Board Thread:General Grimm Discussion/@comment-27720018-20160906015503/@comment-26383427-20180929130946

There's no such thing as a love that disappear. But love can be bested or overwritten. That's the story between Nick, Juliette, and Adalind. When Juliette lost her faith on Nick's love for her which lead to so many tragedies, his love became open to be bested and overwritten in which what Adalind did. I'm not gonna say much about Nick and Adalind pairing except that I had prefer it over the Nick and Juliette. There's an ease in Nick and Adalind's relationship that Nick and Juliette never had. I mean, it didn't help that Juliette's role for 3 and a half seasons was just to be "The Girl" of the show and it also didn't help that they are already in a relationship before the Pilot. Relationships like that especially in a show as dark as this has a huge chance of going downhill since it was not established and strengthened by the course of the show but was instead being desperately prevented from falling apart. Nick and Adalind became more acceptable since even though they are of the worst start, their characters developed throughout the show and the audience relate to them. How they change, how they set aside their differences for their son, and how the progress of the show establish their relationship as a couple. They are developed first as characters, as people, before they are developed as a couple in which what it should be if you're gonna make a relationship in a show like Grimm. Strengthen first your characters through the whirpools of the show and then make them a couple. Not being a couple first and then give them obstacles because most of the time that does not work both in a TV fiction and in real life.