As most of you all know, since I became part of the forum, I have been a Nadalind fan from most of my posts, Ofcourse It is still unclear what other heavy losses Nick will go through.
It makes me smile as after watching the show series and the direction it was heading, our speculations came out quite the directions we saw the creative team go.
Here are certain cast & Grimm Bosses interviews on the topic and below the full blown article (Legit Source link added too) below of what to expect in S6.
The Nadalind Result....
"One big shift is that the love triangle between Nick, Adalind and Eve/Juliette isn't much of a love triangle anymore. Kouf described Nick's relationship with Eve (who was changed into a more Juliette-type being in the Season 5 finale) as more of a "deep friendship," and said his "love has gone where his family is, which is with his son Kelly and Adalind."
That's something Bitsie Tulloch, who plays Juliette, is happy with, because it allows her character to find a more satisfying resolution in the end. "I really hope that the fans are going to love the finale because the one thing I said is I wanted her to make amends for the pain that she had caused people, and there is definitely resolution on that front. She’s just a very strong female character, which is what I love about her."
Added Greenwalt, "I think there’s going to be a line in one of the shows about ‘happiness is one thing, but purpose is the better thing.’ It’s really about her — Juliette/Eve — discovering her purpose in life."
As for Nick and Adalind's relationship, Coffee teased that "Nadalind shippers will not be sad." "It all comes full circle in the end in a really cool way," she said.
FULL ARTICLE.
When Grimm returns with its sixth and final season on Friday, the fantasy series is finally going to be ready to provide answers for some of its biggest questions. The 13-episode season is going to get to the truth of the keys, the magic healing stick and the changes happening to characters like Eve and Diana, while also introducing a new, even more sinister evil force.
"You’re going to get a lot of answers," star Reggie Lee, who plays Sergeant Wu, told IGN during a visit to Grimm's Portland set. "I’m sure there are going to be some things where the fans are going to be like, ‘What happened with that?’ They really tie a lot of things up. It’s been a lot of fun. … A lot of things have been tied up, but not in a bow. Everyone should be nervous, because a lot of s--t happens."
Perhaps the best thing Grimm has going for it as it heads into the final season is that everyone involved knew this would be the end. Showrunners Jim Kouf and David Greenwalt have been open in the past about how they don't plan their storylines far in advance when writing them, but at least in this case they knew they were directing things toward a conclusion.
The cast members spoke at length on set about how grateful they are to get a final season to end Grimm, even if the ending of the show that turned them into a family is "bittersweet." "It’s very lovely to get a final anything where you know it’s the final anything. It doesn’t just get pulled out from under you. That was nice. We get to find our footing for a little while," said lead David Giuntoli, who plays Nick. "It’s been a humane run, it’s been a humane way to make a show, and it’s been a very humane ending."
Even beyond the biggest questions on the show -- seriously, what is the magic stick?! -- the final season will tie up each of the central characters' arc and bring the story full circle in some ways. With the enemy group Black Claw defeated at the end of Season 5, many of the cast members found themselves wondering "what's next?" when they returned for Season 6, and the writers decided to bring in an even bigger villainous force to drive the drama in the final season.
"We have an even greater sort of obstacle this year; as the season progresses, something even more evil this way comes. Eventually it forces everyone to work together because nothing gets everyone on the same side like some mortal danger," said Sasha Roiz, who plays Renard. Added Bree Turner, who plays Rosalee, "It is really survival, and also there’s some elements of understanding beyond what we even know as Wesen about who Wesen are, where did they come from? The writers really take us beyond the comfort zone of what the show’s even thought about in terms of the Wesen community."
There's also the concern about Renard and Adalind's powerful and potentially dangerous daughter Diana, who could prove to be either a major threat or a significant ally despite her young age. In the early episodes of Season 6, the show includes a callback to Nick's mother Kelly telling him and Juliette in Season 3 that Diana has an extraordinary destiny, and the final stretch of episodes will play into whether she goes to the light or the darkness.
"Diana goes back and forth. A large part of the season is devoted to making sure she uses her powers for good, and that has a large part to do with is she Renard’s or Adalind’s child; who has her ear? It all culminates in the finale. She is the most pivotal part of the finale," teased Claire Coffee, who plays Adalind. "I think in the end everyone is able to make a definitive stand in terms of where they stand."
Though the final 13 episodes will play out in real time, fans will also get a sense of Monroe and Rosalee's new child (or children?) and what their mixed-Wesen offspring will look like. "It’s a frantic time for all of us, and that is reflected in the way that the babies are handles, in the way that the babies are dealt with, in the ways that the pregnancy’s manifested," said Silas Weir Mitchell, who plays Monroe. Teased Turner of their baby adventures, "We had a whacky, fun day together and were just like, ‘Welp, never did that before.’ I think the fans will be satisfied."
