The rat king
story wasn’t much, was it? The community of people formed the rat king when
threatened by outside aggressors. Knocking it over defeated it? NBC primarily
promoted the rat king as the central story of the episode. Of course, the rat
king’s barely a presence. Promoting the rat king, though, probably motivated
some new viewers to watch a few minutes of “Rat King” until they realized how
little “Rat King” there was, and how much of what they didn’t understand there
was. Doctors and nurses first play it nice and clear and transparent with Nick
before completely switching a day later? For those confused viewers, one hopes
Mark Cuban’s Shark Tank sufficed as a substitute.
Trubel returned
to Nick and Portland battered and bruised. She had a different name, an active
passport, and multiple identification cards. Her passport showed she’d been
around the world—to Malta and to Paris, among other cities I missed. Nick found
plenty of money in her pocket. The expensive motorcycle she rode to him on shot
darts and arrows from the back. She came from battle battle worn and battered,
and Nick unknowingly put her in the care of enemies.
Yes, her care
team at the hospital comprised members of the claws group rarely seen since
#502. Strangely, they took care of her for the first 24 hours of care. The
doctor told Nick the truth about her condition but added he needed to observe
her overnight. I suspected the doctor of something. The nurse was his
accomplice. Instead of immediately whisking her away to the basement of
hospital where the doctor would slice her head open and not stitch it back
together—yes, her care team wanted to kill Trubel—they let her rest comfortably
in bed. The nurse slapped her awake to confirm her suspicions that they had a
grimm. Nick even came by. The doctor told him they’d let him know when she
woke. The prolonged period of rest raised Nick’s suspicions. This evil, brutal
claws group looked foolish rather than threatening. A giant rat king provided a
convenient distraction.
Meisner, though,
that bearded badass, upon learning that Nick took Trubel to the hospital, knew
she was in danger. Why Meisner sent Trubel to Nick and why he didn’t say more
about why Trubel should remain away from public places where claws folk might
be, ready and willing to slice Trubel’s head open and not stitch it back
together, is a product of cheap writing. Poor communication between characters
for the sake of dramatic action is cheap. Did Meisner hang up on Adalind
because hearing her voice again made the blood rush to his heart and his heart
skip a beat? I half-thought they’d passionately kiss when they saw each other.
The episode ended before Nick learned all about what Meisner and Trubel have
been up to while he combatted rat kings and orphaned children kidnapping
Rosalee.
The scenes with
Trubel showed that the claws have their, well, claws everywhere. Hospitals,
financial institutions, plus those cities from around the world Trubel visited,
and they’re willing to die for their cause. We knew they’d die for their cause.
Remember the slightly comical death scene of the woman in #502? They’ll jump
out windows and all that.
The writers
chose more vagueness, though, which left “Rat King” flat. Next week’s
mid-season finale, seemingly, will add definition to the global threat facing
the grimm crew. The random aside of the rat king plot added a nifty surreal
bizarre quality to the episode. I’d like Nick to deal with ongoing serialized
stuff while investigating increasingly bizarre and fantastic crimes from the
deepest recesses of fairy tale lore.
Other Thoughts:
-The mayor story’s
definitely happening. I liked the sleek mayoral video parody. Renard had one
scene in “Rat King.” He watched the video.
-How long before
Meisner tells Adalind about Diana?
-Jeff Miller
wrote the episode. David Solomon directed. Solomon directed many a Buffy
episode. He’s had a hand in multiple shows run by ex-Whedonverse
writers/producers.
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