In the opening moments of A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, the third instalment in the Game of Thrones TV franchise, a humble hedge knight named Ser Duncan the Tall announces his intention to compete in a jousting tournament. While gripping the sword of his recently deceased mentor, Ser Duncan then stares meaningfully into the distance as the familiar drumbeat of the Thrones theme begins to swell on the soundtrack. It’s an inspiring moment … until it smash cuts to Ser Duncan, also known as Dunk, having a catastrophic bowel movement behind a tree. Yes, we are indeed treated to a wide, semi-graphic shot of same. Because this is not TV, it’s HBO.
That sequence is an immediate and, admittedly, pretty gross indication that this Game of Thrones prequel, based on George R.R. Martin’s Dunk and Egg novellas, marks a departure from its TV predecessors. Set roughly 70 years after the events of House of the Dragon and nearly a century before the Game of Thrones saga, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms hews closer to a comedy than a work of prestige fantasy drama and consistently makes a point of undercutting any hint at excessive seriousness. When any opportunity arises to make a joke, even a crude one, this series takes it.

Unlike its sweeping siblings and in keeping with the tighter focus of a novella, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, adapted for the screen by Martin and House of the Dragon writer and executive producer Ira Parker, is deliberately more modest in scope. Each of the first season’s six episodes (a second season has already been confirmed) are well under an hour in length. Most unfold within a crisp 30 minutes or so, with the longest, the premiere, clocking in at just over 40. The show is not only focused in terms of run time, but in its storytelling, which zeroes in on one key relationship: the one between Dunk (Peter Claffey) and his young squire, Egg (Dexter Sol Ansell) that serves as the beating heart that keeps blood flowing to the narrative’s other vital organs.
In The Hedge Knight, the first episode and the title of the first Dunk and Egg novella that inspires this season, Dunk is on his way to the aforementioned jousting tournament when he first encounters Egg, a slight, bald orphan boy. Egg begs Dunk to let him act as his squire en route to and during the tournament, and he refuses to take no for an answer. In short order, the two become travelling companions who occasionally clash but eventually bond as the impressionable yet savvy Egg attempts to prove himself worthy of his boss, who is prone to unintentionally committing acts of slapstick comedy. (Dunk has a habit of hitting his head on doorways and perpetually heading in the wrong direction, then having to course correct.)
