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==Recap== |
==Recap== |
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+ | {{NeedRecap}}We open in Storybrooke were Graham is at Granny’s throwing darts when Emma walks in. There is tension between them after Emma saw him leaving the previous night Regina’s house in the last episode. He points out that she’s been avoiding him since last night. Emma tells him it’s his life and she doesn’t care what he does. She leaves with Graham close on her heels. Outside, Graham pleads with her to not look at him the way she is. Emma says they’re adults and she doesn’t want to hear about his relationship problems, besides why does he care how she looks at him. Graham says “Because ...” then moves in and kisses her. Immediately, he gets flashes of a wolf in the forest and staring him in the face. Emma pushes him away and is upset, “What the hell was that!” He asks if she saw what he did. She says it was way over the line. Graham apologizes and says he just wanted to feel because he doesn’t feel anything with Regina. Emma says whatever he is looking to feel, he’s not getting it with her. Emma storms off. Graham goes to Regina’s house and knocks emphatically on the door. When she answers, he asks if Henry is asleep. After Regina says he is, Graham steps in and starts kissing her, taking her by surprise. She pulls away than kisses him back. |
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− | {{NeedRecap}} |
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+ | |||
+ | Next we find Regina as the Queen in Fairy Tale Land dressed in black mourning clothes, but without the cape and pony-tail. She hasn’t completed her transformation into the Evil Queen yet. She comes up as a grieving Snow is crying over the father’s casket and saying goodbye. The Queen comforts a sobbing Snow in her arms and tells her she shares her grief. Later, we see the Queen in her chambers where she admits to the Magic Mirror that she’s responsible the king’s passing. Her and the Magic Mirror plot the death of Snow White. The Mirror suggests she needs someone with no heart, a huntsman. Cut to a huntsman felling a deer with a bow and arrow. When we pan around, it’s the Fairy Tale Version of Graham. Then we see the same wolf Graham saw when he kissed Emma. Only here, the Huntsman knows the wolf. As the Huntsman pulls the arrow out of the deer... |
||
+ | |||
+ | Back in Storybrooke, Graham bolts up from a dead sleep. He’s breathing heavy and looks rattled. Regina wakes up as he explains that in his dream he was in woods killing a deer and saw a wolf. Exactly what we saw in Fairy Tale Land. Graham says the wolf had one red eye and one black. Regina tries to comfort him but he said it felt more like a memory than a dream and leaves. While fetching his car at outside Granny’s, he drops his keys and as he bends over to pick them up he comes face to face with the wolf from his dreams. Startled, he falls back against the car and the wolf trots away.. |
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+ | |||
+ | The next morning Emma finds out that Mary Margaret had a one-night stand with Dr. Whale. She thinks this is a good way to help Mary Margaret get over David. Mary Margaret thinks that Emma puts up walls, like the one she puts up between her and Graham. She tells Emma, “That wall of yours, it may keep out pain, but it may also keep out love.” Meanwhile, a disheveled Graham is in the woods tracking the wolf he saw when he runs into Mr. Gold. Graham opens up about seeing a wolf in his dreams and later seeing one in person. Mr. Gold just smiles, “You know Sheriff, they say that dreams ... dreams are memories. Memories of another life.” |
||
+ | |||
+ | Now we’re back in Fairy Tale Land with the Huntsman in a tavern. When some local poachers question his honor and then threaten his wolf, he cuts two of them down while the third flees. Unbeknownst to him, the Queen has been watching through her magic mirror and tells her minions bring him to her. |
||
+ | |||
+ | We cut back to Storybrooke with Graham barreling through the woods chasing the call of the wolf. He finally comes face to face with it. When he asks what it wants, it trots over. The moment he pets the wolf, he gets a Fairy Tale flashback of being the Huntsman and his failed attempt to kill Snow White. He also sees an image of interlocking deer antlers on a building. As quickly as the images came they’re gone, along with the wolf. He goes to see Mary Margaret in her class and tells her he believes they know each other from another life. |
