There is a woman here who strongly reminds me of Gen Padalecki. I keep staring at her to remind myself that it actually doesn't look like her at all. Just her coat. Who associates coats with people? It's weird and I'm the one doing it.
'Objects In Space'
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.
That's so weird -- there's a college girl who works at the diner downtown who has always reminded me of her. I've actually told her so, too, because at one point I felt like I was staring and wanted to explain.
Oh, and I saw We Bought a Zoo the other day, and wee!Sam was so good in it!
I'm catching up on Revolution On Demand, a few weeks after airing. I just watched the one with Colin Ford, tall as any adult onscreen, scruffy, floppy-haired, and determined to go rescue his older brother. I'm borrowing a Jilli term--I definitely wibbled.
I am rewatching S3 (because it's the one I can beam to the tv currently) and for as much as I never feel the pull to watch this season, it's not bad.
I actually like Ruby, think Bella was written terribly which is a shame because the actress has amused me in other roles and the lady demon in Sin City rocks. Women could totally be on this show and be awesome. Ah well. It's chock full of creepy little girls.
Bela would have been so much fun if she had had some soft spots, or some personal emotional connections. I didn't even get the feeling she particularly liked her cat.
And if she had worked with the boys (at least more willingly than she did in canon), and *then* had to steal the Colt to try and save herself -- what great conflict that would have been. Not wanting to hurt them, but taking her only shot at saving her life, and using her particular skills to do it.
It really felt like they were writing the character to fail. Which is dumb because who would actually do that to their show?
Lauren Cohen totally can work as a character thrown into the mix with emotionally unhealthy brothers. If Vamp D can do it, Supernatural could have.
Also this rewatch is all rose-colored. Sandra McCoy as the Crossroads Demon barely annoyed me. Probably because I knew she was dying at the end of her scene.
Ooooooooh, yes. Now I remember. Insults to men are feminized. Insults to women are sexualized. So many whores. Charming.
Well, after all, what could one possibly call a mass-murdering supernatural monster that would be more insulting than "whore"?
Well, after all, what could one possibly call a mass-murdering supernatural monster that would be more insulting than "whore"?
Whores are the worst, right? I mean fighting demons, being the antichrist, Lucifer wanting to wear you and Leviathans happen. But whores? Whores.
Still, I am totally back into my reimmersion in S3.
I have two Mystery Spot comments.
First, there are (fun!) moments that I'd totally peg as Jensen instead of Dean. The "Heat of the Moment" at the intro to each day is a preview to the "Eye of the Tiger" bit later on next season. They amuse me though.
Two, this is horror. I mean, it's really awful. Sam watches Dean die for real an untold number of times on Tuesday. And once on Wednesday. Then he goes on. Even halfway through the Tuesdays, I could see some of soulless Sam. After? That is a really broken hunter. Props to Jared.
Very weird to feel like Jensen is letting himself bleed through the character of Dean a little and Sam is acting his ass off being a different iteration of the character. I'm impressed as a fan on both counts.
Mystery Spot should have (maybe did) break Sam.
For an ep that we think of as having humor, it's dark and epically broken. Like Winchesters.
(points to Cass' post) What she said, on both counts.