Yes! That one low-key line packed so much more wallop than all the weeping and moaning.
Yes! That one low-key line packed so much more wallop than all the weeping and moaning.
My money is on crazed or possessed Vanessa. When Clare remembers it, will he hold a grudge, or accept that she wasn't in her right mind? He's murdered a few people himself in the interim.
Honestly, I don't want to watch a show about grown-up Nancy Drew. Or, if I did, it would have nothing to do with Nancy Drew besides the name. This frees Sarah Shahi to find a better project.
I'm all in favor of their romance, but I agree that it hasn't been set up well on the Shaw side. If you want to be charitable, you could go with Cochlearcuckoo and say that this just illustrates Shaw's tough-girl character and makes the greater emotional honesty she shows in the simulation important viewing.
Or they could argue that it's CBS, so there are no young minds to taint (unless 43 counts as young),
It's weird, because it seems as if at least some of the writers are pretty smart (or at least, "book-smart" as a friend of mine likes to say). Some funny puns, literary references, etc. Maybe they're under orders from the network to pitch it low?
Agreed. What do you think informs that? Are the actor and writers deliberately making a subversive choice? Do they just think that makes Nick a manly man? Will there be a plot line about Grimms having to overcome their natural jerkiness? Or do they not realize at all that they're making their protagonist kind of…
Maybe being angry and belligerent is part of the basic Grimm makeup, like being evil comes naturally to H & Z-biests? It would be kind of depressing if one of the main themes of the show turned out to be the triumph of genetics over free will.
Well said. I do think it's legit that Nick would be enraged at Black Claw taking his son. And I'm pleased that he understands Adalinds's motivation and isn't blaming her… that's a pretty sophisticated reaction by his standards. And I can even accept that there would be a sense of betrayal by Renard. But, as you say,…
It would take a while to get those abs back!
I'm still holding out hope that Rebecca's murderer was a copycat looking to throw the police off his trail. Maybe Burton, and the big showdown is Burton vs. Proctor?
I thought it was just a generic office job… accounting, marketing, what have you. What other show would have a fantasy sequence about beating your boss to death, and then replay it exactly in "real life"? The poor boss apparently didn't have the main cast's superpowers of absorbing unlimited physical punishment with…
They've already devoted an episode to showing that he was a good guy on the Ark (and that Jaha, Abby, and Kane were fine with casually threatening to execute him way back then… sorry, six months ago). From the emotional standpoint of the audience, he's gone to far too survive, but I wouldn't be at all surprised if he…
I suspect Bellamy's in it for the long haul. Isn't Bob Morley basically billed as the second lead?
I thought she was quite good in her bedtime talk with Sarah.
Though wouldn't preclude her being an unwitting pawn.
She's slender but not scrawny, and at five-four, average height for a Canadian woman. Maybe that's just her program height? Or maybe she looks a little smaller because male actors tend to be a little taller than average? Agreed, she's in great shape.
What happens if Maslany gets pregnant in real life?! Do they have a whole season where every clone is either pregnant, wears bulky clothing, disappears on a mysterious side mission, or is seen only from the shoulders up?
I'm a little surprised when people rave about the performances on The 100. It's an enjoyable show, but to me, it's specifically the dialogue and the acting that set it a clear notch below my various genre favorites: GoT, Fringe, Orphan Black, Eureka… No one in the cast is bad, but no one is really great either, and…
I feel that wearing that bizarre trench coat for so many episodes in a row is really starting to take a toll on Clarke.