Grimm 6.03: O Captain My Captain
Thomas Ian Griffith
David Giuntoli
I wasn’t necessarily expecting the writers to
figure out a way to hit a reset button, so to speak, but that’s essentially
what they managed to do. But at least
they made the characters work for it, and there’s enough lingering uncertainty
that the careful detente that has been established could collapse at any
moment. That keeps the intrigue
regarding how the rest of the season (and series) will play out intact.
Along the way there’s even some time for
body-swap humor, even if it occasionally threatened to undermine the
seriousness of Team Grimm’s status in Portland.
Perhaps the weakest link in the plot was Adalind’s labored attempts to
keep Renard from walking out the door and interfering in Nick’s plan. Could she have been any less convincing? It allowed for some entertaining moments when
Renard had to watch his carefully-laid plans fall apart, but it also made him
look too easily fooled. Especially
considering that he has outwitted just about everyone at one time or another.
On the other hand, it’s very clever from a
logistical point of view. Dave Giuntoli
directed this episode, and having Nick look like Renard most of the time frees
him up to work behind the camera.
Perhaps all the juggling is the reason for the occasional scene that
doesn’t quite work, but on the whole, it works very well. There’s even a visual cue for the audience to
tell which Renard is Nick, and it becomes a plot point before all is said and
done!
It occurred to me at one point that Team Grimm
didn’t really experiment with the Stick of Truth, so perhaps it’s a good thing
that the writers used the other walking “deus ex machina” to overcome Nick’s
Grimm-based resistance to shedding Renard’s likeness. It doesn’t resolve the problem that Diana is
way overpowered, and in fact underscores it, but it was one of the more obvious
ways for the issue to be handled. It
serves as a major reminder that even if Renard is more or less contained, Diana
is a massive wild card.
It’s a reminder, along with Juliette/Eve’s insinuations about the past couple years, that no matter how much they might temporarily reset things to allow for a few more procedural-driven episodes, there is no such thing as completely going back. The clock is ticking and sooner or later the final endgame will have to unfold.
- The writers manage to hit the reset button without making the last season or so feel wasted
- The double Renard plot device works very well
- A few scenes are played just a little too broadly for humor or just don’t click