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It’s been reported that a Game of Thrones movie is in development at Warner Bros., with Beau Willimon (House of Cards, Andor) writing the script. It’s still early days, but the reporting indicates that this will tell the story of Aegon’s Conquest, which united Westeros and started the Targaryen dynasty around 300 years before the events of the main series. There is also an Aegon’s Conquest TV show in development, with The Batman‘s Mattson Tomlin writing that one, and it seems as though studio execs will then pick between the two (though it’s not impossible to think they’ll do both and tell different parts of the story/timeline).
Aegon’s Conquest Makes Sense For WB, But Isn’t Actually A Great Story

It’s easy to see why Aegon’s Conquest would be an attractive option to WB and/or HBO. It has Targaryens, a common factor in all the shows so far. It has a lot of action. It introduces the Iron Throne. And most of all, it has three large dragons, with which Aegon does said conquering, and that would create the perfect spectacle for taking Thrones to the big screen. It’s the kind of awesome event the franchise is known for, and so likely to generate plenty of excitement.
There is, however, a catch: Aegon’s Conquest just isn’t that interesting. Maybe that’s just me, but if the story is telling things from his point-of-view, then there’s a real issue in terms of stakes. Aegon has Westeros’ version of nuclear weapons; he’s an almost unstoppable force, and so much of the Conquest is just him, his sister-wives (Rhaenys and Visenya), and their dragons (Balerion, Vhagar, and Meraxes) defeating one kingdom after another. It’s too easy, which doesn’t make for compelling drama.
The resistance of Dorne, which uses guerilla tactics and its mountainous terrain in order to withstand the Targaryen invasion, does add one wrinkle, but there’s not too much beyond that to bring the sort of character development, thematic richness, and political machinations that made Game of Thrones so compelling. The spectacle there was astonishing, but it worked because it was on top of such rock-solid foundations, and it faltered when it became more about moments than it was characters.








