Grimm’s a show
defined by its lethargic attention to its history. The Keys, for instance, have
barely been a thing until they became a thing again this season. Depending on
the message board members or the blogger, Grimm returning to The Keys is a
stroke of brilliance that gave the current narrative urgency, that it’s
representative of the wide scope of the series, and the many exciting ways of
its mythology, or it’s maybe one or two of those things.
“Into The
Schwarzwald” highlighted other parts of the series besides The Keys that were
forgotten. Renard, after the death of Andrew Dixon, became the person Black
Claw wanted to lead Portland into a brand new world. The writers originally
planned to make Renard a villain in season one, but they loved Sasha Roiz, and
Renard remained on the side of good. Since season one, Renard’s been mostly an
insignificant part of the show aside from a cool arc here and there. Renard
became the first of a few characters that continued in the narrative without a
clear purpose. The producers will keep actors despite their character having
little purpose—but, eventually, the writers will find an arc for a character.
Enter Adalind, an extraneous character this season, who sat in a kitchen or
showered or worried about Nick. Claire Coffee’s great, but Adalind’s been
pointless for two seasons. The writers obviously wrote domesticated Adalind for
a reason over the first dozen episodes of the season. Like Eve/Juliette, the
audience needed to think what was was,
but what was wasn’t. Adalind found
peace and domesticity with Nick. She connected with Nick for the first time
without deception before he left for The Black Forest. Nick expressed great
ambivalence about how he felt for her when Monroe asked him how he felt, but he
seemed willing to give it a shot. Adalind’s old hexenbiest powers returned,
though, as he begun his return to Portland. The thing that he hated about her
is the thing she can’t stop or suppress. It is her. The audience definitely
doesn’t root for them. Their strong antipathy towards the two should dull
whatever ‘making it work through the trials’ storytelling looms.
Tonight’s
episode marked Grimm’s 100th episode. Returning to the roots of
Renard and Adalind was designed. A show’s 100th episode is about the
present story, sure, but it’s about weaving the past into it to show it all
meant something. Rosalee’s past returned to terrorize her, which led to the
women sharing their pasts together. Rosalee wanted to know if Adalind wished
she could forget a period in her youth. Adalind said no, adding that she became
a lawyer to free herself from a bad life with her mother. Becoming a lawyer
didn’t lead Adalind to a desirable place, of course. Lucien and Rachel used
Renard’s nature to make him part of their group. Renard never exactly fit into
the group. Nick never entirely trusted him. When Lucien told him ‘You’re one of
us’ and Renard doesn’t immediately kick ass it’s because of bad writing and
because Renard hasn’t belonged. They tried to Macbeth him. Rachel showed him
the poster for his mayoral run. Lucien assured Renard that he was meant to kill
Marwan.
Black Claw is a
more gripping story if Renard becomes an antagonist working against Nick. Nick
didn’t share the revelations about The Keys to Renard. There’s tiny foreshadowing
about a divide; however, Lucien’s far from a charismatic, convincing villain
that the writers could dream the audience would believe he’d turn Renard with a
derivative political poster and a Spike ‘You belong here, with us, in the
dark’. The 100th episode needed dramatic fireworks. Renard and
Adalind were the best fireworks the episode could, however limply.
The treasure
hunt continued beneath the earth in the near-millenia old church. The priest
and his goons looked for Nick and Monroe above ground, somehow missing the
giant hole in the earth mere feet from their search party. Nick used creative
thinking to discover where his ancestors hid the treasure. They couldn’t open
the key because they lacked his blood (as well as the final act). The priest
and his goons were plot devices, with a two-fold purpose: be obstacles to
Monroe and Nick leaving The Black Forest, and to bite Monroe so that the
treasure could cure him.
What’s the stick
all about? It’s all about healing Monroe’s arm. For a second, I thought the
plot would dictate a return to Germany for a magical antidote from the
sacristan. Grimms slaughtered wesen for centuries. Does the stick represent an
olive branch from Grimms to wesen? Will the stick forever alter the world of
Grimms and wesen in ways Black Claw never dreamed? We’ll see.
Other Thoughts:
-Happy 100th
episode to Grimm. The professional critics didn't think Grimm would make it to 13 episodes. Those fools of tooks.
-So, that’s it
for Tony? I didn’t like the character. Hitting Rosalee is a mortal sin.
-Working around,
I assume, budget constraints by having Nick and Monroe slash tires was nifty.
-I understood
Hadrian Wall’s plan, but why didn’t they take Marwan and do what they did to
other Black Claw members?
-Jim Kouf &
David Greenwalt wrote the episode. Norberto Barba directed.
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