Supernatural 2: Why is it our job to save everybody?
[NAFDA]. This is where we talk about the CW series Supernatural! Anything that's aired in the US on TV (including promos) is fair game. No spoilers though — if you post one by accident, an admin will delete it.
catches up on old thread.
Gah. Can't believe I overlooked the "I doubt it" when Sam said that Anna must be happy now. Even so, it's still heartbreaking.
I agree with PC in that it feels like we've been given a whole lot of cosmology in one go with this episode. The one thing that's not sitting right with me (from a story perspective, not a theological perspective) is the idea that angels don't feel things. It doesn't quite jibe with some of what we've seen from Castiel and even Uriel. Or is it just me? As evidenced above, I can sometimes miss things that should be obvious.
I still think that knowing what you did, seeing what you did - is different than feeling it. Like there is still some sort of shock preventing him from getting the whole effect but not enough to prevent the nightmares and thus the self-medicating.
Other thought on what I said last night: the Cross-Roads Demon from last week said that they had the Winchesters exactly where they wanted them: Dean in Hell (either becoming evil or prevented from doing good) and Sam - a mess (not doing good and when he starts using his powers possibly being corrupted.) I'm sure that what helps Hell isn't what Heaven wants so reason enough to save Dean which has the benefit of getting Sam to stop doing what he's doing too.
I had another thought. Well, I remembered a thought I had last night about Anna and her fall. When Lucifer fell he was imprisoned in Hell. Anna fell and was born as a human and grew up as a human. Her punishment was different. Perhaps meant to lead up to a choice such as the one she made last night. Possibly not meant to be made in quite that situation but the Angelic activity around Dean being pulled out of Hell woke up part of her that was in a kind of hibernation.
Also, I agree that at some point John had to realize that something hinky happened - his research would have lead him there.
I also agree that Mary never thought that Sam would pay the price. She thought that she would herself. (Did we talk about that here? Or was that something I overheard at the con?)
I also agree that Mary never thought that Sam would pay the price. She thought that she would herself.
Exactly. Insofar as she was thinking clearly when she made the deal, I doubt she was thinking about hypothetical future children. I could also see her thinking that she'd have the know-how to protect herself when the YED came calling again.
Whee! Yay to wake up to new thread!
And no matter how much white you add after that, you still only have gray.
I loved the way Cass put this. It's so fitting for the tone of the show. There is no shanshu for these boys. Even if Dean became an angel, they don't feel. Castiel and Anna both proved angels can still be unhappy, or more precisely, not happy.
zimshan on LJ had a huge problem the other week when it was established that Dean remembered EVERYTHING from his time in Hell. And now, knowing that Dean spent ten of those forty years in the Pit inflicting torture on other souls? What the fuck, I totally agree with her. He should be a hot mess. Angel came back feral, and that dude had personal experience with torture already. Dean has been remarkably well-adjusted for a man coming off forty years of untold agony.
I brought that up here, but the consensus was that it wouldn't be any fun to watch on tv, so we got the healing packed into time we didn't see. Kind of like Spike needing two weeks to deal with a soul, but Angel had needed 100 years.
My handwavy theory is that Dean's remark that he had no scars (knife or bullet wounds) other than the hand print from Castiel, meant that Castiel healed him as he pulled him from perdition. He's had the equivalent of 400 years of therapy so that now he is not cured, but he is functioning.
ALSO! I just thought. Maybe the hand on the window wasn't a titanic shout-out. Maybe the hand on the scar, then the hand on the window, Kripke was drawing parallels to let us know that Dean and Castiel totally got their Grace on. That's what I'm gonna believe. Dean did question whether something rode him out of hell.
Alastair is a little too Brando for me.
Ha! I noted that as well.
He's had the equivalent of 400 years of therapy so that now he is not cured, but he is functioning.
Think that's what I'm going to go with.
I thought the Titanic shout out was funny on purpose, but that could just be me. I am still pretty meh on the angel sex, but I haven't rewatched yet.
Speaking of meh (the word, not the sentiment): [link]
Also, we need a new phrase for doing the nasty with angels, so we can be gleeful about it, like we were with the necrophilia last week.
Nephilia?
By the way, if you google "angel sex with humans," you fall into a world of weird. Further googling about fallen angels can lead you to "Did Fallen Angels Censor the Bible?" [link] However, you have to stop googling when your head explodes.