03-22-2014, 04:11 AM
Does anyone even care about the royal/adalind story line? I know that I'm tired of it...
03-22-2014, 04:11 AM
Does anyone even care about the royal/adalind story line? I know that I'm tired of it...
03-22-2014, 07:39 AM
(03-22-2014, 04:11 AM)jomaha Wrote: Does anyone even care about the royal/adalind story line? I know that I'm tired of it... Maybe it's because the development of this story line is so very slow. We watch only little pieces every week!! They really need to speed things up a little!!!
Ιωάννα
03-22-2014, 10:35 AM
Since Season 2 I have a name for this problem it called :Juliette Syndrom
Juliette Syndrom: Try to make a story as long as possible. Important, while you tell this storyline chance you character COMPLETLY! Best you change him/her into a stereotypical role cliché Really, Adalind and Renard are my favorite characters on Grimm, however both change more and more in this babystory. Renard became a softie and Adalind a smart lovely mother. Perhaps it´s demonbabies fault...
Ding dong the witch is back
03-23-2014, 12:21 PM
While I am interested in this story, I would like it to move along a bit.
"I am not that big and I am done with the bad."
03-23-2014, 05:28 PM
The only interesting storyline since they started this mess of a season - until they had the smart idea to team Adalind up with this coward Meisner. Seriously, the biggest mistake NBC did was to hire new writers! >(
(03-22-2014, 10:35 AM)FräuleinWunderlich Wrote: Really, Adalind and Renard are my favorite characters on Grimm, however both change more and more in this babystory. Renard became a softie and Adalind a smart lovely mother. Perhaps it´s demonbabies fault... That little bouncing baby Beelezebub is going to be everybody's worst nightmare Seriously, not everyone sees a fatherly love for his child emerging in Renard, but I see it, too. It's also appears to be present in Adalind. But Renard is still the biggest badass on the show, imo. Not so very long ago he killed a man by breaking his neck. In fact, that scene made me think of how he's the one character who has killed more 'humans' by far, than Nick or any of the others - mostly notably his brother and his cousin! My favorites are also Renard and Adalind (second favorite on the list changes off and on). It's funny how the characters change, but the show's continuing on means more knowledge of each through experience and that means we make room for new information about them which does change them - so far, I'm generally pleased with the results. It's taken me longest to accept Monroe and Rosalee's getting married, but I'm okay with it now. But, take heart, FrauleinWunderlich, methinks there's a big, bad, mean, all growed up, reinvented hexenbiest at the door! Can't wait
"The only thing that will redeem mankind is cooperation." Bertrand Russell - printed on a beer mat in "Shaun of The Dead".
05-20-2014, 12:34 PM
I am interested in the royal story, but I think it needs a bit more focus on it. I'd love to learn more about Renard and his family and learn why the Royals were so interested in Nick, and more about the Royals/Grimms.
05-20-2014, 12:55 PM
(This post was last modified: 05-20-2014, 01:05 PM by wfmyers1207.)
(05-20-2014, 12:34 PM)Sable677 Wrote: I am interested in the royal story, but I think it needs a bit more focus on it. I'd love to learn more about Renard and his family and learn why the Royals were so interested in Nick, and more about the Royals/Grimms. I don't think the royals are wesen, but the obviously have a great deal of power over them. Renard's mother was a hexenbeist and he is treated like a freak and pariah by the royal families. As for the royal's interest in Nick, the reasons may be 4 fold: 1. Nick has been in possession of the 3 coins and I think the royals really want those coins! 2. He has wesen and resistance connections, that makes him more than a little a little bit of a threat. "Inside" connections, intel and all that. 3. He has ties to Renard, a bastard royal. The Grimms once served the royals and then went their own way. Renard and Nick as allies may be seen as a serious threat to the royal families, giving Renard some of the power they used to have. 4. On a more personal basis, Victor does seem to be in control on sufferance. If Renard starts looking like he has some real assests, then the king just might decide to get rid of Victor and put Renard in charge of things. After all, Renard is his son, bastard or not, and Victor is only his nephew. For all these reasons the royals are very hot to see Nick gone.
05-20-2014, 01:03 PM
(03-23-2014, 05:28 PM)Hyndara Wrote: The only interesting storyline since they started this mess of a season - until they had the smart idea to team Adalind up with this coward Meisner. Seriously, the biggest mistake NBC did was to hire new writers! >( By your own admission you don't watch any more, so your opinion is based on second- and third-hand information. |
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