(01-20-2016, 02:27 PM)Adriano Neres Rodrigues Wrote:(01-19-2016, 07:15 PM)irukandji Wrote: I'm not sure who said it, but there was a comment that Juliette's condition was a "unique, like, once-in-a-lifetime, doesn't ever seem to have happened before kind of event conundrum".
I was thinking about that and about the full process to create hexan-Juliette...
1. You need a hexanbiest stupid enough to drink a drop of grimm blood. So she loses her power.
2. You that this same hexanbiest to be brave enough to trough a disgusting process that involves killing another hexanbiest to stole the hexanbiest spirit of the dead hexanbiest. It is possible that the spirit doesn't accept the new host.
3. Now, with the blood of this grimm, this hexanbiest must be able to transform herself in another woman (that is not a hexanbiest) and have sex with the SAME grimm that took her powers.
4. The grimm must find another hexanbiest that for some reasons wants to help the woman (the one that is not hexanbiest) to use a spell that will transform her in the hexanbiest that took the grimm powers and them have sex with the grimm so he recover his powers and the woman became a hexanbiest.
This is because we don’t know if there are other pre-requirements for those spells to work. The writers created a process really very hard to be copied…
(laughs). I just can't say it enough. Adalind really is a dweeb.
Here is something I was thinking of today.
I had to go back and look at the script to make sure I got this right. It said that in order for the spell to work, everything had to be done in reverse. Well, in thinking about this intertwining thing, how do they *ahem* intertwine in reverse?
Then there's the statement about the wild and crazy sex they had. Now in considering this, Elizabeth and Juliette would have to go by Nick's memory of the event. I'll just say it right off. Nick is a doofus. Would he really be able to remember crossing every 't' and dotting every 'i' in exact detail? And what about Juliette as Adalind? According to Adalind, she did not enjoy it. If Juliette did, that changes things. Would that make her a hexenbiest?
This issue has actually bugged me for some time, I just never gave it enough thought to put it in words. What if the side effects Elizabeth was referring to were the result of not reversing the spell exactly? After all, they are relying on Nick's memory.
Of course the big argument to all of this is, if they didn't reverse it exactly as it originally took place, why would Nick get his Grimm powers back? You got me on that one. The way I look at this reversal spell, there's no way it could work.
The best way to frustrate a cyberbully is to ignore him.