(01-19-2019, 12:47 AM)FaceInTheCrowd Wrote: It's possible Juliette may have felt that way if she'd had time to think about it much, but they find out there's a way for Nick to get his Grimm back, have barely a day to think about it and the time between Nick admitting that he wants his Grimm back and Juliette telling him he needs it back while she's standing next to a burning wolfsangle on Monroe's front yard is what, two minutes?
The series is loaded with moments like this, where the characters find out something, have very little time to give it much thought and then make spur of the moment decisions that end up coming back on them later.
Adalind's second pregnancy is one of those storylines. Kelly stating she was "on her way" after Juliette pushed the send button is yet another. You believe Juliette was addicted to the wesen world. That, for the most part, also happened very rapidly. What can anyone of us say? The series isn't for story development.
Who believed that once Nick lost his grimm, he was never going to ever get it back? I can tell you the answer is not one person. All Nick did was verbally affirm what we all knew. If we knew it, Juliette knew it too. All the series needed was some kind of a catastrophe to make it happen. Hence the weak mixed marriage prejudice. That was also a story line that rose up with little or preconceived thought.
(01-19-2019, 06:50 AM)brandon Wrote: but if they did not do anything, it would also happen something bad warning from Elizabeth. I think the spell was already done that way and maybe nothing could have changed, that juliette had become a "Hexenbiest".
I've speculated that Nick and Juliette knew of those "side effects" that Elizabeth warned them about. Yet, look at their reactions when Juliette became a hexenbiest. Both of them were completely shocked which seems to point out that Elizabeth didn't tell them squat about the spell they were going to undertake. Would you believe Elizabeth if the most she can provide are vague warnings?
Now remember, this was the hexenbiest who stated they needed someone like her to deal with someone like Adalind. Was that a good or a bad warning?
The best way to frustrate a cyberbully is to ignore him.