Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Rolek Porter (played by Sam Anderson). First seen in the season 3 episode "My Fair Wesen", Rolek Porter is a dying Grimm, desperate to connect with Nick Burkhardt, to deliver a chest full of Grimm books and weapons, and most importantly, one of the Seven Keys. Josh Porter (played by Lucas Near-Verbrugghe) is the non-Grimm son of Rolek Porter.
The A.V. Club's Kevin McFarland gave the episode a "B+" grade and wrote, "I've said it so many times that I sound like a broken record available in one of Portland's many used record shops, but Grimm has so many plates spinning right now in terms of potential plot avenues to wander down, from Adalind's child to the Fuchsbau coins (hopefully ...
The third season of the NBC American supernatural drama series Grimm was announced on April 26, 2013. [1] It consisted of 22 episodes. [1] The series, created by David Greenwalt, Jim Kouf and Stephen Carpenter, follows a descendant of the Grimm line, Nick Burkhardt, as he deals with being a cop, and trying not to expose his secret as a Grimm.
Grimm is an American fantasy police procedural drama horror television series created by Stephen Carpenter, Jim Kouf and David Greenwalt, and produced by Universal Television for NBC. The series premiered on October 28, 2011, and ended on March 30, 2017, after six seasons consisting of 123 episodes .
The main plot follows a descendant of the Grimm line, Nick Burkhardt, as he deals with being a cop, and trying not to expose his secret as a Grimm. Cast and characters
The fourth season of the NBC American supernatural drama series Grimm was announced on March 19, 2014. [1] It consisted of 22 episodes. The series, created by David Greenwalt, Jim Kouf and Stephen Carpenter, follows a descendant of the Grimm line, Nick Burkhardt, as he deals with being a cop, and trying not to expose his secret as a Grimm.
Here's what we do know for sure: until they were collected by early catalogers Giambattista Basile, Charles Perrault, and The Brothers Grimm, fairy tales were shared orally. And, a look at the sources cited in these first collections reveals that the tellers of these tales — at least during the Grimms' heydey — were women.
By contrast, Grimm is an almost leisurely paced show, one that lays the groundwork for its reveals so what happens feels like the natural order of things. If anything, its problem is that it lays too much groundwork for too many things, to the point that events get subsumed by the weight of plot or mythology and the payoff gets muted."