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  • 7
    Mar
    2013
    3:17pm, EST

    'Grimm' star Sasha Roiz: 'The secrets are all coming out'

    By Anna Chan, TODAY

    After what feels like an eternity (it was really just four incredibly long months), NBC's supernatural drama "Grimm" is finally returning with the lucky 13th new episode of its second season. And boy, is it going to be action packed.

    Scott Green / NBC

    It's never a good idea to beat up your boss! But Det. Nick (right, played by David Giuntoli) certainly has an understandable reason for giving boss Capt. Renard (Sasha Roiz) a beating.

    "In episode 13, the one after the break, it all comes to a head," star Sasha Roiz, who plays Capt. Renard, told The Clicker. "What I like is the secrets are all coming out."


    And in particular, his mysterious character's skeletons -- both of the romantic and Wesen-world sort.

    "Everyone knows about (Renard) now, or at least certainly, Nick knows about him," Roiz said.

    Need a refresher? In the previous episode, which aired Nov. 16, Monroe (played by Silas Weir Mitchell) tells Nick (David Giuntoli) that girlfriend Juliette (Bitsie Tulloch) has a new love (it's Renard, Nick's boss!), and former hexenbiest Adalind (Claire Coffee) threatens to tell Nick who Renard really is. (A royal bastard! And a half-hexenbiest too!) Oh, and Renard also finds Det. Nick's nifty trailer of anti-Wesen weapons as the episode closed. Whew!

    "(Nick's) going to discover a lot ... it really is a huge episode," Roiz teased. "Me and Nick face off, and it's going to be fascinating to see where this leads. I think it's going to basically take the trajectory of the show in another direction."

    Face off indeed. As the NBC trailer teases, the two law-enforcement hunks come to blows. 

    "A huge fight!" Giuntoli told us. "And it was ridiculous that when we actually did do that fight, because we're clumsy, we were bears on roller skates! ... We bruised and battered each other's bodies."

    The actor told us that both he and Roiz got hurt filming the scene, but it was nothing too serious. "Not beyond bruises. But major, major injuries," Giuntoli said. "I had a bruise like that on my leg. I kneed him in the face!"

    "I’m really glad that we had a chance to finally confront each other because I think it’s something the fans had been waiting for a long time," Roiz said during a call with reporters Wednesday. "And we -- as characters and actors -- had been waiting for as well."

    When anyone gets into a physical altercation with their boss, things are going to get weird in the office (especially if said boss also gets to know your significant other in a ... umm ... more romantic way). And this will definitely be the case for Det. Nick and his captain.


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    "It's going to be hard to work with (Renard)!" Giuntoli laughed. "Here's the thing, though. I can't really ... what do I do? I don't quit! I don't tell anybody in the force. So we just kind of have to suck it up and work together, sort of, and hopefully, somehow make amends enough to keep working together."

    Renard's not about to let Nick the Wesen-fighting Grimm slip out of his grasp either. 

    "Ultimately, he needs the Grimm," Roiz said of his character. "That's the most important thing for him right now -- for his protection, for his plans and ambitions -- he desperately needs to be allied with the Grimm. ... It's like having a superhero in your back pocket to protect you!"

    Tune in to the return of "Grimm" on March 8 at 9 p.m. on NBC to see if Renard and Nick can put the captain's betrayal behind them after a good fight. 

    What are you most excited to see in the new episode? Tell us on our Facebook page!

    Related content:

    • 'Grimm' star Silas Weir Mitchell thought show was 'never gonna work'
    • 'Grimm' star Bitsie Tulloch dishes on kissing Nick and Renard

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    • 'DWTS' pro Val: I'm toning down the sexiness this season
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    Explore related topics: tv, featured, grimm, david-giuntoli, sasha-roiz
  • 16
    Nov
    2012
    11:03am, EST

    'Grimm' star Silas Weir Mitchell thought show was 'never gonna work'

    Scott Green / NBC

    Monroe (Silas Weir Mitchell) gets in on the action in the new episode of "Grimm."

    By Courtney Hazlett, TODAY

    “Grimm” star Silas Weir Mitchell is having a full-circle moment. The very first role he landed was that of Hansel in “Hansel and Gretel” back in the third grade. Now, at 43, he’s back in the fairy-tale world, playing Monroe, a reformed Big Bad Wolf-like monster known as a Blutbad, on NBC’s “Grimm.”

    It’s a funny turn of events for the longtime actor, but even more remarkable is the fact a show as quirky as “Grimm” is on the air. After all, it takes a leap of faith to buy into the show’s main premise, the idea that normal-looking “humans” living seemingly normal lives can shift into crazed, diabolical creatures when provoked.

