04-20-2017, 04:47 PM
(This post was last modified: 04-20-2017, 05:00 PM by MarylikesGrimm.)
(04-20-2017, 04:36 PM)MarylikesGrimm Wrote: Royals, HW, BC and some wesen had similar ideas to Nick and Monroe. Monroe admits to causal killing before he was a vegetarian and introduced Nick to many wesen ideas of how to do things which sometimes included violence. I do not agree that in Grimm all the wesen are teaching their children to live within the bounds of society.
I want to review "Lycanthropia" as an example. Monroe assisted Nick in finding the "Lycanthropia" but neither Nick or Monroe tried just asking the suspect (a male Blutbad) if he was one. IMO once he realized Monroe was a Blutbad and wanted to help him he would have told them about his mother in time to have saved her.
"Lycanthropia Synopsis: Following a brutal attack in the woods, Nick and Hank stumble upon a terrifying Wesen disease that may be the inspiration for the modern-day werewolf myth
http://grimm.wikia.com/wiki/Lycanthropia
From Lycanthropia transcript
He and Rosalee return to Nick and Hank, and Monroe tells them that he has a hunch that they could be dealing with a Lycanthrope. Hank asks if that's Wesen and Monroe tells him yes and no.
At the spice shop, Monroe shows everyone a Lycanthrope from one of his books. He says that it is a Wesen disease specific to Blutbaden.
...
Nick tells him, "So we're thinking, if Doyle is a Lycanthrope, we bring him in and lock him up. See what happens."
(04-20-2017, 04:43 PM)irukandji Wrote: But how does that make Nick and Adalind's actions any different? Their actions are just as evil, more so, because they brought their own innocent children into the problem.
Monroe, Nick and Sean often think alike. I see all of them as wrong sometimes and to quick to go to violence. Both Rosalee and Juliette/Eve are involved in scooby decisions. Out of the main characters Adalind has the least influence on the scooby gang. How is baby Kelly involved? Sean hardly seemed in a rush to pick Diana up from her "play date" with LT Grossant (? spelling).
Women characters do not have to be having sex with the lead to be important to the story.