Board Thread:Episode Discussion/@comment-3125844-20150424201205/@comment-26368233-20150513152007

This is the season finale, in all the interviews with the cast members each said it would be intense and there would be a lot of bodies. That being said I am guessing a few questions will be answered but many will be left and more will be raised--probably enough to keep everyone guessing until next season.

As for Kelly not behaving out of character--she had no reason not to trust Juliette, and when she bought Adeline and Diana to Portland earlier she just walked into the house--and didn't even call to let them know she was coming. She evidently felt that it was a safe house.

I am curious to see how the relationship between Renard and the rest of the gang after last week--does he become closer or more detached and will the crimes he committed be used against him. It is interesting to see the character develop--it appeared in season 1 he was trying to develop his own fiefdom in Portland, now he seems to be more concerned with the global context.

After going back and re-watching most of season 1 the schism between Nick and Juliette was apparent even then. Even before she had a clue about Nick being a Grimm it appeared she had doubts about being a cop's wife--all the missed time together and only being in part of his life--then the grimm part was hard for her to accept. How do you build a home when you don' know if your husband will have his head cut off or someone will destroy your house. She is acting like someone who just won the lottery--all the power she saw others have, no idea how to use it, and also mad at the world for forcing that power on her and "betrayal" by Nick with Adeline. I hope the flashbacks of her remembering the good time are a foreshowing of her redemption, but that could take a season for that to happen if it does.

I would really doubt that all of the Royals are killed-that would remove a major conflict plot for the show. Kings command--usually in a very safe location.

I really enjoy how the writers introduce a plot by giving a little information in one episode that may not come to fruition--or even be mentioned--until several episodes later. Many of the story arcs everyone loves have taken 1/2 or all of a season to develop--part of the reason we keep tuning in.