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Top 5 Grimm Moments by Season

Season 2, #3: Juliette’s Creepy-Ass Visions in 2×14 (”Natural Born Wesen”) through 2×18 (”Volcanalis”)

I liked Juliette in season one, but season two is when I started to loooooove her, and this arc was a big part of why. Even though she was disoriented, confused, and being gaslit by everyone around her, she remained relentless in her pursuit of the truth. She literally clawed her way back to her memories of Nick, with very little help from the people who could have given her the answers she needed.

(Also, these scenes were so fucking creepy and terrifying and awesome-looking, just aesthetically, A+ Grimm production team. Four for you.)

(Source: tumblr_oae48ikimc1rx652j

Top 5 Grimm Moments by Season

Season 2, #3: Juliette’s Creepy-Ass Visions in 2×14 (”Natural Born Wesen”) through 2×18 (”Volcanalis”)

I liked Juliette in season one, but season two is when I started to loooooove her, and this arc was a big part of why. Even though she was disoriented, confused, and being gaslit by everyone around her, she remained relentless in her pursuit of the truth. She literally clawed her way back to her memories of Nick, with very little help from the people who could have given her the answers she needed.

(Also, these scenes were so fucking creepy and terrifying and awesome-looking, just aesthetically, A+ Grimm production team. Four for you.)

)

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Top 5 Grimm Moments by Season

Season 2, #4: Nick Burkhardt, Fruit Ninja in 2×15, “Mr. Sandman”

This scene was just pure fun at the end of an episode that was equal parts gross (eye parasites, euck) and heartbreaking. Nick isn’t often physically vulnerable, and less and less so as the show goes on and he gets better at being a Grimm. So seeing him so helpless, even for a short time, was disconcerting.

But at the end, we were rewarded with this little tidbit: Nick, in the woods, blindfolded, and being a literal fruit ninja. The only thing better than that? The cocky little smirk Nick aims at the trees as he surveys the fruity carnage he’s wrought.

(Source: tumblr_oae3ebeqjq1rx652j

Top 5 Grimm Moments by Season

Season 2, #4: Nick Burkhardt, Fruit Ninja in 2×15, “Mr. Sandman”

This scene was just pure fun at the end of an episode that was equal parts gross (eye parasites, euck) and heartbreaking. Nick isn’t often physically vulnerable, and less and less so as the show goes on and he gets better at being a Grimm. So seeing him so helpless, even for a short time, was disconcerting.

But at the end, we were rewarded with this little tidbit: Nick, in the woods, blindfolded, and being a literal fruit ninja. The only thing better than that? The cocky little smirk Nick aims at the trees as he surveys the fruity carnage he’s wrought.

)

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Top 5 Grimm Moments by Season

Season 2, #5: Catherine Schade vs. Kelly Burkhardt in 2×02, “The Kiss”

Catherine and Kelly actually had a lot in common. They were both fierce, talented women who found a way to survive in a harsh, cutthroat world. They were both mothers who weren’t always there for their children (although arguably for very different reasons).

I love every second of this scene. Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio and Jessica Tuck acted the hell out of it; you can feel the tension between these two and the unspoken threat in the air from the moment Kelly enters the room. And once they start fighting, it is on.

We finally get to see Kelly’s fighting skills showcased in a scene that isn’t super brief or darkly-lit, and against an opponent that might actually be her match to boot. In fact, as Kelly herself later acknowledged, if it hadn’t been for Catherine’s unlucky fall into that shard of broken mirror, the outcome of this confrontation might have been quite different.

(Source: tumblr_oae2xrndxu1rx652j

Top 5 Grimm Moments by Season

Season 2, #5: Catherine Schade vs. Kelly Burkhardt in 2×02, “The Kiss”

Catherine and Kelly actually had a lot in common. They were both fierce, talented women who found a way to survive in a harsh, cutthroat world. They were both mothers who weren’t always there for their children (although arguably for very different reasons).

I love every second of this scene. Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio and Jessica Tuck acted the hell out of it; you can feel the tension between these two and the unspoken threat in the air from the moment Kelly enters the room. And once they start fighting, it is on.

We finally get to see Kelly’s fighting skills showcased in a scene that isn’t super brief or darkly-lit, and against an opponent that might actually be her match to boot. In fact, as Kelly herself later acknowledged, if it hadn’t been for Catherine’s unlucky fall into that shard of broken mirror, the outcome of this confrontation might have been quite different.

)