I don’t like
episodes that begin in media res,
especially in Grimm, because the story won’t reach the ‘hook’ of the in media res until the last act of the
episode. Some TV shows would catch the story up to the ‘hook’ point halfway in
the episode. I dig non-linear storytelling, but in media res differs from one’s preferred non-linear storytelling
fare. “Mishishepu” opened with Hank-with demon face-attack Nick. The immediate
transition to “Now” happened. The case hadn’t come to Nick and Hank. Oh, how
would that happen?
A Native
American myth came to ‘reality’ in Portland-mishipeshu, the great lynx, and an
underworld water being. The Grimm writers transmogrified an already
transmogrified and mythic creature to fit within the specific crime/wesen
format of the procedural. It’s more of a vengeance demon than underword water
being. It drinks from the water after brutally murdering men. A late teenager,
on a vision quest of sorts, was possessed by Mishipeshu and murdered two of the
men responsible for his father’s death. A third died after Hank’s love-interest
police officer friend, possessed by Mishipeshu, The possession of Hank lasted
less than one full act. He attacked Nick. A tertiary character necessary for
exposition (for without him the episode would not have progressed) blew magic
red dust into Hank’s face, which relieved him of the possession.
Grimm tells
morality tales more oft than not. The turn in the last act is Hank’s
disgruntled manner after he experienced the teenager’s childhood memories, saw
the men kill his father, and then watching the third murderer walk into his
face. The teenager won’t face charges due to the possession of an ancient and
mythic creature. Nick can’t bring the third guy in court because the trial may
link the teen to the other two murders. Wu informed Renard about the wesen
case. Renard didn’t care about it, because he needed to return a wallet he
randomly stole from a man he suspected worked with Prince Kenneth. I’d like for
Grimm to have Nick choose between the law and the grimm. Past episodes briefly
touched on the conflict. I don’t expect to see it become a significant conflict
for Nick in season five.
Nick and
Juliette continue to conflict. Juliette intentionally assaults a bar patron
because she wants to know will Nick free her from the prison. Nick won’t free
her from prison. Juliette, naturally, threatened to harm him. She raised the
problem of a Grimm and hexenbiest living together, sharing a bed, and murdering
each other in his or her sleep. Juliette’s mad and vengeful because Henrietta
told her she cannot cure the hexenbiest thing. She has become her enemy. She
blamed her friends for bringing her into the world. Rosalee and Monroe worked
in two scenes to help Juliette, assisted by Renard. Nick won’t free her to
protect her from acting brashly and rashly, and because of the potential she’ll
hurt him. Juliette’s at least dynamic as the angry hexenbiest, which is a
marked improvement from the wretched amnesia storyline from season two.
I felt
disappointed, too, when I realized much of the episode would involve the
case-of-the-week. It’s not an unusual for Grimm; in fact, it is the norm. The
previews, I’ve learned, show every non-case-of-the-week scene. That’s an
exaggeration. The serialized stories receive maybe 8-10 minutes of the
41-minute run-time. A non-passive aggressive conversation between Nick and
Juliette would be a start.
Other Thoughts:
-I joked that
Renard wouldn’t learn the identity the man with the benjamins until 2020.
-Janelle Farris
returned and killed folk during possession. I doubt that will have a follow-up.
It’s the story of dark whimsy Grimm likes for a conclusion.
-Alan DiFiore
wrote the episode. Omar Madha directed.
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