Board Thread:General Grimm Discussion/@comment-25875828-20141217190511/@comment-25875828-20150609215603

I am really starting to wonder if the responses to Juliette  are what the writers had in mind. It make sense the writer wanted to make Juliette the vilian in the story. But the writers had her do wrong but did not have it come from a position of malicious, unlike Adalind all of her actions have and are from a point of malicious. You could see Adalind was enjoying setting up Kenneth. But with Juliette every thing she did came with remorse and regreat. Why make Juliette the villian and the victim.

If Juliette was ment to be a villian why not make her follow in the path of Sean, Adalind, Eric, Viktor, or even Kenneth. Not once did any of these show any sign of remorse or regreat. There was anger for failed attempts.

With Juliette she takes out the manticore, a moment that would have been celebrated by any of the other "villians" on the show. With Juliette the result is sorow, depression and getting drunk. Adalind come over with every intention to yet again make Juliette a victim. Juliette mops up the floor with her. Adalind response, the bitch caught me off guard. Juliette sorrow, depression that she almost killed Adalind.

The one reason I want Juliette to return is hoping the writer's have a purpose for creating the conflict in the Juliette character. If they are going to make her a villian then make her a villian. Good or Bad but let her own it. The other villians do. The writers have Juliette give the speech of being the best hexenbiest she can, but then have her continue to be the victim.

Even if she does not come back give her actions have a purpose. If that purpose was to show good dong bad in Juliettes case and bad doing good in Adalinds case. The writers did a very poor job at projecting that idea. I have not heard anyone comment they believe Adalind is not good. Some say she is trying for the childs sake. But her personality has not changed. They changed Juleitte personallity. So something else must be in store. The writers did that massive Juliette buildup with absolutly no payoff.