||
+ | |||
+ | In Fairy Tale Land, the Huntsman is brought to the Queen. He has no interest in killing anyone for the Queen. She presses him, telling him she needs someone like him who has no qualms about killing someone and cutting out their heart. He says he’ll do it in exchange for her outlawing the killing of wolves and ordering their protection. She agrees. |
||
+ | |||
+ | Back in Storybrooke, Graham asks Mary Margaret if she believes in past lives. She thinks he’s been talking to Henry, who believes they’re all fairy tale characters. When she says that makes no sense, he half-heartedly agrees with her but we see on his face that’s far from what he believes. |
||
+ | |||
+ | Snow White and the Huntsman walk alone down a forest road in Fairy Tale Land. She realizes that he’s not one of the regular knights and tells him she knows he’s there to kill her. Snow makes her move, knocking over the Huntsman with a large branch and fleeing into the forest. |
||
+ | |||
+ | Regina finds Emma in the Storybrooke Sheriff’s Station. She tells her to stay away from Graham, “You may think you’re doing nothing, but you’re putting thoughts in his head. Thoughts that are not in his best interest. You’re leading him on a path to self destruction.” Meanwhile Graham goes to see Henry to ask him if he’s in his story book. |
||
+ | |||
+ | In Fairy Tale Land, the Huntsman has found a calm Snow White composing a letter, resigned to her fate. She asks him to deliver the letter to the Queen and tell her she means every word of it. After the reading the letter the Huntsman is visibly moved, as a tear rolls down his face. Surprisingly, he spares her. After cutting her loose, he gives her a whistle to call for help and tells her to run. |
||
+ | |||
+ | Sitting with Henry in his room back in Storybrooke, Graham explains to Henry that in his flashes he saw a wolf but that he also had a knife and was about to hurt Mary Margaret. Henry explains to Graham that in the storybook Mary Margaret is Snow White, which makes him the Huntsman. Graham asks if he could be another person and Henry tells him it makes totally sense, “You were raised by wolves. That’s why you keep seeing one. It’s your friend. Your guide. It’s trying to help you.” Graham doesn’t understand why he saw all of this after kissing Emma. According to Henry, it’s because Graham and Emma have a special connection because she owes him her life. Henry says, “Snow White’s her mother. And you spared her. If you hadn’t, my mom wouldn’t have been born.” Graham absorbs this and asks what happened after he spared Snow White. Henry tells him that the Queen ripped out his heart because she never wanted him to be able to feel again. Graham points out that the deer antler symbol from his flashback is also in the storybook. Henry says it’s the vault where the Queen put his heart. Graham says the Wolf wants him to find it. When he leaves, Emma is outside. He tells her that he needs to follow the wolf from his dreams so can find his heart. She tries to convince him that he has a heart then suddenly out of nowhere they both spot the wolf. Graham takes off after it with Emma following right behind him. The wolf leads them to a mausoleum which bears the same deer antler symbol from his flashback. The same one he saw in Henry’s book on the Queen’s vault, but it’s in the Storybrooke cemetery. Graham is insistent that they go in as Emma reluctantly goes along. |
||
+ | |||
+ | Back in Fairy Tale Land, the Huntsman returns to the Queen’s castle. When the Queen asks if Snow White is dead, he lies and says he has her heart. The Huntsman reads Snow White’s letter to the Queen, who becomes visibly upset at Snow’s message of forgiveness to her. When the Huntsman asks what Snow White did to her to incur her wraith, the Queen says she shared a secret with Snow White that cost her dearly. After she takes Snow White’s heart from the Huntsman she goes to her vault. Inside there are rows of boxes floor to ceiling. She tries to magically open a box and place the heart inside but the box does not open. She knows right then it’s not Snow White’s heart and storms over to the Huntsman, “What did you do?!” |
||
+ | |||
