06-12-2016, 04:17 PM
(06-12-2016, 03:19 PM)izzy Wrote: I have been pretty hard on the writers of Grimm at times, but in their defense they were dealt a crap hand this season. It looks like they really thought this was the final season and were trying to wrap things up only to be given a reprieve. So I don't think they had the time to develop the characters positions/sentiments/inner relationships as much as they may have wanted.I’m going to disagree because of the numerous episodes that contributed nothing to character evolvement and/or the Wesen uprising arc.
But maybe G & K insisted on specific stories/episodes because “they’re cool ideas” and the writers did the best they could with the time they had.
(06-12-2016, 09:28 AM)Kathryn Wooten Wrote: Sean is not a bad man......He knew that Bonaparte dream was now a nightmare to him starting with Miesner (when he showed no mercy)and the horror he learned that Bonaparte was going to exterminate the human race or the horror he saw in Adalind being choked or when he was threaten that his COMPASSION..is a danger to BC plan...so even Bonaparte saw that there is good in him he hated. I think the writers so desperately try to make Sean dark ..they .did not read his own history that Sean would never had drunk the kool aid...and with Bonaparte's mind control who knows if Sean really was towing the line or was made to believe it was the right thing...look how Diana can manipulate her father......I would not put it pass Bonaparte not filing Sean head with how great the revolution would beAs lousy as the season was covering the Wesen uprising arc, Renard’s role was pretty well covered. Every step of the way, Renard picked up on clues linking the mayoral race and other events to BC, processed the information and made the decision to move forward. By the time Renard was too deeply rooted in BC to get out, he’d already chosen BC over other viable options. But those other options didn’t make him mayor and didn’t give him power. It was only once he was too deeply embedded to get out that Renard realized he didn’t actually have any power, but was merely a front man for BC.
BC didn’t trick Renard into believing they were a worthy cause, they tricked him into believing he’d wield power within the organization.