"The Dragon's Call" is not a perfect pilot. It’s frantic, overstuffed, and the pacing lurches from dark ritual to slapstick laundry. But it has something more important than polish: soul . You watch it and immediately understand the assignment. You are watching two boys who will one day build Albion, but right now, one is trying to polish the other’s boots without setting them on fire.
For first-time viewers, it’s a delightful oddity. For returning fans, it’s a time capsule of innocence—before the betrayals, before the tears, before the final farewell. It is the spark that lit the pyre. And what a glorious, clumsy spark it was. Merlin - Season 1- Episode 1
Underneath the dragon calls and enchanted shields, the episode establishes a heartbreaking secret. Merlin cannot tell Arthur who he really is. Every time he saves Arthur’s life (which happens three times in the pilot), he has to lie. This isn't just a plot device; it's the tragedy of the show. The closer they become, the more impossible the truth becomes. "The Dragon's Call" is not a perfect pilot
Young Merlin arrives in the glittering, paranoid kingdom of Camelot. Magic is outlawed under pain of death by its king, Uther Pendragon. Within hours, Merlin is nearly executed, saves the life of the arrogant prince Arthur, and gets hired as his manservant. Oh, and a buried dragon under the castle tells him they are destined to be partners. You watch it and immediately understand the assignment
In the pantheon of BBC fantasy, few pilots have swung for the fences quite like "The Dragon's Call." Released in 2008, the episode had a deceptively simple mandate: take the most famous wizard in literature and turn him into a clumsy, terrified teenager. The result was a gambit that could have failed spectacularly. Instead, it launched a five-season phenomenon.