+ | Inside the mausoleum in the Storybrooke cemetery, Emma and Graham find nothing. Emma tries to comfort him and tells him there is nothing there. Regina shows up and demands to know what they’re doing at her father’s grave. When Regina tells Graham he doesn’t look well and tries to take him home, he stops her. Graham tells her he doesn’t want to be with her anymore, “I’d rather have nothing than settle for less. Nothing is better than what we have. I need to feel something, Regina. And the only way to do that is to give myself the chance.” Regina is visibly upset and blames Emma. When Emma says the problem is not her but Regina, “Maybe, Madame Mayor, you need to take a good hard look in the mirror and ask why that is. Why everyone’s running away from you.” She takes that in then punches Emma in the face. Emma goes down but gets right back up and punches Regina back. Graham breaks them up. Emma walks away and Graham follows, leaving Regina alone. At the Sheriff’s station, Graham patches up Emma and apologizes for his behavior. Back inside the vault, Regina opens an entrance to a vault and walks down the stairs, taking us ... |
||
+ | |||
+ | In Fairy Tale Land, the Queen remorselessly rips out the Huntsman heart for sparing Snow White. As she holds his glowing heart in her hand, he asks the Queen what she’s going to do with him, she kisses him and tells him, “You’re mine now. My pet.” He looks on as the horror of his situation hits. She takes his heart to the wall of boxes and magically opens one. He now belongs to the Queen, “From this moment forward, you will do everything that I say. And if you ever disobey me ... If you every try to run away? All I have to do is squeeze.” To illustrate her point, the Queen gives the heart a slight squeeze. The Huntsman gasps in pain, doubling over, “Your life is now in my hands. Forever.” She orders her guards to take him away to her bed chambers. With that, she places his heart inside the box. |
||
+ | |||
+ | In Storybrooke, Regina is inside the secret vault and walks up to the same wall of boxes that were in her vault in Fairly Tale Land. She opens up a box and inside is a glowing heart. In the Sheriff’s Station, Graham finishes patching up Emma. There is something electric between them. They lock eyes and Emma steps up and kisses him. Immediately, he flashes back to his life as the Huntsman in Fairy Tale Land. All the memories come flooding back. He breaks the kiss and steps back. At the same moment back in the vault, Regina takes his heart out the box and holds it in her hand. Graham tells Emma he remembers. He finally looks clear-headed. He steps up to her and tells her, “Thank you.” He leans in to kiss her. Just as their lips are about to meet—Graham keels over, slamming into the floor. Back in the vault, Regina squeezes his heart to dust. As it scatters, we see a look of regret on her face—mixed with resolve. Emma shakes Graham’s body. Nothing. She leans in close. No breathing. Nothing. And as Emma begins to cry, it’s hitting her—Graham is dead. |
||
==Cast<ref name=release/>== |
==Cast<ref name=release/>== |
Revision as of 06:46, 22 October 2017
"The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter" is the seventh episode of Season One of ABC's Once Upon a Time. It was written by Edward Kitsis & Adam Horowitz and directed by David M. Barrett. It is the seventh episode of the series overall, and premiered on December 11, 2011.
Synopsis
One of the town's residents begins to remember their fairytale past, and Storybrooke mourns the loss of one of their own. Meanwhile, in the fairytale world that was, the Evil Queen attempts to find a heartless assassin to murder Snow White.[1]
Recap
We open in Storybrooke were Graham is at Granny’s throwing darts when Emma walks in. There is tension between them after Emma saw him leaving the previous night Regina’s house in the last episode. He points out that she’s been avoiding him since last night. Emma tells him it’s his life and she doesn’t care what he does. She leaves with Graham close on her heels. Outside, Graham pleads with her to not look at him the way she is. Emma says they’re adults and she doesn’t want to hear about his relationship problems, besides why does he care how she looks at him. Graham says “Because ...” then moves in and kisses her. Immediately, he gets flashes of a wolf in the forest and staring him in the face. Emma pushes him away and is upset, “What the hell was that!” He asks if she saw what he did. She says it was way over the line. Graham apologizes and says he just wanted to feel because he doesn’t feel anything with Regina. Emma says whatever he is looking to feel, he’s not getting it with her. Emma storms off. Graham goes to Regina’s house and knocks emphatically on the door. When she answers, he asks if Henry is asleep. After Regina says he is, Graham steps in and starts kissing her, taking her by surprise. She pulls away than kisses him back.
