Not a lot
happened in the season three premiere of Grimm last week, which is why I chose
not to write about it. I went to see the new Steve McQueen movie instead. I
planned on writing a review for the premiere over the weekend and posting it,
but the premiere offered so little to write about. I decided to wait a week so
I could write about the two-part in its entirety. The best parts of the opening
two episodes involve every major character except for Nick, who’s long been the
most consistent character on the show. Monroe, Rosalee, Juliette and Renard
work together to help Nick. The widespread zombie disease got contained last
week. Nick’s the only lunatic terrorizing innocent folk in Portland.
The first two
seasons of Grimm were marked by stretches in which some characters knew what
other characters did not. In season 1, Hank solved essentially zero crimes in
this season. Nick would go off with Monroe and solve it. In season 2, Hank
learned the truth, but Juliette didn’t. For most of the season, she was in the
dark about it, and also amnesiac. Finally, Juliette learned the truth about her
boyfriend and regained her memories. Before they all could work together like
ANGEL investigations, Eric Renard flew into town to kidnap Nick so that the
Grimm could be destroyed. The plan, of course, failed. Nick took the plane down
that was headed to Austria—in zombie-mode—and survived the crash, because he’s
a Grimm and he reacted differently to the green goo’s toxic neurological
affects. Nick resembled Angel for Buffy season 3 after he returned from hell.
Buffy’s presence was his cure, but Juliette’s not Nick’s cure. The sappy,
sentimental cure for Juliette was Nick. Feral Nick’s a harder beast to tame.
Beauty and red hair won’t do it.
Curing Nick’s a
given, though. Indeed, a feral Nick for more than three episodes would’ve
gotten obnoxious. The reason for the two-parter is clear: create more conflict.
Murder’s a great conflict for a character to deal with, for the greatest of
writers have dealt with the morality of murder. One of the bikers Nick beat up
in the bar in last week’s episode died. The police department has to
investigate. Nick’s friends have to cover for Nick. Nick, meanwhile, is barely
back from what’s happened to him. The antidote cured him, but he looked like
death took him while he slept. His skin was pale, almost grey. Nick felt fine,
though. Juliette looked worried. All the while he had no idea he killed a man.
Murder as a plot
point is only worth hitting when a main character’s responsible for the death.
I’m thinking of Faith in season 3 after she kills the deputy mayor as well as
the gravity of the scene in which Giles kills Ben to spare Buffy from
regretting her moment of mercy. Renard working together with Hank, Monroe,
Juliette and Rosalee is a different dynamic and fun to watch. Renard’s plan to
cover for Nick is approved by all. I’m glad Kouf and Greenwalt didn’t wait
awhile for Nick to learn about the death he caused. One’s never sure how long a
storyline will get dragged out before it advances. That’s one of Grimm’s
biggest problems. Through two episodes, the story’s plenty substantial and
moves at a nice pace.
I also liked the
reverse of the last two season’s conceits. Whereas Nick kept nearly everyone in
the dark about his other life as a Grimm for two seasons, Nick’s the one in the
dark for most of “PTZD.” The neurological disorder affects him differently as a
Grimm. I’m not sure if its affect was intended to show what Nick’s capable of
physically rather than mentally or both. Physically, at his Grimm peak, Nick’s
a deadly force. He’s a tempest with the reflexes of a mountain lion. The teaser
and the first scene of “PTZD” shows Nick at his most frightening. He terrifies
the traditional nuclear family, he beats up his friends, and he hits Juliette.
The first act is terrifically executed. The physicality of the scene is created
through David Guintoli’s intense acting and the sound editing. The pounding on
the door is loud, like the pounding of one’s head when one’s afflicted with a
head ache, it’s a sound that sounds unceasing, like the sound of the drums on a
slave boat. Little girls scream their throats out. A father struggles to get
his gun from his electronic safe. Nick growls as a mythical beast would. Feral
Nick is super quick in reacting and acting. Without morals and a conscience,
he’s deadly.
Feral Nick’s
abilities don’t call back to the Grimms of the past, but there’s a sense that
it might. The epigraph in the opening of the episode is about resurrection.
Nick’s feral-ness is a kind of death as is his eventual despair and crisis upon
learning of the death he caused. The root Grimm is animalistic, acting without
thought or reason, and deadly exact. Humanity doesn’t save.
Other Thoughts:
-Other
developments include the death of Eric Renard. The death happened off-screen. I
doubt Eric’s dead. Adalind continued the weirdest baby shower on television,
which concluded with a blood skull forming from blood she put on her belly.
-Jim Kouf &
David Greewalt worte the episode. Eric Lanueville directed it.
I've done some research and I found out Eric will probably be dead because the actor (james frain) got a role on another show so they needed to end his role on grimm. Instead of him, there's gonna be another royal (his cousin). So the murder was off-screen because james frain isn't showing up anymore in the show.
ReplyDeleteEric is dead because the actor James Frain got a role on another show. He isn't showing up anymore.
ReplyDelete