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Game of Thrones Season 5: Episode Guide and Everything to Know

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Game of Thrones Season 5 is almost here, and we have everything you need to know about it, plus its growing episode guide!

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We're now just a week away from the April 12, 2015 premiere of Game of Thrones season five. HBO is pulling out all the stops for this one, including new character magazine covers/posters below. We have compiled all of that, plus everything else you need to know as we head into the new season, including potentially major changes from the books as compiled in our special spoilers section.

So join us in this leaving and breathing document as we explore every corner of the Seven Kingdoms to discover everything there is to know about Game of Thrones season five.

The Trailer

We did a nearly shot for shot analysis of this trailer. Click here to read it.

Den of Geek Game of Thrones

Episode Guide

Season 5 Episode 1: "The Wars to Come"

Cersei and Jaime adjust to a world without Tywin. Varys reveals a conspiracy to Tyrion. Daenerys faces a new threat to her rule. Jon is caught between two kings.

Season 5 Episode 2: "The House of Black and White"

Arya arrives in Braavos. Pod and Brienne run into trouble on the road. Cersei fears for her daughter’s safety in Dorne as Ellaria Sand seeks revenge for Oberyn’s death. Stannis tempts Jon. An advisor tempts Daenerys.

Season 5 Episode 3: "High Sparrow"

In King’s Landing, Queen Margaery enjoys her new husband. Tyrion and Varys walk the Long Bridge of Volantis.

Season 5 Episode 4: "The Sons of the Harpy"

Margaery seeks prudent counsel. Jaime struggles in foreign lands. Dany answers the Harpy’s call.

Season 5 Episode 5: "Kill the Boy"

Cersei plots a dangerous game. Jon swings his sword. Melisandre studies the signs. Tyrion sees the ghosts of the past.

Season 5 Episode 6: "Unbowed, Unbent, Unbroken"

Margaery receives a grim surprise. Jon hears dark tidings. Winterfell prepares for a wedding. Doran Martell speaks his word.

Season 5 Episode 7: "The Gift"

In Meereen, Dany must compromise or flee. Stannis comes into trouble on his way south. Brienne finds shelter in the woods. Arya faced with her destiny.

Production and New Dorne Cast

Production began on season five around the series’ Belfast and Northern Ireland settings in July 2014. Production also shot early at Binevenagh Mountain in Ireland’s Londonderry County. But the real interest actually began earlier that month when it was first announced that Game of Thrones would be shooting in Spain’s Province of Seville. That could only mean one thing: Dorne.

Indeed, HBO and David Benioff and D.B. Weiss, the series creators and showrunners, confirmed as much much, though they only after being caught filming in Córdoba, which utilized the still standing Roman bridge as the Free Standing Bridge of Volantis (which will play an integral part in Tyrion’s season five journey, where he meets a surprising and familiar face).

Nonetheless, Dorne is an obvious location given that it is the last unseen party of the Seven Kingdoms on the HBO series. Plus, as Prince Oberyn (wonderfully played by Pedro Pascal) attested to in the fourth season, their culture is of an arid, and very Spanish disposition. This was made even more obvious by the plethora of casting announcements revealed during San Diego Comic-Con this year. In fact, you can see them all below right now.

Amongst those cast are Jessica Henwick, Rosabell Laurenti Sellers, and Keisha Castle-Hughes as the daughters of the late great Prince Oberyn Martell: the Sand Snakes Nymeria, Tyene, and Obra Sand. But the Martell family proper is also making an appearance with Toby Sebastian portraying Trystane Martell, the youngest ruling Prince of Dorne, and son of Prince Doran Martell, Oberyn’s older brother, set to be played by the terrific Alexander Siddig.

Doran Martell will be quite different from Oberyn. While Oberyn was fire and publicly open about his emotions, pursuits, and vengeance (ultimately to his own demise), Doran is far more underhanded and cautious in his equal disdain for the Lannisters. With his younger brother dead, and the daughter of Cersei and “Robert” in his keeping, Myrcella Baratheon who has been recast in Nell Tiger Free, Doran’s plans may have to change. The SDCC announcement also included the wonderful Jonathan Pryce being revealed as playing the High Sparrow (more on him in a bit).

Yet, perhaps most telling is that Arianne Martell, a major player in the Dorne family during the fourth book A Feast forCrows--one half of the source material for season five--is notably absent. However, it is quite obvious from the season five trailer why she has been left out: her narrative role in Game of Thrones has been awarded to Indira Varma, a Rome alumni who appeared in Game of Thrones season four as Ellaria Sand. For those who don't remember all the names, you might recall her as the mistress of Prince Oberyn. In the novels, she more or less vanishes after the tragic death of her lover, but in the series, she is clearly whispering words of vengeance in Dorne during the new trailer, which was the role played by Arianne Martell in the book series.

