IMDb RATING
7.2/10
54K
YOUR RATING
Escaping from poverty to become a witcher, Vesemir slays monsters for coin and glory, but when a new menace rises, he must face the demons of his past.Escaping from poverty to become a witcher, Vesemir slays monsters for coin and glory, but when a new menace rises, he must face the demons of his past.Escaping from poverty to become a witcher, Vesemir slays monsters for coin and glory, but when a new menace rises, he must face the demons of his past.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Theo James
- Vesemir
- (voice)
Mary McDonnell
- Lady Zerbst
- (voice)
Lara Pulver
- Tetra
- (voice)
Graham McTavish
- Deglan
- (voice)
Tom Canton
- Filavandrel
- (voice)
David Errigo Jr.
- Young Vesemir
- (voice)
- …
Jennifer Hale
- Illyana
- (voice)
- …
Kari Wahlgren
- Kitsu
- (voice)
- …
Matthew Yang King
- Luka
- (voice)
- …
Darryl Kurylo
- Sven
- (voice)
- …
Keith Ferguson
- Lord Carlisle
- (voice)
- …
Jennie Kwan
- Young Luka
- (voice)
A.J. LoCascio
- Young Sven
- (voice)
- (as AJ LoCascio)
Michaela Dietz
- Tomas
- (voice)
Adam Croasdell
- King Dagread
- (voice)
- …
Nolan North
- Handsome Knight
- (voice)
- …
Samia Mounts
- Midwife
- (voice)
- …
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
(Edit: It may be best to treat this film's story as a re-write or alternative adaptation of The Witcher universe.) Any fans of The Witcher and its many works know and love Geralt, but we've rarely been given stories of his teacher. This movie resolves that issue by giving us a heart-felt, detailed, and beautiful, and I say again, Beautiful look at Vesemir's origins. Without spoiling anything, Nightmare of the Wolf shows us an emotional and epic telling of a critical event in Witcher history while delivering the tale of what led Vesemir to becoming the vaunted teacher to the "hero" we know. The writing was evocative. The characters were interesting and believable. The action was jaw-dropping. And holding it all together was some of the most brilliant animation to ever grace Netflix. It does have some instances of predictability and some of its pacing could've been worked out better if it were allowed more run time as a season instead of a movie, but none of it was to any significant detriment to the overall feel and enjoyment of the film.
It's nothing extremely good. But it met my expectations. It doesn't rely too much on the main show but still is enough connected to the lore to have a reason to exist. Vesemir is a great character too. The fight scenes are great. The animation is beautiful. The story is interesting. Overall, it's a great movie
Can't wait to see the live action Vesemir in December!
I've spent the past two year's now studying, filmmaking, directing, and reading the entire Witcher Series, along with completing the Wild Hunt 3 times over.
This film was pretty damn great; a prequel that answered my questions about the sacking of Kaer Morhen, and the origins of Vesemir. I personally think the film would've made more sense if it was longer, but it was sped along nicely, sometimes a tad too fast. The animation was stellar, with the writing almost perfect. My issues: The voice acting felt a bit monotone-not a deal breaker, but frustrating. It took immersion away a bit.
Tetra's backstory and motivation was answered, but I could've used more info.
Vessemir's true light; hard men are made hard by circumstance-I hope that season 2 of Witcher 3 gives us more of his morally-good side. Kindness is a virtue, even if only ever shown at ones worst moments.
The directing seemed to "direct" this film to readers of the original book series; we forget, not all of us have invested hundreds of ours rummaging through the novels. Some people may be left in the dark to some extent *cough*, "season one of the Witcher Netflix series" All in all, a great prequel that does justice to the Witcher Universe.
Time to get back to reading, Winds Howling.
This film was pretty damn great; a prequel that answered my questions about the sacking of Kaer Morhen, and the origins of Vesemir. I personally think the film would've made more sense if it was longer, but it was sped along nicely, sometimes a tad too fast. The animation was stellar, with the writing almost perfect. My issues: The voice acting felt a bit monotone-not a deal breaker, but frustrating. It took immersion away a bit.
Tetra's backstory and motivation was answered, but I could've used more info.
Vessemir's true light; hard men are made hard by circumstance-I hope that season 2 of Witcher 3 gives us more of his morally-good side. Kindness is a virtue, even if only ever shown at ones worst moments.
The directing seemed to "direct" this film to readers of the original book series; we forget, not all of us have invested hundreds of ours rummaging through the novels. Some people may be left in the dark to some extent *cough*, "season one of the Witcher Netflix series" All in all, a great prequel that does justice to the Witcher Universe.
Time to get back to reading, Winds Howling.
Sick action, Great animation, Entertaining, Great Soundtrack, And Interesting Characters but weren't fleshed out enough, in fact it felt like there were big gaps in between the story and the story was not fleshed out nearly as much as it should have been which is why this would have worked a lot better as a series, they pretty much crammed an entire season into one movie, which took away the impact from a lot of the scenes and the story in general. Overall enjoyable and entertaining but could have been better.
Among so many problems that the Live Action series starring Henry Cavill had and whose biggest criticism is not respecting the spirit of the literary saga and video games, this version appears that perfectly fulfills that.
It is a film that covers a period of time in the chronology of the saga that is somewhat dark due to lack of information.
The story focused on Vesemir is a success from any angle, giving us a context that we did not know we needed.
The plot is solid, the animation is quite good and really for fans of the saga I think it is a great success.
The release of a second film in 2025 only reinforces these concepts. Unfortunately, I think this is the most correct direction to take since season 4 and 5 of The Witcher with the change of actor in the leading role makes us glimpse a resounding failure.
It is a film that covers a period of time in the chronology of the saga that is somewhat dark due to lack of information.
The story focused on Vesemir is a success from any angle, giving us a context that we did not know we needed.
The plot is solid, the animation is quite good and really for fans of the saga I think it is a great success.
The release of a second film in 2025 only reinforces these concepts. Unfortunately, I think this is the most correct direction to take since season 4 and 5 of The Witcher with the change of actor in the leading role makes us glimpse a resounding failure.
Did you know
- TriviaGraham McTavish who voiced the role of "Deglan" also plays the live-action role of "Dijkstra" in The Witcher Season 2.
- ConnectionsFeatured in 49th Annie Awards (2022)
- How long is The Witcher: Nightmare of the Wolf?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- The Witcher: Nightmare of the Wolf
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 23 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content