"The Witcher" Turn Your Back (TV Episode 2021) Poster

(TV Series)

(2021)

User Reviews

Review this title
18 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
9/10
The monoliths/spheres are very interesting
jaqmeister20 December 2021
Another great episode. The lore behind the monoliths, different spheres and new monsters are really interesting.

Yen and Jaskiers chemistry is great. I like how Jaskier is doing something good to help the persecuted elves.
15 out of 40 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Great episode
finnschneider-2583118 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
This is one of the best episodes of the season. A lot of plot is advancing and all kinds of things are going on.

Two highlights are without a doubt the "dream"-state with Ciri and Triss, which is awesome. A lot of foreshadowing and a bunch of small nice details. The whole storyline with Ciri wanting to become a witcher is done quite nicely. Also the inner conflict of Vesemir is displayed quite nicely and even though it may not be in line with the book, it is done in a believable way.

Also Geralts trip to the monolith (completely new) is a strong point of this episode and corelates well with Ciris scenes when she is calling for him. You kinda see more and more where this whole story is going to.

A weak point for me is the storyline with Fringilla, Francesca and the elves, which feels a bit stretched and get's too much screen time in my opinion. Fringilla was never a very important character besides in Toussaint, so it's not surprising that her scenes feel a bit unnecessary. What's also weird is the fact, that Francesca seems so powerless. Originally she was one of the leaders of the brotherhood and fought with them in Soden. She only later joined Nilfgard, but never held Cintra, but Dol Blathana. So yeah, it is about time the elves leave Cintra and start fighting as the Scoaitel.
16 out of 47 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
In too deep
Calicodreamin27 December 2021
Amazing cinematography in the magical sequence, that was beautiful television. The storyline is delving deeper into the past and magic, and while I'm a bit confused, I'm also deeply invested.
8 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Insane so far
lukerandall17 December 2021
Season 2 is everything you want it to be, the plot so far is amazing!

All the characters are starting to get their own arcs especially Ciri.

Been miles better than the first season, looking forward to what's to come!
44 out of 113 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Powerful
deejon5118 December 2021
After about 15 min in to the episode I was just glued to it....so powerful and intense, just loved it.

Especially the newfound things about Ciri and the implications of her and the witchers.

The acting is really moving me, did not expect that at all......I am hooked, bigtime to the screen.
29 out of 80 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Wow powerful
moviesfilmsreviewsinc1 January 2022
A key Witcher characteristic - one that's established quite early in the show - is that they can't feel emotions. Or at least, that's what people believe. It's quite obvious that Geralt has some deep emotions, even if he keeps them buried most of the time. Watching with me last season, a friend of mine suggested that this is a metaphor for toxic masculinity, and that part of Geralt's growth may be in surfacing the feelings he's repressed for so long. So when Ciri tries to become a Witcher herself to try and escape what I can only assume is her survivor's guilt over the events in Cintra, it makes sense that Geralt would be the one to finally get through to her after Triss and Vesemir fail. It leads to one of the most affecting exchanges in the series so far. Geralt's connection with Ciri has been one of The Witcher's biggest strengths in its second season, and their familial chemistry is once again on display in this episode. It's yet another example of Geralt's outsized influence outstripping his actual screentime. It's a credit to Henry Cavill that he consistently nails the handful of opportunities that Geralt has to show real emotional range, lending texture to a character who might otherwise be a two-dimensional Medieval Batman. This eight-part season is effectively a prologue for the show's main story, which has only just begun in the finale's last scene. And while that does mean that these hours do feel somewhat inconsequential and exposition-heavy, they do establish a fascinating world worth exploring. Indeed, as the credits roll you'll almost certainly reach for a copy of The Last Wish or boot up the games to continue that adventure. But if you do, you'll likely discover that Netflix's The Witcher has a bit of work to put in before it hits the high quality bar set by the story's other mediums.
11 out of 26 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Character building and world building, some people dont like that!
ha77y73ad9717 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
There is a stark difference to the books compared to this series but i can honestly say im enjoying every episode that i watch of this!

The more characters that are introduced to each other brings the best out of the series, because we know all the stories behind them and whats happens just drives the anticipation whenever they meet!

The Investigation of the cracked Monolith was amazing along with the sudden introduction of Garelt to Istredd. Just brings this meeting to another level.

Overall just excited to see the next episode!
1 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
By itself, this was one of the weaker episodes. Weakest, even.
LegendaryFang5631 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I don't know how to feel about this episode. It was still somewhat entertaining, at least, I guess. Hardly any of it felt interesting enough. The most important part was the dialogue about the Conjunction, the Spheres, and the monoliths. I'm sure a lot of people found that super interesting.