Combining Books

Like last season, this will be adapting all of “A Song of Ice and Fire,” as opposed to a singular book. However, unlike when creators Benioff and Weiss have said that in the past, it is now more than just massaging certain details early from the beginning of the next book or saving a scene that occurs late in A Storm of Swords (book three) for the fifth season. No, for this upcoming year, it most specifically means combining A Feast for Crows (book four) and A Dance with Dragons (book five) into the fifth season.

The reason for this transition was inevitable since George R.R. Martin divided his central characters from the first three books as almost entirely separate in the two novels, choosing instead to write based on geography. A Feast for Crows chronicled the characters in the Southron half of the Seven Kingdoms, such as Cersei, Jaime, Sansa, and Brienne, as well as passages about Arya’s adventures in Braavos. The fifth book, conversely, focused on the North as well as more of Essos, centering Jon Snow, Theon Greyjoy, Bran Stark, Daenerys Targaryen, and Tyrion Lannister in its gaze. We were not going to go an entire season without either. Further, there is ample proof that they will be combining both books whole for the fifth season (thereby bringing the series up to date with the currently published novels). But more on that in the most spoilerish section below.

And much like characters’ locations, the effect this will have on character arcs will be all over the map.

The Starks

One example is Sophie Turner’s Sansa Stark. When season four concluded, Sansa has proudly revealed to the Vale’s leadership her real heritage as the daughter of the late great Ned and Catelyn, and will be traveling incognito (black hair!) through the Vale as Littelfinger’s “niece.”

For anyone who has read the last two “A Song of Ice and Fire” novels, this is both a major departure from the source material (only Littlefinger knows she is really Sansa Stark, and he calls her his bastard daughter), as well as nearly catching up with it. Her arc concludes on a rather dramatic journey down the mountain as “Robyn” Arryn’s glorified nanny and the beginning of a tour of the Vale. We are likely skipping that journey in season five and will be up to the last chapter of her appearances at least when season five of Game of Thrones begins. This is likewise confirmed by Sophie Turner, who in August toldHitfix that she has quit reading the books, because “now that the storyline and scripts are going away from the books, I decided I’m going to read the scripts, so I don’t get confused and read the books later.”

Turner goes on to say that she’s excited, because the role is going in a completely different direction. “I think the fans will really like where her storyline is going this season.” And this was most definitely confirmed by the second trailer for Game of Throens season five, which in a flash revealed a major, major surprise for Sansa Stark's character arc: She's going to Winterfell.

If you study the above image, that is most definitely Sansa in the crypts beneath Winterfell. And if you want to know what that means, we will discuss it in detail in the spoilers section of this article.

Similarly, the sisterly Arya Stark may also be jumping ahead some pages. While none of her storyline from A Feast for Crows or A Dance with Dragons appeared in season four, that doesn’t mean things could not be sped up. At the end of season four, we saw Arya sailing to Braavos, much like how her arc ended in A Storm of Swords. And actress Maisie Williams told me in July that while she had not read the scripts, she is aware of Arya’s future at the House of Black and White--which we now see the front door of in the season five trailer. However, if any have read the sampled Arya chapter from The Winds of Winter, then the new set photos from season five that features Arya in disguise while Mace Tyrell visits what appears to be the Iron Bank in Braavos may seem familiar in a surprising way. Arya is most certainly going to Braavos, and her storyline from the fourth and fifth book will appear…and possibly the unpublished sixth as well.

Arya’s hapless brother on the other hand, Bran Stark, will not be appearing in season five (though actor Isaac Hempstead-Wright has since suggested they might make a single cameo). Actor and DJ Kristian Nairn, better known to Game of Thrones fans as simply “Hodor,” said in September 2014, “We have a season off. We have a year’s hiatus…I imagine our storyline is up to the end of the books.”

In actuality, there are still several Bran centric chapters left from A Dance with Dragons left unadapted. However, the largest story pieces from that novel for Bran were already put in the show for season four when Bran, Hodor, Jojen, and Meera reach the Three-Eyed Raven’s Tree…and Jojen is very much alive in the book. Quite honestly, while Bran and Hodor are lovable, their storyline in the fifth book is fairly dry, and we have seen all the most important bits to date. My guess is that Benioff and Weiss feel the same way and will simply skip ahead to the end of Bran’s wizard training for season six.