Next we find Regina as the Queen in Fairy Tale Land dressed in black mourning clothes, but without the cape and pony-tail. She hasn’t completed her transformation into the Evil Queen yet. She comes up as a grieving Snow is crying over the father’s casket and saying goodbye. The Queen comforts a sobbing Snow in her arms and tells her she shares her grief. Later, we see the Queen in her chambers where she admits to the Magic Mirror that she’s responsible the king’s passing. Her and the Magic Mirror plot the death of Snow White. The Mirror suggests she needs someone with no heart, a huntsman. Cut to a huntsman felling a deer with a bow and arrow. When we pan around, it’s the Fairy Tale Version of Graham. Then we see the same wolf Graham saw when he kissed Emma. Only here, the Huntsman knows the wolf. As the Huntsman pulls the arrow out of the deer...
Back in Storybrooke, Graham bolts up from a dead sleep. He’s breathing heavy and looks rattled. Regina wakes up as he explains that in his dream he was in woods killing a deer and saw a wolf. Exactly what we saw in Fairy Tale Land. Graham says the wolf had one red eye and one black. Regina tries to comfort him but he said it felt more like a memory than a dream and leaves. While fetching his car at outside Granny’s, he drops his keys and as he bends over to pick them up he comes face to face with the wolf from his dreams. Startled, he falls back against the car and the wolf trots away..
The next morning Emma finds out that Mary Margaret had a one-night stand with Dr. Whale. She thinks this is a good way to help Mary Margaret get over David. Mary Margaret thinks that Emma puts up walls, like the one she puts up between her and Graham. She tells Emma, “That wall of yours, it may keep out pain, but it may also keep out love.” Meanwhile, a disheveled Graham is in the woods tracking the wolf he saw when he runs into Mr. Gold. Graham opens up about seeing a wolf in his dreams and later seeing one in person. Mr. Gold just smiles, “You know Sheriff, they say that dreams ... dreams are memories. Memories of another life.”
Now we’re back in Fairy Tale Land with the Huntsman in a tavern. When some local poachers question his honor and then threaten his wolf, he cuts two of them down while the third flees. Unbeknownst to him, the Queen has been watching through her magic mirror and tells her minions bring him to her.
We cut back to Storybrooke with Graham barreling through the woods chasing the call of the wolf. He finally comes face to face with it. When he asks what it wants, it trots over. The moment he pets the wolf, he gets a Fairy Tale flashback of being the Huntsman and his failed attempt to kill Snow White. He also sees an image of interlocking deer antlers on a building. As quickly as the images came they’re gone, along with the wolf. He goes to see Mary Margaret in her class and tells her he believes they know each other from another life.
In Fairy Tale Land, the Huntsman is brought to the Queen. He has no interest in killing anyone for the Queen. She presses him, telling him she needs someone like him who has no qualms about killing someone and cutting out their heart. He says he’ll do it in exchange for her outlawing the killing of wolves and ordering their protection. She agrees.
Back in Storybrooke, Graham asks Mary Margaret if she believes in past lives. She thinks he’s been talking to Henry, who believes they’re all fairy tale characters. When she says that makes no sense, he half-heartedly agrees with her but we see on his face that’s far from what he believes.
Snow White and the Huntsman walk alone down a forest road in Fairy Tale Land. She realizes that he’s not one of the regular knights and tells him she knows he’s there to kill her. Snow makes her move, knocking over the Huntsman with a large branch and fleeing into the forest.
