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The evidence that Knight of the Seven Kingdoms was never knighted

Viewers who’ve followed the show to this point will understand what Lyonel is talking about — Dunk is despondent over the death of Baelor Targaryen (Bertie Carvel), the heir to the Iron Throne of Westeros, who was mortally wounded while defending Dunk in a trial by combat. Lyonel is furious at Dunk’s response, insisting that Baelor “risked nothing” in the fight, since the men on the other side were his family members and Kingsguard “sworn to protect him.” Even though Baelor died from the beating he suffered in that fight, Lyonel still feels the prince’s participation was a sham, and that the gods punished him for it.

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Eternity ending, explained: The director answers the big questions

Polygon spoke with writer-director David Freyne about Eternity’s backstory and setting — who established those rules, and who’s running the afterlife in Eternity? We also had a more spoiler-heavy conversation about how the movie ends, and how to interpret some of its more confusing elements. Freyne reveals how the movie originally ended, and what went into the final choice Joan (Elizabeth Olsen) makes about where to spend the afterlife, and who to spend it with.

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How Pluribus pulled off its biggest stunt yet

People watching along with Vince Gilligan’s science fiction series Pluribus may not think of it as a stunt-heavy show. It isn’t the kind of series that centers on chases, explosions, or combat: A few particularly emotional sequences just have the protagonist, Carol (Rhea Seehorn), slumped on her couch watching The Golden Girls. But stunt performer and coordinator Nito Larioza (Avatar, TheSuicide Squad, I Think You Should Leave) is a crucial factor on Pluribus, because coordinating the actors’ movement is such a key part of the story. When you have 200 actors playing a hivemind without actually being part of a hivemind, someone’s got to step in to take control.

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