05-31-2017, 03:54 AM
(This post was last modified: 05-31-2017, 07:01 AM by MarylikesGrimm.)
(04-18-2017, 07:18 AM)MarylikesGrimm Wrote:(04-16-2017, 10:52 PM)MarylikesGrimm Wrote:(04-16-2017, 06:49 AM)MarylikesGrimm Wrote:(04-16-2017, 06:36 AM)syscrash Wrote: MaryLikesgrimm. G&K never said that or implied that Diana refereed to Nick as dad. You are just making things up to try and prove your point. I dare you to sight where they said that. You are using an opinion of posters and reviewers. contrary to current popular belief. there is no such things as alternate facts. You like a lot of posters have a bad habit of making things up.
http://mashable.com/2017/03/31/grimm-ser...jdNjXFsaqc
Mashable: At the end of the final episode, we get the sense that Nick and Adalind are still together. Is that fair?
JK and DG: Yes, that's fair.
Mashable: Throughout this last season it kind of felt like Eve was switching back into Juliette mode, and that at some point she was going to proclaim her love to Nick, and try to get him back. Was that ever a possibility?
JK: Not in our minds. In other people's minds, it was definitely a possibility. We shot where she felt the strength of being a hexenbiest, all that power. She went from bad to good. But she didn't want to give up that purpose.
DG: It wasn't like she was converting; she was coalescing in this last season. In the third to last episode [she and Nick] had a big scene in that other place/dimension, and she spells out that she wouldn't go back if she could. They both did a lot of stuff, good, bad and indifferent. But she was no longer interested in simple happiness. She discovered a purpose in life.
http://tvline.com/2017/03/31/grimm-serie...interview/
TVLINE | But as we see in the flashforward, we see that Diana and Kelly are carrying on the Grimm work, and they mention that Adalind and Nick — as well as the triplets — are involved. What can you tell me about how everyone else ended up?
KOUF | They’re all just one big, happy family, fighting evil together.
GREENWALT |They’re all fighting the good fight, in one way or the other. Trubel’s definitely out there. She’s “have sword, will travel” for sure.
http://tvline.com/2017/03/31/grimm-serie...pisode-13/
TVLINE | Marie and Kelly task Nick with guarding the completed staff with his life from here on in.
(from the transcript of "The End") And “take care of my grandson,” Kelly adds. “I like his name.”
http://deadline.com/2017/03/grimm-series...202057358/
DEADLINE: What made you want to jump forward in time?
KOUF: It seemed like a very fairytale ending to the show. We really wanted to close the book on it.
GREENWALT: We literally closed the book and we liked the idea of suddenly you’re with Nick at Monroe’s house … and you get this great look on Nick’s face and then you hear this other narrator person who basically says: “What happened in the world that day was either a myth, a legend, or a fairytale and I know it’s true because my father told me.”
KOUF: The whole emotional ending turned out to be about family and the power of family. And [the ending] continues that idea that here are the two siblings working together with their family.
DEADLINE: Fans had been wondering what Nick and Juliette’s future would look like. Do you think they would’ve ended up together again?
GREENWALT: There are a lot of people who have a lot of opinions about that on both sides of that question. But I think that there was such a beautiful speech in the third to last episode in which Eve/Juliette says, “I wouldn’t go back if I could … We’ve all grown, we’re all different now than we were.” So I think that’s more realistic.
KOUF: I mean they’re friends, there’s something there. You don’t have to be married and sleeping together to have a good, happy relationship.
http://www.ign.com/articles/2017/04/01/g...-questions
IGN: I can only imagine how difficult it must have been to end a series like this. What are you most proud of in the way you brought everything to a close?
KOUF: I think it was ultimately about family and the power of family, and the support of family makes a huge difference in people's lives. When Kelly showed up and Aunt Marie and Trubel and Nick and the family all came together to fight as a team, [it showed] they can fight evil.
GREENWALT: You can always dig a little deeper than you think you can dig, and then the whole thing of coming full circle too. I like that notion.
