Yeah. What I'm saying is that it's a side-effect of the transformation — 'If a Grimm bangs a transformed Hexenbiest, he loses his powers,' something like that.
Yeah. What I'm saying is that it's a side-effect of the transformation — 'If a Grimm bangs a transformed Hexenbiest, he loses his powers,' something like that.
Bitsie's good with the material they gave her. But I found it a bit of a stretch that she knows that Adalind's probably messing with her head, something may or may not be up with Renard, and yet she immediately jumps to assuming that Nick is dressing people up in her lingerie and screwing them and leaving the evidence…
This past season someone working on the show has really developed some sort of unnatural lust for trying to spin as many plates as possible. It's the only explanation. Even to the point of taking stuff that should be B-plots for regular episodes and spanning them out into two or three-episode arcs and wrapping up what…
My prediction is that there will be an extended arc of Nick regaining his powers, probably with Trubel's help, while they go on a magical mystery tour of exploring where Grimms originally came from and what being one really 'means.'
I'd guess that Adalind's shapeshifting potion is probably something specifically intended to take out Grimms. Especially since the same potion causes the shapeshifting but is apparently tied to taking away a Grimm's powers (since you have to drink the same potion to cure it). So it's probably something really…
Which would be fun, but I have trouble imagining how it wouldn't just be Lone Gunmen with younger characters.
Wow. If this animation was any cheaper I'd expect to see a graphics software shareware notification in the corner of the screen.
Vince Vaughn mysteriously disappearing in the third act still puts this movie above any movie in which he appears all the way through.
Well, not _totally_ exploitation-free. There's that shower scene during her first appearance. They probably didn't need to go quite that far to get the idea across that she's covered in scars.
An explosive arrow is already just an awkward grenade with some great range.
I figure Laurel's little freak-out moment when she first saw Sara is because it's the first time she's seen her in the mask since figuring it out. So there's that moment when she's reconciling her sister's appearance with the Canary's.
That drove me nuts, too, if that helps you feel any better. I was expecting them to try and just have her jam the arrow into a spot and do something to set it off.
I would not be terribly surprised if the last few episodes of this season are a big long backdoor pilot for a spinoff. Because I have trouble seeing her fitting into the show as a sidekick for Nick, but I can see them wanting to make the character a viable spinoff protagonist.
I think Kevin read the conversation the way he did because of how rarely the show uses dialogue for character definition and not exposition or foreshadowing.
Odds are they probably didn't think it through. But it's also possible that his brief flashback notwithstanding, his hesitation before leaving her alone at the station could have been interpreted as a moment of recognition. (Maybe he's subconsciously connecting her to all of the weirdness that goes on in Portland,…
Adalind struggling to open up her mother's book in the storage unit struck me as a bit contrived. I mean, what, was she a late bloomer and only discovered she and her mother were Hexenbiests a month before the show's premiere? Now that she's just being a pain in the ass rather than overtly evil, she keeps acting like…
"Superheroes don't steal"? I don't recall Nick Fury being a superhero.
Prediction: Adalind does something that undoes Nick's Grimm abilities. It just so happens that having another Grimm is required to get them back. Gasp! How fortunate, then, that this 'Trubel' person showed up when she did!
She's a pretty recent addition to the comics (they created her as part of the New52 reboot). Personally, I think her story and motivations are meant to be cliche. In a world of overly-complicated motivations where everyone needs entire scenes of exposition just to explain their thought processes at any given moment, I…
I'm actually really out of touch these days and don't actually have the first clue who Drake is. This is like the second time I've ever heard anyone referred to by that name. Is there anything I'm missing.