02-09-2017, 12:53 AM
(02-09-2017, 12:39 AM)syscrash Wrote: I am not saying the actions are making a statement. I am saying after five season of watching the show. It maintains certain perceptions. It is not a logical distinction. It is an emotional distinction. The same reason why when Adalind sleep with Nick as Juliette. They did not have Juliette show a feeling of juliciousy. They also did not have Nick show feelings of being abused. His only concern was that Juliette would be mad. There are certain places the show just doesn't go. Uncomfortable situations is one.
Juliette was jealous of Adalind when she slept with Nick which is completely natural and normal.
http://grimm.wikia.com/wiki/Blond_Ambition
He asks her if she is okay, and she says she doesn't know. Nick tells her she seemed pretty okay "not that long ago." She asks him why her negligee was on the floor, and he smiles and says, "I think that's just pretty much where it fell." Juliette asks him when, and he tells her she must be joking, but she sternly says she isn't. Nick asks her if he was "that bad," and she tells him to just tell her what's going on, but he says he doesn't know what she is talking about. She says she's talking about how her negligee was scrunched up on the floor and the bed was messed up when she got home. Nick says, "Yeah, I didn't do that by myself," and Juliette asks who he did it with then. Nick is confused and tells her when he came home, she was wearing the negligee. Juliette asks how stupid he thinks she is because she was gone getting her hair done. Juliette says she can't believe he would do something like that in their home and bed. Nick tells her, "This isn't funny anymore," and she says she would make him pull over so she could get out if they weren't going to Monroe and Rosalee's wedding. Nick says he was in bed with her and that they had sex, but she loudly says, "We didn't!" Nick says it was someone who looked and sounded just like her, and Juliette repeats that it wasn't her. Nick asks who else could it have been, causing Juliette to pause for a second before she realizes that Adalind called earlier and knew she wasn't going to be home. Both get worried looks, and Juliette says she's going to be sick.
Women characters do not have to be having sex with the lead to be important to the story.