01-21-2017, 04:55 AM
(This post was last modified: 01-21-2017, 04:59 AM by Grimmbiest11.)
(01-21-2017, 04:47 AM)Purity Wrote:(01-21-2017, 04:36 AM)Grimmbiest11 Wrote:(01-21-2017, 04:20 AM)degrimm Wrote:(01-21-2017, 03:34 AM)rpmaluki Wrote:S1 kiss was a romantic kiss to nick, I didn't say it was to adalind. To adalind it wasn't for her and she clarified it but to nick it was.(01-21-2017, 01:52 AM)degrimm Wrote: Yeah right now it's funny how season 1 hexenbiest removal kiss is all of a sudden a first and romantic kiss.S1 kiss wasn't a romantic kiss, Adalind clarified that. It was a tactical move on Nick's part to steal her powers, there was zero romantic feelings about it before or after.
I said it over and over again here that, was nick really in love with juliette or was just scared of been alone and you all said yes but now, I think we all know the answer and they 've given it to us.
Either that, OR it could just be another of their ways to want us to believe the nadalind relationship when truly it's still the most fictional unbelievable relationship they 're forcing us to believe.
BY THE WAY JUST A QUICK NOTE- Diana looks pissed but only further episodes will tell.
I once said that there are a whole lot of different ways he could have his blood into her without having to kiss her;what if she hadn't bitten his lips, cos there was no way he would ve known that she was gonna bite his lips. Yeah it might 've been a tactical move but there was a reason the writers chose those events, it meant something personal to him with her.
Yeah I remember you kept saying that last season and we were all like naah. So I guess Nick was killing two birds with one stone with that godawful kiss.
More a reason why lots saw the Adalind/Nick love arc early. It had always been the writers plan to bring these 2 together but in a disfunction type of twist being it all supernatural and all. The chemistry was there, the bread crumbs were put (rpmaluki quote), there were sparks between the 2 as they used thier hatred for each other to mask their real feelings. It was the viewers to pick up the pieces and add them up and patience.
Hmm I wouldn't say the writers had planned it in advance since Claire was just a guest star at the point. I think when she got pregnant and they wrote her pregnancy in the story that's when they decided to make it a thing. Now this is them trying to tie in some kind of build up.
(01-21-2017, 04:53 AM)degrimm Wrote:(01-21-2017, 03:50 AM)rpmaluki Wrote:Yeah I completely agree points in the first paragraph but(01-21-2017, 02:45 AM)degrimm Wrote: Let's them be honest with themselves, there isn't really any conflict. If there should be, they had done a bad job from the start of season 1 and now in season 6 instead of showing by actions, they are still trying to make us believe by putting words out there for us to hear it and believe/accept it. @ d beginning of season 6, they dropped it there and now they revert to words accepted love/relationship.these writers have never been good at writing relationships, particularly Nick's which is strange considering they have done such a stellar job with Monroe and Rosalee. I think the short season forced them into a corner they'd written themselves with S5. Realistically speaking, Nick and Adalind should want nothing more to do with one another but because they were "forced" to shack up together during the previous season, we are expected to accept that being confined together in a small space with one common goal of raising their son opened up additional possibilities of pursuing an actual relationship.
From Adalind's perspective, I can see why she quickly grew attached to Nick, given her history. Nick is a mystery. I know he values her as a mother to his child but what more than that? There's something there but writers still think they are being clever in keeping it close to Nick's vest. He supposedly loves Adalind but why does he? I think the writers don't want him to say the words just yet for some weird reason but why, since they've made it clear that he does? With 13 episodes, they've opted for the telling and not showing option which is reminiscent to how I perceived Juliette's feelings for Nick for the first four seasons. The only difference is I can actually see Nick's attraction to Adalind as opposed to Juliette's attraction, or lack thereof, to Nick.
Edit: I'm not saying Juliette never did anything to show her love for Nick, I'm saying I never saw anything in her actions that showed me why she loved him when all I ever saw of their relationship made her utterly miserable much more than it made her happy. And Nick wasn't helping things either being selfish.
in the second, Nick's attraction to adalind mysteriously appeared in s06e01. The last I checked in s05 ending, he was willing to take his child and leave adalind high and dry in renard's home. So what changed. either The stick made him fall in love with adalind or point of steering death in the face made him realize it
Imo the attraction part was established in season 5, he had no qualms about hitting the sack with Adalind or kissing her. It's the love part which probably is up for debate, since the two are different.