All His Angels
"All His Angels" is the fifteenth episode of the fourth season of History's historical drama television series Vikings, and the 44th episode of the series. Directed by Ciarán Donnelly and written by Michael Hirst, it aired on December 28, 2016.
"All His Angels" | |
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Vikings episode | |
Episode no. | Season 4 Episode 15 |
Directed by | Ciarán Donnelly |
Written by | Michael Hirst |
Produced by | Sanne Wohlenberg |
Featured music | "Snake Pit Poetry" by Einar Selvik & Hilda Örvarsdóttir |
Cinematography by | Owen McPolin |
Editing by | Tad Seaborn |
Original air date | December 28, 2016 |
Running time | 44 minutes |
Guest appearance(s) | |
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The episode stars Travis Fimmel, Katheryn Winnick, John Kavanagh, Moe Dunford, Alex Høgh, David Lindström, Jordan Patrick Smith, and Linus Roache. Clive Standen, Gustaf Skarsgård, Alexander Ludwig, and Alyssa Sutherland also appear in archive footage.
It received wide critical acclaim, particularly for Fimmel's performance, and it was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Makeup for a Single-Camera Series (Non-Prosthetic) at the 69th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards.
Plot
Ecbert (Linus Roache) visits Ragnar (Travis Fimmel) in his cell to inform him that he has arranged a ship to take his son Ivar (Alex Høgh) home later that day. Ragnar tells him that he wishes to speak to Ivar alone and Ecbert sends his guards to fetch him. Ragnar tells him that he will be handed over to King Aelle (Ivan Kaye), who will kill him. Ivar promises that he and his brothers will avenge their father's death, but Ragnar tells him that they must take revenge on Ecbert.
In Ecbert's bedroom, he and Princess Judith (Jennie Jacques) confess their love for each other. Ecbert admits that he deeply regrets committing his friend Ragnar to death. Judith says he has no choice, but Ecbert wonders if that is true and compares himself to Pontius Pilate. In the courtyard, Ragnar gives Athelstan's (George Blagden) cross to his son Alfred and tells Ecbert that in the end, Athelstan chose Christ. Ragnar is then caged on a carriage and taken away. Later that night, Ecbert takes Athelstan's priest clothes, and leaves court.
On the road, Ragnar converses with the blind driver, who says that he can see Ragnar, fulfilling the Seer's (John Kavanagh) prophecy that "you will die on the day the blind man sees you". Ragnar now sees the Seer in the driver's place, and tells him that it was he who guided his fate and not the gods, and that his prophecies are dangerous. The Seer tells him that he has only groped for meaning and that he may have been wrong. Ecbert follows behind the contingent, disguised as a priest.
Ragnar arrives in Northumbria and is tortured by Aelle for days. He refuses to beg for mercy or repent his actions, remembering the happiness of his earlier years. Eventually, Aelle prepares a pit of snakes and gives Ragnar a final chance to repent his sins. Ragnar boldly recites a boastful poem about looking forward to Valhalla and the future triumphs of his sons. He is promptly dropped into the pit and killed by the snakes. Ecbert observes the execution, seemingly relieved by Ragnar's unbroken spirit.
In Kattegat, Ivar returns to discover that his mother, Aslaug, was killed by Lagertha. Across the fjord, a longship carrying a black cloaked figure (André Eriksen), missing his right eye, approaches.
Production
"All His Angels" is the fifteenth episode of the fourth season, directed by Irish director Ciarán Donnelly and written by showrunner Michael Hirst. It is the 44th episode overall.
Writing
Hirst told IGN he had always intended to kill off Ragnar at some point, with the original plan being the departure of Fimmel's character in the first-season finale.[1]
Hirst and Fimmel recalled having an argument about the delivery of Ragnar's last speech. Fimmel initially felt uneasy about it, but he was convinced of its importance and impact on Ragnar's sons: "me and Michael spoke about how the kids will find out what he said. It’s all for them, he doesn’t believe it".[2]
Filming
Principal photography for the episode took place at Ashford Studios and on location in Ireland in mid-winter 2015–2016.[1] Regarding Ragnar's final scene, Michael Hirst told Entertainment Weekly "it was shot in the deepest winter, in the harshest conditions, with Travis absolutely suspended in this cage, above a muddy field, in torrential freezing rain."[2]
Music
The musical score of "All His Angels" was composed by Trevor Morris. Additionally, Norwegian musician Einar Selvik, who had been working with Morris on the music of Vikings since season two, provided the ancient Norse instruments and vocals. The soundtrack album for season four features two original tracks from the episode: "Dreams of the Past" and "Death of a Legend", the latter featuring Selvik's vocals.
For "All His Angels", Selvik wrote and produced a song to accompany Ragnar's final moments, "Snake Pit Poetry". It features vocals by Icelandic singer Hilda Örvarsdóttir and it was released in an extended play on October 20, 2017, together with a second version solely performed by Selvik.[3][4]
Reception
Critical reception
"All His Angels" was met with positive reviews from critics. Matt Fowler of IGN gave the episode a 9.0 out of 10, stating: "'All His Angels' gave Ragnar a bold, brutal hero's exit - in the way that he planned as a man who claimed, in the end, to be the master of his own fate. It was honest and earned and hard to watch, though for a man who no longer believed in the Norse afterlife Ragnar was still heavily devoted to his people and the future of his family - thinking about what the world would become after his death, not what would happen to him in Valhalla."[5] The A.V. Club's Dennis Perkins gave the episode a "B+" rating.[6]
Accolades
Year | Award | Category | Nominee(s) | Result |
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2017 | Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards | Outstanding Makeup for a Single-Camera Series (Non-Prosthetic) | Tom McInerney, Department Head Makeup Artist Katie Derwin, Key Makeup Artist Ciara Scannell, Makeup Artist Lizanne Proctor, Makeup Artist |
Nominated |
Notes
- Archive footage only.
References
- Fowler, Matt (December 28, 2016). "Vikings creator on this week's shocking turn of events". IGN. Retrieved December 29, 2017.
- Franich, Darren (December 28, 2016). "Vikings creator and star talk about the shocking 'All His Angels'". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved December 29, 2017.
- "Snake Pit Poetry - Single". iTunes. Retrieved December 29, 2017.
- Selvik, Einar. "Snake Pit Poetry". Bandcamp. Retrieved December 29, 2017.
- Fowler, Matt (December 28, 2016). "Vikings: "All His Angels" Review". IGN. Retrieved January 2, 2018.
- Perkins, Dennis (December 28, 2016). "All stories end in another's beginning on a somber, shocking Vikings". The A.V. Club. Retrieved January 2, 2018.