    “I don’t ever remember reading the whole script. What I remember when I read the breakdown was, ‘This is a cool idea and it’s never gonna work,’ ” Mitchell said of his first encounters with “Grimm’s” tale. “All of us who had shot the pilot, we felt like it was a really special thing that was going to be this kind of dream-like month in Portland, never to be heard from again. Despite feeling like we were making something cool that was funny or weird, and it kind of worked and it had its own unique flavor.”

    Part of that “unique flavor” is due to the fact that the show is shot on location in Oregon and doesn’t rely on Hollywood trickery to convey its setting. When the characters run through a haunted-looking forest in the Pacific Northwest, it’s really a forest in the Pacific Northwest. And if there’s one character on the show who outwardly represents some of the more specific characteristics of the city, it’s craft coffee, slow-food movement, fine wine-loving Monroe.

    “Portland’s motto is ‘Keep Portland weird,’ and it’s painted on a very prominent spot downtown ... Monroe in a lot of ways represents that kind of uniqueness,” Mitchell said. “Portland celebrates its uniqueness in a way that is unpretentious and genuine. I think if you made a list of adjectives that you felt describes Monroe, you could very well be describing the city of Portland. He’s sort of a surrogate for the city. Even the facial hair, the sweaters that he wears.”

    In the case of “Grimm,” there are occasions when getting into character means more than beards and layering. Copious amounts of special-effects makeup are required for a man to go Blutbad and back.

    “To be honest, I don’t do very much of that,” Mitchell said of the complicated makeup process.  “Even when I do morph out, there are ways of doing it using photo doubles who do sit in the chair.” Further shedding light on the process, Mitchell said that “to get into it and out of it is like eight hours. The getting out of it is a whole chunk of time in its own right. And your skin just gets destroyed.”

    And what about some of the smaller, yet no less important details of the show, like the many reference books about creepy creatures that Monroe and company depend on? They are more than a prop -- they are meticulously written and illustrated by graphic designer Carly Serti. 

    “She is fantastic. But what is also great about this show is it glamorizes books in many ways,” Mitchell said. “The show is about ‘Books are cool. Books are interesting. Books have things in them that you want to read.’ ”

    And what about that Airstream trailer that is practically a character in and of itself? It doesn’t take an overly critical eye to see that it appears to have some serious square footage despite being a simple Airstream.

    “You just gotta roll with it. Just accept the fact that on the inside it’s more a double wide,” Mitchell said, laughing. Kidding aside, he explained the illusion. “Part of that is the lenses they use, to be fair. A lot of the visual, aesthetic vocabulary of the show is low shots that are wide, and high shots that are wide. There’s a spooky kind of arch quality to the composition they use. But the set that’s the interior of the trailer is still bigger. And it looks even bigger when they shoot it. It’s also a little ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.’ Walk into a little room and it’s actually a big room. It has an MC Escher, the ‘world is not what it seems’ quality to it.”


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    The final episode of 2012 airs Friday night, and the cast and crew are currently filming the back end of this second season. Is there anything Mitchell can leak? Without going so far as to spoil, just keep a careful eye on Capt. Sean Renard, the man to whom detectives Nick Burkhardt and Hank Griffin report.

    “The captain figures pretty majorly in what happens going forward. The relationship between Nick and Hank and Juliet really reaches a breaking point,” Mitchell said. “And that’s a very interesting story line to watch unfold.”

    Meantime, fans of the show will want to know: Does good guy Monroe get the girl? 

    “It’s an interesting thing to watch develop,” Mitchell said. “Getting the girl -- what’s it mean? I know it’s based on fairy tales, but it’s an ongoing saga. There’s definitely a dynamic at work that the writers play with.”

    In other words, stay tuned. The final episode of the year airs Friday on NBC at 9 p.m. “Grimm” returns in 2013 for the second half of season two.

    What are you hoping to see on Friday night's midseason finale? Share your thoughts on our Facebook page.

    Related content:

    • 'Grimm' star Bitsie Tulloch dishes on kissing Nick and Renard
    • Behind the scenes of 'Grimm's' Halloween episode

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    • 'Raising Sextuplets' mom Jenny McClendon is pregnant again
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  • 22
    Oct
    2012
    9:01am, EDT

    First look: Behind the scenes of 'Grimm's' Halloween episode

    Scott Green / NBC

    David Giuntoli stars as Nick Burkhardt on "Grimm."

    By Anna Chan, TODAY

    Creepy creatures always abound on "Grimm," but Det. Nick Burkhardt is about to run into something that his family's book of monsters can't help him with on Friday night.

