By
Tom Russell
Published 35 minutes ago
Tom is a Senior Staff Writer at Screen Rant, with expertise covering all things Classic TV from hilarious sitcoms to jaw-dropping sci-fi.
Initially he was an Updates writer, though before long he found his way to the Classic TV team. He now spends his days keeping Screen Rant readers informed about the TV shows of yesteryear, whether it's recommending hidden gems that may have been missed by genre fans or deep diving into ways your favorite shows have (or haven't) stood the test of time.
Tom is based in the UK and when he's not writing about TV shows, he's watching them. He's also an avid horror fiction writer, gamer, and has a Dungeons and Dragons habit that he tries (and fails) to keep in check.
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From the moment it arrived in 2011, Game of Thrones signaled a major shift in fantasy TV. Audiences responded instantly to its brutal politics, explicit violence, and moral ambiguity. Fantasy was no longer niche or sanitized. Viewers wanted dragons, yes, but also bloodshed, betrayal, and adult consequences delivered with blockbuster confidence on a previously unimaginable scale for the small screen.
After that success, countless series branded themselves the next Game of Thrones. Most chased its sprawling maps, massive casts, and expensive battles. Far fewer embraced what truly captured fans: the way fantasy tropes collided with tones borrowed from grim thrillers and violent crime dramas, creating worlds that felt dangerous, uncomfortable, and uncompromising in mainstream prestige television storytelling spaces everywhere.
There was, however, a notable exception. Trading medieval high fantasy for a sooty Victorian aesthetic, Prime Video’s Carnival Row leaned harder into magic than warfare but kept the core of what made GoT great. It took Game of Thrones’ R-rated sensibilities, blending sex, violence, and political cruelty into a densely imagined world that felt familiar yet boldly distinctive.
What Is Carnival Row About
A Dark Fantasy Mystery That Merges Political Intrigue With Brutal Magical Realism
Rather than a medieval fantasy continent like Westeros, Carnival Row is set in the Burgue, a sprawling industrial city strained by war, immigration, and deep-rooted prejudice. Mythical creatures known as the fae have fled their homelands after human conquest, seeking refuge among people who fear and despise them. The uneasy coexistence forms the backbone of the series’ social and political tension.
At the center is half-fae Rycroft Philostrate (Orlando Bloom), a hardened detective tasked with investigating a string of gruesome murders targeting fae citizens. His role mirrors Game of Thrones characters like Jon Snow (Kit Harington) or Tyrion Lannister (Peter Dinklage), figures forced to navigate rigid power structures while harboring inconvenient empathy.
Philostrate’s past is complicated by Vignette Stonemoss (played in the Carnival Row cast by Cara Delevingne), a fairy and former soldier whose life has been shaped by colonial violence and betrayal. Their relationship adds emotional weight, grounding the show’s fantastical elements in messy, adult romance rather than fairy-tale idealism.
Beyond the central mystery, Carnival Row sprawls outward into political drama. Aristocrats like Imogen Spurnrose (Tamzin Merchant) and her evolving partnership with Agreus Astrayon (David Gyasi) explore classism and exploitation from the perspective of privilege, echoing Game of Thrones’ fascination with power and hypocrisy.
The show’s appeal for Game of Thrones fans lies in its commitment to consequences. Violence is shocking, sex is explicit, and moral victories are rare. Magic exists, but it does not simplify problems. Instead, it complicates them, reinforcing the sense that this is a world where idealism is dangerous and survival often comes at a personal cost.
How Carnival Row Is Different From Game Of Thrones
A More Intimate Fantasy That Prioritizes Social Horror Over Epic Warfare
While Game of Thrones built its reputation on continent-spanning wars and dynastic struggles, Carnival Row is deliberately more contained. Its conflicts unfold primarily within a single city, trading battlefield spectacle for claustrophobic streets, alleyways, and drawing rooms thick with paranoia and resentment.
Thematically, Carnival Row is less concerned with who sits on a throne and more focused on who is allowed to exist safely. Its fantasy races are overt stand-ins for marginalized groups, and the show rarely softens that allegory. Racism, xenophobia, and state-sanctioned violence are depicted with an almost procedural bluntness.
Magic also functions differently. In Game of Thrones, dragons and sorcery are destabilizing forces that alter the balance of power across the Seven Kingdoms. In Carnival Row, magic is normalized, even weaponized against those who wield it. The fae’s abilities make them targets, reinforcing fear rather than awe.
Tonally, the series leans closer to gothic horror than epic fantasy. Murders are graphic, crime scenes linger, and the atmosphere prioritizes dread over anticipation. Narrative arcs often emphasize trauma and survival rather than triumph, distinguishing the show from Game of Thrones’ operatic highs.
Even its political figures differ in texture. Chancellor Absalom Breakspear (Jared Harris) operates less like a fantasy king and more like a compromised statesman in a corrupt system. His authority feels fragile, bureaucratic, and morally compromised, reflecting a modern cynicism absent from the various monarchs in Game of Thrones.
Why Carnival Row's Rotten Tomatoes Score Is So Low
A Divisive Series That Suffered From Expectations Rather Than Execution
Despite its ambition, Carnival Row holds a 48% score on Rotten Tomatoes, a number that can appear damning at first glance. Much of that reception stems from mismatched expectations rather than outright failure. Critics often approached the show anticipating another sweeping epic in the mold of Game of Thrones.
Instead, they encountered a dense, dialogue-heavy series more interested in world-building and metaphor than momentum. The deliberate pacing, especially in the first season, frustrated viewers looking for immediate payoff or constant spectacle. Its mysteries unfold slowly, demanding patience not all audiences were willing to give.
The show’s allegorical elements also proved polarizing. Carnival Row rarely disguises its commentary on immigration and systemic oppression, and some critics found its symbolism heavy-handed. However, that bluntness is also part of its identity, aligning it more with social horror than escapist fantasy.
Production challenges further impacted perception. The long gap between season 1 in 2019 and season 2 in 2023, along with the compressed storytelling of the final episodes, created a sense of imbalance. Character arcs sometimes feel rushed, not because of poor writing, but due to structural limitations beyond the show’s control.
Ultimately, the low score reflects discomfort more than incompetence. Carnival Row is abrasive, explicit, and politically charged. For fans of Game of Thrones who appreciated its cruelty, moral grayness, and willingness to unsettle, those very qualities make Carnival Row a compelling, if imperfect, successor worth revisiting.
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Like Follow Followed Game Of Thrones TV-MA Drama Action Adventure Fantasy10/10 619 9.0/10 Release Date 2011 - 2019-00-00 Showrunner David Benioff, D.B. Weiss
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Kit Harington
Jon Snow
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Isaac Hempstead Wright
Brandon Bran Stark
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Like Follow Followed Carnival Row Drama Crime Fantasy 12 9.3/10 Release Date 2019 - 2022 Network Amazon Prime VideoCast
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Cara Delevingne
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Jamie Harris
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