IGN: I imagine finding a satisfying ending for all these characters was tough, but Eve must have been particularly tricky after all these years. Why end her on her own journey, and why the decision to give her back her Hexenbiest powers instead of ending her as a human?
KOUF: We thought that she should stand alone without Nick. She's a powerful woman and she doesn't need a guy, and she found a purpose without having a particular relationship. She was in for the fight. She realized that's what she was motivated to do.
GREENWALT: She found real purpose with all the terrible knowledge that came to her and even all the terrible things that she did. She had one of the more interesting character arcs in that she kind of coalesced into two new people.
Mary: If you do not agree with the Grimm wiki, please contact WesenZoo.
http://grimm.wikia.com/wiki/Nick_Burkhardt
Nick Burkhardt
Actor: David Giuntoli
Gender: Male
Type: Grimm
Relationships: Adalind Schade, wife
Kelly Schade-Burkhardt, son
Diana Schade-Renard, stepdaughter
@syscrash
Mary: I moved all seven sources under one post. I hope this helps.
Mary: I am looking forward to the real marriage of Elizabeth Tulloch and David Giuntoli because I think they are both good people.
https://editorial.rottentomatoes.com/art...es-finale/
RT: The onscreen relationship between you and Elizabeth Tulloch — first as Juliette, then as Eve — was so compelling. How was it working with her?
Giuntoli: Well, here’s a tidbit: We are getting married!
RT: Congratulations!
Giuntoli: Thank you so much! We aren’t too loud about it, but we are aren’t hiding it — [we] just don’t broadcast it. I’m a lucky guy. I got the good end of that deal. Funny thing: Bitsie and I played boyfriend and girlfriend in a movie prior to Grimm [the 2012 indie Caroline and Jackie]. And her ex-boyfriend directed it. In that movie, I propose to her, and she says no. Three years later — and a couple of relationships later — we are on Grimm together. I proposed to her on Grimm, and she says no again. So two strikes in fantasy world and rocked it in real life.
irukandji, I tried to make who is talking clearer. I hope this helps. In general, the interviewer asks a question and G&K answer it.
Grimm Series Finale: EPs Answer the Burning Questions Today’s News
By Megan Vick | Mar 31, 2017 9:00 PM EDT
Megan Vick: Previous Grimms have had to lead their lives alone and these very dark, solitary paths. Nick avoids that fate and gets to keep everyone. What is it about him that allowed him to do that?
Kouf: He took everyone as who they were, not what their reputation was. Not every Wessen was bad. If you deal with people one on one to try and decipher who they are, not everyone is bad.
Greenwalt: Nick is a more post-modern Grimm. Aunt Marie told him in the pilot, "Juliette is great. You have to dump her immediately. There's no room for love in this kind of life you're going to be leading." His mother had to make those sacrifices. He kind of held on and didn't make those sacrifices. Sometimes he paid dearly for them, like Juliette going evil...He didn't just cut off your head instantly if you were a Wessen. He was a new kind of Grimm. He's a New Testament Grimm.
(05-30-2017, 10:49 PM)Loona Wrote: "Mom and Dad are waiting..." It was not mentioned who the siblings speak about if Nick or Sean. Why do you all think it must be Nick? It could be Sean as well. I had not the impression that Diana as well as Kelly have directly addressed a person.
Exclusive: Grimm creators David Greenwalt and Jim Kouf tell all
GRIMM Kathie Huddleston Sun, Apr 02, 2017 5:00pm
Kathie Huddleston: And then 20 years later we see the kids. I love that part. That was fun.
Jim Kouf: That's just us blatantly putting up a sequel.
Kathie Huddleston: Well, it would be an awesome sequel. Diana and Kelly and the triplets, with Mom and Dad too.
JK: It's really just an application for another job.
Exclusive: Grimm creators David Greenwalt and Jim Kouf tell all
GRIMM Kathie Huddleston Sun, Apr 02, 2017 5:00pm
Mary: Please review the interviews from G&K above.
Women characters do not have to be having sex with the lead to be important to the story.