    The drama's Halloween episode, titled "La Llorona," is based on the Latin American tale of the same name, which translates to "the weeping woman." In it, a mother, upset that her husband left her for a younger woman, drowns her children before taking her own life, then returns to haunt the living. Nick -- the monster-seeing crime fighter played by David Giuntoli -- makes the connection to the legend when a mysterious being abducts several of Portland's children on Halloween.

    That's right. It sounds like in the new episode, Nick won't be up against the various beasts found in Grimm's classic fairy tales, but a ghost instead.

    Kate Del Castillo guest stars as Valentina Espinosa, a detective from New Mexico who works with Nick and his partner Hank (Russell Hornsby) to try to solve the child abductions. See what she and the stars of the show had to say about the special episode in this behind-the-scenes look that NBC is sharing with The Clicker:

    The "La Llorona" episode airs at 9 p.m. Friday on NBC. In honor of the tale's roots, the episode will also air in Spanish on Telemundo from midnight to 1 a.m. ET Friday night/Saturday morning, and in English from 1 to 2 a.m. Saturday on mun2.


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    Which is your favorite creature from "Grimm" so far? Tell us your pick on our Facebook page!

    More in The Clicker:

    • 'Project Runway' winner: Heidi Klum 'took half of my collection'
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  • 13
    Aug
    2012
    10:28am, EDT

    'Grimm' returns with mommy issues

    By Ree Hines, TODAY contributor

    When procedural-crime-and-fantasy show "Grimm" returns for its second season, fans can expect new shockers. Star David Giuntoli, who plays detective and resident Grimm Nick Burkhardt, visited TODAY Monday morning to tease the upcoming action.

    "We have a lot of surprises," he said. Among them? Burkhardt's relationship with his long lost (until late last season) and very much alive mother.

    "(We'll) meet my mom. I don't really like her because she 'pretended' to be dead for a very long time," Giuntoli explained.


    Follow @TODAY_Clicker

    Watch the clip above to learn more about what the actor calls "Law & Order: Special Fairy Tales Unit."

    The second season premiere of "Grimm" airs Aug. 13 at 10 p.m. on NBC.

    "Grimm" fans, what are you most looking forward to seeing in season two? Tell us on our Facebook page.

    Related content:

    • An exclusive look at 'Grimm's' monster book and makeup effects

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  • 7
    Aug
    2012
    8:31am, EDT

    An exclusive look at 'Grimm's' monster book and makeup effects

    Scott Green / NBC

    Stevie Battles, left, helps transform Silas Weir Mitchell into "Grimm" Blutbad Monroe.

    By Anna Chan, TODAY

    Blutbaden and Reapers and Hexenbiest! Oh my! If you've ever wondered about the monster-creating process behind NBC's fairy-tale police procedural "Grimm," you're in luck.

    In a creature feature that the network is sharing exclusively with TODAY.com, viewers can see some of the work that goes into Det. Nick Burkhardt's (played by David Giuntoli) 200-year-old monster encyclopedia and the special effects used to create the Wesen (aka fairy-tale creatures).

    "This little book is just full of ... gross things!" graphic designer Carly Sertic says in the video. Indeed! It's not just chock full of creepy baddies and exotic beings, it also depicts decapitations, monsters eating human babies and more. After all, this is a book for Grimms (folks -- like Burkhardt -- who can see past the creatures' human disguises) to use to identify and figure out how to best destroy the evil monsters. 

    "I never thought when I was a little kid that I would be drawing such horrific things," Sertic says in the clip.

    The video also shows special makeup and creature creator Barney Burman at work, turning regular actors into Eisbibers, Lausenschlange, Fuchsbau and more. 

    Check it out:

    As Burman teased in the clip, expect "even bigger, crazier stuff" in season two, which kicks off on Monday, Aug. 13 at 10 p.m. on NBC. If you need a refresher of what happened in season one (and boy, did a lot go down!), check out this video that sums up the first year in seven minutes:

    Want to watch -- or rewatch -- every episode instead? "Grimm" season one (and a bunch of extras) is available on DVD and Blu-ray Aug. 7.


    Follow @TODAY_Clicker

    For more "Grimm," tune into the TODAY show on Aug. 13, when star David Giuntoli is scheduled to appear. Check local listings for air times.

    Which storyline are you most excited to see pick up again when "Grimm" kicks off season two? Tell us on our Facebook page!

    Follow @Anna_Banana

     

     

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    • Ryan Lochte: I'd like to do 'Dancing With the Stars'
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