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Violet Hunter
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I'll keep watching. The Jimi Hendrix reference and little violin scene sold the episode for me.
Also, I think it was brilliant that they showed Sherlock with the violin on his lap with whatever storm hurling in his brainmaze but didn't actually show him playing it.

I'll keep watching. The Jimi Hendrix reference and little violin scene sold the episode for me.
Also, I think it was brilliant that they showed Sherlock with the violin on his lap with whatever storm hurling in his brainmaze but didn't actually show him playing it.

Eh… It was all right.
I am sure I would've liked it more if I didn't watch the long promo that showed almost every single thing that was interesting in the episode. It robbed the revelatory audience moments off me, especially considering that the case-of-the-week was blah. Liu's performance was better than I expected

Eh… It was all right.
I am sure I would've liked it more if I didn't watch the long promo that showed almost every single thing that was interesting in the episode. It robbed the revelatory audience moments off me, especially considering that the case-of-the-week was blah. Liu's performance was better than I expected

Amen!

Amen!

Oh yeah, you have the interwebs all figured out. Good for you. Marvellous!

I didn't love this episode, I didn't despise it either. Can't I have a neutral rating? Do I really have to love or despise every thing here? Seems a bit much.

Wu had the best line, "The answer's obvious. These murders were committed by a barefoot man carrying a wolf."

Well if Walter didn't get the bullet out, Etta wouldn't have been born, so it would make sense for her to carry the bullet around with her. Olivia might have died (disappeared, is also a possibility) in an entirely different way, in Bell's own curious fashion, so to speak.

I was replying to you because you talked about Kevin's review. I find it's easy to miss things on a tv show and sometimes it's because it's just a tv show.

I thought it was obvious that at least Nick recognised the similarity of the case to Cinderella. When Nick and Hank interrogated prince charming, the prince was telling them about the dance with the two stepsisters and then meeting Lucinda, it was pretty obvious in Nick's facial expression that he was making the

Reichenbach Falls was great.
But The Blind Banker… The casting was terrible. Every character was so stereotypical it hurts, the fragile damsel in distress, the lady villain who spoke in heavy accent. Then there's the 19th century theme of Chinese smugglers. Oh please. The only thing that worked in that episode was

I share Mel Gibson's birthday, different year, but alas!

Anti-Grimm enchantment. God.. that is awesome!

Yea yea, thanks and all, but typing it is easy. How would you pronounce that?

For a few seconds during Nick's interrogation, I expected Olivia or someone to show Nick the living breathing Kendra from over there. It's manipulative as hell, but that reverse empath totally had it coming!

It wasn't the best episode but certainly the funniest and with the most interesting opening; Nick being mentored and excelled at it. I laughed out loud on more than three scenes. And forgive me, but I wasn't really digging the dialogue between Nick and Bud after the meeting, Bud's part was good, Nick's not so much

Hey! I did not get notification for this review.
What ever happened to the map from the previous episode? Grimm is doing its "Oh yeah, something happened last week, we'll do absolutely nothing about it, not even utter a single line about it for at least the next three episodes."

To me this episode was essential and great fun at the same time. The last time I had THAT many goose bumps and curses was during sex, dammit! It was one fine hour of television. Even though I predicted that Peter and Olivia will have a daughter instead of a son, I also guessed that her name would be Henrietta, when it