I wonder will Grimm make a tradition out of bringing Mexican
and/or Spanish legends to modern audiences. Last season’s “La Llorona” was
promoted in the same way as last night’s “El Cucuy.” Special attention was
given to the episode’s source material. “La Llorona” was promoted more for its
scary tale than the world in which the scary tale is happening, which is the
world of Nick and his friends, with weird murders and different creatures
behind those murders. I felt unsure about what kind of episode “El Cucuy” would
be. Would it shelve the over-arcing parts of the story for a week to focus
exclusively on El Cucuy? The answer is no.
The legend of El Cucuy reminded me of a story I heard
earlier this year. This American Life ran a story about “Diana, Hunter of Bus
Drivers.” “Diana” shot and killed two bus drivers in Cuidad Juarez. Bus drivers
in Cuidad Juarez had been raping women who rode took their buses home or to
work. The roots of the story, this woman’s actions rather, seem rooted in this
legend of El Cucuy. El Cucuy acts on behalf of the sorrowful voices it hears.
El Cucuy comes through a town and acts violently against the criminals who harm
people. The cries of sorrow come together to form the most sorrowful cry, a cry
wherein all sorrow is connected, and then El Cucuy attacks.
There’s a mother theme throughout El Cucuy. El Cucuy itself
is a 77 year old woman who could be anyone’s grandmother. She responds to the
cries of mothers she hears in the roughest part of Portland. Two robbers
brutally beat a mother’s son, and her cries echo throughout the town; soon, the
two robbers are found brutally murdered. Two men follow a young woman, walking
home from the bus stop. One man tries to assault the young woman, but gets
brutally murdered before he can harm her. The mother of a local do-gooder,
Daniel Flores, cries out for aid when her son takes a knife to the local ‘beast
of evil’ who pushes drugs and violence in the neighborhood. El Cucuy intervenes
on her behalf.
Nick investigates the murders, of course, but he’s alarmed
by an e-mail sent from his mother, who hasn’t been seen since last season.
Monroe’s mother’s voice is heard for the first time in the series. He’s also
alarmed by his mother but because his parents don’t know about the specifics of
Rosalee. Monroe’s mother doesn’t really connect, as it were, to the other
mother parts of the episode; however, her little role serves as this sort of
Old Testament type omniscient force he worries about disappointing (or not).
The mother’s role as protector connects Nick’s mother with the mothers seen
throughout episode and with The Mother, El Cucuy.
Grimm put a different spin on the legend of El Cucuy. With
the role of the mother-as-protector, El Cucuy cannot prey on innocent children.
Juliette provides brief exposition about the actual legend when she tells Nick
she was told El Cucuy would eat her if she didn’t eat her vegetables or if she
behaved badly. Grimm turns the legend around so that it’s about protecting
innocent children, no matter the age since a mother always sees her son or
daughter as her child. Nick and Hank don’t know what to do with the kindly old
woman they find ripping through the throat of the ‘beast of evil’ character in
the last act except to let her on her way, to which Renard asks, “Are you
kidding me?” El Cucuy punished the bad man and turned a bad neighborhood to
good. How does one imprison a myth anyway?
Juliette learns about Nick’s mother, who he speaks about in
a bemused way, though the essentials of Nick’s mother are conveyed to Juliette.
“M” sacrificed for the sake of her son’s safety and all that. Juliette tracks
his mother to a place in Slovenia. Nick assumes she’s headed to Greece. Later,
Juliette finds a section in the Grimm journals about a slaughter in Greece
during the 1600s. I suspect that’s foreshadowing, but I never thought Nick’s
mom would have disappeared for so long from the show.
Other Thoughts:
-Does NBC hate Grimm? I don’t think the network wanted to
skip two weeks of Grimm since it had a late premiere. Last Friday the network
ran a special about John F. Kennedy. Last night was the day after Black Friday.
The episode ran against holiday specials, so maybe it performed decently. I
searched for last night’s ratings but did not find any.
-The Adalind story is barely worth a mention. Her baby has
two heartbeats. Renard’s getting the medical records.
-John Behring directed it. Michael Golamco wrote it.
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