Daenerys The Atlantic Retrieved May 13 2019 Vejvoda Jim May 12 2019 Game of Thrones Why Daenerys Made That Unexpected Decision IGN Retrieved May 13 2019 a b Baty Emma May 13 2019 Emilia Clarke and the Game of Thrones Creators Just Responded to That Major Dany Controversy Cosmopolitan Retrieved May 14 2019 Corinthios Aurelie May 13 2019 Game of Thrones Fans Slam Penultimate Episode Laziest Writing I ve Ever Seen People Retrieved May 14 2019 Hill Lauren May 13 2019 Game of Thrones Season 8 Episode 5 Did you love it or hate it Fans are divided Chicago Tribune Retrieved May 14 2019 Tang Estelle May 13 2019 Best Tweets and Memes About Mad Queen Daenerys Targaryen in Game of Thrones Season 8 Elle Retrieved May 13 2019 Bruney Gabrielle May 13 2019 Game of Thrones Fans Aren t Happy About What Daenerys Did in Episode Five Esquire Retrieved May 13 2019 Bonner Mehera May 13 2019 People Absolutely Hated Last Night s Game of Thrones Episode Cosmopolitan Retrieved May 13 2019 a b Lee Jess May 18 2019 Game of Thrones fan petition asking for HBO to remake season 8 hits 1 million signatures Digital Spy Retrieved May 20 2019 Game of Thrones petition 500 000 demand series eight remake BBC News May 16 2019 Retrieved May 17 2019 Fieldstadt Elisha May 16 2019 Nearly 800 000 Game of Thrones fans sign petition for remake of season 8 NBC News Retrieved May 17 2019 a b Lewis Sophie May 18 2019 Over 1 million angry Game of Thrones fans petition to remake season 8 CBS News Retrieved May 20 2019 Roeper Richard May 20 2019 Game of Thrones finale review Enthralling series comes to a satisfying end Chicago Sun Times Retrieved May 20 2019 Wigler Josh May 17 2019 Game of Thrones Final Season Stars Look Toward the Very Clever Series Final The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved May 20 2019 Daly Rhian May 17 2019 Game Of Thrones star weighs in on petition to remake season 8 I think it s rude NME Retrieved May 18 2019 Egner Jeremy May 20 2019 Sophie Turner on Game of Thrones Disrespectful Fan Reactions and Sansa s End The New York Times Retrieved May 20 2019 Beachum Chris July 29 2019 Lena Headey Game of Thrones 2019 Emmy Awards episode revealed for Best Drama Supporting Actress Exclusive GoldDerby Retrieved August 10 2019 Hill Libby September 14 2019 Complete Creative Arts Emmy Awards 2019 Winners List Game of Thrones Torches Competitors IndieWire Retrieved September 24 2019 External links edit The Bells at HBO com The Bells at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Bells Game of Thrones amp oldid 1179702017, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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