(06-19-2015, 10:29 AM)Adriano Neres Rodrigues Wrote: From my point of view, the writers used this division Juliette haters versus Juliette lovers to create a series of events in the end of the 4th seasson with a clearly objective of changing completely the dynamics of grimm starting in the 5th seasson.
This is an interesting comment. It's also a troubling one, if that's what the writers actually did. Do you think this was a good way for them to go? If so, why?
(06-19-2015, 09:02 AM)irukandji Wrote: some of the posters stated that if things weren't better by the first or second episode, they were tuning out of the series forever.
(06-19-2015, 10:29 AM)Adriano Neres Rodrigues Wrote: I have a guess about this feeling. Grimm changed since Juliette transformation became a darker and unpredictable show and many grimm fans where unconfortable with this change. As the show writers put all this change over Juliette change... I mean, the way the writers worote, grimm was changed by Juliette... The division hatters and lovers of Juliette became deepes becuase the hatters put in her account the guilt for this change... and the lovers put her as a victim of this change... this is my impression...
But in the end, it is not about Juliette... it is about the tranformation the show went in... Juliette is just a symbol of this change.
For the future, I don't see the writters reverting the changes in last seasson... They are goign deeper in this now.
I think all of the characters changed in one way or another. Season 4 was a dark season. It wouldn't have been that way if Juliette was the only one who changed, in my opinion.
I've been looking over Grimm's ratings just to get an idea of how the audience perceived season 4. The highest rated episode occurred with the very first episode of season 4. No other episode, even Juliette's death, rated higher. With all of the Juliette haters out there, I would have thought the finale would not only score highest of the season, but skyrocketed the ratings over any previous season. It didn't and in fact, among the 18-49 crowd, didn't make much of an impact at all
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