Regina finds Emma in the Storybrooke Sheriff’s Station. She tells her to stay away from Graham, “You may think you’re doing nothing, but you’re putting thoughts in his head. Thoughts that are not in his best interest. You’re leading him on a path to self destruction.” Meanwhile Graham goes to see Henry to ask him if he’s in his story book.
In Fairy Tale Land, the Huntsman has found a calm Snow White composing a letter, resigned to her fate. She asks him to deliver the letter to the Queen and tell her she means every word of it. After the reading the letter the Huntsman is visibly moved, as a tear rolls down his face. Surprisingly, he spares her. After cutting her loose, he gives her a whistle to call for help and tells her to run.
Sitting with Henry in his room back in Storybrooke, Graham explains to Henry that in his flashes he saw a wolf but that he also had a knife and was about to hurt Mary Margaret. Henry explains to Graham that in the storybook Mary Margaret is Snow White, which makes him the Huntsman. Graham asks if he could be another person and Henry tells him it makes totally sense, “You were raised by wolves. That’s why you keep seeing one. It’s your friend. Your guide. It’s trying to help you.” Graham doesn’t understand why he saw all of this after kissing Emma. According to Henry, it’s because Graham and Emma have a special connection because she owes him her life. Henry says, “Snow White’s her mother. And you spared her. If you hadn’t, my mom wouldn’t have been born.” Graham absorbs this and asks what happened after he spared Snow White. Henry tells him that the Queen ripped out his heart because she never wanted him to be able to feel again. Graham points out that the deer antler symbol from his flashback is also in the storybook. Henry says it’s the vault where the Queen put his heart. Graham says the Wolf wants him to find it. When he leaves, Emma is outside. He tells her that he needs to follow the wolf from his dreams so can find his heart. She tries to convince him that he has a heart then suddenly out of nowhere they both spot the wolf. Graham takes off after it with Emma following right behind him. The wolf leads them to a mausoleum which bears the same deer antler symbol from his flashback. The same one he saw in Henry’s book on the Queen’s vault, but it’s in the Storybrooke cemetery. Graham is insistent that they go in as Emma reluctantly goes along.
Back in Fairy Tale Land, the Huntsman returns to the Queen’s castle. When the Queen asks if Snow White is dead, he lies and says he has her heart. The Huntsman reads Snow White’s letter to the Queen, who becomes visibly upset at Snow’s message of forgiveness to her. When the Huntsman asks what Snow White did to her to incur her wraith, the Queen says she shared a secret with Snow White that cost her dearly. After she takes Snow White’s heart from the Huntsman she goes to her vault. Inside there are rows of boxes floor to ceiling. She tries to magically open a box and place the heart inside but the box does not open. She knows right then it’s not Snow White’s heart and storms over to the Huntsman, “What did you do?!”
Inside the mausoleum in the Storybrooke cemetery, Emma and Graham find nothing. Emma tries to comfort him and tells him there is nothing there. Regina shows up and demands to know what they’re doing at her father’s grave. When Regina tells Graham he doesn’t look well and tries to take him home, he stops her. Graham tells her he doesn’t want to be with her anymore, “I’d rather have nothing than settle for less. Nothing is better than what we have. I need to feel something, Regina. And the only way to do that is to give myself the chance.” Regina is visibly upset and blames Emma. When Emma says the problem is not her but Regina, “Maybe, Madame Mayor, you need to take a good hard look in the mirror and ask why that is. Why everyone’s running away from you.” She takes that in then punches Emma in the face. Emma goes down but gets right back up and punches Regina back. Graham breaks them up. Emma walks away and Graham follows, leaving Regina alone. At the Sheriff’s station, Graham patches up Emma and apologizes for his behavior. Back inside the vault, Regina opens an entrance to a vault and walks down the stairs, taking us ...
