01-08-2016, 11:28 AM
One thing I've noticed is that the venues we've been accustomed to have changed. Most noticably, the new war room is the spice shop now that the trailer is gone, and Nick's new digs have taken on a new and gloomy atmosphere compared to the beautiful home he shared with Juliette. Kinda symbolic of his new reality. I feel the task of Season 5 is to see Nick emerge from the battering of so many losses as a stronger and smarter hero-warrior, a clear-minded and savvy strategist, and a determined leader at the forefront of the fight. There's no room for any competition to his role as such, but there is plenty of need for courageous brothers and sisters to fill the ranks of soldiers willing to follow him into battle, imo. Eve can be wedged in there in the way that Hercules was a member of the crew captained by Jason in the quest for the golden fleece. He was the strongest, but Jason was his Captain. But just as in the myth, imo, Eve must part company with the group eventually, I believe.
Renard now has a new address, too, although that happened early in Season 4. So much of the original setting has been altered in the show; about proportionate to the amount of change in the profiles of the characters.
Guess an argument for your observation could made. Where I am withholding my opinion is the area of the Royals and the Resistance involvement in the story, since I feel the Royals are directly involved in the BC uprising. I also feel that Meisner has kept his affiliation with the Resistance and that they also know of these recent events.
Viktor did such a despicable and dangerous thing in arranging for the King's assassination that the Royals can't be out of the picture for long, imo. Which places Renard square in the middle of the palace intrigue I think is going to continue to take place.
Do t.v. shows actually reinvent themselves successfully, I don't know of any, but maybe so. I get the feeling that the show is simply evolving as inevitably as any other program that endures through a sustained period of time. It's a real achievement hold on to viewer loyalty for many seasons and I feel Grimm will do this. At this point, I don't see Grimm as a new show because the original has resounded with its audience, but the producers are certainly taking a chance with its future in featuring so prominently a controversial 'artist formerly known as Juliette.'
Renard now has a new address, too, although that happened early in Season 4. So much of the original setting has been altered in the show; about proportionate to the amount of change in the profiles of the characters.
Guess an argument for your observation could made. Where I am withholding my opinion is the area of the Royals and the Resistance involvement in the story, since I feel the Royals are directly involved in the BC uprising. I also feel that Meisner has kept his affiliation with the Resistance and that they also know of these recent events.
Viktor did such a despicable and dangerous thing in arranging for the King's assassination that the Royals can't be out of the picture for long, imo. Which places Renard square in the middle of the palace intrigue I think is going to continue to take place.
Do t.v. shows actually reinvent themselves successfully, I don't know of any, but maybe so. I get the feeling that the show is simply evolving as inevitably as any other program that endures through a sustained period of time. It's a real achievement hold on to viewer loyalty for many seasons and I feel Grimm will do this. At this point, I don't see Grimm as a new show because the original has resounded with its audience, but the producers are certainly taking a chance with its future in featuring so prominently a controversial 'artist formerly known as Juliette.'
"The only thing that will redeem mankind is cooperation." Bertrand Russell - printed on a beer mat in "Shaun of The Dead".