“Wesen Nacht”
was a fine episode. The storytelling had purpose. The writers did not waste a
scene. The Claws group returned to the forefront of the season. Last week’s
episode showed the group had members within the healthcare industry, which
added to their influence in the financial sector. While “Wesen Nacht” did not
reveal new information about the group aside from their intricate planning,
ability to attack, and ability to manipulate and influence other wesen, the
episode showed yet again that they’re a group that won’t go down easily—unless
Juliette’s there, in which case the group goes down really easy.
The final act
showed the vulnerability of the gang. Nick, Hank, Wu, Renard, and Wu lacked the
means to fight the Claws group. Limited ammo, backed into a group, things
looked bleaked. Rosalee revealed ol’ Xavier deceived them all good. He played
them. The Claws group threatened him into coercion. The enemies came from the
ceiling, through the doors, but then the sounds of anguish and violence
emanated from outside. Nick left the room to investigate. His friends followed.
Juliette killed the last threat, emerged ever so briefly from the shadows, and
disappeared. Who saw that coming?
Of course,
nearly everyone watching the show guessed Juliette would return from the “dead”
into a redemptive story. David Greenwalt swore Juliette died and would not
return, but television writers do not kill characters in 2015. Glenn died in
The Walking Dead until he didn’t. Kevin in The Leftovers died twice in less
than twelve hours. Arrow brought back nearly every dead character between the
end of season three and the early part of season four. The Vampire Diaries’
writers claimed that they would restore meaning to death after every significant
character survived death; tts two stars, its leads, died in Thursday night’s
episode. Will they return? Yes.
Trubel’s scene
with Adalind tried to further mislead viewers from the thought that Juliette
could return. I liked the scene very much. Adalind mostly carries Kelly around
the warehouse; her and Nick act like children when one or the other needs to
shower; and her reunion with Meisner last episode, which had potential for
more, merely teased the audience. Adalind told Trubel about her history with
Meisner. Trubel, however vaguely, told Adalind that Diana will be okay. Adalind
thought Trubel returned specifically to take Juliette out. Trubel confirmed she
did return to take Juliette out, but she left out a crucial detail: that her new
group, the secretive government agency, so secret that the government does not
know about it, wanted Juliette on their side. The threat’s so great it needs
someone as recklessly powerful as Juliette. The scene’s significant for what it
isn’t said, which often appears as bad writing rather than suspense, but what
wasn’t said made the scene play on multiple levels which further enriched it.
It’s rare Grimm’s writing has multiple things happening in a scene.
The central plot
of the episode was Nick’s investigation of the Claws. Hank helped. Hank
basically serves to warn wesen suspects that Nick, the grimm, would kill them
if he wasn’t nice enough to bring him or her in for interrogation. The twist is
the aforementioned Xavier led trap and new blonde arch-villain Billie Trump.
Adalind’s a domestic ex-hexenbiest possibly in love with Nick, and Billie’s a
scowling, violent badass who will kill folk. Billie’s what Adalind was. The
previews for the post-hiatus run revealed more about what the bad guys want.
Monroe’s explanation of “Fear what is hidden” did not touch on my idea that the
wesen want to reveal themselves to the world. No one else in the scene wondered
what the group wanted. Questions would’ve broken the narrative flow. Questions
would’ve lessened the tension and the suspension.
Xavier’s role
was problematic. Nick and Hank didn’t pursue Xavier’s escape story. Neither
Monroe nor Rosalee asked him about what happened. Renard encouraged Nick and
Hank to encourage Xavier to do the right thing. Rosalee asked the right
questions after the guys left for the trap. Xavier cracked. Rosalee cracked his
face. She saved the day. His friendship with them precluded the police officers
from doing their jobs. Not once did Rosalee and Monroe interact with Xavier in
the run of the series. The unseen lives of characters in a TV show could be
narratively rewarding; however, the old ‘show, don’t tell’ adage applies to TV.
They trusted him as a fellow small business owner and friend. Our trust in
Monroe and Rosalee made us trust Xavier. We were all bitten, weren’t we? Well,
I mean, it was blatantly obvious that Xavier did not escape and that he had a
jawn plan.
Yes, “Wesen
Nacht” was a fine episode of Grimm—the finest of this season. I want more of
“Wesen Nacht” in the future, as I always do, but I expect more of the usual
from Grimm in the New Year.
Other Thoughts:
-If I
interviewed the actors in a Foot exclusive, I’d ask how silly they feel when
they need to woge for the camera. I would’ve laughed after Sasha Roiz whipped
around to scare Billie. Will Renard’s woge out on her have consequences later
in the season? Wu’s reaction to Renard rocked.
-I hope I did
not misunderstand, but Trubel worked with Meisner’s crew during her absence
last season, correct? I missed the agency’s name each time a character
mentioned it. If the Claws group has a name, I don’t know it. I’ll continue
referring to them as the Claws or Claws group.
-David Greenwalt
and Jim Kouf wrote the episode. I missed the name of the director. The series
will return sometime in 2016. I presume Grimm returns in early January, but
what the hell do I know? I run a blog with a nonsensical title. I’ll continue
writing my reviews in the New Year.
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