  • The beginning left some question marks for me. How did that Lydia woman know about Cirilla, including a last-known location? I can understand Nilfgaard; particularly, The White Flame/Emhyr, knowing. If you know, you know. I'm not sure if the Nilfgaardians themselves know. Unless maybe Cahir. There's even a more specific reason why Emhyr would know about her.


  • cont.) To clarify, I'm referring to Cirilla's mysterious powers, although the more specific reason has to be something nobody else knows. Everyone probably knows of her, specifically. She is the princess of a kingdom. A kingdom that recently got attacked and taken over.


  • cont.) As far as her knowing a last-known location of Cirilla, I can buy that. With the extensiveness of this world and all the players, and 3D chess going on, it makes sense that probably everyone has spies everywhere. What I'm curious about is how she, or more like whoever she's working for, knows enough about Cirilla to where they'd be after her, too, wanting to get to her first.


  • cont.) Maybe she's someone close to Emhyr, who considered her trustworthy enough to tell her about Cirilla's powers, only she's playing a double game. Or whoever she works for found out somehow. How? I don't know. As far as her character is concerned, she could be one of the significant female mage characters, or just female characters, that I casually read about a while back in The Witcher's wiki. Her name seems familiar.


  • Another question mark was Rience going after Jaskier. I doubt Jaskier's songs are specific enough for Rience to know one of them could have mentioned Cirilla without mentioning her by name, let alone that by finding Geralt: he'll find Cirilla. But Rience seems to have had a history with Queen Calanthe, so maybe he met Geralt, too, and has a history with him as well. And that going after Geralt has nothing to do with going after Cirilla, as far as he knows.


  • cont.) Also, how Yennefer rescued Jaskier was a bit ridiculous. So was how she burned Rience's face. It seems like the only reason it happened like that was so Yennefer could burn Rience's face, as I'm pretty sure that was a notable aspect of his appearance in the novels. But I'm sure how it happened in the latter wasn't as ridiculously done as it was in this episode.


  • Geralt and Istredd taking down those two Nilfgaardian guards was also a bit ridiculous. Lightly hitting one across the head with something you're carrying and pushing the other off his horse with a weak magic blast is more than enough to knock out anyone: so it would seem.


  • Well, Geralt knows Yennefer isn't dead. Thankfully. That's good. I'm relieved that he knows now, especially after the previous episode's writing with him and Triss, about to learn that Yennefer's alive, then screwing himself. It made sense that he'd not want to hear Yennefer's name because of the pain, but I feel like the writing of that was too convenient. The writers could've made that last longer, so I'm glad they didn't.


  • Suddenly, the second episode has context. Yennefer's dream didn't make sense, but now, it's not as confusing. Cirilla is of Elder blood and is the seed that will burst into flame; in Yennefer's dream, her and Geralt's child burst into flame and had elven ears when the red-robed figure was holding it. But I don't think that Elder blood has to do with elves/Elven blood. Maybe those with Elder blood have always been elves. Either way, there's probably a correlation there. It's interesting.


  • Is it just me, or does there seem to be more to that exchange between Fringilla and Francesca? Something romantic, I mean. I seem to remember from when I skimmed through The Witcher's wiki a while back that one of the significant female mage characters liked women.


  • cont.) It may have been the one who was depicted blindfolded. Or was that Tissaia's depiction? It's hard to remember which one is which; when compared with their counterparts in the show. I can't seem to remember who that one is: maybe Philippa, who we've already been introduced to; if you know what I mean.


  • cont.) Then again, I don't think any of the other significant female mage characters ever hooked up with her. I could be wrong about that. Still, either way, that doesn't mean Fringilla and Francesca won't have romantic aspects sprinkled among their encounters. But I'm probably overthinking it.


  • Triss seemed a little hypocritical in this episode. She said that Cirilla gets to decide. Then, she freaks out when Cirilla makes a choice. One that she doesn't like. Granted, Triss was referring to using Cirilla to create Witcher mutagens, not Cirilla being the one on who it's used. But that, too, was still for Cirilla to decide: her choice to make, and Triss immediately goes into tantrum mode.