Jon Snow, meanwhile, appears to be on track to complete his story arc from A Storm ofSwords, which was not seen in season four, and jump right into the thick of things from the fifth novel, A Dance withDragons. But intriguingly, one aspect that should surprise book readers is that Jon Snow is personally overseeing the rescue of Hardhome, a Wildling fishing village north Beyond the Wall and on the east coast. In the book, they are being overrun by Others (White Walkers) and plead for help, causing Jon Snow to organize a failed rescue from Eastwatch by the Sea. He then personally considers leading a second expedition himself...but political matters in Westeros detain him.

It appears that in season five, Jon Snow will indeed lead that expedition in Hardhome, as the HBO featurette "Game of Thrones: A Day in the Life," shows series craftsmen building the set, and indeed actor Kit Harington running around, sword blazing, on it. What this detour means for Jon Snow's story arc in season five (besides more action) is anyone's guess.

The Targaryen Queen

If you could not guess from the season five trailers, Daenerys will be taking an even more central role than she has in previous years. This is because while Westeros is spinning out of control under Queen Cersei's stewardship (more on that in a moment), Daenerys is also finding governance in Meereen quite difficult.

For the past two seasons, we have mostly watched Daenerys Targaryen be a splendidly brutal conqueror from Astapor to Yunkai. But it was her taking of Meereen that has trapped her in a role of occupying regent in the former slave city. Last season, we saw her chain up two of her baby dragons because of the actions of the third, but she also is chaining herself to an unpleasant and difficult political situation.

This season will turn the hinted "Fighting Pits" controversy from season four into a full scaled battle between Dany and the will of "her people." This is just a symbol of a larger problem with being an occupying presence, as "Sons of the Harpy" (who you can see in the trailer) use terrorism to create civil unrest by assassinating her officers and Unsullied. Anybody familiar with insurgent forces in Iraq and Afghanistan can easily guess George R.R. Martin's intended parallels.

Given the trailers, it is likely no surprise that she eventually reopens the fighting pits. However, by the time that she does this, she will have foreign city-states that are very unhappy with her anti-slavery policy closing in around her, and they will be bringing slaves for the gladatorial contests. What this can mean for Dany's rule cannot be good. Nor is a familiar face that clearly ends up in the said fighting pits.

The Lannisters

Other surprise casting slip-ups include last month when Charles Dance revealed that he will be returning for season five. “Well, I’m not completely missing out on the next series,” Dance said.

Could this mean that Tywin is alive? No, I’m afraid that Tywin is as dead as poor Ned’s head, and I highly doubt Benioff and Weiss would depart from that aspect in the source story. However, they are likely departing from their own previous storytelling techniques, as they revealed this month that season five of Game of Thrones will be the first to include flashbacks. This is none too surprising though since we already know that “Maggy the Frog,” a character from Cersei Lannister’s past revealed via A Feast for Crows, has been cast for season five. In fact, you can see what appears to be Cersei as a little girl in the season five trailer, holding hands on her way to Maggy, as well as Charles Dance's definite return as Tywin Lannister during the opening shot of his funeral.

This brings us to Cersei, who is the dominant figure in the fourth novel, and whose storyline’s climax in season five has been thoroughly spoiled for non-book readers. Yes, in case you missed it, Lena Headey’s Queen Mother will appear in season five in her royal birthday suit when she is forced to commit a walk of shame through the streets of King’s Landing. This was first revealed because the Croatian Church of St. Nicolas protested to the Croatian Film Commission for allowing the scene to be shot in the streets of Dubrovnik. Bishop Anthony IV especially objected for any nudity to be shot on the front of his church. For the record, the scene was shot still shot (using a set for the “Steps of Baelor”) with a body double doing much of the nudity.

Spoilers and the Rest

And this Cersei unrobed Croatian drama is very telling for the series as a whole. At this point, some fans are still expecting Game of Thrones to spend two seasons on adapting both published books, even if they are melding them together. However, the Cersei reveal completely contradicts this expectation.

In what will undoubtedly be a terrific part for Pryce as the High Sparrow, this Westerosi version of the Pope sentences Cersei to this disgusting and vile shaming, because she confesses to having slept with Lancel Lannister, amongst others. While she denies carnal knowledge of Jaime, which on top of being incest would be treason since he begot the three children pretending to be Robert Baratheon’s spawn, she is still forced into a corner during the final chapters of A Dance with Dragons that causes her to “seek forgiveness” for her sins. And this walk of shame through King’s Landing is her penance.

It comes after her entire arc of the fourth book, involving an Anne Bolyen-styled witch hunt after Margaery Tyrell (oh the irony for Natalie Dormer must be obvious) blows up in Cersei’s face. The men she seduces to conspire in “knowing” Margaery (in the biblical sense) are tortured by the Church and by the High Sparrow’s command, upon which they confess having slept with Cersei. She is arrested at the end of the fourth book, and in A Dance with Dragons, she admits it all (save for encouraging them to lie about Margaery). The result is this sequence, which is the climax of the King’s Landing drama in the fifth book.

