Ditto. And my introduction to Sia.
Ditto. And my introduction to Sia.
It's a Hogwarts thang.
I actually hope they DON'T do a spin-off. Nick was a satisfying character because of his orphaned youth and his need to make a life as a human — thereby developing such traits as empathy, though he could switch them off when he needed to. Diana, on the other hand, has been a creepy little bot from the get-go (viz.,…
". . .and the regularity of the deaths doesn’t make you any ̶l̶e̶s̶s̶ more numb to the next one."
FTFY
IKR? She was flirting/overcompensating so hard she weemed just a hair away from throwing him down on the floor and having her way with him. Of course he noticed.
He's onto the fact that she's onto him, then she's onto the fact that he's onto the fact that she's onto him. Very neatly done.
Well, since each show's opening credits end with Quinn whispering "Why?", that seems a fairly solid bet.
And it will be bitter. This show could have gone on for a number of years, but no. It's too bad. So far — in terms of the "forgotten plot points" — it looks like Grimm will be going out not with a bang, but a whimper. And that's too bad.
Um — he *did* kidnap her, and did tell Renard that he'd kill Diana if Renard didn't hop to — all within her earshot — so I think even a fully adult normal person would have not summoned up a huge amount of empathy, much less Diana (who, as we have seen, is very judgey). I thought he was lucky she didn't kill him; …
Corky's initial plot point is that he is gay, but his character development is what he does with it. Not unlike a similar het character.
Rully. You wade into a swimming pool to kill someone, you end up rumpled. At least in my experience.
Unless I'm just having a very long and very bad nightmare, I'd have to say that the topic is back in left field.
That's why it was so perfect to turn Juliette into a full-on evil raging hexenbiest, and *SO* disappointing to have Our Indifferent Veterinarian back again.
INORITE? It's telling that I have never once looked at Juliette/Eve and thought, "Oh, I should go to IMDB and see what else she's been in so that I can follow up!"
You could write a thesis on the topic of "Lost Logical Plotlines from Grimm."
What I really don't get — and that's because there likely is no answer — is, after Renard wakes up the dude saying "I need warrants, and lots of them," and the warrants are eventually issued and delivered to him, they bear the heading of: United States District Court? I mean, Renard is a city police chief, maybe a…
Nah, they've made Renard too central at this point. Also we don't like him. (Although I understand that there are those who, when confronted with a shirtless Renard, are willing to adapt their principles as needed.)
Best line of the episode, from Adalind to Renard: "If Diana made you kill Bonaparte, I'd go a little easy on the discipline."
I can't remember the exact moment last night, but my partner and I looked at one another and agreed "yup — shark jumped." Of course, we are insane Grimmies, or we might have reached this conclusion in, oh, I dunno, season one.
"A-a-and. . .and my vet practice! I LOVED those little fur kids!"