feliciakw: (SPN - LR (4.01))
[personal profile] feliciakw
Oh, S4, you had such promise, particularly in the first half.

Then you went wonky.

Date: 2011-08-22 02:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] feliciakw.livejournal.com
But I do think Kim was the "adult" voice on the show, probably kept Kripke and Gamble in line a lot of times.

Kim and Bob Singer. IIRC, during the first PaleyFest, Kripke and Bob both talked about the studio pairing the young whippersnapper Kripke, who was all about the blood and gore, with the more mature, character savvy sensitivities of veteran Robert Singer. It made for a nice balance in the early seasons, and it is pretty evident to me that Kripke didn't have carte blanche to do whatever *he* wanted to do in those early seasons.

Kripke said more than once in commentaries that he was pulled back from some really bad Dean choices

Oh, very much WORD to that. The two that stand out in my mind was what he wanted to do with Dean in WIaWSNB, and in DaLDoM. Sometimes it's the other writers/producers that pull him back, and sometimes it's the serendipitous way things work out.

Then there's the scene that Jensen touched on at a convention, where he felt he wasn't in a position to tell the creator of the character when the character felt OOC, but you could kind of tell he was really frustrated with it. And I think I know exactly which scene he was referring to.

it would have been easy if they honestly employed the "symmetry" they claim they like, except never end up doing

A lot of times, the writers talk a good game, but they're obviously trying to tell us what they think we want to hear. Kripke originally compared the show to Star Wars. And ya know? Luke (Sam) is the central figure in that mytharc. No two ways about it. (Until the prequels, which I refuse to acknowledge. *g*) If Sam is Luke and Dean is Han, then it's very clear that there actually is a hero and a sidekick (I do not use that term as a derogatory. I usually gravitate toward the sidekicks). Or perhaps hero and supporting roguish character (I never really considered Han a "sidekick"). The writers can claim as much "symmetry" as they like, but the model they originally compared the show to was not "symmetric." An ensemble cast, yes. But the story clearly revolved around one character.

So their whole thing about "it's about two brothers"--that I believe. But if they're using "symmetry" to describe the mytharc, then no. (As I've always said, I see Sam as the center of the mytharc, and Dean as the center of the emotional arc. And though the mytharc and the emotional arc are connected, they're still two separate things. And I find Dean's emotional arc to be more interesting and accessible than the mytharc. I hope that makes sense.)

(I don't think that word means what they think it means)

Incontheevable!!!!

*awards bonus points for Princess Bride reference* :-D

Going back to S1, I actually would say things were more of an even split in the hero moments. (I've touched on that a while back in my early S1 reviews.) Very early on, whichever character had the peril moment, that's the character who had the hero moment in that ep. Sometimes there were multiple hero moments, with each brother taking one.

But the mytharc has always been Sam's.

It just seems to me that Jensen turned Dean into a richer character than they were anticipating, and that he, in some ways, has become the . . . I'll say unsung hero . . . of the show. Dean is the constant source and representation of good. Yes, he's got his flaws, and there are certain things to which he has blinders, but he's the regular guy (meaning, sans "powers") who's fighting the good fight and trying to keep things together as best he can.

And now I'm just babbling.





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