the witcher, interrupted

I was going to write about The Witcher, and I still am, but first I need to write for a moment about Charli xcx. (Nobody’s more surprised about this than I am.)

Charli xcx is a singer and songwriter, and she never really made much of an impression on me until I read about her unplanned collaboration with Lorde (who has made a big impression on me over the years) on the song “Girl, So Confusing.”

So, that was something, but the song didn’t grab me as much as the backstory.

But then there was this: “Charli xcx – House featuring John Cale“!

I’ve been trying to think about a collaboration that would have seemed as surprising to me, but nothing comes to me. But the great thing is how good the end result is. Wow.

 
And now for our regularly scheduled blog post.

The Witcher is a series of fantasy books written by Andrzej Sapkowski. I haven’t read them. There is also a series of video games, based on the books, and I haven’t played them. But I have watched, and I continue to watch, the TV show which is based on the novels. I am very attached to it, and to the characters, and a lot of the actors, perhaps even beyond what the whole thing deserves.

Liking the Witcher show is, online, a controversial opinion to express, for a variety of reasons. Some devoted readers of the books never liked the show because it doesn’t Follow the Books. The star, Henry Cavill, was known to be a fan of the books and of the games, so the narrative developed that he was struggling, heroically, to get the show to Follow the Books.

(Some people also minded that the show doesn’t follow the games, but that argument is silly on the face of it because both the TV show and the games are adaptations of the original text: the books. That’s like complaining that the TV show Sherlock doesn’t follow the movies with Robert Downey Jr. and Jude Law.)

Anyway, I have also heard (I haven’t seen this myself) that some people complained that there was no indication in the books that any characters were any race other than white, and a fair number of the (very large cast) are actually (!) Not White. But this is just hearsay.

But then, after the third season, Henry Cavill quit the show. As far as I have heard, he has not given a reason, but the narrative in some corners inevitably turned into: “Our Hero Henry has given up on his sacred quest to make this darn show Follow the Books.” So, he has been replaced by Liam Hemsworth, who I have never seen in anything before. He’s completely… adequate.

But Anya Chalotra (Yennefer) and Freya Allan (Cirilla) and Joey Batey (Jaskier) and all the rest of the actors are still terrific (other than the actor who played Vesemir — who was also recast, unfortunately). Plus they added Laurence Fishburne, who pretty much takes over ever scene he’s in (there’s a reason his voice is the first one you hear in the trailer).

I’m very happy. I’ve enjoyed other shows in the last few years, but (other than Doom Patrol, which ended a while ago) there’s nothing else quite like this (for me).

Maybe someday after the show is over, I’ll start to read the books. Or maybe not — I like the Movie Let the Right One In so much that I’m never going to read the book. The movie sits perfectly in my brain, and that’s the way I like it.

a wheel, a witcher, and a patrol

1) Doom Patrol is coming back. The current season (the fourth) was split into two parts, and for a long time it wasn’t clear if the second half was ever going to be shown. The episodes were completed, from what I’ve read, so the current strikes weren’t a factor. The series has been canceled (also from what I’ve read — these things are always in flux), but we wanted those final episodes.

And now they are (in theory) coming. I’ve said it before, I like some different shows, but there’s nothing like Doom Patrol.

 
2) I’m watching Wheel of Time (Season 2), and I’m enjoying it, but I’m realizing that I’m enjoying it at a distance. Based on what I’ve seen online, the fandom mostly consists of 1) devoted fans of the book series, who are either interested in or dismayed by (or violently opposed to) the ways the show’s story deviates from the books, and 2) people who have not read the books but who are captivated by the complex story and/or emotionally attached to one or more of the main characters.

The acting runs the gamut from very good to actually great. I’ve seen several people online declare that they are on “Team Liandrin,” and book readers point out how thoroughly evil Liandrin is, but Kate Fleetwood, who plays Liandrin, is riveting in every scene she’s in. This reflects how I watch the show: I’m not rooting for anybody in particular, or for the “good” characters or the “evil” characters. I’m here for the complexity and the mysteries and the design elements, and the acting.

 
3) Season 3 of The Witcher is over, and it was very satisfying. A lot of people didn’t like it (and many of them had made that decision before the season even started, for reasons which I have no interest in), but I enjoyed it. Not perfect (no season has been perfect so far), but I had a good time. I’m eager for Season 4, but production hasn’t started yet, and there are various strikes, of course, and viewership apparently tanked for Season 3, so I’m not holding my breath. (For example, a second season of The Peripheral was confirmed, and now it’s been canceled, and that’s happened to other shows, too.)

The difference, for me, compared to Wheel of Time is that with The Witcher I’m (very) attached to the main characters. I still tear up a little when Yennefer, who has wanted a child for many, many decades, bids farewell (possibly forever) to Ciri and kisses her (on her eyelid, apparently) and whispers, “I love you, my daughter.”

::sniff::

The point being that there a different ways to enjoy things, and, as I’ve talked about before, finding “relatable” characters to root for doesn’t work for everything. It’s not going to get you very far with Macbeth or King Lear or The Shining (or any Kubrick film, really) or Chinatown or Apocalypse Now.