A terrifying pack of foes lays Geralt low. Yennefer and her fellow mages prepare to fight back. A shaken Ciri depends on the kindness of a stranger.A terrifying pack of foes lays Geralt low. Yennefer and her fellow mages prepare to fight back. A shaken Ciri depends on the kindness of a stranger.A terrifying pack of foes lays Geralt low. Yennefer and her fellow mages prepare to fight back. A shaken Ciri depends on the kindness of a stranger.
Mimî M Khayisa
- Fringilla
- (as Mimi Ndiweni)
Featured reviews
A little context before I start, I've never read the books that "The Witcher" is based on. I've got some exposure to the games, but I've never played them properly.
As a Kingdom falls to invaders, the Queen desperately forces her granddaughter Ciri (Freya Allen) to leave the city, telling her that "Geralt of Rivia is her destiny". Geralt (Henry Cavill) is a Witcher, a skilled fighter who makes his living hunting and killing monsters at the request of local towns, cities and Kingdoms. Elsewhere, a lowly stable girl is sold by her parents into the mages guild. Wildly powerful, but lacking control, Yennefer (Anya Chalotra) enhances her magical skills, but consistently rebels against the traditions and rules of the guild.
Once I got into it, I really liked this first season of "The Witcher". The first couple of episodes jump around a little more than I was comfortable with and introduce a number of characters and locations when I wanted to stay with Geralt more, and learn about him. There was then a "eureka" moment, for me, when it became apparent that these stories were not concurrent and from there, working out where the stories linked became another fun aspect of the show.
Cavill is a good cypher for Geralt and with his perfectly timed grunts, looks and muttered swear words is a deceptively funny character to spend time with. This is only heightened when he's forced into reluctant straight man opposite Joey Batey's Bard Jaskier. His fight scenes were very nicely done with strong sword play, in fact, action across the whole series was good, ending in an epic battle at the conclusion of the season. I've focused on Geralt quite a lot there, but I'd suspect that Yennefer actually appears in the series more than Geralt (I'm sure she's got more lines) and it's her development and growth (and one particularly bad decision) that dominates the narrative. Fortunately then, I really liked Anya Chalotra's nuanced performance.
Really really good stuff that doesn't outstay it's welcome and leaves me craving season two.
As a Kingdom falls to invaders, the Queen desperately forces her granddaughter Ciri (Freya Allen) to leave the city, telling her that "Geralt of Rivia is her destiny". Geralt (Henry Cavill) is a Witcher, a skilled fighter who makes his living hunting and killing monsters at the request of local towns, cities and Kingdoms. Elsewhere, a lowly stable girl is sold by her parents into the mages guild. Wildly powerful, but lacking control, Yennefer (Anya Chalotra) enhances her magical skills, but consistently rebels against the traditions and rules of the guild.
Once I got into it, I really liked this first season of "The Witcher". The first couple of episodes jump around a little more than I was comfortable with and introduce a number of characters and locations when I wanted to stay with Geralt more, and learn about him. There was then a "eureka" moment, for me, when it became apparent that these stories were not concurrent and from there, working out where the stories linked became another fun aspect of the show.
Cavill is a good cypher for Geralt and with his perfectly timed grunts, looks and muttered swear words is a deceptively funny character to spend time with. This is only heightened when he's forced into reluctant straight man opposite Joey Batey's Bard Jaskier. His fight scenes were very nicely done with strong sword play, in fact, action across the whole series was good, ending in an epic battle at the conclusion of the season. I've focused on Geralt quite a lot there, but I'd suspect that Yennefer actually appears in the series more than Geralt (I'm sure she's got more lines) and it's her development and growth (and one particularly bad decision) that dominates the narrative. Fortunately then, I really liked Anya Chalotra's nuanced performance.
Really really good stuff that doesn't outstay it's welcome and leaves me craving season two.
Right now I completed one of the greatest series at all,the fight scenes were the best of all time without any single mistake and without forgetting the cinematography and for that it deserve the full point 10.
They could have made it better, more emotional and the fighting wasnt that tight and shot in parts, it wasnt continuous and resulted in a kind of chop chop sequences. a continuous flow could have been great. season 2 is 2021! phewww, long wait..
Excellent ending and buildup for Season 2. I've never read the books so to those who say I could have experienced something better, that's great. Maybe I will read the books one day now that I've watched this. But just so you know, most books transferred onto film isn't going to do the books justice.
I also can't understand anyone who would bill this as the next GoT. GoT got old. The way The Witcher is being written where intertwining stories are aired from past and present and finally they meet in the end...this is going down a path that leaves the possibility for writers to develop on these characters further in season 2 in a pace that doesn't unnecessarily drag it out as I've felt at times in GoT. We would still have bloody good entertainment at the end of the day, regardless.
I for one, can't wait to see Season 2.
I also can't understand anyone who would bill this as the next GoT. GoT got old. The way The Witcher is being written where intertwining stories are aired from past and present and finally they meet in the end...this is going down a path that leaves the possibility for writers to develop on these characters further in season 2 in a pace that doesn't unnecessarily drag it out as I've felt at times in GoT. We would still have bloody good entertainment at the end of the day, regardless.
I for one, can't wait to see Season 2.
Did you know
- TriviaLike the previous episode, Geralt's story is loosely based on a part of the short story "Something More" from the book "Sword of Destiny". The same story mentions the Battle of Sodden.
- SoundtracksThe Song of The White Wolf
Written by Sonya Belousova and Giona Ostinelli
Produced by Sonya Belousova and Giona Ostinelli
Lyrics by Declan De Barra
Performed by Declan De Barra and Sonya Belousova
Details
- Runtime
- 59m
- Color
- Sound mix
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content