scarletlettered--disqus
scarlet_lettered
scarletlettered--disqus

As in: "I didn't know they were going to kill her now. I thought they were going to kill her later, after extracting a few teeth and engaging in some light waterboarding."

I'm waiting for the fanfic that is Bud's emails to his wife during this entire running a safe house experience.

Which is why Juliette's decision to murder Adalind back was totally reasonable, from a Hexenbiest perspective.

(Has urge to make stupid John Mellencamp reference, clenches hands and waits for urge to go away)

This is my nitpick—the lighting was much too dark during the Nick-Kenneth lovefest. This was in some ways the central piece of action in the episode, and I felt like I had to squint through it. Yeah, I get that they were in an impromptu black-site kind of place, but really guys, couldn't you have chosen an abandoned

Juliette knew that Kelly was either going to die or be taken and tortured for information. She watched Kenneth's men murder all her former neighbors just for owning the wrong house at the wrong time. The only reason I can see for saying that she didn't know is sheer curiosity as to how Nick would react. I'm with Evil

I'm guessing Kelly didn't give them the option of taking her alive. And Kenneth's gloating at how Kelly didn't live up to Grimm advertising was pretty funny, given that he needed a small army of Verrat to take her out.

As someone commented an episode or two ago, being as inept at being evil as Adalind is, is kind of its own punishment. And to be fair, she was kind of raised by wolves, or at least the hexenbiest equivalent. So honestly, I'm not that put out that they're protecting her and her baby, especially since she gave up the

In the Wesen world, yes.

Hey, I'm just suggesting a reason the director chose to go that way. I think leaving Kelly's head in a box is probably on the list of abusive behaviors too.

That was her book club, calling when she failed to bring the booze to their meeting as promised.

Trubel: "Never should have left"
Grimm viewers: "Word."

Well, all fair points. I myself have learned to avoid thinking about "police work" while watching Grimm, I find the show is more fun that way. As for loyalty, this has been hashed out often over the last few episodes—They did steal Adalind's child, which led Adalind to agree to De-Grimm Nick for the Royals, believing

Ah. Much like the roommate who "cleans" by shoving all the dirty clothes and plates of half-eaten food under the bed.

I'm thinking they hired a replacement a year ago. Juliette has spent the season secretly sitting at Starbucks when Nick thinks she's at "work."

I agree—I think both the writing, acting and/or directing felt off there with Juliette. I would have bought it more if Juliette had just been playing him, and had laughed and taunted Nick when he let go of her neck—because really, couldn't she have bashed his head with a teleported lamp at any point during that long,

I know, right? I mean it's one thing to accept that Mack's mom watches Fox news. But May using the wrong verb tense? Totally shattered my suspension of disbelief!

I was right there with you!

What's worse, Sava didn't even mention the most glaring mistake in the episode: May using the grammatically incorrect simple past when telling her ex-husband "There's a lot I didn't say that I wish I did," instead of the correct past perfect ("There's a lot I didn't say that I wish I had).

You have no idea who is reading these comments. Some of them may find the word offensive. I know I do. Not because of a fictional character's feelings, but because of the real people to whom you are also applying that word by association. I bet if you typed something racist here about Mac or May or Skye, other people