In Fairy Tale Land, the Queen remorselessly rips out the Huntsman heart for sparing Snow White. As she holds his glowing heart in her hand, he asks the Queen what she’s going to do with him, she kisses him and tells him, “You’re mine now. My pet.” He looks on as the horror of his situation hits. She takes his heart to the wall of boxes and magically opens one. He now belongs to the Queen, “From this moment forward, you will do everything that I say. And if you ever disobey me ... If you every try to run away? All I have to do is squeeze.” To illustrate her point, the Queen gives the heart a slight squeeze. The Huntsman gasps in pain, doubling over, “Your life is now in my hands. Forever.” She orders her guards to take him away to her bed chambers. With that, she places his heart inside the box.
In Storybrooke, Regina is inside the secret vault and walks up to the same wall of boxes that were in her vault in Fairly Tale Land. She opens up a box and inside is a glowing heart. In the Sheriff’s Station, Graham finishes patching up Emma. There is something electric between them. They lock eyes and Emma steps up and kisses him. Immediately, he flashes back to his life as the Huntsman in Fairy Tale Land. All the memories come flooding back. He breaks the kiss and steps back. At the same moment back in the vault, Regina takes his heart out the box and holds it in her hand. Graham tells Emma he remembers. He finally looks clear-headed. He steps up to her and tells her, “Thank you.” He leans in to kiss her. Just as their lips are about to meet—Graham keels over, slamming into the floor. Back in the vault, Regina squeezes his heart to dust. As it scatters, we see a look of regret on her face—mixed with resolve. Emma shakes Graham’s body. Nothing. She leans in close. No breathing. Nothing. And as Emma begins to cry, it’s hitting her—Graham is dead.
Cast[1]
Starring
|
Guest StarringCo-Starring
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Trivia
Production Notes
- The opening title card features the wolf.
- This is the first episode in which Josh Dallas does not appear.
- A scene involving Rumplestiltskin was cut.[3]
Episode Chronology
- The Enchanted Forest flashbacks occur after "Fruit of the Poisonous Tree" and before "Red-Handed". (For more details, see the Enchanted Forest timeline)
- The Storybrooke events of this episode occur after "The Shepherd" and two weeks before "Desperate Souls". (For more details, see the Land Without Magic timeline)
Episode Connections
- The events surrounding the death of King Leopold are explored in "Fruit of the Poisonous Tree".
- The Huntsman's fate following the ripping out of his heart is shown in "A Land Without Magic".
- The Huntsman's failed attempt at killing Snow White is mentioned again in "The Evil Queen".
- Sheriff Graham's life during the first week after the casting of the curse is explored in "Welcome to Storybrooke".
- What Mr. Gold was burying in the woods is revealed in "The Return".
- The school classroom where Graham comes to see Mary Margaret,[4] is the same classroom where David came to see her in "The Shepherd".[5]
Biblical
- Graham asks Mary Margaret if she believes in other lives. She replies, "Like heaven?".
- A cross-shaped headstone can be seen in the Storybrooke Graveyard, while a cross is etched into the grave of an "Olson, Anthony".[6]
Disney
- The Evil Queen sends the Huntsman to kill Snow White and bring back her ripped out heart as proof, but he is unable to do so.
- This episode contains a number of other references to Disney works. See the list of Disney references for more.
Lost
- There is a close-up of Graham's eye as he awakens.[7] This is a recurring theme from Lost].
- This episode contains a number of other references to ABC's Lost. See the list of Lost references for more.
Fairytales and Folklore
- This episode is a rendition of the Snow White fairytale, focusing on the Evil Queen's attempted assassination of Snow White by giving a Huntsman the job of killing her.
- This episode also features the Magic Mirror from the same fairytale.
