Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Finale Title Change, Dorne Explained

SPOILER ALERT: This article contains spoilers for the Season 1 finale of âA Knight of the Seven Kingdoms,â now streaming on HBO Max.
The dust has settled from the trial of the seven, the wounded are patching up their injuries and âA Knight of the Seven Kingdomsâ Season 1 has come to an end.
Dunk (Peter Claffey) is pretty banged up after his knights won in their down-and-dirty fight against Aerion Targaryenâs (Finn Bennet) team. Even though Dunk was victorious, he feels guilty after Baelor Targaryen (Bertie Carvel), his teammate and heir to the Iron Throne, died after an accidentally fatal mace to the head from Baelorâs own brother Maekar (Sam Spruell).
After Baelorâs funeral, Maekar asks Dunk to serve under him and take his son Egg (Dexter Sol Ansell) as his squire, but Dunk says heâs done with princes after all this. As the tourney wraps up and heâs visited by the ghost of his mentor Ser Arlan of Pennytree (Danny Webb), Dunk soon reconsiders and decides to take Egg away from the malevolent influence of his Targaryen family. Against Maekarâs wishes, Dunk and Egg ride away together as knight and squire. Dunk honors Ser Arlanâs tradition by nailing a penny to a tree before they depart, and Arlanâs ghost rides with him then sets off on his own path.
On their new journey, Dunk and Egg discuss heading to Dorne, the southern, desert-covered region of Westeros. In the final scene, Maekar searches for Egg as his wagons take off â hinting that there may be some Targaryen crossover next season.
Speaking with Variety, co-creator and showrunner Ira Parker reveals that Season 2 will cover George R.R. Martinâs second âDunk and Eggâ novella âThe Mystery Knight,â why Martin shot down one of the original titles of the show â and more.
Steffan Hill
To start off, whatâs up with the âA Knight of the Nine Kingdomsâ title at the end?
Thatâs maybe me getting a little too jokey. People may hate it or crucify me for that, but thereâs a bit of a lighter touch to these shows. And Iâm going to learn some things. People are going to have a reaction to it, and and Iâm going to have a reaction to it after not seeing it for a few months. And weâll see. I like it. Enough of the wonderful creatives that I worked with liked it, too. It came from an honest place. Itâs all true. Itâs nine kingdoms at that point. We want to make Westeros a fun place to hang out, even when terrible, terrible things are happening and everyoneâs sad, just like real life. You can still make jokes at a shiva, and itâs OK. We need that relief. So even in a bad spot, Dunk and Egg are still Dunk and Egg again.
Speaking of titles, was the show ever going to be called âThe Tales of Dunk and Eggâ like the novellas?
Early on, George was like, âJust donât call it âDunk & Eggâ â it sounds like âLaverne & Shirley.â It sounds like a sitcom.â I said, âOh, absolutely fine.â As it got really late in the game when we were putting the final touches in the post-production process, I did sort of waver a little bit. I said, âEveryoneâs just gonna call it âDunk & Egg,â so why donât we call it that?â Then I was talked down by my assistant that it wasnât a wise idea. And I agree. Itâs nice to see a show called âA Knight of the Seven Kingdoms,â and come there to find out that it is just a little lighter and has some fun, rather than setting people up with âDunk & Eggâ and you sort of know what youâre gonna get. I hope.
Are Dunk and Egg going to Dorne in Season 2?
They do go to Dorne. How much of that we cover, Iâll leave up to people to tune in for Season 2. I donât know if Iâm supposed to talk about it yet. For the most part, weâre following the books. So Season 1 was âThe Hedge Knight.â Season 2 is âThe Sworn Sword.â Hopefully, if we get to Season 3 itâll be âThe Mystery Knight.â
The novellas are each their own separate story, but will we see any of the Season 1 characters returning for Season 2? It looks like Aerion and Maekar could be looking for Egg at the end.
The one thing about this show, the nobles, the kings and queens are all terribly interesting. So many times you want to go and write for them, but the truth is thatâs not what this show is. There are a lot of shows, within this world and other worlds, that definitely cover that part. And weâre not that. We are bottom-up. We are in Dunkâs POV. Even minor lords and ladies, we donât allow ourselves to go behind the scenes in their POVs. For better or for worse, that is the storytelling lens that we have set up for this show. Whether or not somebody will come in and out of Dunkâs world again, I would say probably. Westeros is a â yeah. Yes. Thatâs all Iâll say. Yes.
Will Season 2 also be six episodes?
Yeah. It really was the perfect amount for us. Honestly, HBO was wonderful. They said anywhere between 30 minutes and 60 minutes is fine, which gives us a very large target to hit. We could let them be what they needed to be based on the source material.
How much of the Blackfyre Rebellions will we learn about in Season 2?
The Blackfyre Rebellions are in and out of their lives for Dunk and Egg, all the way up until pretty late Iâd say. The Second Blackfyre Rebellion factors in pretty heavily into one of the books, and obviously we make a few mentions to it in Season 1. But Iâd say itâs important background and informs a lot of the characters that they come in contact with. Essentially, we are 15 years outside of a massive civil war, and so thereâs still a lot of those lingering resentments. There are certainly a lot of open wounds left. One of the promises I made to George very early on is that I really wouldnât create story. We are adding to the character and the world. Weâre writing this TV show as if George had written a novel instead of a novella. So weâre just filling out things that he naturally probably would have done.
But we donât send people on any side quests, and we try not to get too bogged down in history. These are nice, little contained journeys. Itâs an action adventure series, almost. Itâs Dunk and his squire having fun and adventures, getting into trouble. Even if we do take two years between seasons, there are no cliffhangers. Weâve told a story and wrapped it up. Hopefully youâve enjoyed it, and you can come back and see their journey next time.
This interview was edited and condensed for clarity.




