Urgency
separates the episodes of Grimm that air before a long break and the ones that
air during a run of new Grimm episodes. The final act tipped me off to the fact
that Grimm won’t air a new episode for awhile. I thought it odd that Nick and
Hank barely investigated the Wesen scalping men in uniform. I thought it
especially odd how engaged I was in the Vienna material. Urgency may not be the
correct word to use. Progression might be better. Grimm seems stuck in place
for much longer than it moves forward in its various plots and character arcs.
“The Wild Hunt” had progress—significant things happened in each story that
actively moved the story and its characters forward.
David Greenwalt,
who co-wrote the episode with Jim Kouf, wrote ANGEL’s second season episode,
“Happy Anniversary,” which involves a man who wants to stop time so that his
girlfriend won’t break-up with him. The man nearly ends the world, because
ending the world is a threat in many a Joss show, but Angel and Lorne save the
day. Angel and Lorne fight off demons to get to the guy, demons that want the
world to end because it fulfills a prophecy. Once Angel and Lorne unfreeze the
time the man froze, they sit together, drink coffee, and talk. Lorne delivers
one of my favorite lines ever written in books, TV, the movies, video games and
music. Gene, the man, explains he wants
the wheel of time to stop to avoid stuff. Lorne tells him, “It just don’t work,
Gene-y. It’s like a song. Now, I can hold a note for a long time. Actually I
can hold a note forever; but eventually that’s just noise. It’s the changes
we’re listening for—the note coming after, and the one after that. That’s what
make its music.” The same idea applies to television storytelling. So, it’s a
bit funny David Greenwalt wrote Lorne’s line and currently runs Grimm, when so
little will happen for weeks. Slow movement in a show isn’t an unforgivable
crime. Writing that a show lacks urgency doesn’t always mean it lacks pacing
and plotting. For me a lack of urgency means whatever’s happening within the
world doesn’t matter. If fictional characters don’t care within the world we
transport ourselves to each week, audiences won’t care. People turned en masse
on Under The Dome for “urgency” issues.
One scene in
“The Wild Hunt” represents the problem of what I wrote about in the above
paragraph. The never-ending Verrat storyline continues at its glacially slow
pace. Juliette decided to e-mail Nick’s mother. Nick doesn’t expect a response,
but Nick’s mother responds. The response involves references to the Resistance
and the Verrat. Nick’s mother writes vaguely about where she is, what she’s
doing, and Nick tries to explain what’s happening to Juliette. Nick’s
explanation is useless since he himself does not quite understand the details
of the Resistance and the Verrat. Prince Vicktor name-dropped the grimm a month
ago, and Nick is the one feared most and he’s a vital part of the battle, but
he’s clueless. Nick knows the coins should not fall into the possession of the
royals, but beyond that is a shrug of the shoulders for he and Juliette. All
they can do is wait for more word from a woman on the constant move in
southeastern Europe just as the viewer can wait for the writers to make the
story more sensible and easier to invest in.
The wild hunt of
the title is for a Wesen that scalps men in uniform. Nick and Hank hear the
debriefing from Renard about the case, follow leads once the guy arrives in
Portland, and then fail to catch him. The suspect doesn’t arrive in Portland
until halfway into the episode. Nick and Hank can’t move to find the guy
aggressively, I assume (since neither move aggressively to find the guy). The
type of Wesen Nick learns scalps men in a warrior ritual. This specific Wesen
knits the scalps together to create a warrior cloak. The Wesen of the week
comes from Mexico so the Wesen mythology seems rooted in a Native American
culture, though the diversity studies in me balks at writing much about its
roots in post-colonial criticism. Each man in uniform murdered by the scalp Wesen
is deemed ‘unworthy’ by the murderer. Hank points out that Nick’s probably the
target. No man is as fine a warrior as the grimm. Sure enough, the Wesen looks
at a newspaper clipping of Nick to confirm Hank’s suspicion that Nick is the
target.
Elsewhere,
Monroe proposed to Rosalee. Their scenes were the sweetest. Monroe used a clock
to propose. Following the proposal and the abundant happy feelings, the
foreboding visit from the parents loomed. Monroe opted not to tell his parents
certain facts about his betrothed. Details about Rosalee’s past have been
prominent the past few episodes to create more of a sense of her as a person.
She still has a fragility and vulnerability about herself. The promos teased
the meeting between Monroe’s parents and Rosalee as titantic; however, as I
predicted, the meeting doesn’t happen until the last act. Rosalee receives
rejection from the parents, she feels betrayed by Monroe, and bolts out of the
house. Nick shows up at the worst time to consult with Monroe on the wild hunt
case. Monroe’s parents fly into a murderous rage that seems uncontainable. The
scene cuts to black and these words, “Oh, fuck.” That was pretty great.
Other Thoughts:
-Grimm won’t
return until February 28, so we will wait for the resolution to the wild hunt
story. Will Rosalee return to Monroe? Will Nick’s mother send another e-mail
that leaves Nick bewildered?
-The Vienna
scenes were good. Adalind will give birth next episode or the episode after or
maybe the writers forget about her until May. Alexis Denisof returned as
Vicktor. Much of the scene was concentrated on Vicktor’s anger towards the Resistance.
I don’t care about the material, but Denisof was really good as the enraged
Prince.
-Rob Bailey
directed.
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