NBC originally
advertised Grimm as a series that modernized and/or reinvented Grimm fairy
tales. NBC doesn’t advertise Grimm as modernized Grimm fairy tales. The series
moved away from strictly reinventing fairy tales. Grimm used that conceit to
launch but it’s basically a semi-serialized genre show now, more like ANGEL
than Once Upon a Time. “One Night Stand” was advertised like this: various
scenes from the episode with the anonymous narrator promising a ‘mystical
creature comes to town.’ I think anyone watching Grimm expects a mystical
creature every week. The main character is a Grimm who fights creatures from
fairy tales. Is Grimm pushed a police procedural with ‘bizarre’ elements now? I
know it’s not, but the emphasis on ‘mythical creature’ is a preposterous way to
advertise the newest Grimm episode.
“One Night
Stand” introduces a mystical creature—creatures actually—as the writers do
every single episode, as already noted. The teaser sucked me into the
case-of-the-week. It may be the most effective teaser the show’s done, though
what follows is predictable. The decent acting, and the awesome writing for the
one-off characters, specifically Ellie and Jake, offsets the predictability of
the story. Jake’s introduced as the Bro-est Bro who ever Bro-ed. He’s got that
west coast blonde hair, hangs out at a lake, and has a pretty blond girl all
over him. The character transforms once he sees his friend pulled under water.
Jake swims over to try to save him, while is friend’s lady friend, Anna, swims
away. The key to the scene is the girls’ reaction. Their cries of ‘Get out of
the water!’ aren’t fearful but rather a warning to the boys. Get out of the
water or die.
Jake and his
friend made sexy friends with water nymphs, or naiads. Naiads live near the
water, need to swim in water to live or else naiads dry out and die. Female
naiads possess a transfixing sexual allure. Mating happens in the water. Male
naiads cannot procreate. The husbands must raise another man’s child. The
murders of the episode are male naiads upset with having to raise another man’s
baby. The male naiads attack Jake and his friend who were copulating with the
ladies in the water.
The third
sister, Ellie, is the damsel in distress, the innocent, deaf, and sublimely
beautiful. I cared about the naiad story because of Ellie; her introduction in
the teaser’s so, so sweet. She hides behind some bushes watching Jake. She
pleads with her sister, the blond with Jake, that she choose another boy, any
other boy, just not Jake, because she loves him. Ellie saves his life after
he’s left for dead in the water. Ellie’s sisters scurried off, fearful of the
male naiads. Ellie’s easy to root for: her sisters accept tradition, but Ellie
fights it. Sarah and Anna won’t risk their lives for others, but Ellie will and
does.
I especially
liked the case-of-the-week because the story’s more formed than many other
cases-of-the-week in Grimm. The naiad story works as a stand-alone short film.
Cases-of-the-week don’t usually stand on their own. These cases depend on the
core characters. Nick and Hank’s role in the story, which is solving the case
as always, actually detracts from the story. A short film would’ve allowed for
Ellie to kick the asses of the Alaska naiads herself. Nick and Hank wouldn’t
have had to save her life. Those characters wouldn’t be the leads of the short
film. It’d be Ellie’s. I struggle to invest in many case-of-the-week stories.
Most of those stories are fragmented, underdeveloped narratively, forgettable.
The story doesn’t matter past the hero solving the case and is never thought of
again. This particular story wouldn’t matter past this episode either, but Jake
tells Hank and Nick that he saw Ellie transform into something strange he
couldn’t describe. Nick reminds Jake that no one’s normal in Portland, which is
the first admission to a tertiary character about what’s been going on in the
city. Not only that, though, since Nick’s line suggests the citizens realize
the strange things in their city. It’s a bit reminiscent of “The Prom” episode
of Buffy. The audience learns that Buffy’s classmates knew how she saved them,
but Grimm’s not as touching as that Buffy episode.
Nick and Hank
barely figure into the story. They trace the clues and find out who murdered
Jake’s friend. Nick continues to experience problems from what happened at te
end of season three. A swim to save Ellie’s life should’ve killed him. Once he
surfaces he looks dead. He’s visibly pale but in a second his healthy
complexion returns. Hank wants to know what happened. Nick looks bemused.
Juliette researches Nick’s condition; however, she reads last week’s diagnosis,
the one the audience heard in the teaser. So, the A story adds to the
persistent mystery about what’s wrong with Nick.
Other Thoughts:
-Monroe and
Rosalee move in together. The change is significant, which makes Monroe anxious
about himself and his habits. Rosalee’s incredibly sweet throughout Monroe’s
anxiety about the move-in.
-Steven DePaul
directed the episode. Sean Calder wrote it.
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