lironmiron--disqus
lironmiron
lironmiron--disqus

On the one hand, we lost a great villain. On the other hand, her utter joy in her last scene almost made it worth it.

But he was very clear that he had no intention of ever taking a mistress. As indeed, by all accounts, he never did.

It was pride and his view of himself as a man through a 19th century lens. If he had to ask Victoria for money, every time he wanted to buy something, he was the wife of the marriage, not the husband. He did not think he could respect himself if he had to do that. But more than caring about how he saw himself as a

Speaking of awkwardness… ah, that funny age when children start asking if their daddy was one of the evil men who murdered that old friend of the family. XD

The lady had to be beautiful. It was part of the backstory that this wesen chose his victims for their pretty face.

Yeah, but I thought they were putting on a show for Diana because they're both quite terrified of her and would rather keep her as happy as possible.

They are herbivores, but they are also the most vicious killers in all of Africa (other than humans, of course).

When the cicada wesen first came out of the ground I actually felt wow'ed. I genuinely thought they had an absolute winner because of all the repulsive vibes it was giving me. And then it stood up. On two legs. And… well… it looked like that :(

But we only just found out that Helena is cold because she has to be. All of last season, she seemed like she was cold because she thought she was so far above everyone else that the atmosphere barely had any pressure. The other bosses might have lots of unexpected facets if we ever get to see them out of the office.

I'm pretty sure "Total Rendition" is what they did to Denver. Basically turning the entire "block" and everything in it into a smooth glass surface.

So Alfred gives Jim the full layout of the room and instead of coming in shooting Mr. Machine Gun, or even Mr. Machete, he shoots Mr. Crowbar?!

To be fair, in his very first appearance, he was stabbed in the heart and that clearly did not help matters in the long run either.

Making a character so hateful that you have to cheer for "Whoever else" may be an effective technique, but on the same night as this Royal Rumble… I just couldn't take two doses of that on the same night.

It could have been worse. Julliette could have been accused of her husband's murder (whom we last saw on his way to an autopsy after the doctor said he wasn't sure of the COD).

But that's impossible. Humans don't commit crimes. All murders are really committed by wesen!

Yes! Renard really earned massive dirtbag points by trying to maneuver his little daughter into being his murder weapon, but Nick had the perfect antidote and I don't get why he doesn't even try to use it. Bonding over memories of the only maternal figure Diana has known for more than a week should certainly earn him

It would really cut on the sorrow of losing Grimm if they'd just make Witchblade with the entire same cast. Roiz could play a pretty good Kenneth Irons, Giuntoli might not be too bad as Ian, and Hornsby is likeable enough to play Gleason. Monroe and Rosalie could trade the spice shop for an antiques shop and together

It was the pig nose. For some weird reason he looks much more relatable with the pig nose.

I thought it was a pretty good wording for a non-politician without a written or rehearsed speech improvising live on a major network imagining how a real Major would resign.

They were all great. My only issue was with Monroe's scene at Adalind's house, because it seemed to have been written for Bud. Even without the Bud-ish dialogue, I actually think it would have worked better with Bud, since he would have been much more helpless and scared than Monroe in that closet.