Again, this leads me to believe that Benioff and Weiss are more than aware of the season five problem that we documented last June. And they are solving it by combining the two books into a single season. This means wholesale changes, including the rumor about the deletion of the Iron Islands subplot from A Feast for Crows. There has certainly been no casting announcements about all the various Iron Islanders who appear in both the fourth and fifth books.

Further, when recently asked about whether we will see events from The Winds of Winter in season five, as indicated at the very least by the Arya picture above, Benioff and Weiss reportedly remained non-committal in their answer, which all but most certainly means yes.

Additionally, the season five trailer shines new light on these changes and promises more major storytelling conflations and adjustments. On the minor side of things, instead of going to the Riverlands and being the hero that stopped the Blackfish without firing a single arrow, Jaime Lannister heads south to Dorne. This increases Dorne's prominence (though hopefully it does not downplay Jaime's).

However, we also see a rather late sequence from A Dance with Dragons in the season five trailer: Daenerys visiting the fighting pits. This sequence has a How I Met Your Mother sense of frustration, because both Tyrion and a newly enslaved Ser Jorah Mormont (tragic or poetic justice?) are scheduled to fight before Dany's favorite dragon Drogon disrupts the proceedings and flies away with the Silver Queen. But in the trailer, Dany clearly does see Jorah fighting and intervenes on his and Tyrion's behalf. This means that Dany's story will intersect sooner with Tyrion's than it does in the books (in fact, it still has not, despite much teasing).

With Varys also in tow with Tyrion and Jorah, an alliance also not in the books, this means major character crossovers that gets to what is teased for The Winds of Winter in season five. We also might even be seeing the Battle for Meereen itself in the fifth year since the anticipated climax of A Dance with Dragons was inexplicably left out by Martin, who insisted that the book was too long to include it. Might we instead suggest cutting the 100 pages devoted to sea turtles, Mr. Martin?

When put together, it would appear that Game of Thrones season five will not only merge the fourth and fifth books, but complete most of storylines from them, not unlike how Bran, Sansa, and Theon’s storylines in season four started pulling from the later books as well.

Of course, words are wind, and Benioff and Weiss could go in a different direction. They certainly seem to have done so with the Sansa Stark and Theon Greyjoy storylines...

As we mentioned earlier in this article, Sansa Stark is seen visiting the crypts of Winterfell in the second season five trailer. This confirms a theory that we had posited several months ago that Littlefinger and Sansa would hatch a plan to unite the North with the Vale by having Sansa Stark become betrothed to Ramsay Bolton, which would somehow likely lead to the Boltons' undoing.

Shots like the below one of the Arryns' sigil in Winterfell--which is the House that Littlefinger is currently acting as the regent of--indicate this theory is accurate.

In A Dance withDragons, the Boltons passed off Sansa's childhood friend, Jeyne Poole, as Arya Stark and wed her to Ramsay at Winterfell in an attempt to legitimize their claim as being the new Wardens of the North. "Arya" would also be a great hostage to keep Stark loyalists in line.

The Boltons also forced Reek to pretend he was Theon Greyjoy again and "confirm" that their mystery girl was Arya....and then Theon was forced to watch Ramsay torture, rape, and beat Jeyne on their wedding night and many since. This led to Theon finally regaining enough courage to save Jeyne and flee the Boltons. In the meantime, he also lived in shame and horror for what he did to the now haunted ruins of Winterfell.

Much of this will likely occur in season five, but with Sansa in Jeyne's role. However, we at least hope that Sansa will not be victimized by Ramsay as this show has had enough rape in general, and suffering for Sansa in particular. Besides, she is coming into this with vengeance in her heart (as Littlefinger said in the first trailer). Recall that it was Roose Bolton who helped Walder Frey and Tywin Lannister orchestrate the Red Wedding, and it was Roose who delivered the killing blow to Robb Stark. Somehow, this seems like a much more malevolent plan on Sansa and Littlefinger's part to wipe the Boltons out than a genuine union of Houses.

Whether this comes to pass is not a guarantee yet, but we’ll be here to keep you updated about everything else we will or could know about Game of Thrones season five. Also, be sure to check out all of our Game of Thrones coverage by clicking here.

***The original version of this article was published on October 24, 2014.

And if you're sad that my watch is ended, you can report to this Lord Commander Crow about all things Game of Thrones and George R.R. Martin by following me on Twitter with @DCrowsNest.

David Crow4/4/2015 at 10:40AM

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