Renard just seems to be super-strong when he woges, as opposed to doing anything magical.
Renard just seems to be super-strong when he woges, as opposed to doing anything magical.
Maybe they'll be like Scully and immortality will be joked about on occasion.
That is a very, very good question.
Thank you!
Thanks!
Grimm tends not to premiere until later in the year - I think NBC likes to roll it out so they can market it with Halloween programming. And based on the latest schedule, starting tonight it's going to be an uninterrupted stretch for the rest of the season.
Oh, Grimm. Never change.
It was? Dang. I don't speak German and the volume on my screener wasn't good enough to pick that up - I just heard the accent and assumed he was playing along.
That's one of the things I like about late-era Grimm - they don't need a new monster every week, they can just keep reaching through their back catalog and bring them in as convenient.
I honestly hope so. Renard seems to be off on his own orbit that only occasionally connects with the rest of the crew.
I feel like Grimm got there quicker than a season, but it tends to have more ups and downs. S4 and S5 are when its most consistently good, but there's still good in the first three seasons.
I'm just wishing he had an endgame, because he doesn't seem to have one at this point.
Apparently that plot was addressed in a tie-in comic I haven't read.
Exactly! Grimm is a scrappy show that likes to do things when it thinks it'll work. I admire that.
I made it through two seasons of Sleepy Hollow (and even reviewed the second for PopOptiq), but it really lost its way. It was a crazier show than Grimm, but once it burned through that craziness it couldn't hold itself together. Grimm is built on a more stable foundation, I feel.
- Tri-Crossbow: allows three shots in one round, takes two full rounds to reload
- Grimm Diaries: +10 on all Knowledge (Wesen) checks
- Keys of the Seven Knights (3): Main quest items.
Glad to know the subjective laws of comedy remain immutable!
I think it's less that they were the only ones who cared and more that Fred and Carrie thought their reactions were the only ones that mattered.
Nothing sums Frank up for me as well as his behavior in "The Gang Gives Frank an Intervention".
I'd be shocked if Grimm gets canceled this year. Its ratings aren't good but it's been such a reliable player for NBC in that timeslot (and a reliable player the network owns) that I don't see them killing it without giving it a final season that everyone knows is the last one going in.