grampton
Grampton St. Rumpterfrabble
grampton

I'm gonna miss this show an awful lot. I like to think of TV in such a way that different kinds of shows are like different kinds of friends, and in that metaphor, Grimm is the kind of friend who you would never call your best friend, but who you're always glad to see and who never pisses you off. So… kind of better

It was definitely odd that Trubel didn't see the ghost Grimms, since, you know, they were real.

The Season 1 (and 2, and maybe even 3) reviews on this site insisted - to an infuriating degree - on calling him Eddie rather than Monroe, so I always figured the pilot, or the end credits of the pilot, or a casting call, or something had him listed as Eddie Monroe. Apparently there's no canon evidence of that.

It doesn't help that a good 80% of all fan theories involve the characters having been dead the whole time.

Sometimes I feel like even back then, those copy writers had to know what they were doing.

…with a dead kid's jacket in his closet.

Veronica: "My mom and I will throw Polly a baby shower, and we'll invite your parents and the Blossoms. It'll be somewhere public, where they can't fight…"
Me: "It's adorable that you think that."

I know Forrest is a tragic figure, and Grant is a manipulative monstrosity of a human being, but after he vetoed that review I really wanted the catharsis of seeing him genuinely understand that he'd made a mistake. Going out on the prank review was perfect, but I just wish they'd squeezed one more in, one that forced

My favorite line in Frozen is when Olaf sings his little song about how he can't wait for summer to come, and afterwards Kristoff mutters to himself "Someone's gonna have to tell him."

See, on my first viewing I thought the act of true love was going to be Olaf staying with her and melting.

I remember taking a chance on Grimm. On top of the World Series, it premiered within a week of Once Upon a Time, a show that, at least back then, seemed to have a strikingly similar premise, and was backed by Disney besides. I was only going to check out one and went with Grimm, even as I wondered if I was making the

I think more than anything, my issue is that by changing the way Syd's power works - but only this one time - it takes what could have been a really weighty sacrifice and instead makes it just a thing she did.

I don't think it's the latter, because when Syd knocked out The Eye in her own body, nothing like that happened.

If that really was the first time, I envy you.

"What, you think it's three hours long 'cause it's not good?"

For the last time, it's because the Hawkmen of Thanagar have a distaste for all humans and aren't going to help anyone on either side win a war they have no stake in.

No, that's how it's always worked. When David got out of Clockworks, he looked down and saw that he was himself again. When she switched places with The Eye, David realized (too late) that the person he tackled had become Syd. Tonight was the only time it's been inconsistent.

Then Kerry's body should have been empty, and Kerry should still have been inside Syd. Still doesn't check out.

So I'm trying to figure this out.

From the time we went into slow-mo to the time we came back from that commercial, my only real thought was "I swear to God, if you kill Kerry…"