âA Knight of the Seven Kingdomsâ co-creator explains opening poop scene as George R. R. Martin shares reaction
- - âA Knight of the Seven Kingdomsâ co-creator explains opening poop scene as George R. R. Martin shares reaction
Nick RomanoJanuary 21, 2026 at 12:00 AM
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Steffan Hill/HBO
Peter Claffey as Dunk on 'A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms'
The opening minutes of Game of Thrones prequel A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms ended in s---...literally, but that's the point, according to series co-creator Ira Parker.
In the premiere episode, which aired on HBO and streamed on HBO Max Sunday night, squire Dunk (Peter Claffey) decides to pick up the sword and armor of the late hedge knight he served for years. The iconic Game of Thrones theme music begins to play as the camera closes in on Dunk's face, but then we immediately cut to a shot of him taking a dump behind a tree.
"A lot of people are gonna take it the wrong way," Parker tells Entertainment Weekly. "It was never meant as a cheap gag to just show a butt that's [pooping] on television, that we really are trying to get into as fully as possible Dunk's headspace, which is so interior in the novellas that we have to find creative ways to get out there, whether it's Dunk talking to the horses, whether it's in conversations with Egg [Dexter Sol Ansell], or whether it's seeing Dunk's nerves manifest themselves physically as they do here in that way."
Claffey stars as Dunk, who travels to the Ashford tourney in the hopes of winning some coin as a knight. He comes across a young, bald, quick-witted boy named Egg who wants to squire for him. These events take place several decades after the events of HBO's other Game of Thrones prequel, House of the Dragon, and well before the events of the flagship TV series.
Steffan Hill/HBO
Peter Claffey as Dunk on 'A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms'
"Like so many of us, when we have those feelings of greatness that call to something else and it's going to be really difficult and challenging, we are soon then hit with the reality of doing that," Parker explains. "The dream falls away and we get butterflies in our stomach, that feeling of nervousness, which Dunk then finds himself very quickly in an unheroic, crouched position."
The Game of Thrones theme is "the ultimate hero music," he continues. "That's the ultimate call. That's what he aspires towards. But he's not that yet. He's not the hero. He's not capable of that yet, and he knows that inside of himself. So that's why his body reacts the way that it does."
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In a separate interview with The Hollywood Reporter, author and HBO's A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms co-creator George R. R. Martin shared his reaction to the moment.
"Yeah, that was a bit of a surprise...Not to say that my characters donât take s---s, but I normally donât write about them at any length," he said. "When I saw the rough cut, I wrote, âWhat is this? Where did this come from? I donât know if we really need the s---.â But [Parker] liked it for whatever reason.â
This won't be the last unheroic moment we get from Dunk in the six-episode first season. New episodes of A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms arrive every Sunday night on HBO and HBO Max.
on Entertainment Weekly
Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