Wonderful piece of work.
I love reading other people's mail. Even when they're fictional people.
Oh, I don't go around robbing mailboxes, but I do love published correspondences. I have a collection of my parents' letters to each other when he was away in the army. It's relevatory, in a way talking to them about that period never would have been.
Real letters from real people are awesome, Bev. I read some of my grandfather's letters to my grandmother during WWII, and they were just fascinating. Also, he called her "Bluebird," which made me sniffle.
There is just something about reading letters meant for someone else that makes them more powerful--maybe the private/secret thing. I came across some letters between my parents from when I was about two years old and she was out of state being treated with chemo (she is a breast cancer survivor). Those letters were pretty fascinating and I felt a bit like a spy.
Something just occurred to me. How, exactly, did Gordon get word that Bela would know where the Winchesters were while he was stuck in prison? Is Folsom really a hotbed for gossip about the casual aquaintances of high-end curio brokers?
The script told him, of course. ...Let's just say there's been a bit of a logic deterioration in recent months.
I have to work the next two thursday nights. Ima cut someone. Then I'm going to hug my dvr and thank it for its loyalty.
I totally just invited a recording disaster, didn't I?
Something just occurred to me. How, exactly, did Gordon get word that Bela would know where the Winchesters were while he was stuck in prison?
We know he'd been in contact with Kubrick during the timeframe that Bela and the Winchesters were first interacting. Seems like less of a logic leap than some they've made.
I just don't see Bela advertising the fact that she and they had collaborated. Nor Dean and Sam, given how poorly they came out in the first encounter.
Following Supernatural requires a great deal of handwavium.