CARPENTER, Stephen, David Gereenwalt & Jim Kouf, Creators, “Grimm – Season Two”, 2012-13, Universal
Studios.
I’ve
recently realised the reason why I have such strong initial antipathy to
watching this show: the main character on the front cover of the DVD packaging
looks an awful lot like the kid who plays Merlin in the eponymous TV show, and
the gung-ho brandishing of bipennis weaponry adds to the overall medieval
effect. Whenever I contemplate taking a dip in this quagmire my brain goes
“hold on – we don’t watch kids’ shows”. And then I opt for something else
instead. Like “Arrow”. Or “Flash”. (Don’t judge...)
(Actually,
when you get into this show, the main character of Nick Burkhardt looks nothing
like the Merlin kiddie, but rather the hunky-dory tough-guy cop that the script
calls for. I guess all the Photoshop action on the packaging is just working
against him...)
In
this season of “Grimm”, David
Giuntoli is called upon to do a lot more than what he accomplished in Season
One. In the first season (where everyone was saddled with bad haircuts) Dave
acted like a robot with emotions that were clicked on and off like a switch was
being worked somewhere; in this run around the block, he manages to segue more
smoothly through the drama, matching the action with much more believable
responses. It struck me that there is a weird tension in this character: on the
one hand, he’s supposed to be a no-nonsense cop; on the other, he’s supposed to
be every woman’s dream partner. It’s a hard act to pull off and I get the
impression that Giuntoli likes the one and does his best to endure the other.
His
partner Hank Griffin (Russell Hornsby) is back and duly whips his shirt off
whenever required. Nothing has changed here. I started to get irritated
whenever he and Nick kick in doors and stride into houses ready to pop caps:
they both go into a half crouch with their guns held out in front of them and
tip their heads sideways. Is this normal? I mean, surely if you hold your head
up straight you’ll see better and be able to comprehend what you’re seeing to a
greater degree. Try walking through your own house like this; you’ll see what I
mean.
I
had hoped that the CGI puppet heads of the Wesen characters, that show up
whenever they “woge”, would have taken a quantum leap forward in expertise and
look somewhat passable – nope. Nothing to see here. Or rather, all the wrong kinds of things to see. Try to
ignore it.
Once
more the ‘gun’ characters form a core network of entertainment quite apart from
the police action: Monroe and Rosalee (Silas Weir Mitchell and Bree Turner),
Sergeant Wu (Reggie Lee), Bud the Eisbiber (Danny Bruno), and Juliette (Bitsie
Tulloch) - Nick’s amnesiac one-time vet girlfriend - are all back and having a
ball with things. My only criticism is that Juliette is saddled with her
memory-loss and misdirected romantic feelings for “Prince (not so) Charming”
Captain Renard for most of the season, and her usual dry wit and sly humour gets
canned for most of the show in favour of a hesitant school-marm persona that
just isn’t a good look on her. Thankfully, by the season’s end, she’s back,
firing on all cylinders, and – as a bonus – completely au fait with the Wesen world and Nick’s place within it.
I
was pleasantly surprised by the developments that took place with Captain
Renard (Sasha Roiz) in this season. Like Hank, he seems to get his shirt off
quite a lot, but I can forgive him since he does actual stuff as well, unlike Mr. Griffin. Having been set up as the
local villain last season, the expanding intrigue of the Royal Houses in Europe
sees him make some unexpected and very interesting decisions which align him
quite strongly with Nick and his buddies, rather than trying to oppose them. Of
all the main characters, Renard is definitely the brooder and, having ditched
his hat of black, the grey replacement is a far better fit for him.
(On
the down side, every time we cross to Vienna to see Renard’s brother Eric’s
latest villainy, the scene is subtitled with the disclaimer “Vienna, Austria”.
I’m guessing this is so we don’t think we’re looking at “Vienna, Rhode Island”,
or “Vienna, Wyoming”, but seriously – is there anywhere outside mainland USA
where this kind of mistake would reasonably take place? “Vienna” will do,
people; believe it or not, we know where that is and we know what you mean.)
Once
more I’m left wondering what kind of abilities a Grimm has, apart from being
able to see a Wesen for what they are when they freak out. In one episode, a
Tsetse fly Wesen creature comes to town invading grief counselling groups in
search of the tears which act upon him like opiates. Unfortunately, while
licking the eyeballs of his victims, he passes on hideous barbed worms which
permanently blind them – I kid you not. In the course of the episode, Nick
becomes temporarily blind and discovers that his hearing is preternaturally
sharp, finally taking out the bad guy without needing to see him at all. Sadly,
having made this point about Nick’s ears, the fact is dumped and forgotten
about entirely for the remaining episodes. There’s a lack of focus about Nick
that’s becoming painfully obvious as time rolls on...
Good
things about this show are that the police procedural bits – unlike “Sleepy Hollow” – form a basis for the
action, and justice – real, non-supernatural, non-head-lopping,
non-spell-casting justice – needs to be seen to be done by the end of each
instalment. This attention to detail is a plus for the show, even though I
suspect there’s a lot of grumbling in the background about just ‘magicking the
boring stuff away’. The fact that the magical stuff sits firmly in a mundane
world is what helps ground this particular drama.
There
is a point that I’d like to raise about this show which I found deeply
disturbing. In the new credits for Season Two, it’s strongly implied that Adolf
Hitler was a cranky Wesen who pushed all the wrong buttons. A cut scene of a
Blutbad morphing into A.H. happens during the credits for the first three or so
episodes, before being ditched for the rest of the run. I assume that some
other people – like me – found the absolving of Europe’s genocidal dark times
by saying “oh, it wasn’t really a person
behind it all; it was just a monster”
deeply disturbing and had them yank it. That doesn’t stop them strongly
implying that Jeffrey Dahmer was some kind of undercover beastie also at
another point. Listen: people do bad stuff; people who live in what we take for
granted as enlightened, reasonable and accountable societies like that in which
we believe we live. You can’t rewrite, debunk or trivialise history – even on a
fantasy platform – just to make people feel better about themselves. That way
lies Snoop Dogg and his ongoing belief that Game
of Thrones is real medieval history...
To
lighten up a bit by way of a conclusion, again, there’s too much bad German and
creaky rationalising, backed up by dodgy-looking books of lore (which, although
penned by Grimms across the centuries, are all illustrated by the same person),
but the 100% effort thrown at the vehicle by the majority of the people
involved helps enormously in bringing the concept home. This is a show which is
having a lot of fun with itself and which is starting to spread – like some
kind of mystical rhizome – into some very intriguing areas. You definitely need
to shut your higher brain functions off and just watch the pretty people (while
ignoring the bad CGI), but it’s turning into a very amusing ride...
Two-and-a-half
tentacled horrors.
No comments:
Post a Comment