One big shift is that the love triangle between Nick, Adalind and Eve/Juliette isn't much of a love triangle anymore. Kouf described Nick's relationship with Eve (who was changed into a more Juliette-type being in the Season 5 finale) as more of a "deep friendship," and said his "love has gone where his family is, which is with his son Kelly and Adalind."
That's something Bitsie Tulloch, who plays Juliette, is happy with, because it allows her character to find a more satisfying resolution in the end. "I really hope that the fans are going to love the finale because the one thing I said is I wanted her to make amends for the pain that she had caused people, and there is definitely resolution on that front. She’s just a very strong female character, which is what I love about her."
Added Greenwalt, "I think there’s going to be a line in one of the shows about ‘happiness is one thing, but purpose is the better thing.’ It’s really about her — Juliette/Eve — discovering her purpose in life."
As for Nick and Adalind's relationship, Coffee teased that "Nadalind shippers will not be sad." "It all comes full circle in the end in a really cool way," she said.
But that's not to say the series will end with everyone living happily ever after. Greenwalt quipped that Nick will "suffer greatly" in the finale, which he describes as "the biggest episode" the series has ever done.
"If you think Nick has suffered before, he has never suffered like this. He has never suffered loss of this scale. It goes nuclear," said Greenwalt. Added Kouf, "We burned all the bridges. We took this city to the ground. This is a full-on bombing campaign."
The showrunners didn't know how they were going to end the season when they started breaking story for the premiere, but by the time they got around to writing the finale, they came up with something they feel is true to the series as a whole.
"Ultimately, I think we wound up with an ending that is surprising but makes sense, where we had some other ideas that would have been surprising and made less sense. I think it’s the right end," said Kouf. Added Greenwalt, "Everything comes full circle, I would say, in the end. And it’s very satisfying, but still incredibly heartbreaking."
It's an ending the cast is also ready for, even if there has been what Roiz calls a "strain of melancholy" stretched through filming the final batch of episodes. But the cast members also think the final season will be a great way to pay homage to the series as a whole.
"I think it’s bittersweet, but I think fans will be ready. I think they’re ready for it to move on, and I think what it will give them an opportunity to do is go back to the beginning and then really see how much the show has grown, but also our contribution to television," said Russell Hornsby, who plays Hank. "When you’re dealing with things oftentimes in the present you lose an appreciation for something, but then when you go back, you go, 'Damn, this was good.'"
Source
It makes me smile as after watching the show series and the direction it was heading, our speculations came out quite the directions we saw the creative team go.
Here are certain cast & Grimm Bosses interviews on the topic and below the full blown article (Legit Source link added too) below of what to expect in S6.
The Nadalind Result....
"One big shift is that the love triangle between Nick, Adalind and Eve/Juliette isn't much of a love triangle anymore. Kouf described Nick's relationship with Eve (who was changed into a more Juliette-type being in the Season 5 finale) as more of a "deep friendship," and said his "love has gone where his family is, which is with his son Kelly and Adalind."
That's something Bitsie Tulloch, who plays Juliette, is happy with, because it allows her character to find a more satisfying resolution in the end. "I really hope that the fans are going to love the finale because the one thing I said is I wanted her to make amends for the pain that she had caused people, and there is definitely resolution on that front. She’s just a very strong female character, which is what I love about her."
Added Greenwalt, "I think there’s going to be a line in one of the shows about ‘happiness is one thing, but purpose is the better thing.’ It’s really about her — Juliette/Eve — discovering her purpose in life."
As for Nick and Adalind's relationship, Coffee teased that "Nadalind shippers will not be sad." "It all comes full circle in the end in a really cool way," she said.
FULL ARTICLE.
When Grimm returns with its sixth and final season on Friday, the fantasy series is finally going to be ready to provide answers for some of its biggest questions. The 13-episode season is going to get to the truth of the keys, the magic healing stick and the changes happening to characters like Eve and Diana, while also introducing a new, even more sinister evil force.
"You’re going to get a lot of answers," star Reggie Lee, who plays Sergeant Wu, told IGN during a visit to Grimm's Portland set. "I’m sure there are going to be some things where the fans are going to be like, ‘What happened with that?’ They really tie a lot of things up. It’s been a lot of fun. … A lot of things have been tied up, but not in a bow. Everyone should be nervous, because a lot of s--t happens."
Perhaps the best thing Grimm has going for it as it heads into the final season is that everyone involved knew this would be the end. Showrunners Jim Kouf and David Greenwalt have been open in the past about how they don't plan their storylines far in advance when writing them, but at least in this case they knew they were directing things toward a conclusion.
