Grimm’s sweet
spot is maintaining balance between the procedural and the serial. “A Reptile
Dysfunction” showed why that balance works. It furthered the Black Claws
intrigue, and it told a one-off monster story that let the characters have a
bit of fun. Serialization tends to become intense the deeper the season gets.
The narrative focuses acutely on the serial/mythology. At that point the season
loses its fun. Grimm’s far off from the intense batch of episodes to come. The
writers can parse out plot information while introducing fun cases such as the
Diamond Lake Monster.
Perhaps “fun”
should be swapped with “light.” It’s not quite a light story. The Diamond Lake
Monster story is bloody: two dead bodies, attempted fratricide, followed by two
more dead bodies. Genre fans know what this humble blogger means by light. Nick
and Hank don’t bother with trying to tie the murders to someone because they
can’t arrest a wesen that killed when woged. Instead they wait, I guess, for
fate to work it out for them.
The brothers
running the Diamond Lake store hired a wesen whose name I cannot remember—the
aforementioned Diamond Lake Monster—to swim in the water. They need to drum up
business. The plan fails because the monster decided to kill the man shooting
at him. The victim and his girlfriend thought a sea creature wanted to kill
him. Business boomed after the death. The brothers charged $15 for souvenirs.
Their wesen friend demanded more money after he killed a second time. Wayne and
Oliver possessed differing moral philosophies. Wayne reasoned the bodies were
worth the business after their father struggled and toiled to make it work.
Wayne did not like earning blood money. Trubel got involved. She made a deal
with the brothers to kill the Diamond Lake Monster. Wayne then betrayed his
brother by making a separate deal with Lou (is it Lou?) to kill Oliver. Wayne’s
plan went awry. Nick and Hank burst in, for it was a sting operation.
(Actually, it becomes an unintended sting operation thanks to Wayne’s idiocy).
Trubel snapped
Lou’s neck. Wayne ran when he saw Nick was a grimm. Police officers in police
boats shot Wayne as he swam away in the lake. The next morning, Nick and Hank
explained what happened to the county sheriff. The Sheriff wondered why someone
with a snapped neck was found in the lake. Nick replied, “Maybe the Diamond
Lake Monster does exist!” Hank told Nick that people would believe a monster
did it far more easily than what happened. Nick followed with a disparaging
remark about “reality.”
“A Reptile
Dysfunction” started with fallout from the assassination event at the end of
the last episode. Nick covered up what happened with a rote story about gangs
and murders. Meisner revealed more about the federal government operation to stop
Black Claw by showing him the base, taking him to his mother’s grave, and
giving Nick an opportunity to familiarize himself with Eve more. Eve reminded
Nick that she’s not Juliette. Later, she wondered why Meisner did not give her
a different face; however, she commented about regretting that Nick didn’t
marry Juliette. Friends and well-wishers, Eve is a covert way to rehabilitate
Juliette without overtly copping out of her actions last season.
Black Claws want
to take over the world, which connects with the Hitler-as-wesen reveal early in
the series. The Hitler reveal was quality nonsense. Grimm continued its bold
and nonsense writing with another reveal about the turmoil currently gripping
the world, especially throughout the Middle East: it’s not what everyone
thinks; it’s wesen rising up to take over the world. I like that Grimm goes for
it, however big the story, without compromise. Nick didn’t decide whether he’d
work with the government. Rosalee suggested they do it together or don’t do it
at all. Obviously, they’re going to work with Meisner and the government to
stop Black Claw.
“A Reptile
Dysfunction” was spotted with clichéd writing. Meisner left Nick at his
mother’s grave. Nick knelt over it, touching the earth where his Mom rested.
Meisner walked back to the base. Trubel asked, “Is he okay?” Meisner paused and
said, “He will be.” The Diamond Lake story was littered with cliché and tropey
plotting, as well. That’s okay, though. It shaped up as a pretty good episode
of Grimm.
Other Thoughts:
-Rosalee
received a second letter from her past. Monroe suggested finding out what the
guy wanted. I’d guess he wants Rosalee. He made it clear he felt they had a
relationship in their past. Rosalee doesn’t want to re-visit her past. Of
course, she will. She expected him, so did Monroe, in the spice shop, but it
was Trubel. Will the guy send a third letter after not receiving a response?
Rosalee tore the second letter into pieces. Wouldn’t it be remarkable if Grimm
didn’t bother casting anyone and had Rosalee re-live her past only through
unwanted letter correspondences? It won’t happen. He mentioned he’ll be in
Portland.
-Oregon’s
beautiful. I adored the lake scenes. The Pacific Northwest is a place of magic.
-The writers
poked fun at the kind of people that visit somewhere pretty and spend all of it
taking pictures to show they went to the place instead of experiencing the
place.
-Renard slept
with a new character, a woman with red hair that coached him through an endorsement
for the Portland mayoral candidate. Once again, Renard’s adrift in the
narrative. I assume this mayor works for Black Claw.
-Wu returned
long enough to hear the latest about Eve and Black Claw. After the exposition,
he disappeared from the episode. Wu could’ve provided good quips for the lake
monster case.
-The episode title amuses me. It's good nonsense. David Greenwalt wrote and directed Buffy's "Reptile Boy" during season two.
-Michael Golamco
wrote the episde. David Straiton directed.
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