Props Notes
- Mary Margaret has[8] an Anthropologie Grapefruit Sugar Bowl (no longer available).[9]
- An excerpt from the fairy tale of "The Golden Bird" can be seen when Henry flips through the storybook.[10]
- A description of a scene from "Pilot", can be seen next to an illustration of the Huntsman, and the illustration of the Evil Queen:[11]
with fear as what [image ends]
don't. "Soon, ev[image ends]
love, will be tak[image ends]
suffering will rise [image ends]
to face Charmi[image ends]
ness if it is the [image ends]
Having made [image ends]
to walk away. B[image ends]
Queen's threat go[image ends]
threw it at the ev[image ends]
her, however, the [image ends]
smoke. The sword [image ends]
Queen was gone. [image ends]
- The rest of the page, contains an excerpt from the fairytale of "Snow-White and Rose-Red".
- Three illustrations by the famous English book illustrator Arthur Rackham can be seen in the book:
- "The Meeting of Oberon and Titania",[12] a 1905 artwork by depicting a scene from William Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.
- An illustration[13] from a 1922 edition of Nathaniel Hawthorne's children's book A Wonder-Book for Girls and Boys. It depicts a scene from the story "The Paradise of Children".
- "He played until the room was entirely filled with gnomes",[14] from the fairy tale collection Little Brother & Little Sister and Other Tales By The Brothers Grimm (1917). It depicts a scene from the Brothers Grimm fairy tale "The Gnome".
Set Dressing
- On Mary Margaret's loft counter,[8] there is a Vintage Enesco Tea for Two Owl Teapot.[15]
- Regina's bedroom[16] has Arabian Scroll Motif Saybrook wallpaper from Wallquest.[17]
- One of the pictures on the wall,[18] is "Rosa indica Fragrans - Rosier des Indes odorant", a watercolor picture by the famous Belgian nineteenth century painter and botanist Pierre-Joseph Redouté, from his work The Roses, published between 1817 and 1824.[19] Rosa indica is a synonym for Rosa chinensis,[20] more commonly known as China rose.
- The same picture is in one of the rooms that Cora searches in "In the Name of the Brother",[21] and outside Regina's kitchen in "Save Henry".[22]
- On the billboard at the sheriff's station, there is a police report describing the events leading up to Dory Zimmer's death.[23] However, this is just a fake document fabricated by the curse:
- St
4979 MA
- St
- Telephone: 555-0145
Fax: 555-0146
- Telephone: 555-0145
- [image begins]RATIVE − [three illegible words] Sun 10/14 11:22 − [illegible word] 03 – 10 – 0742
- [image begins]ARY PLACEMENT − [illegible word] Dorris Zimmer [sic]
[image begins] our vehicle parked in the woods. The explainant, Neil Westlake,
[image begins]gar one parked in the woods and is wounded like [illegible word] was
[image begins] woods. Upon Graham's arrival, he found a white [illegible word], early 90's
[image begins]s. He made contact with the driver, Dorris Zimmer [sic], 01/01/02.
[image begins]he was suffering from clinical depression and that she was not
[image begins]ed and checked the area. She was largely incoherent and is
[image begins] [illegible]. This prompted the Sheriff to further inspect the vehicle,
[image begins] ran taped to the tall pipe of the vehicle. At this [illegible word],
[image begins] and taken into custody under the [illegible word] of the Baker Act.
[image begins]he no longer wants to live. She also keeps stating that she was
[image begins]le." She admitted that she had been institutionalized two times
[image begins] suicide.
[image begins] background check, it was [illegible word] that Zimmer had a previ-
[image begins] incident during the New Year festivities in Storybrooke Park.
[image begins]re called and Zimmer was transferred to the Storybrooke Mental
[image begins]is point, the Clinical Psychiatrist on duty alerted the Special
[image begins] [illegible word] in the presence of her two children, Nicholas and Ava (both 4
[image begins]fed and the children were found alone at the Zimmer
[image begins]is Boulevard, since − without a primary caregiver present. The
[image begins] into short-term foster care while while Zimmer underwent further
[image begins]sted this file was S.S. Edwards who is responsible through the
- Neal Westlake is a graphic designer and production staff member on the show.
