David Greenwalt
ran ANGEL during season three’s baby Connor arc. The baby Connor arc hit a
tragic end after a string of episodes that focused on adorable baby Connor.
Angel worked extra cases to provide for him. Cordelia and Angel snuggled with
him, creating an idyllic family tableau. Lorne babysat with him and performed a
puppet show for him with characters from the Rat-Pack. Indeed, it was an
adorable stretch of episodes in an otherwise terribly sad arc. Grimm, also
co-run and co-created by David Greenwalt (with Jim Kouf), had limited options
with a baby character: have it kidnapped or have it saved from the dangerous
life she was born into. “The Law of Sacrifice” combined two ANGEL episodes:
“Provider” and “Sleep Tight.” “The Law of Sacrifice” lacks the crippling
sadness of “Sleep Tight,” but it hits a rather striking note near the end.
“The Law of
Sacrifice” continues last week’s adventures with Nick meeting Renard and
Adalind in the hotel room. Two Verrat men die before the trio leave the hotel
for the refuge of Monroe’s home. The major conflict between Nick and his boss
and his boss’ lady is the fate of the child. Viktor flies from Vienna to
Portland in pursuit of the baby. An FBI agent is in the employ of the Verrat,
allowing Viktor to access places he can’t physically access, to gather
information he otherwise could not because of geography. The addition of the
FBI agent serves to make Prince Viktor more threatening, though Denisof’s
performance helps the character more menacing than the addition of C. Thomas
Howell does. The goal for every character is the baby: the baby’s protection or
possession of the baby or the baby’s safety, which means taking her far from
her parents.
The singular
goal shared by the characters unites them in action. Adalind’s shuffled to
Monroe’s house where she receives the nurturing comfort of Rosalee. Nick and
Hank concoct a plan with Renard. Renard deals with Viktor. Viktor makes
menacing threats to Renard. Kelly wanders around in the shadows of Portland.
She neutralizes the FBI agent problem. She sneaks through backdoors. Of all the
characters in Grimm, even more than Adalind, she has a soothing effect on the
baby. In one scene the baby cries and cries, and Adalind cannot calm her down.
The baby’s cries unleash her powers. Monroe’s clocks swing wildly around in
circles. Kelly walks into the room. The baby looks over. The clocks stop. She
settles.
The goal of the
writers is to separate Adalind from the baby long enough for the other
characters to execute the plan to whisk the baby away to safety, thus sparing
everyone’s lives from the wrath of Prince Viktor. Renard initially wants to
keep the baby in his and Adalind’s care, but realizes he cannot after a
conversation with Prince Viktor. The plan involves using Nick’s mother’s murder
to distract Adalind while Renard takes Diana away. The scene before Adalind
leaves her baby is reminiscent of Angel’s last scene with baby Connor before
Wesley takes him and hands him over to Holtz—for the baby’s protection. Adalind’s
goodbye to her baby is touched with the trope of the ‘name the baby right
before the character realizes he/she won’t see the baby again’ Claire Coffee’s
excellent after Adalind learns she’s been tricked by Renard, Kelly, and Nick.
She frantically runs outside the police station, looks around for signs of the
baby—now in the hands of Viktor—and then woges and wails like an animal in the
wild that’s lost its baby. Her wailing cry breaks the windows of every parked
car on the street.
Meanwhile, the
gang took the baby from Viktor’s hands moments before Viktor and his men
boarded a private jet bound for Vienna. Once the baby is safe, Nick reminds
Renard that the best thing for the baby is letting go of her for a number of
years. Renard does. Baby Dianna leaves Portland with Kelly, while the others
will wait for Adalind to unleash total hell and carnage on those who deceived
her and took her precious baby girl from her, her baby girl she carried and
protected through Vienna, from the city to the forests on the outskirts. Grimm
needs Adalin as the villain, though—she’s visceral and threatening when scorned
and betrayed (except for that extremely slow storyline involving her and Eric
last season and early this season).
“The Law of
Sacrifice” definitely concludes the baby storyline with finality. It shows off
the best qualities of characters: compassion, mercy, grace, comfort, etc., even
with all of them reduced for the sake of removing the baby from the narrative.
Adalind’s still not in control of her life, but this arc humanized the
character and makes whatever she does next more sensible.
Other Thoughts:
-Michael Duggan
wrote the script. Terrence O’Hara directed.
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