Grimm’s sleepy
pacing has been the worst aspect of the series since the beginning. The Royal
Family accomplished nothing in almost four seasons of being the most major
villain in the series. Two Princes were introduced. Both Princes did nothing.
One Prince died off-camera; the other Prince left almost off-camera. Prince
Kenneth, the mysterious new family member headed to Portland, seemed destined
to follow the anticlimaxes of the previous two Princes. One would expect even
less results with Kenneth. I wanted him to concentrate more on an aquarium than
on the search for Nick’s mother and the royal baby. Kenneth, of course, gets
results. He’s a brute. He kicks ass, kills, and threatens-the complete opposite
of the previous two Princes. The penultimate scene involves a fight between
Kenneth and Renard. Renard discovered the corpse of his informant, Sam, and
wondered would Kenneth tell Renard of his importance to the family. No, Kenneth
says, because Renard must know of his, Kenneth’s, importance to the family.
Should he continue to resist providing information about Kelly, well, Renard
will die.
One may pass out
from the change in the Royal family pacing. The speed and action with which
Kenneth acts is heretofore unseen in Grimm. Kenneth calls out Adalind on her
lie about the identity of her second baby’s father. Adalind requests that
Kenneth kill Juliette. One is amazed Juliette lives by episode’s end. Of
course, Kenneth may only act in “Heartbreaker” because he’s a new character
different from the previous two princes. He leaves Renard bleeding on the
ground. Kenneth seemed the character type to drag Renard away and torture him
until he provides solid information about Kelly and the important baby. He
doesn’t, because it’s inconvenient to the plot. Kenneth threatens, tortures,
and kills characters one will not remember, because those characters have no
life, no vitality, no identity aside from plot device; but Kenneth will not
maim or harm any developed character, i.e. any of the main characters.
The
case-of-the-week involved an unfortunate woman who reacted to any guy who felt
sexually aroused by her by releasing a deadly toxin that would break the guy’s
heart. The case is a rare instance of the writers doing a modern adaptation of
a fairy tale. The writers have veered away from the original premise of the
series. Bella involuntarily kills men who want to date her. The first guy is
uncomfortably forward with her. The second guy tries to rape her. Both won’t
back off. Attraction to Bella isn’t a death knell as much as not taking no for
an answer. Her mother and her grandmother suffered brands to their face after
rapes that resulted in death. The grandmother didn’t want her granddaughter to
continue killing men, and she didn’t want her to become a victim of rape. She
tried to brand her face, telling Nick when he stopped her that he wouldn’t help
Bella by stopping her. There’s darkness to Bella’s story. Her mother and her
grandmother bear the scars of their past traumas. Rosalee concocts an antidote
to Bella’s fatal rejections so that Bella won’t kill any more men and so that
she can experience love and physically touch another human being. The
conclusion of her story is silly but sweet.
Juliette
continued to behave sourly towards Renard and Nick. Her scene with Nick, in
particular, showed a nasty side of her. She told Nick she wanted to take her
stuff from the house. Nick’s phone rang during their conversation. Juliette
spit on his “I love you” laden dialogue. Earlier she threatened Renard if he
did not help her. Juliette feels frustrated by her new unasked for hexenbiest
nature, which came about from a life she never asked to join. “Heartbreaker”
ties together stories about things people didn’t ask for. Kenneth didn’t ask to
track down a woman and a baby, but he had to because he gets results. Bella
didn’t ask for men to like her knowing that if they did she killed them. Things
happen. The characters dealt with it in different ways. The story will go on
violently for some, unhappily for others, and happily only for the few.
Other Thoughts:
-Nick e-mailed
Trubel who e-mailed him in an uninspiring exchange of messages. “Everything’s
fine here,” is what Nick writes in response to, “How are things?”
-Wu’s so into
Wesen cases. He whispered over the line that he thought the death of the biker
was Wesen related.
-Dan E. Fesman
wrote the episode. I don’t remember who directed tonight’s episode.
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