(05-06-2018, 07:05 PM)Robyn Wrote: I don’t see Nick wanting to rectify Juliette becoming a Hexenbiest as narrow minded. Juliette’s words and actions before and after telling Nick expressed her devastation over becoming a Hexenbiest.
Actually, his wanting to rectify Juliette was very narrow minded. Henrietta told him to stay out of Juliette's way. I believe this to mean that eventually Juliette would come to terms with her hexenbiest and would eventually be someone Nick could deal with.
(05-06-2018, 07:05 PM)Robyn Wrote: Had Nick/Juliette been a healthy relationship, Juliette would have trusted talking to Nick first, not go to Renard and Henrietta before disclosing her situation. Juliette keeping her Hexenbiest secret in S4 is the same as Nick keeping his Grimm secret in S1. Neither had valid reasons, only self-serving excuses.
Juliette's reason for not telling Nick she was a hexenbiest was not a self-serving excuse. She said she was afraid Nick would kill her.
(05-06-2018, 07:05 PM)Robyn Wrote: The suppressant was Adalind’s idea, an offering she’d trade for protection. Nick accepted Adalind’s offer after Juliette’s aggressive and uncharacteristic behavior. Had Juliette not moved out, it’s reasonable to assume Nick’s need to ‘fix’ her would have been more about trying to get rid of the Hexenbiest that Juliette clearly didn’t want in the beginning.
It makes me wonder why Nick would choose to listen to a hexenbiest who's done irreparable harm to him simply because she offers a suppression potion while ignoring another who warns him of Juliette's aggressive and uncharacteristic behavior and tells him to do the sensible thing; stay out of her way.
(05-06-2018, 07:05 PM)Robyn Wrote: The show made a point to have Juliette decide Nick should be a Grimm again, then kept Nick firmly planted in relationship mode while quickly spiraling Juliette into destructive mode. When Juliette ignored Nick’s many calls about finding a way to help her, Nick didn’t tell Hank he was done with Juliette, he said Juliette was done with him.
Which goes back to an obsessive Nick wanting to demote Juliette back to human. It seems to me all of the examples you cited, Robyn, show Nick to be a man who doesn't want to deal with Juliette directly. If Nick was so intent on keeping the relationship alive after Juliette had become a hexenbiest, it would make much more sense to go to the source instead of Hank, Monroe, Rosalee, Henrietta and Adalind.
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