“Last Fight”
marks the second fight related episode in Grimm. The first fight episode of
Grimm I do not remember well. I compared it to ANGEL’s “The Ring.” The B story,
i.e. the case-of-the-week, seemed tangential to the larger story, the A story,
involving the mystery of Nick’s post-Adalind post-Grimm life. The writers will
ignore the case-of-the-week story until the very end and will keep Nick and
Hank apart from the tangential case-of-the-week story where then it’ll quickly
wrap before the end of the episode; however, “Last Fight” did not keep the
stories separate. It all came together, better than usual actually, for a
stand-alone Grimm story. By that, I mean the A and the B story. (And the C
story, too. Cohesion.)
Trubel kills
another wesen, which creates more problems for Nick, and which will raise the
eyebrow of Wu a bit higher. Trubel’s already a known grimm among FBI circles,
and she hasn’t acted with the caution and discretion of Nick. Trubel couldn’t
follow Nick’s ways. Nick slowly figured out the balance between the underground
fight against the wesens and the aboveground fight against the criminals. Act
with care, caution, and discretion. Do not antagonize. Play the hero, not the
villain. Indeed, Nick’s the noble hero-he bridges the worlds, creates and then
fosters cohesion and harmony. Trubel acts rashly, overeager to help, and that
ends in wesens with severed heads or wesens with broken necks. At the end of
“Last Fight” Nick decides to cover for Trubel or risk her exposure or
incarceration or anything.
Wu wants to talk
to Nick. Nick tells him to wait. The Wu problem isn’t different from the Hank
problem in season one and part of season two. Wu knows something isn’t right. A
small difference between him and Hank is awareness. Knowledge is awareness. Wu
knows and is aware of Trubel’s living situation, her various suspicious
involvements in crimes, and needs only to confirm his suspicions with his
colleague and friend. Wu’s no rash character, prone to destroying his
credibility because he suspects something or someone of some act, vulnerable to
believing a nightmare over what one can confirm or deny for him. Nick continues
to delay their talk. So many delays happen between characters that stretch out
revelations and surprises. Wu will learn the truth about certain things, but
the viewer may not care. It’s obvious what he’ll hear and what’ll happen. Get
it over with-the interesting element is Trubel and how she’ll work into Wu’s
new understanding of things.
The
case-of-the-week begins roughly, with rote characters, tired tropes, and complete
lack of originality. The boxing promoter’s corrupt, morally bankrupt, in
pursuit of the dollar more than a modicum of human decency. He bullies the
talent by hiring former, damaged boxers to beat his wesen boxing hope into a
murderous rage, leading to bouts won within forty seconds of the bell ring.
Clay, the boxing hope, the one Stan and Abe want to lead them to a payday in
Vegas, doesn’t like boxing, and doesn’t know the nicknames of famous boxers.
Trubel learns about why he boxes, which is for his mother. The mother seems a
doting, caring, woman, who wants for Clay happiness. She speaks of his father
in poor terms: absentee, selfish, a vulture, waiting only for Clay to hit a
payday to return to his fatherly duties. The story engaged me once Trubel
joined the gym and had the only meaningful conversation with Clay in “Last
Fight.” That’s a difficult piece of writing. The writers had one scene to connect
Clay with Trubel, with human decency removed from Stan, and the other fighters
damaged and used by Stan, and to show he wants more than boxing and violence in
his life.
The twist to the
story is the reveal of the doting, caring, and benevolent mother as the
murderer of the damaged boxer, at the end of the first act, and of Abe, the
kindly older man who lacks the cruelty of Stan. She wants the payday. She beats
her son to fight for her. Clay stands up for himself and his values by breaking
his wrist. The twist happens abruptly. It’s enough of a turn to carry the last
the two acts of any procedural, but Grimm reveals the mother in the final act,
in the final seven minutes. I think the abrupt twist works. Clay reacts in the
moment. He does not simmer or stew over things. The sudden betrayal of his
mother would bring him to a near-murderous decision. It’s visceral, irrational,
but in character, on track with what happened to him in earlier scenes.
So, the B story
turned out all right. The other Nick related stories that involve Rosalee and
Monroe trying to find the recipe for the cure-all potion moves at a glacial
pace. Adalind escaped from her cell with a crazy bearded man. I thought the
story may’ve echoed a passage in Vladimir Nabokov’s Invitation To A Beheading,
in which Cincinnatus C. is led through a tunnel in the walls only to end up at
the warden’s dining table. It did not. Alas.
Other Thoughts:
-The voice of
Adalind’s bearded friend sounded like Alexis Densiof; however, Viktor did not
appear in “Last Fight.” The crazy bearded guy promised Adalind to lead her to
her child. She thinks The Resistance has him. The Resistance does not. Nick’s
seldom seen mother has her dear daughter. Regarding the close parallel to
Invitation To A Beheading, Adalind and Cincinnatus are not parallel characters.
Adalind’s nefarious, sometimes evil, vengeful, and murderous, while Cincinnatus
is not. He belongs in a place with beings akin to him, giants that stand above
totalitarian brutality, the obliteration of the individual, and the
proliferation of generalities. Ah, Invitation To A Beheading-it’s a magical
fairy tale that’ll affect your soul.
-Thomas Ian
Griffith wrote the episode. Paul A. Kaufman directed.
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