Grimm finales
always build to the moment of crisis, which is not uncommon in season finales.
TV shows want fans returning in the fall to find out what happened to their
heroes left in peril. There are moments of crisis in “Blond Ambition.” There
are life-and-death stakes like last year’s finale wherein Nick suffered zombie
paralysis (was that it?) and attempted kidnapping. The effects of what happened
to him—the dead eyes, clammy skin, and violent outbursts in bars; his role as
murderer instead of detective tasked to find himself generated the early
stories of the season. Here and there Nick experienced lingering effects, but
it stopped. Wu had his nightmare experience. Trubel came to town. Monroe’s
parents came to town. Adalind and the baby happened. These events aren’t listed
chronologically. Adalind posed the greatest threat, but she only acted because
Viktor suggested she return the favor of taking his powers from him. So, she
does by seducing Nick.
Nick easily
succumbs to Adalind’s seduction, because Adalind uses a spell and magic potions
to become a mirror of Juliette. The mirror spell seems like a trope from bygone
genre television; it had a certain nostalgia to it. Adalind tests her
manipulated image with Renard, and with Juliette, to create confusion and
misunderstanding. It works. Renard calls Juliette about stopping what already
started. Juliette calls Adalind, because Adalind called Juliette about Renard’s
behavior, to tell Adalind about Renard’s behavior. Grimm sometimes indulges in
unnecessary scenes wherein characters exchange information the viewer witnessed
seconds earlier. The point, of course, is to show Adalind’s satisfied reaction
to the confusion she created. Two smart characters were powerless to see that
Juliette’s been mirrored, which makes Nick more vulnerable, though those scenes
were unnecessary. The act breaks, too, lack oomph. Adalind becoming Juliette
again ended the second act, which already happened in the final scene of last
week’s episode and the teaser of “Blond Ambition.”
The finale takes
a little bit to move towards the delightful chaos at episode’s end. The first
half of the episode concerns the wedding and Adalind’s slow moves. Monroe
receives final approval from his father about his bride. Rosalee’s sister ruins
her dress, but Monroe’s parents love Rosalee and choose to buy her a
wonderfully expensive dress. Everyone makes a reason for why Nick needs to wear
sunglasses when the minister asks why the best man will the best man wear
sunglasses during the entire wedding. Nick’s friends along with Monroe’s
family, and Rosalee’s sister, take whatever one said and builds upon that to
create a coherent, sensible reasons for the shades. It’s like campers around a
campfire when a counselor suggests they tell a story, so little Jon Jon starts
with a hookable line about a Smores monster making its bi-annual appearance at
Camp No-No. The made up story about the shades lacks imagination, but the
delight is in the fumbled attempts to make it okay.
The shades, of
course, become superfluous at the wedding because of Shade. Jim Kouf and David
Greenwalt devised a way to delay Nick’s realization about what he lost through
Nick conveniently forgetting the shades and having to borrow prescription
sunglasses from Monroe’s father. The prescription sunglasses blur Nick’s
vision. When the wedding guests freak out because of Trubel’s surprise appearance,
Nick thinks he can’t see the woged people because of the glasses. Shade solved
his problem. The antidote to losing his Grimm powers crashes to floor because
the wedding guests turned into a punk rock crowd and collapsed upon Trubel,
causing her to drop the bottle, which Renard explained would help Nick from
something ‘very bad.’
Renard takes
several bullets to the chest, shot by Weston Steward, which begins the madcap
end to Grimm’s third season. Wu comes to the scene and begins investigating the
scene, which leads to him and his partner discussing the ‘weird stuff’ that
happens in and around Nick’s life. Alone, and wandering the house, Wu finds a
book containing an illustration of the Aswang, which terrorized and terrified
him, inducing near-insanity in him, and reducing him to a patient in a psychiatric
hospital. Wu’s discovery sets up an exciting storyline for next season. “Blond Ambition” set up other potentially
wonderful and engaging storylines for next season.
That’s all one
can really ask for with Grimm, right?
Other Thoughts:
-Nick and Trubel
talked about living normally, which Nick dismissed. Now he has the chance.
Juliette thought about ending the relationship after Adalind duped him. His
life doesn’t mesh with what she wants. I’d like for next season to focus more
on Nick as a more public Grimm figuring out how to make both his lives work,
which has happened on a smaller scale. I don’t know.
-Jim Kouf &
David Greenwalt wrote the episode. Norberto Barba directed.
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