02-22-2019, 11:38 PM
(This post was last modified: 02-22-2019, 11:52 PM by dicappatore.)
(02-22-2019, 11:31 PM)irukandji Wrote:(02-22-2019, 11:18 PM)FaceInTheCrowd Wrote: The invisible woge, as explained by Monroe, is often done deliberately by wesen as a form of introduction, but also happens reflexively when wesen get emotional. I imagine that in the absence of a Grimm, wesen under arrest in a police precinct might be stressed enough to be woging all over the place without anyone but other wesen noticing.
I would agree if that's what we saw. But the incarcerated man was sitting at a desk being booked and looking just like any other man who is being booked. In other words, totally human. It was only when he saw Nick that he woged. It seemed to me, like with Adalind, the series was showing the woge as a hostile reaction to Nick, indicating that he finally got his grimmness.
Obviously, this contributor doesn't get it. Sometimes the camera shows what the audience sees as spectators and sometimes the camera sees what the character sees. Such as Nick starting to be aware something is afoot as he is becoming a Grimm and has no clue yet of his coming transformation.
In this case, the camera switched to sees what Nick saw as a Grimm instead of what the rest of the non-Wesen world saw, which would have been just another guy.
You know you are OLD, when you see the Slide Ruler you used in college selling in an ANTIQUE SHOP!!