Hank and
Juliette received rare storylines in “Eyes of the Beholder,” which were
connected through each character’s discovery of something new about someone
they thought they knew. For Hank, it’s less about what he thinks of his
physical therapist’s wesen-ness than about what she thinks of it herself; for
Juliette, it’s also more about her friend accepting who she is than Juliette
accepting her friend is more than who she thought. “Eyes of the Beholder” has a
rare approach because wesens are never written from the side of the wesen. The
story introduces a new wesen and then Nick and Hank must stop the wesen from
committing crimes. They’re rarely more than a terrorizing presence, and the
negative traits of the character transforms that character into more of a
beastly character.
Zuri, Hank’s
physical therapist introduced last week, is used to show a different
perspective about the Grimm world we’ve come to expect formula and
predictability from since it began. Last week’s episode involved changing the
structure of the show a tiny bit and “Eyes of the Beholder” continues to
subvert expectations. The surprise of the episode happens in the last act when Zuri
kills a gang member who points a gun at her brother. She rips into his neck
savagely before turning to Hank, changing back to Zuri he knows. The wesen-ness
of Zuri doesn’t bother him. Hank’s dealt with stranger, more surprising
discoveries in the past, highlighted by his romp with Adalind. Zuri’s more
bothered by Zuri. She hasn’t reconciled her two selves into a harmonious union.
Hank reconciled the two sides of Portland after a period of near-insanity.
Juliette navigated her way through her own discoveries through amnesia and a
magic kiss. Nick relies on a book and help from friends from within the world
to aid him. Zuri, and Juliette’s ancillary friend, are isolated, individual,
unconnected with the world around them that’s seemingly full of folk more like
them than like Hank and Juliette.
Alicia’s story
runs parallel to the A story. In the A story, Zuri’s brother is wanted dead by
three guys who beat a rival gang member to death. In the B story, her abusive
boyfriend wants Alicia, though he is barely a presence in the episode. Juliette
feels more invested in connecting with her friend’s wesen nature. The abusive
boyfriend aspect of Alicia’s story falls away until it conveniently resurfaces
in a moment of hysterics wherein Juliette saves the day. The introduction of
Alicia wasn’t great, and her extensive history with Juliette makes their
friendship more forced. Juliette tells Rosalee she knows no one better than
Alicia. Alicia didn’t bother to visit her during her coma. Juliette never
freaked out to her or cried to her during the times with Nick she did not
understand. Alicia’s the kind of character forced into the plot because the
writers want to accomplish a vital thing for its regular character. David
Greenwalt worked on Buffy during its early years when characters would come and
go whom Buffy or Willow or Xander or Giles had significant attachment and then
something would happen to build the character of one of the core four. Alicia’s
boyfriend comes to terrorize her but ends up terrorized by Juliette, who kicks
his ass.
Another connecting
part of both stories is each woman’s discovery of Nick’s other self, the grimm.
Both recoil in horror, panic, only to watch Nick treat them kindly as he
explains his intention is not to hurt but help. It punctuates what’s been plain
for two seasons or so: Nick is changing the way the underbelly, or whatever you
call of it, of Portland works; rather, he’s changing the whole world wherein
wesen live.
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