After two
episodes that established the central threat of the season—with the appropriate
vagueness for a serialized TV show—episode three of Grimm leaves the threat of
the claws to tell a Peter Pan-esque story about four wesen children who need a
mother. They don’t know what or who they are. Every adult has abandoned them.
The lost children hope Rosalee will be the one that doesn’t abandon them after
she lets Peter, the angry killer one among the four, leave with medicine to
help his sister.
“Lost Boys” is
an okay episode. Grimm episodes can flail around for extended periods.
Rosalee’s taken about halfway through the episode. Monroe, Nick, and Hank arrived
at the start of the last act. In between, she told them a story about grimms
and wesen they didn’t understand. Rosalee ate a berry. Big John and his brother
fought. Peter tried to look menacing. The sister beamed to have a mother. The
kids have no idea about life. They’re motivated by need and act by instinct. They
need good guidance. For a spell, I thought Monroe and Rosalee would take the
children into their home. I wondered about the potential storytelling disaster
of that choice. Peter was the lone kid with any semblance of definition. The
girl coughed a lot. Big John obeyed Peter. The other kid wanted berry credit.
Rosalee laments
that the kids will re-enter a system that’ll confuse them more and make them
angrier at the world. The kids took another woman. She escaped them, presumably
out of terror after seeing them woged. The kids don’t know that they’re scary.
I suppose the twist is that they meet the hammy leader of the claws group at
the end of the episode. He told the boys, “The girl is safe” before swearing
them into their new family. Will these kids come back to haunt Rosalee, Monroe,
and Nick? Peter promised he’d find Rosalee and kill her if she left. Now a bad
person is raising him. Grimm takes a good while to return to any plot points;
so, the audience may not see Peter follow through on his threat until season
twelve (or it’ll be dropped, and both the audience and the character will
forget four lost children took Rosalee in #503).
Beyond the
central lost kids/Rosalee plot, it’s a subdued episode. Nick moved out of the
house and into a warehouse with Kelly and Adalind. Near the end of the episode,
Adalind asked Nick to lay next to her to help her sleep in the new place. Nick
looked awkward and uncomfortable next to her. Before long they’ll probably
snuggle and spoon. The warehouse looked wide open. Filming action sequences
should be easier for the staff. The two future lovers reminisced about their
first meeting in the “Pilot.” It was the first woge Nick saw, and a major part
of NBC’s marketing campaign.
Meisner
debriefed Renard about the latest nonsense with the Royals and the Resistance.
Viktor holds the throne. He paid The Resistance to help overthrow the king. The
rest of the scene did not advance the overall purpose of Meisner’s shadowy
wandering around Portland. He freed Trubel from her cell in the last act. I
assume she’s ready for whatever The Resistance trained her for.
All in all,
there was a kidnapping, some dramatic intrigue, some slow progress toward
romance, and no Wu. It was an episode of television.
Other Thoughts:
-I think the
store Big John and Peter chose may’ve been the most heavily guarded store in TV
history. Pharmacy techs everywhere. The security guard roamed the premises. It
looked like a government facility compared to the homely rustic quality of
Rosalee’s spice shop.
-Nick’s back on
the force. The other guy disappeared. So, that’s good. Grimm needn’t do more of
the ‘He doesn’t know!’ storylines.
-The writers
took the epigraph from Peter Pan. “I think I had a mother once.” I thought of
the paragraph in Lolita about Humbert
Humbert’s mother (“Picnic. Lightning.”) I don’t know why. VN gave Humbert a
mother trauma to fool and trap the Viennese council. Well, this is becoming a
digression.
-A former lawyer colleague of Adalind's told her she'll get her job back if asked. He's probably evil.
-A former lawyer colleague of Adalind's told her she'll get her job back if asked. He's probably evil.
-Sean Calder
wrote the episode. Aaron Lipstadt directed.
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