Season 01 - Vikings
By the finale, Ragnar is Earl. He has achieved his dream. But the final shot is not of celebration. It is of his face—calculating, haunted, already looking West again. The raid was never the point. The point was the restlessness . Season 1 of Vikings is not an origin story. It is an autopsy of a soul that has decided that peace is death. And in that decision, it suggests something profoundly unsettling: that the heroes we admire are often the men and women who have lost the capacity to be happy. They win the world and lose the ability to sit by the fire. That is not a victory. That is a sacrifice—and the gods, whether Odin or Christ, are always hungry for it.
The season’s deepest truth, however, lies in its depiction of the gods. The Christian monks of England pray to a God of mercy. The Vikings pray to gods of action, violence, and finality. But the show subtly argues that both are traps. Ragnar’s famous “conversion” scene with Athelstan is not about theology; it is about loneliness. Ragnar envies the Christian promise of forgiveness because his own gods offer only fate—unyielding, indifferent, written in runes before birth. “What if the gods don’t care?” he asks. That question hangs over every victory. When Ragnar sacks the monastery of Lindisfarne, he does not feel triumph. He feels the first chill of a terrible freedom: he has broken the old world, but he has no idea what to build in its place. Vikings Season 01
The counterpoint to Ragnar is Earl Haraldson—not a villain, but a mirror. Haraldson is what Ragnar will become if he survives: a paranoid, hollowed-out shell, clutching at power because he has nothing else. Their final confrontation in the great hall is not a battle of good versus evil. It is a debate between two kinds of fear. Haraldson fears the unknown; Ragnar fears stagnation. When Haraldson dies, whispering that the gods will punish Ragnar’s pride, the show leaves the question open. Is the Earl wrong? Or is he simply the first to pay the price? By the finale, Ragnar is Earl