01-24-2019, 04:47 PM
(01-24-2019, 04:09 PM)irukandji Wrote:(01-24-2019, 01:59 PM)N_grimm Wrote: I have no clue what you are trying to say. I was describing the storyline. But this stuck out: When I cited Kouf and Greenwalt, you answered “Not true. If you noticed….”. If YOU noticed, that was a quote from the writers explaining the final, not my statement. Unless you think the writers do not understand the logic behind their own story and that somehow is my fault….
You mean this quote?
Quote:As the writers explained:
"…. the point was to take Nick to the lowest possible point he could be, where he thought he could not possibly dig any deeper inside. And he was willing to give up the world so that he could have his loved ones, as anyone would do in that position. But then kind of mystically, and kind of not mystically, his ancestors appeared to him, and he found a deeper strength than he even knew he had. And that was really the theme, his deepening purpose as a post-modern Grimm."
Isn't funny how you are so adamant about what the writers state, then you state this:
We don’t’ know if it was mom Kelly and aunt Marie who made Nick change his mind, or if they only appeared in his mind. The fact that Trubel couldn’t see them indicates that Nick only imaged them, and he was the one figuring out what to do (with the help from Trubel).
It seems you don't think the writers understand the logic behind their own story either................
Nice try. But I see no conflict between the two …. They appeared to him, but was it only in his mind? “kind of mystically, and kind of not mystically” does not clarify what happened. It was real to Nick, but was it real?