(05-26-2019, 07:38 PM)irukandji Wrote:(05-26-2019, 03:24 PM)N_grimm Wrote: And just for the record, this is from google: What is another word for main character?
main character; protagonist; leading actor; principal person; principal character;hero; principal figure; main actor.
Well, that being the case, my snippet from wiki is just as correct, wouldn't you say?
The page you are referring to when insisting on using that term for every regular, also says: “Nicholas Burkhardt (played by David Giuntoli) is the show's protagonist and titular grimm”.
(06-09-2019, 07:39 AM)irukandji Wrote: Fantasy or no, the way I see it, in order for Juliette to turn from good to bad, the storyline must support her desire to do so. It doesn't. What it did do was dumb her and all of the characters down into one plot element. They must behave the way they did so that Adalind could be brought into the story and immediately established as a regular character.
You keep using alternative/unconventional terminology when it comes to these characters. Adalind became a regular character from episode 12 season 2.
Neither Juliette nor Renard's turn to the dark side was explained very well. I guess that's because the lack of reason made the viewers hate the bad guys even more.
(06-07-2019, 06:15 AM)irukandji Wrote: I think the betrayal was a means of ridding the series of Kelly, bringing Diana temporarily into the picture while propelling a somewhat useless Adalind back into the story.
We all know why this happened. Juliette turned evil so she could be killed, paving the way for Nick and Adalind. Killing mom Kelly was partly a result of Mastrantonio lacking time for filming, but she was only a gust star, so it would been possible to just let her stay away and come up with an alternative explanation for Diana’s appearance at a later stage. The main reason for killing Kelly was to add to Juliette’s evilness, and make Adalind look like an angel in comparison (she looks like an angel in the first place, when she doesn’t woge, then she looks like a rotten corpse, but I’m taking about the inside). Personally, I’ve never made any bombastic conclusions when it comes to whether Juliette was in full control of her actions at the end of season 4.