  • cont.) And why was Cirilla's idea of needing a moment to prepare for getting injected with the Witcher mutagen, dabbing herself with a wet cloth? You'd think she'd want to do it right away, and the writers couldn't come up with a better excuse. It was only written like that so Triss would find out about it and then be with Cirilla in private. That was also to buy time for Geralt to arrive just in time to intervene when Triss's method still didn't make Cirilla decide against taking the mutagen.


  • cont.) Of course, the result had to happen. From back when I casually read through some of The Witcher's wiki, I'm pretty sure I read that Cirilla never took the mutagen until the very end of the novels, or the end of the third game, something like that. Or that she never took it at all. Her powers and skills themselves were sufficient enough. I feel like if the writers didn't write Geralt to intervene, it would've been like killing Eskel, only a more significant change, one that would have probably pissed people off a lot more.


All-in-all, this episode seemed on the weaker side, but it was still entertaining, albeit confusing or written a little poorly. I was expecting the season to get more intricate starting with this episode after watching the previous episode, which I was somewhat correct about, I guess. But it wasn't to the extent or like I was expecting, so I feel like what I was expecting may happen in the following episodes, but probably not.
9 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
well
Lythas_8525 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I disagree with another reviewer who was comparing the books to the show.. well, if they wanted to make her a witcher here.. who am i to complain? It wouldve make quite an entertaining story.. more so than yen wandering around trying to do dunno what... i keep skipping ahead to see ciri and geralt.. as with netflix shows.. we know that they will all get together at the end and fight an evil boss.. lol.
6 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Vesemir: Make witchers great again!
alexxxlibra26 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I haven't read Witcher books but I do have a couple of questions. Ciri has Elder Blood and she wants to become a witcher - I can understand that: she hopes it will deaden her painful recollections and help her become more insensitive and strong enough to take a stand for herself. But what about Vesemir? He is willing to create new witchers and agrees to converse Ciri when she insists to be the first candidate. Forget the books - let's just consider the facts: there're no female witchers at Kaer Morhen, and they say very few boys managed to survive the conversion. What if she dies and Vesemir loses his only source of the ingredient for mutagen used to create witchers? What if her blood is not suitable to make mutagen after her conversion? His decision makes no sense.

The idea that the monoliths are gateways is kinda derivative. I do know how Conjunction of the Spheres worked but I don't really get Istredds explanation.

The moment when Yen rescues Jaskier from Rience doing her fire-blower trick was cool.
27 out of 28 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Alcohol saves the day
TheCorniestLemur22 January 2022
I can't believe what I'm seeing...Ciri, having something interesting about her? A conflict that is more than running away from things chasing her all the damn time? A...cliche prophecy thing being hinted at...okay that wasn't very interesting, but everything else was!

Better late than never I suppose, but unfortunately, Yennefer has the short end of the stick in this episode. It hints at something interesting towards the end, but everything leading up to it feels rather a lot like it's running in place.

And as for Geralt, well...it's not exactly riveting, but he does definitely have something pretty interesting in terms of lore going on in this episode. It's...not bad.

But really, I'm astounded by this more than any other episode in this whole series, because never did I think I'd be saying that Ciri is genuinely the standout character of the episode. But, well...she is.

And while I still can't say I'm absolutely in love with this series, bloody hell did Ciri being interesting really come out of left field for me.
3 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
[6.8] 'I'm the key' ... you're under my protective care...
cjonesas8 April 2022
Episode 5: After finishing the episode and near 63% in, one may have the feeling that this season's episodes are moving way too slow, sort of in circles, as if it consisted of a 15-16 episodes chapter.

The photography, filming and some CGI are nice, but as far as the storyline plots and real acting are concerned, only a sense of void is felt and you can be quite sure that in the next 3 episodes, they wouldn't do darn much and much would be left for the next season and so forth.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
The Wish version of Game of thrones
RobTortureWright20 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The white flame, the white flame, the white flame. Words that echo my ears like nails on a chalk board because it's mentioned so much. The white flame is portrayed as this major figure, but the truth is it's mentioned so much because it's all they have to go on. The story has begun to fall away into a mash up of random incoherent dialogue of which you have no explanation for who is who and what anyone is fighting for, and then it switches to Geralt killing a monster for a few minutes of the episode, roll credits. The lord of light in Game of Thrones is what "The White Flame" reminds me of but atleast in Game of Thrones they take the time to lure your interest into each storyline and weave a web of betrayal and intrigue, all while you have atleast 5 other major storylines running alongside. This show really has none of that.