- He is also listed as a land surveyor on a document in "Fruit of the Poisonous Tree".[24]
- Neil Westlake is also credited as a photographer on the front page of the Storybrooke Daily Mirror in "The Stable Boy".[25]
- He is also listed as one of the reviewers on the book blurb for Isaac's novel "Heroes and Villains".[26] ("Operation Mongoose Part 1")
- Neal Westlake is also listed as a Storybrooke entrepreneur on a sign by the town hall.[27] ("Last Rites")
- It is also the name of the author on the cover of book Robin Hood: Myth & Legend.[28] ("Only You")
- Next to the police report, there is a report about an 8 year old boy named Billy Mason from Seattle, Washington. According to the report, he disappeared on on March 1, 2002, and was possibly kidnapped by his babysitter, a 16 year old boy named David. David is described as having a birth mark on his left shoulder, wore a gold watch, and his clothes were made by The Ridge Clothing Co. He was last seen at the house of a man named Greg Mason, where he "was babysitting for his [sic]". According to the report, "David disappeared along with his 8 year old charge Billy Mason. The time of disappearance is between 8:000 and 12:30 on March 1. 2002. Billy Mason's parents arrived home at 12:30 am to find the back door wide open and the house empty". The incident was reported by Srgt. Kelly, and the investigating officer is called Det. Bradshaw. The report contains an officer's signature, but it is unreadable. }
- Below the report is a document carrying the Storybrooke Sheriff's Department seal. A website address is printed on it: www.kawther.info. This is the personal website of Kawther Salam, a Palestinian journalist who reported on human rights abuses by the Israeli military and filed legal complaints against them. Fittingly enough, the document is written in Hebrew.
- One of the gravestones in the Storybrooke Graveyard says:
- Another gravestone says "Olson", "Anthony"[6]
- The insignia on the Heart Vault shows interlocking deer antlers,[30] a reference to the stag heart which the Evil Queen received from the Huntsman.
Costume Notes
- Mary Margaret is wearing[31] a skirt from H&M (no longer available).[32]
- Mr. Gold wears a red tie[33] that is the same tie that Henry chooses to go with the suit he'll be wearing as Mr. Gold's apprentice in "The Snow Queen".[34]
- Gold wears the same tie at the sheriff's station in "Desperate Souls",[35] in "Heart of Darkness",[36] and when he is reunited with his "son" in "The Return".[37]
Goofs
- When the Wolf walks way from Graham, a window pane in the background says "Pacific Net & Twine",[38] the real name of the Steveston business which doubles as Atlantic Twine & Net[39] on the show.[40]
- After Regina's scuffle with Emma, there is blood on the lower left corner of her lip. For the rest of the episode, the wound keeps changing appearance and position.[41]
- When Emma is pressing a pack of ice against her wound, her flower wrist tattoo[42] is missing.[43]
Reawakened: A Once Upon a Time Tale
- Emma shatters the vase containing Mary Margaret's flowers from Dr. Whale by hurling it across the room.[44]
- Snow White states she "watched (her father) fall in love with Regina".[45]
- As Graham is dying, he says to Emma that he loves her.[46]
- After his death, Graham's body is put on a stretcher and carried away by paramedics.[46]
International Titles
International Titles | ||
---|---|---|
Language | Title | Translation |
Finnish | "Metsästäjä" | "The Huntsman" |
French | "Le Cœur du Chasseur" | "The Heart of the Huntsman" |
German | "Das Herz ist ein einsamer Jäger" | "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter" |
Hungarian | "Magányos vadász a szív" | "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter" |
Italian | "Il cacciatore" | "The Huntsman" |
Polish | "Serce to samotny myśliwy" | "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter" |
Portuguese | "Coração é um caçador solitário" | "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter" |