Throughout Netflix’s The Witcher, Freya Allan’s Ciri has grown into her power and become a monster hunter like her adopted father Geralt. In the newly released fourth season, she’s been separated from Geralt and Yennefer and now goes by the name Falka. She’s also hanging out with an outlaw band called the Rats and finds herself hunted by Sharlto Copley’s Bonhart, who wants to make some money by delivering her to her father Emhyr.
In a pair spoiler-heavy interviews, Allan and showrunner Lauren Schmidt Hissrich discussed the hero’s season-long arc and what’s next for the young Witcher.
During the season premiere, Ciri enters a romance with her fellow Rat Mistle, who saves her from Kayleigh, another Rat, trying to sexually asssault her. The show slightly diverges by having Ciri consent to Mistle kissing her after the ordeal, but like in the Witcher books, this kicks off a pairing longtime fans have complicated feelings about.
Complication is what Allan wanted: she told TVLine she didn’t want a “fluffy little romance” for her character similar to what’s found in the source material. To her, Mistle “lets see parts of Ciri we haven’t seen and really shows a different kind of vulnerability in her. There’s a big part of her saying goodbye to her childhood—a push and pull [where] we really get to see how desperate Ciri is to not be alone. Mistle confronts her about trying to run from her past…and says you can’t just run away from who you truly are.”
Separately to Variety, Hissrich said the romance give Cirii “a vulnerability that we’d never been able to see before. She’s been a princess, the most powerful person on the Continent, someone’s daughter, someone’s granddaughter. What starts to happen when she lives life for herself?”
Well, the answer to that is nothing good: after rushing off to save a young boy the Rats sold off, Ciri learns it’s a trap and returns to her friends just in time to watch Bonhart decapitate them all, Mistle included. The pair confessed their love to each other before Ciri left, despite Mistle begging her to stay, and to make matters worse, she ends the season defeated and captured by Bonhart.
This being the penultimate Witcher season and shot back-to-back with season five, Hissrich said the writers wanted it to end with characters brought to their low points. When we next see Ciri, she’ll face a “baptism by fire” that sees her “touch those deepest, darkest places within herself that she’s always pushed away. She worries that death follows her, and once she deals with the heartbreak and loss of the Rats, we get to see her start to access that for a while.”
The Witcher will return with its final season presumably in 2026, where we’ll see how Ciri gets out of this mess and whether she gets a good ending.
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