House Of The Dragon With Mary & Blake: A Podcast For House Of The Dragon
House Of The Dragon With Mary & Blake: A Podcast For House Of The Dragon
Mary & Blake Media
House Of The Dragon Season 1 Episode 10 Review: “The Black Queen” Makes Peace Cost Rhaenyra Her Son
1 seconds Posted Oct 27, 2022 at 1:41 am.
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Spoiler note: This House of the Dragon Season 1 Episode 10 review discusses “The Black Queen” in full. Mary & Blake cover the show as TV-first viewers and avoid future Fire & Blood spoilers.
Content note: This episode includes a traumatic stillbirth sequence. We discuss why that choice matters to the story, why the execution did not work for Mary, and why the scene deserved more care for viewers who have experienced pregnancy or infant loss.
In our House of the Dragon Season 1 Episode 10 review, we break down “The Black Queen,” a finale where Rhaenyra tries to be the ruler Viserys wanted — patient, restrained, prophecy-minded, unwilling to burn the realm for a throne — until the war takes her son.
That is the shape of the episode. Rhaenyra loses her father, loses the throne, loses a baby, and then loses Luke. And through almost all of that, she still tries not to become fire. Daemon wants war. The men around her want motion. The room wants retaliation. But Rhaenyra keeps asking what it costs to rule over ashes.
Then Vhagar kills Lucerys.
Peace stops being a political position. It becomes a wound.
Quick answer: House of the Dragon Season 1 Episode 10, “The Black Queen,” follows Rhaenyra after Rhaenys tells her Viserys is dead and Aegon has been crowned. Rhaenyra suffers a stillbirth, is crowned queen on Dragonstone, considers Otto and Alicent’s peace terms, and tries to avoid immediate war. She sends Jace and Luke as messengers to secure alliances. Luke goes to Storm’s End, where Aemond confronts him. In the storm, Arrax attacks Vhagar, Vhagar retaliates, and Lucerys is killed. The episode ends with Rhaenyra learning her son is dead and turning toward the camera with war in her face.
Watch Or Listen To Our House Of The Dragon Season 1 Episode 10 Review
Watch our full House of the Dragon Season 1 Episode 10 review for “The Black Queen,” or use the podcast player on this page to listen to the full season finale recap and reaction.
In this episode, Mary & Blake discuss the use and abuse of theme, why this show is best interpreted as a family drama, the painted table, the traumatic stillbirth scene, Daemon’s reaction to the prophecy, why dragons are not slaves, and some truly heavy cereal talk at the end.
Watch the House Of The Dragon Season 1 Episode 10 review on YouTube
Prefer audio? Use the podcast player on this page to listen to the full episode.
House Of The Dragon Season 1 Episode 10 Coverage
Use these links to move through Mary & Blake’s House of the Dragon coverage in order.
Season 1 Hub: Full recap, episode guide, podcast coverage, and war setup
Previous Episode: Season 1 Episode 9, “The Green Council”
Season 2 Guide: Recaps, reviews, podcast reactions, and fallout from the war
Season 2 Recap Before Season 3: What to remember before the next chapter
Season 3 Guide: Teasers, explainers, and the next stage of the Dance
House Of The Dragon Season 1 Episode 10 Recap: What Happens In “The Black Queen”?
“The Black Queen” begins on Dragonstone, away from the Green coup in King’s Landing. Rhaenys arrives and tells Rhaenyra the news: Viserys is dead, Aegon has been crowned, and the Greens have moved before Rhaenyra could even enter the room.
The news sends Rhaenyra into premature labor. While Daemon immediately moves toward war footing, Rhaenyra is trapped inside the most brutal physical cost of the episode. She loses the baby, later identified as Visenya, and the show uses that loss as a dark bookend to the season premiere’s birth trauma with Aemma.
After the funeral, Ser Erryk arrives on Dragonstone with Viserys’ crown. Daemon crowns Rhaenyra. The people around her kneel. Rhaenyra becomes queen, but the moment is not triumphant in the clean, easy sense. Her crown comes wrapped in grief.
Then the Black Council begins. Daemon wants to count dragons, raise armies, and strike fast. Rhaenyra wants to know who supports her before she burns the realm. She is thinking about the Song of Ice and Fire, the prophecy