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Home What's Hot? GRIMM Scoop: Everything Gets ‘Renardy’ in “Oh Captain, My Captain”

GRIMM Scoop: Everything Gets ‘Renardy’ in “Oh Captain, My Captain”

BY Jennifer Griffin

Published 8 years ago

GRIMM Scoop: Everything Gets 'Renardy' in

"Malkovich, Malkovich, Malkovich!"

As any film buff will tell you, that's a line from Charlie Kaufman's 1999 surreal comedy Being John Malkovich, starring John Cusack, Cameron Diaz, and of course, John Malkovich.

In the movie, an unemployed puppeteer finds a secret door behind a filing cabinet that leads inside the mind of actor John Malkovich. The passageway enables him to effectively assume the life of the Hollywood star against the other's will.

What does that all have to do with this week's episode of Grimm? Thematically, quite a bit, and in the same surreal and altogether fun vein. Swap Malkovich for Captain Sean Renard and you've got an hour of Sasha Roiz playing David Giuntoli playing Nick Burkhardt playing Sean Renard, and clearly having a blast while doing so.

But it's not all comedy. "Oh Captain, My Captain" pushes the Nick/Renard feud into a new place, dives into Adalind's prisoner-in-a-mansion dilemma (we'd be tempted to stay for the walk-in wardrobes alone), and even manages to throw a cliffhanger ending our way in the final seconds.

If you're looking for further scoop of the more specific variety, then read on. We've got a collection of tidbits and teasers (think of it like a tapas bar offering) to share below.

As always, we avoid outright spoilers along with plot and character reveals that would probably spoil your appetite for the live experience. However, our usual advice applies here. Proceed with a little caution anyway.

Eve and Nick Talk Adalind

“You love Adalind,” states Eve (Bitsie Tulloch) without emotion, and suddenly she and Nick are having a brief but to-the-point relationship talk in Friday’s upcoming episode.

Which ever side of this particular romantic ship you’re on there’s no denying that Nick’s new relationship status is something which he and former fiancee Juliette/Eve should address at some point.

Interestingly though, “Oh Captain, My Captain”  will highlight Adalind’s status with Nick from a couple of viewpoints, not just Eve’s observations.

Of particular note is a scene in which the pair share an extended embrace. While Eve looks on impassively, it’s Adalind and Renard’s daughter Diana who appears to be more troubled by Nick and Adalind’s shared intimacy.

Future trouble?

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