Of the two major
cliffhangers from the last episode in December, Grimm begins “Wesenrein” with a
truth session for Wu. Nick and Hank take Wu to the trailer where Wu looks at
the books, pages though the monsters, and wonders why he should believe he’s
still not being told lies. Four minutes into the episode, Rosalee discovers the
Wesenrein took Monroe. The Wesenrein plot has come and gone infrequently during
the early part of season four. Rosalee and Monroe experienced threats, but
didn’t become consumed with worried. Their reaction to the early threats, where
it’s at first alarming but then that sense of alarm decreases as days pass and
no one acts on the threat, contributed to quite a lack of urgency to the
storyline. Now that it’s here with life-and-death stakes, it’s still flat,
unengaging-it’s more of a way for the writers to bring Wu into the Wesen side
of policing, it’s more of a way to continue showing the continual struggle for
Nick between being a grimm, lawless, and being a cop, living by the law, but no
way will Monroe suffer the death of Timmy or Tommy or Trevor or whatever the
name of that tertiary character was.
No, the writers
essentially showed their collective hand in the dream scene involving Rosalee
and Juliette. Juliette, reeling from seeing she’s hexenbiest, loses it during a
fight with Rosalee and rips her throat open. She stares down at dead Rosalee,
horrified, her hand and arm covered in blood, for several beats. Suddenly,
Rosalee wakes her up. It was only a dream. It would’ve been the most unexpected
thing Grimm would ever do or ever have done and move the show in a very
interesting direction; however, Juliette only dreamed it. It represented her
fears and what she could do if her new nature can’t be controlled. No, Monroe
won’t die. Nick and Hank will save him.
David Greenwalt,
and even Jim Kouf, already told a story about a hate group that kills impure
folk. It happened almost sixteen years ago in an ANGEL episode titled “Hero”-a
group of Nazi-like demons round up half-demons in Los Angeles for obliteration.
It’s a good episode with a great ending that changes the series. The Wesenrein,
led by the poorly named Grandmaster, share similar beliefs with the Scourge.
The execution of the episodes differs. Doyle makes it his personal mission to
help demons like him. Nick’s motivated by friendship. It’s also personal, yes,
but it’s also more drawn out. “Wesenrein” had maybe a nod to “Hero” when Monroe
finds his cellmate’s burned body.
“Wesenrein” also
sets up a lot and tries to build the audiences’ anxious sense of anticipation.
Will Monroe die? Will he escape? Oh, he escaped; but, oh, the Wesenrein caught
him again. Shaw, the only lead in the case, becomes a victim of the
Grandmaster. The Shaw interrogation scene involves Nick turning pale zombie
again, which hasn’t happened since season three. Renard then denies Shaw any
sort of civil rights because of the Wesen nature of the crime. Nick, Hank,
Renard, and Wu, work the case together. At Shaw’s home, they see the cop parked
outside Monroe’s and Rosalee’s in a picture with the Wesenrein.
Characterization doesn’t advance, though. Nick repeats he’s doing it for
friendship. Hank helps Wu. Meanwhile, Rosalee hangs out, while Juliette
internally freaks. Grimm establishes life-or-death stakes in its world, but
sometimes the characters behave brazenly or the writing slows. That’s also a
problem of stalling for a second episode. The tribunal drama, which will decide
Monroe’s fate, happens in episode ten, and the police won’t question the
treacherous cop until episode ten. Rosalee expresses concern about Monroe, but
the worst he deals with is a punk kid who likes bad music and yelling awkward
sounding hate-filled dialogue at him.
The episode ends
as Monroe faces the chanting tribunal, with a look of alarm and dread. The
tribunal uses a Nazi-like symbol and dress in the garb of the Ku Klux Klan. The
sand in the hour glass is running low.
Other Thoughts:
-Angel dealt
with a tribunal in the season two premiere “Judgment.” It was great.
- Juliette and
Nick never shared space during the episode. Her surprise may wait for two more
seasons, or she’ll tell him in episode eleven. Episode ten seems busy.
-One scene in
Vienna this week. Viktor reminds Adalind of the essentials of the storyline. He
wants to find her daughter and thinks Nick’s mother has her. He might not have
said that. I accidentally tuned out the dialogue.
-Wu asked, did
the grimms take the name from the Grimm brothers? Nick said, yeah, more or
less. Yes, the series was once about fairy tales coming to life.
-Thomas Ian
Griffith wrote the episode. Hanelle M. Culpepper directed.
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