(05-05-2019, 07:28 AM)irukandji Wrote: Nice dialogue, but it doesn't come near to clarifying my earlier post.
Adalind "needs to be with Nick" and Nick "thought he was gonna go crazy without Adalind".
Aalind asked Nick to sleep with her because she was frightened. She was a guest in his house at the time. Adalind is still sleeping with Nick, only there's one added benefit. She's screwing him. That one act does not make Adalind "more" in Nick's eyes. Why would it? Grimm has never been one to make sleeping together a special moment.
All Adalind and Nick are is bed buddies with benefits. I can't see how that particular act raises Adalind from guest to important family member when the series itself has never made sleeping together something special. Even the main character himself doesn't consider sex anything special.
To quote the script from the Grimm-episodes doesn’t clarify when discussing a series based on these scripts? It’s better than pulling things out of thin air.
I guess it was these wicked creators again, hiding away the storyline. Having the hero’s «girlfriend» manipulate him for two seasons, without ever telling him or the audience. I guess Nick considered Adalind just a houseguest. When he told her he loved her, it was a lie. When he shouted to the ghost of his mother and aunt that he wanted Adalind back, it was a lie. When the powerful Hexenbiest Eve told Nick she could “feel” that Nick loved Adalind, she lied. When Adalind told Nick she loved him, she lied. And when Diana told Renard that Adalind loved Nick, Adalind lied to her daughter as well. Right?
(05-04-2019, 09:10 AM)irukandji Wrote: She wouldn't have gotten choked at all if she hadn't gone in the first place.
So, how would Bonaparte have killed her then?
s05e19: Bonaparte: “If she chooses the Grimm, we will have to kill her”.
(05-04-2019, 09:10 AM)irukandji Wrote: Adalind going to Renard served some purposes:
First, it's a complete slap in the face to Nick. Adalind didn't tell him she was going.
Second, she makes it plain by appearing on television with the mayor to be Renard that she has chosen the winner. So just where is this so called hatred of Renard? I'm sure Nick's death might be troubling to her, but Adalind has made it plain where she wants to be, under the roof of another man's mansion.
Third, Nick had no sayso on whether he wanted to keep Kelly. It's one thing for Adalind to make the decision to go to Diana. She is free to do so. It's another for her to take Kelly and essentially place him in the hands of the enemy.
So she didn't want to tell Bonaparte where Nick lived. What difference would that make to Nick? He sees her on television standing next to another guy who's just won the mayoral election.
Adalind was forced to go, because of Diana. Just because she wanted her daughter back, doesn't mean she didn't love Nick or wanted to take Kelly away from him. In fact, it was shown that Adalind was crying and telling Kelly she couldn't take him away from his dad. She was also begging what she thought was Renard (on the phone) for more time. She then left Nick a note, stating that she loved him. Something she repeated to Wu on the phone in the next episode. She then got Diana to help Nick, she then helped bring Renard down and then took both her children and moved back in with Nick. Was that a slap in the face to Nick or Renard?
(05-04-2019, 09:10 AM)irukandji Wrote: They had time. They had 20 years later, according to the end of the series. Yet there was no indication Nick and Adalind were even together, married, or had other children.
Maybe because Adalind couldn't let go of the hexenbiest?
No indication? Well, given that you have gone from blue to purple in the face twisting and denying the Nick-Adalind relationship, this is no surprise. Let me give you the clues anyway: Adalind and Nick say they love each other. Nick killes the devil to get Adalind back. He then removes her ring and declares Adalind, Diana and Kelly are his family. We then get the 20 years later scene, where we learn that Nick and Adalind are waiting for their children, while Kelly is signing the book with Kelly Burkhardt (not Kelly- Shade-Burkhardt). That was enough for the Grimm wiki to put Adalind as Nick’s wife.