The cast members spoke at length on set about how grateful they are to get a final season to end Grimm, even if the ending of the show that turned them into a family is "bittersweet." "It’s very lovely to get a final anything where you know it’s the final anything. It doesn’t just get pulled out from under you. That was nice. We get to find our footing for a little while," said lead David Giuntoli, who plays Nick. "It’s been a humane run, it’s been a humane way to make a show, and it’s been a very humane ending."
Even beyond the biggest questions on the show -- seriously, what is the magic stick?! -- the final season will tie up each of the central characters' arc and bring the story full circle in some ways. With the enemy group Black Claw defeated at the end of Season 5, many of the cast members found themselves wondering "what's next?" when they returned for Season 6, and the writers decided to bring in an even bigger villainous force to drive the drama in the final season.
"We have an even greater sort of obstacle this year; as the season progresses, something even more evil this way comes. Eventually it forces everyone to work together because nothing gets everyone on the same side like some mortal danger," said Sasha Roiz, who plays Renard. Added Bree Turner, who plays Rosalee, "It is really survival, and also there’s some elements of understanding beyond what we even know as Wesen about who Wesen are, where did they come from? The writers really take us beyond the comfort zone of what the show’s even thought about in terms of the Wesen community."
There's also the concern about Renard and Adalind's powerful and potentially dangerous daughter Diana, who could prove to be either a major threat or a significant ally despite her young age. In the early episodes of Season 6, the show includes a callback to Nick's mother Kelly telling him and Juliette in Season 3 that Diana has an extraordinary destiny, and the final stretch of episodes will play into whether she goes to the light or the darkness.
"Diana goes back and forth. A large part of the season is devoted to making sure she uses her powers for good, and that has a large part to do with is she Renard’s or Adalind’s child; who has her ear? It all culminates in the finale. She is the most pivotal part of the finale," teased Claire Coffee, who plays Adalind. "I think in the end everyone is able to make a definitive stand in terms of where they stand."
Though the final 13 episodes will play out in real time, fans will also get a sense of Monroe and Rosalee's new child (or children?) and what their mixed-Wesen offspring will look like. "It’s a frantic time for all of us, and that is reflected in the way that the babies are handles, in the way that the babies are dealt with, in the ways that the pregnancy’s manifested," said Silas Weir Mitchell, who plays Monroe. Teased Turner of their baby adventures, "We had a whacky, fun day together and were just like, ‘Welp, never did that before.’ I think the fans will be satisfied."
One big shift is that the love triangle between Nick, Adalind and Eve/Juliette isn't much of a love triangle anymore. Kouf described Nick's relationship with Eve (who was changed into a more Juliette-type being in the Season 5 finale) as more of a "deep friendship," and said his "love has gone where his family is, which is with his son Kelly and Adalind."
That's something Bitsie Tulloch, who plays Juliette, is happy with, because it allows her character to find a more satisfying resolution in the end. "I really hope that the fans are going to love the finale because the one thing I said is I wanted her to make amends for the pain that she had caused people, and there is definitely resolution on that front. She’s just a very strong female character, which is what I love about her."
Added Greenwalt, "I think there’s going to be a line in one of the shows about ‘happiness is one thing, but purpose is the better thing.’ It’s really about her — Juliette/Eve — discovering her purpose in life."
As for Nick and Adalind's relationship, Coffee teased that "Nadalind shippers will not be sad." "It all comes full circle in the end in a really cool way," she said.
But that's not to say the series will end with everyone living happily ever after. Greenwalt quipped that Nick will "suffer greatly" in the finale, which he describes as "the biggest episode" the series has ever done.
"If you think Nick has suffered before, he has never suffered like this. He has never suffered loss of this scale. It goes nuclear," said Greenwalt. Added Kouf, "We burned all the bridges. We took this city to the ground. This is a full-on bombing campaign."
The showrunners didn't know how they were going to end the season when they started breaking story for the premiere, but by the time they got around to writing the finale, they came up with something they feel is true to the series as a whole.
"Ultimately, I think we wound up with an ending that is surprising but makes sense, where we had some other ideas that would have been surprising and made less sense. I think it’s the right end," said Kouf. Added Greenwalt, "Everything comes full circle, I would say, in the end. And it’s very satisfying, but still incredibly heartbreaking."
It's an ending the cast is also ready for, even if there has been what Roiz calls a "strain of melancholy" stretched through filming the final batch of episodes. But the cast members also think the final season will be a great way to pay homage to the series as a whole.
"I think it’s bittersweet, but I think fans will be ready. I think they’re ready for it to move on, and I think what it will give them an opportunity to do is go back to the beginning and then really see how much the show has grown, but also our contribution to television," said Russell Hornsby, who plays Hank. "When you’re dealing with things oftentimes in the present you lose an appreciation for something, but then when you go back, you go, 'Damn, this was good.'"
Source