Brandon, I agree that each person must take responsibility for the actions they choose. There's not much to admire about her activities after becoming a Hexenbiest. But she did start out as good person. And she drove the biggest share of the unfolding saga of Grimm because of what she became. And it's proper that she is a hated character. For me, because I have emphasized with her all along, it is the best that can be hoped for that she give her life for the cause. That's it, it doesn't begin to balance the scales, but it has a kind of justice to it and also, a grace given that at her worst, she failed to confer on her victims. I just can't separate myself from my attachment to Juliette.
Plus there's an irony in the fact that Juliette lost her chance at being a mother and having a normal life, and that Adalind's journey seems to have begun at the point at which J's ends; starting out as an evil doer and ending up with being a mother who is beloved by Nick (so far). No reflection on Adalind, I've always loved the character. Just a demonstration that life isn't fair, more like a crap shoot. Of course, the fly in the soup is Diana.
Intriguing idea that the Crusade Grimms may have combined their power somehow into the stick.
Plus there's an irony in the fact that Juliette lost her chance at being a mother and having a normal life, and that Adalind's journey seems to have begun at the point at which J's ends; starting out as an evil doer and ending up with being a mother who is beloved by Nick (so far). No reflection on Adalind, I've always loved the character. Just a demonstration that life isn't fair, more like a crap shoot. Of course, the fly in the soup is Diana.
Intriguing idea that the Crusade Grimms may have combined their power somehow into the stick.
"The only thing that will redeem mankind is cooperation." Bertrand Russell - printed on a beer mat in "Shaun of The Dead".