If you thought Kit Harrington peaked north of the Wall with a fur cloak and a permanent look of emotional distress, Industry Season 4 is here to gently—but firmly—shake you awake. Because Harrington is no longer brooding in the snow. He’s shirtless, morally compromised, dripping with power, and absolutely thriving.
Harrington reprises his role as Sir Henry Muck, the CEO and founder of green energy tech giant Lumi—a man who has wealth, influence, and the kind of confidence that curdles into entitlement when left unchecked. Henry isn’t just rich; he’s insulated. And Industry knows exactly how sexy and terrifying that combination can be.
KIT HARRINGTON in “Industry” season 4 📷#NeedThat pic.twitter.com/xup0AHBeSc
— Male Celebs Hub 📷 (@Hot__Culture) November 24, 2025
The trailer teased us with a more sexually promiscuous Henry. The episode itself? Oh boy. It delivered something far more charged: control, voyeurism, and the slow unspooling of dominance inside a luxury hotel room that suddenly feels much smaller than it should.
RELATED: If there is one word to describe Kit Harrington, that is–ICONIC
Harrington, Undressed… Literally and Dramatically
Let’s be honest. The internet did not collectively combust over spreadsheets and FinDigest rebuttals. It combusted because Harrington emerges from a shower, damp-haired and bare-chested, like a smug finance-world Adonis who knows he’s about to ruin your life.
What follows is a scene that’s less about nudity and more about power. Hayley (Kiernan Shipka) arrives with three possible rebuttals from Whitney—work-related, technically—but the conversation quickly veers off course. Yasmin points out the obvious: this could’ve been an email. Tension crackles. Boundaries blur. Hayley admits to sexual frustration. And suddenly Henry, still glowing from the steam of the shower, is pulled into a conversation that is no longer pretending to be professional.
At first, Henry hesitates. This is important. Harrington plays the uncertainty beautifully—the flicker of “should I?” before the inevitable “I will.” When he leans in to kiss Hayley, it’s not aggressive. It’s curious. And that curiosity is exactly what makes the moment sizzle.
When Yasmin Takes the Match and Lights the Room on Fire
Just when you think the scene is heading in one direction, Industry pulls the rug out from under us. Yasmin steps away. She sits. She lights a cigarette. And in that quiet shift, the power dynamic flips completely.
What follows is less a sex scene and more a psychological chess match. Yasmin begins to orchestrate, to command. She watches. She directs. And with one devastating line—“I think you have something that belongs to my husband and now, to me”—the moment snaps into focus.
This isn’t about desire alone. It’s about ownership, spectacle, and control. Harrington’s Henry becomes an object as much as an instigator, and that reversal is where the performance truly shines.
Why Harrington Is Getting Career-Best Praise
Fans aren’t just thirsting. They’re paying attention.
Social media lit up immediately, with viewers calling this one of the strongest episodes Industry has ever delivered—and singling out Harrington for praise that borders on heresy in certain fantasy fandoms.
One viewer wrote that Kit delivered “Emmy-worthy work” in an episode packed with bold direction and razor-sharp writing. Another claimed—controversially but confidently—that the former Game of Thrones actor is giving a “better and more complex” performance here than in most seasons of GoT. Others joked that Harrington had to “remind us that he actually can act,” and then promptly did exactly that.
@jonsuow
Hyperbole? Maybe. But there’s no denying that Industry gives Harrington something Jon Snow rarely had: moral rot. Henry Muck isn’t noble. He isn’t trying to save the world. He’s exploiting it and enjoying himself along the way.
Final Verdict: Wake Up, Babe. Harrington’s Hot Now.
If you’ve been sleeping on Industry, consider this your alarm clock. Kit Harrington has officially entered his “prestige TV menace” era, and it is sexy, unsettling, and wildly entertaining. This isn’t fantasy hero Harrington. This is Harrington with money, leverage, and a collapsing ethical center—and somehow, that’s even hotter.
Catch Industry Season 4 Sundays at 9 p.m. ET on HBO. Just don’t expect to watch it calmly.


