David, the
little boy at the center of “Dyin’ On A Prayer,” controls the clay monster
unknowingly with his fear, when threatened, and when intimidated. His uncle
conjured the clay monster through an ancient Cabbalistic prayer. The episode’s
case involves domestic abuse. David’s mother suffers the drunken blows of her
stephusbad and his brother. David’s around whenever the stephusband or his
brother terrifies his mother, and, also, terrifies him. So, when David tells
Trubel about the monster the adults become, it’s true; and when Trubel tells
David she sees the monsters, too, which one sees often in domestic abuse
stories in a police procedural, she tells the truth, and she may even have seen
some monsters prior to her realizing her grimm abilities. Who knows, though; it
isn’t hinted at in the episode.
The clay monster
looks good. David’s a solid emotional center for the episode. Unfortunately,
“Dyin’ On A Prayer” is stuck in the mud like Nate’s vehicle before he receives
the clay monster’s hug of death. Nick and Hank have little involvement in the
story. The uncle leads Nick and Hank to every revelation. Trubel serves as
David’s safety net. The mother character barely matters. A throwaway line about
the clay monster by her brother, the uncle, who wants to stop it through
scaring his nephew, lets one know brother and sister do not share the same
ideas about ancient Cabal prayers. Any discord, disagreement, conflicts of
ideas, do not happen in prior scenes with the brother and sister. It’s a
throwaway line that weakly exists to put more stakes in the scene. What if she
finds out and stops it before David’s uncle can kill what he prayed for? It
never happens. There’s not an opportunity for them to have a back and forth
before the monster arrives. She runs outside in time to see the monster rise
from mud. She’s all like, “So, this is happening, now, I guess.”
Urgency in the
episodes comes from David’s innocent existence, and it’s a sad and poignant
idea. He feels so scared that a Gollum comes from the earth to kill those who
scare him. Nick and Hank need to the monster dormant, returned to the earth,
before David leaves a trail of bodies. There’s circularity to David’s arc. In
the beginning he fears the monster. His fears lessen with the help of Trubel,
whom he shares the ‘gift’ with, or what-have-you. They play monsters together.
Trubel shows him how to tire the monster. Move fast, wear him out, and then
strike. The little boy uses Trubel’s instructions to stab the Gollum to death
with his good guy action figure, and he also uses a stronger feeling to stop
the Gollum: his affection for Trubel. She’s threatened and in danger. One’s
desire to protect and save someone is stronger than one’s fear, one’s
intimidation--The strength within a person…that idea.
The coolest
scene in “Dyin’ On A Prayer” happens at the Austrian prison during Adalind’s failed
escape. Adalind’s escape from Vienna last season had some of the least exciting
escape sequences in contemporary television. Whomever with she tries to escape
a place from she and her co-escapee move like a beach crab. I like the
fantastical elements in the prison. Last week’s episode recalled to mind a
scene from Vladimir Nabokov’s Invitation to a Beheading. This episode is
without faint echoes from an aging Russian novel, but its phantasmagoria continues
in a Terry Gilliam spirit. The prison walls speak to Adalind about the location
of her baby. Adalind wonders, “Where? Where is my baby?” The prison walls cry
and nearly drown her. She’s no longer Cincinnatus C. traveling in a circle back
to her prison; she’s Alice, the girl lost in wonderland. She, too, nearly dies
on a prayer-the prayer she has to find her daughter. A prayer is a thought, a
promise.
Other Thoughts:
-Rosalee and
Monroe have been little else other than soundboards for other characters. They
want to take a honeymoon, though. Renard’s mother discovered the magic cure for
Nick’s current grimm-less plight. It’s complicated and involves Juliette as the
key piece.
-Wu continues to
search for anything he can find or get to figure out Trubel. Renard does not
offer much for Wu. Renard returned to the office and delivered an unnecessary
speech.
-Brigid Brannagh
portrayed David’s mother. She worked for David Greenwalt and Joss Whedon during
the second season of ANGEL. She played Virginia Madsen, brief girlfriend of
Alexis Denisof’s Wesley Wyndham-Pryce.
-Sean Calder
wrote the episode. Tawnia McKiernan directed.
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