Ladies and Gentlemen? We have a compromised Grimm.
Well … “compromised” may not be quite the correct term.
We have a confused Grimm. A conflicted one. One who is befuddled by recent events and has been rendered somewhat uncertain by his circumstances. Effectively, circumstances have caused our Grimm Nick to “turn” in a direction he could never have conceived. And what that means is things may get even more dangerous for him if he continues to be seduced down that path. He has the mysterious Verrat and Resistance to thank for that.
The Verrat are a pretty nasty bunch, apparently. Monroe, Rosalee and Resistance fighter Ian Harmon (Neil Hopkins) detailed to Nick who the group is in so many words, noting the Verrat are not only ruthless but have their fingers in the pies of high-level governments and high-profile industries world-wide. They have agendas. They’re going to execute those agendas. And we will certainly find out what those agendas are. What we know about them right now is that they’re pretty merciless, employ some rather top-notch “employees” to carry out their wants and desires and they’re pretty pissed off Renard is letting Portland languish as a “haven” for their enemy the Resistance.
And that last piece of information was pretty telling given the conclusion of the episode: Nick let Ian go, regardless of the fact he was witness to Edgar Waltz’ (Sebastian Roché) murder at the fugitive’s hand. Telling in that Nick knowingly and willing aided Ian in his escape and masterminded the police department’s discovery of Waltz death, a bald-faced lie I didn’t think we’d ever see come out of Nick.
This puts a whole new wrinkle on things, doesn’t it?
Notes:
Quote:
“They make the Spanish Inquisition look like the SPCA.” — Monroe on the Verrat
I loved last night’s show. Wow..I kept thinking..how much do Police Captains make in that town? What an apartment!! What a view!!! The suspense of wondering when Renard is going to do something to Nick is killing me!
Grimm just keeps getting better! I’m sure it’s blown the hatch, I just need to find the exact moment they did it so I can write a post about it. It was somewhere around when they became more serial and less procedural and really began to build up the mytharc. Well done!
I’d say the hatch was blown with “Three Coins in a Fuchsbau,” though it was picking up before that.
You could be right … that may be the episode! Or, I was thinking it may be when
Giles and the magic shopRosalee and the herb shop began playing a larger role.