jujubiest:

Can we talk about this? Because at first I reacted to this with the same level of eyeroll-incredulity as Trubel. “Don’t make mistakes?” Yeah okay I’ll get right on that.

But then I thought: this is coming from Eve, who is not a perfectionist or Trubel’s boss or anything else that would suggest she’s giving an order. In fact, Trubel and Eve are probably the closest thing either one has had to a friend or equal within Hadrian’s Wall.

So…what if this is Eve’s stilted, robotic attempt at trying to give Trubel friendly advice? After all, who knows better than Eve what happens when you allow yourself to feel emotions and make mistakes? The last time Juliette Silverton felt angry, she made a lot of mistakes…and she lost everything.

And then, too, there’s what she says after this, about how she thinks it’s the reaction to one’s choices that decide whether they were good or bad, not the person who makes the choices (and implicitly, not the intentions, reasons, or even results of those choices).

The really heartbreaking thing is that Eve isn’t just saying to Trubel, “don’t allow your emotions to cloud your judgment or distract you into messing up.” She’s not saying don’t make a mistake. She’s saying don’t make mistakes, period.

Because when she’s sifting through the many mistakes Juliette made, it doesn’t escape her notice that Juliette’s choices were judged and found wanting long before the mistakes were big, and deadly, and irreparable. Long before her intentions were anything but good and loving.

So she tells Trubel: Don’t make mistakes. Don’t feel things and make choices because at the end of the day, you’re not the one who controls how people will react to those choices. And all it takes is one choice they don’t like to bring everything crashing down.

Ah but see, Hexenbeitst side effects. Being a Hexenbeist isn’t a side effect no matter how it happened, plus if it was the being a hexenbeist why is it side effects instead of side effect. Maybe it just means the whole homicidal, cruel, evil changes it made to her. Cause I mean Adalind’s showing Hexenbeists aren’t automatically like that. Unless it is being a hexenbeist, in which case I’m wrong. Hope not though, with Wu going all cave man she’d be the only one with no real protection.

Juliette’s transformation has been referred to, both in canon and by the cast and writers–and in fandom too, for that matter–as a “side effect” or “side effects” since it happened. David is the master of being coy in interviews, so again it’s possible that she’s still a hexenbiest. But I don’t personally find it very likely based on that choice of words alone, just because there’s so much precedent already for simply referring to Juliette’s whole hexenbiest transformation, with rather comically gross understatement, as “side effects.”

Also, the writers have kind of written themselves into a corner by constantly insisting via both Adalind and Eve this season that being a hexenbiest or a zauberbiest does make a person homicidal, cruel, and evil (and power-hungry), whether they want to be that way or not, unless there’s some kind of outside intervention (i.e. HW brainwashing or a suppressant).

Granted, the writers have yet to explain how that jives with Adalind’s current behavior or all of her previous bad behavior while she didn’t have her powers, but that doesn’t unwrite what they’ve written so much as make me go:

Hey there. So I saw the facebook live chat David and Sasha did a few weeks ago, and in it David said before they knew they would get renewed for season 6, the writers had written 2 different scenarios for the ending. My guess is that moment when Renard kills Bonaparte. Like, Renard could’ve killed Bonaparte out of his own free will to redeem himself with Team Grimm. What’s your take on it? My brother said it totally seemed forced that way, but I want to know what fellow Grimmsters think.

I hope if they wrote a different ending in case of cancellation, it changed more than just Sean choosing to help Nick. Because while that would have at least slightly given his character the option of being redeemed in my eyes, it wouldn’t have even remotely provided closure for the series’s multiple unfinished plot threads or any of the characters, including Sean.

So…if they wrote two different endings, I hope it was more like two different last-thirty-minutes, not two different last-three-seconds.