No Rest for the Wicked
Jul. 22nd, 2010 07:12 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The ep was so stressful when it first aired. So tense and the impending doom was just . . . ugh. And yet, humor sprinkled in, but humor with a melancholy doom to it.
Everything about this ep is intriguing, with so many details that are never explained. I know I've talked about this elsewhere, but apparently not in my own journal, because I can't seem to find the entries.
The humor in the ep--not ROFL humor but heartwarming moments humor--are great. "Do I look like a ditchable prom date to you?" "Family don't end in blood, boy." The whole Bon Jovi scene.
The girl who played Lilith was fantastic and does Bad Seed creepy extremely well. For those fans who used to watch The Sentinel, Inspector Megan Connors, aka Anna Galvin, plays the little girl's mom.
The sticky wicket in all this, especially considering how things turned out, is Ruby. Ruby says that she can help Sam save Dean, but she needs time. We now know she was referring to getting him hopped up on demon blood (like that's ever gonna happen while Dean is still breathing) to kill Lilith. BUT . . . If Ruby was in the know from the beginning, as we're told at the end of her run, then she would know that killing Lilith first would accomplish nothing (except maybe take a huge weight off of the Winchesters). If this were the case, that she really did want Sam to kill Lilith, was Ruby trying to set herself up as the . . . advisor/consort . . . of the leader of the demon army? Was she planning on eventually maneuvering herself into the position of leadership? Was there an alternative way to open Lucifer's cage? We're told at the end of Ruby's run that everything she did was to get Sam at the cage's gate at the right time, to kill Lilith there. But how do her machinations in NRftW fit in with that plan? If Sam had taken her up on her lessons, would she simply have stalled for time? Was it all a shell game from the very beginning? It had to have been. But all in all, the whole thing seems like a very risky plan on the part of YED and Ruby both, because there are a lot of variables that could have gone a different way. I mean, knowing the Winchesters, the odds were really good that they would do what they did. As Dean points out, he and Sam are each other's weak spots, and the bad guys know it. But still . . . there's a lot of opportunity for error in the overall plan. I'll have to think on this more. It's making my brain hurt.
However, I must say that I really liked the way Katie Cassidy played Lilith. She played her like a child in a grown-up's body, which is as it should be, given how Lilith is presented to us. She's a spoiled, bratty little girl with the intelligence of an adult. And a completely different demon than Ruby. Bad Seed all grown up. I think Katie could have made Lilith pretty darn terrifying if she'd continued in that role. (As it is, the adult Lilith they ended up with didn't really impress me much.)
When Geo and I first saw this ep when it first aired, we were convinced that Dean was only mostly dead. The camera zoomed into Dean's eye, and we took that as meaning Dean was actually trapped in his own mind, and it was going to be up to Sam to figure out that Dean was only mostly dead (which is still partly alive. I'm sure Bobby has a recipe for a miracle pill. Probably passed down from Miracle Max himself). See, I was holding on as long as freakin' possible to the idea that Dean wouldn't really go to Hell. Of course, come S4, I find that is not the case, and it makes for some . . . interesting . . . character development.
Oh, and speaking of Bobby: turning the town's water system into holy water and turning on the sprinklers to provide a demon-proof shield? Reason #453 why Bobby is awesome!
So, yeah, this ep has a lot of good stuff in it. It's got funny, it's got hurt-y, all with an overlaid sense of urgency and desperation. I'll tell you what. It was a really long hiatus that year. Oy.
I started doing full commentaries with the beginning of S4. They should be tagged accordingly, if you're interested in reading them. So I won't, as a rule, be reviewing them again. If some brilliant bit of insight strikes, I'll try to share it, but for the most part, I think we're done for now.
Everything about this ep is intriguing, with so many details that are never explained. I know I've talked about this elsewhere, but apparently not in my own journal, because I can't seem to find the entries.
The humor in the ep--not ROFL humor but heartwarming moments humor--are great. "Do I look like a ditchable prom date to you?" "Family don't end in blood, boy." The whole Bon Jovi scene.
The girl who played Lilith was fantastic and does Bad Seed creepy extremely well. For those fans who used to watch The Sentinel, Inspector Megan Connors, aka Anna Galvin, plays the little girl's mom.
The sticky wicket in all this, especially considering how things turned out, is Ruby. Ruby says that she can help Sam save Dean, but she needs time. We now know she was referring to getting him hopped up on demon blood (like that's ever gonna happen while Dean is still breathing) to kill Lilith. BUT . . . If Ruby was in the know from the beginning, as we're told at the end of her run, then she would know that killing Lilith first would accomplish nothing (except maybe take a huge weight off of the Winchesters). If this were the case, that she really did want Sam to kill Lilith, was Ruby trying to set herself up as the . . . advisor/consort . . . of the leader of the demon army? Was she planning on eventually maneuvering herself into the position of leadership? Was there an alternative way to open Lucifer's cage? We're told at the end of Ruby's run that everything she did was to get Sam at the cage's gate at the right time, to kill Lilith there. But how do her machinations in NRftW fit in with that plan? If Sam had taken her up on her lessons, would she simply have stalled for time? Was it all a shell game from the very beginning? It had to have been. But all in all, the whole thing seems like a very risky plan on the part of YED and Ruby both, because there are a lot of variables that could have gone a different way. I mean, knowing the Winchesters, the odds were really good that they would do what they did. As Dean points out, he and Sam are each other's weak spots, and the bad guys know it. But still . . . there's a lot of opportunity for error in the overall plan. I'll have to think on this more. It's making my brain hurt.
However, I must say that I really liked the way Katie Cassidy played Lilith. She played her like a child in a grown-up's body, which is as it should be, given how Lilith is presented to us. She's a spoiled, bratty little girl with the intelligence of an adult. And a completely different demon than Ruby. Bad Seed all grown up. I think Katie could have made Lilith pretty darn terrifying if she'd continued in that role. (As it is, the adult Lilith they ended up with didn't really impress me much.)
When Geo and I first saw this ep when it first aired, we were convinced that Dean was only mostly dead. The camera zoomed into Dean's eye, and we took that as meaning Dean was actually trapped in his own mind, and it was going to be up to Sam to figure out that Dean was only mostly dead (which is still partly alive. I'm sure Bobby has a recipe for a miracle pill. Probably passed down from Miracle Max himself). See, I was holding on as long as freakin' possible to the idea that Dean wouldn't really go to Hell. Of course, come S4, I find that is not the case, and it makes for some . . . interesting . . . character development.
Oh, and speaking of Bobby: turning the town's water system into holy water and turning on the sprinklers to provide a demon-proof shield? Reason #453 why Bobby is awesome!
So, yeah, this ep has a lot of good stuff in it. It's got funny, it's got hurt-y, all with an overlaid sense of urgency and desperation. I'll tell you what. It was a really long hiatus that year. Oy.
I started doing full commentaries with the beginning of S4. They should be tagged accordingly, if you're interested in reading them. So I won't, as a rule, be reviewing them again. If some brilliant bit of insight strikes, I'll try to share it, but for the most part, I think we're done for now.