Does anyone think the writers should write something we find in a book gives us the why of Juliette changes? Or is it better to leave it up to the fan?
(06-29-2015, 06:17 AM)jsgrimm45 Wrote: Does anyone think the writers should write something we find in a book gives us the why of Juliette changes? Or is it better to leave it up to the fan?
I would like to haver the answer. But I believe the writers will leave it opened. Maybe some fill tips in flashbacks during the 5 season... Or in meddle of a conversation about Juliette... But they will not give a final answer, I think.
06-29-2015, 03:15 PM (This post was last modified: 06-29-2015, 03:19 PM by Nickster.)
No.
I believe a majority of grimm fans know why she changed- having read forums and discussion. It's been kind of obvious, the woman's always had a jealous streak and harboured resentment against Nick which she buried, it all came to the surface when she became a hexenbiest and found out Adalind will be bearing Nick a child.
As for making her character likeable post-hexenbiest, I think it is a little too late for that. Maybe some viewers can feel a bit sorry for her, I sure won't, but wasting time to show why she turned bad is just repeating the many scenes she sat at home moping about Nick and burying her resentment for him being a grimm.
Like she said, Nick had the chance to give up being a grimm because of her, she had the chance to give up a normal life if she wanted to stay with a grimm, she took it and still blames Nick. Because Juliette thought she'd have the best of both worlds, she was in for a nasty shock when she found out she couldn't and thus became evil.
So I don't feel there needs to be a book about what happens to humans when they turn hexenbiest, BUT I would like to have a couple of them included in the show as sane and compassionate hexenbiests to prove that Juliette's buried resentment and not the hexenbiest inside was the reason why she become so bad.