In my opinion, the best episodes of Grimm center around original fairy tales and put a clever, modern-day twist on them. After all, is this not the very essence of the show? My juu vipendwa are these;
#7: Episode 5, Danse Macabre: This episode clearly and elequently elaborates on the story of the Pied Piper. It really gives a new perspective on an old tale while delivering wonderful suspense and horrific scenes.
#6: Episode 10, Organ Grinder: Not only did this episode have all the prospects of a good horror film, it also captured part of the story of Hansel and Gretle. It is very subtle, but parts of Hansen and Gracie's life reflect that of the lives of the two children in the classic German fairy tale. Their names, their abandonment, even leaving small objects to leave behind a trail. Brilliant!
#5: Episode 1, Pilot: This episode clearly lables what this onyesha is about. Sometimes, a onyesha will take a few episodes to figure out the premice. Most of them don't last very long. When I sit down to watch a show, I don't want to spend the duration trying to figure out what the hujambo the onyesha is about. The pilot episode sets the tale in motion while maintaining a reflection of Little Red Riding Hood. I think it was a brilliant idea to make Nick Marafiki with the Big Bad Wolf, so to speak. This episode was evrything a pilot should be; high suspense and captivating.
#4: Episode 4, Lonelyhearts: The ziegevolk proves a powerful and dark character. It contains the evil and aluring qualities that give him an almost Dracula-like persona. This episode reflects the dark and twisted spirit of the story of Bluebeard, a crazed man who lived in a beautiful mansion, and seduced women while keeping the bodies of his past wives hidden in the cellar. Billy Capra is a perfect modern adaptation of the classic villain.
#3: Epidode 6, Three Bad Wolves: When I was young, I read the Three Little Pigs quite often. Sometimes I wondered what it would be like if it were the other way around. What if the last pig sought revenge on the mbwa mwitu for the death of his brothers? Well, this episode delves into this idea in an elegant way. In this episode, the pig is the one who destroys houses and kills the wolves. I upendo it when people take an old tale, and put a new perspective on it, and this episode, like many episodes of Grimm, does that in a modern, humanized setting.
#2: Episode 14, Plumed Serpant: Yay, dragons!
The classic tales of knights and dragoni comes to life in the modern-day setting of Portland. One of the things that shows just how creative the writers are is how they explain how the daemonfeur breaths fire. It follows biology that could theoretically exist. Of course, the fact that they chose a hot redhead for the dragon does indeed help.
#1: Episode 8, Game Ogre: Oleg Stark is probably the most ferocious, evil, and menacing of all the antagonists of Grimm. Both his human and Siegbarste form are terrifying and intimidating. I also upendo the fact that this episode reflects the tale of Jack and the Beanstalk. It was always my inayopendelewa fairy tale when I was kid, I was glad to see that they continued it in the back story of Oleg Stark. He was Sent to prison for seeking revenge on a guy named Jack who aliiba his gold. When discussing his lack of personal history, Hank even says that "it was like he just fell out of the sky", much like the giant in Jack and the Beanstalk. This episode is scary, captivating, and reflective of a classic tale. It also shows the beggining of the strain on Nick and Juliette's relationship. Overall, this episode is the bomb.
#7: Episode 5, Danse Macabre: This episode clearly and elequently elaborates on the story of the Pied Piper. It really gives a new perspective on an old tale while delivering wonderful suspense and horrific scenes.
#6: Episode 10, Organ Grinder: Not only did this episode have all the prospects of a good horror film, it also captured part of the story of Hansel and Gretle. It is very subtle, but parts of Hansen and Gracie's life reflect that of the lives of the two children in the classic German fairy tale. Their names, their abandonment, even leaving small objects to leave behind a trail. Brilliant!
#5: Episode 1, Pilot: This episode clearly lables what this onyesha is about. Sometimes, a onyesha will take a few episodes to figure out the premice. Most of them don't last very long. When I sit down to watch a show, I don't want to spend the duration trying to figure out what the hujambo the onyesha is about. The pilot episode sets the tale in motion while maintaining a reflection of Little Red Riding Hood. I think it was a brilliant idea to make Nick Marafiki with the Big Bad Wolf, so to speak. This episode was evrything a pilot should be; high suspense and captivating.
#4: Episode 4, Lonelyhearts: The ziegevolk proves a powerful and dark character. It contains the evil and aluring qualities that give him an almost Dracula-like persona. This episode reflects the dark and twisted spirit of the story of Bluebeard, a crazed man who lived in a beautiful mansion, and seduced women while keeping the bodies of his past wives hidden in the cellar. Billy Capra is a perfect modern adaptation of the classic villain.
#3: Epidode 6, Three Bad Wolves: When I was young, I read the Three Little Pigs quite often. Sometimes I wondered what it would be like if it were the other way around. What if the last pig sought revenge on the mbwa mwitu for the death of his brothers? Well, this episode delves into this idea in an elegant way. In this episode, the pig is the one who destroys houses and kills the wolves. I upendo it when people take an old tale, and put a new perspective on it, and this episode, like many episodes of Grimm, does that in a modern, humanized setting.
#2: Episode 14, Plumed Serpant: Yay, dragons!
The classic tales of knights and dragoni comes to life in the modern-day setting of Portland. One of the things that shows just how creative the writers are is how they explain how the daemonfeur breaths fire. It follows biology that could theoretically exist. Of course, the fact that they chose a hot redhead for the dragon does indeed help.
#1: Episode 8, Game Ogre: Oleg Stark is probably the most ferocious, evil, and menacing of all the antagonists of Grimm. Both his human and Siegbarste form are terrifying and intimidating. I also upendo the fact that this episode reflects the tale of Jack and the Beanstalk. It was always my inayopendelewa fairy tale when I was kid, I was glad to see that they continued it in the back story of Oleg Stark. He was Sent to prison for seeking revenge on a guy named Jack who aliiba his gold. When discussing his lack of personal history, Hank even says that "it was like he just fell out of the sky", much like the giant in Jack and the Beanstalk. This episode is scary, captivating, and reflective of a classic tale. It also shows the beggining of the strain on Nick and Juliette's relationship. Overall, this episode is the bomb.