I've lost all interest in the "world building" if you can even call it that because there is simply nothing that's exciting about it, tell me other than everyone trying to kill Ciri and finding out what happens at the conclusion of that storyline, what other plot points are even vaguely interesting ? Awful writing, confusion clustered with boredom and then a 2 minutes action sequence, one random episode of Game of thrones has more happening and more excitement than this entire season of The Witcher, and this is coming from someone who very much began to dislike the final seasons of Game of thrones. A shows main goal to keep you entertained and hooked, both of which is slipping away with the Witcher.
51 out of 77 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Shoddy scriptwriting
jayball9825 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Haily Hall is one of the worst scriptwriters I've ever seen.

This whole episode is arbitrarily structured without any dynamic or tension.

The dialogue makes the Star Wars Prequels look like Shakespeare.

Istredd has a monologue that sounds like he's reading the script notes out loud.

Ciri suffers from acute Daenerys-Season-Eight-Syndrome and behaves like a version of herself that requires another two seasons of character development.

Pretty sure i've gained new wrinkles from cringing for 56min.
23 out of 34 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Forget logic
tju-0452218 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
First, I come to the only part that follows the books. It's true that Jaskier is interrogated by Rience because he has a lot of connections to Geralt and thus probably to Ciri. The scene until Yennefer shows up is pretty well done. I think it's funny how Yennefer saved Jaskier from Rience and gave him his scar, but it also seems a bit cheap in retrospect because she used her magic in the books and they only presented it that way to follow their made up plot.

It doesn't make sense that Francesca gets pregnant when the elves haven't had children in decades and are therefore in danger of extinction and humans simply outnumber them as a result. Even if the elves could reproduce, Ciri would be completely worthless to the elves. They take way too much time away from the main characters .... again.

The little task Geralt has with Istredd feels kind of forced to make the whole Leshy thing with Eskel fit. You've heard in the books and games that big towers were used to conjunct the spheres, but it felt a bit like the King Kong scene where they're looking into the abyss, only much more boring and less spectacular. There could have been some monster fights thrown in here to tie into their made-up plot, but instead there's just flat conversation, Geralt learning that Yennefer is alive while creating minimal tension between him and Istredd that was much more extreme in a short story in the books. And a monster flies toward them and makes its way to Kaer Morhen. That's it for the epic adventure.

After that, Vesemir knows that Ciri is of the Elder Blood and her blood could be used to create new witchers. So he decides to use his only source, Ciri, first, while the boys had at most a 30% survival rate at the Trial of Grasses, so she would most likely die. This makes no sense in the long run, as he could simply use her blood and other test subjects to produce witchers for decades to come, but he's betting everything on one try?
6 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
The writer should read the books.
giridharidas19 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Netflix, don't ever again touch something as good as witcher universe, they completely broke the original story.

  • Rience wasn't cought by Aretuza in the beginning, he NEVER SERVER CALANTHE, MY GOD!


  • Lydia acts like that? Are you kidding me?


  • Triss teleports Geralt to Istredd? For some Monolith? Never happened.


  • I don't think witchers were actually created because of the elder blood.


  • So they want to make Ciri a witcher? Well, THIS NEVER HAPPENED, NO ONE EVEN TALKED ABOUT THIS IDEA IN THE BOOKS.


AT LEAST SOMETHING HAPPENED IN THE SHOW, WHAT HAPPENED IN THE BOOKS (Yen saved Jaskier and gave Rience a scar from fire).
50 out of 126 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Still on a descent :-(
forpassord17 April 2022
I am no fan of Netflix and usually find their movies flawed with plot holes, bad manuscripts and other annoyances. And this season of The Witcher have been on a descent after this seasons premiere. This episode continues the downwards trend starting with season two, episode two!

I have played the three The Witcher games, but not read the books. But too much of this episode too feels "off". Several of the characters seems to me to behave out of character, and that ruins much of the immersion for me. The plan Vesimir had for Ciri is just stupid!

In a series about The Witcher I expect action and at least a scene with a monster being fought. In this episode there was just barely a glimpse of a monster, and no monster fighting at all! I really hope that this episode too at least is a part of a build up for something large, because except for the first episode, the second season have been a disappointment so far!

Other than that, the acting, some of the characters, the CGI, the music, were..................................good.
0 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Cirri
Kirpianuscus13 August 2022
Her past, her gifts, her dark side as pieces of a very large puzzle, explored in decent way by episode. The battle and its consequences, the elves as ingredients of policy and Yennifer looking for the truth who can gives, again, more than the lost powers.

An episode about connections and terrible menaces. And , sure, defining, one level more, Cirri and her life purpose.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed