The Claws group
of wesens lack a name, but “Clear and Wesen Danger” defined the shadowy group a
little. Two of the group members embezzled money to, I think, fund the
operation. By the end when the wesen-of-the-week died, shot to death by Wu, his
partner in crime, the longtime secretary of the teaser’s victim, uttered a
threat in a foreign language (“free the hidden”), warned Nick that he doesn’t
know what’s coming, and then jumped to her death. Obviously, certain wesen don’t
wish to remain hidden any longer.
The majority of
the episode follows Kincaid/whatever his other name is. Renard gave Hank a new
partner. Nick took over the case covertly; the dude’s the only guy capable of
working wesen cases. Renard warned Nick he’d terminate him if he continued to
work while on personal leave. Adalind told Nick she worried what would happen
if she lost him. She’d have nothing. Evidently Renard’s threat affects Adalind
as well. Hank working with a new partner reversed the usual dynamic. Would the
case work differently without Nick? I should’ve known Nick would work the case.
Hank’s new partner means Grimm will repeat the past. X character doesn’t know;
x character finds out; x character goes insane; x character joins the group;
however, the widespread reach of The Claws group seems to suggest that Po, Hank’s
new partner, works for them—or his ignorance will kill him.
Mystery
surrounds the new season. Meisner, seemingly, covered up the Chavez crime scene
and painted over the claw marks. Meisner lurked while Nick, Hank, Monroe, and
Wu investigated the non-existent crime scene. The last scene of the episode
involved Meisner leaving the cell with the strong opponent. He said, “Better,”
while wiping blood off his lips. Juliet’s in the cell, right, and he’s
rehabbing her the hard way to battle what’s coming, yes? The FBI asked Nick
about his interactions with Chavez in light of her disappearance. Nick’s
scattered between mourning for Juliette, dealing with the FBI, solving the
wesen murder case, bonding with Adalind, and raising his son. Also, he’ll
eventually confront Renard’s role in the claws group—his picture was the last
deleted before jawn woman jumped to her death.
Adalind is
working hard at redemption. The group forgave her. Her conversations with
Rosalee serve to change the hearts and minds of the fanbase. Adalind’s
hexenbiest suppression lasts a temporary amount of time, but she doesn’t want
to be a hexenbiest anymore, telling Rosalee, “I was mean.” Claire Coffee has
played Adalind as reserved and cautious. She doesn’t want to do anything to
make Nick hate her. It’s an okay change from past Adalind, even though much of
her character has been passive since season three. Her reluctance to return to
her former self represents Adalind’s first attempt to take control and
ownership of her choices and her life.
I liked “Clear
and Wesen Danger” more than “The Grimm Identity.” It was an okay episode. The
writers continue to struggle with balance when they hit multiple beats. It’s
better than dropping the thread altogether. The FBI scene was a reminder that
it’s not over. There’s potential for the long haul of the season.
Other Thoughts:
-Nick remembered
the time he helped zip up Juliette’s dress. I didn’t see Bitsie Tulloch’s name
in the credits, but it must’ve been if her likeness appeared. Credit watching’s
tough business.
-Rosalee hinted
she’d like a child one day with Monroe. Let her announce her pregnancy in the
series finale. Baby stories suck on television. Grimm can’t do one well. No way
they pull off three.
-Thomas Ian
Griffith wrote the episode. Norberto Barba directed.
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