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In another part of the country, Sam Winchester made his way to Rufus’ old cabin. He had visited there many times over the past year, whether looking for Dean or comfort… But this time, he was leaving a behind a relationship, one that held promise of the kind of life he’d often wished for but never dared hope could happen. As it turns out, it couldn’t…too many obstacles or two many secrets or both…or was it just that this was a dream built only on loss and grief... Sam arrived at the cabin, only to discover his brother. A brother he believed was dead, a brother he believed was lost to him forever. But there, standing in front of him, was Dean… Holy water, silver blade, borax, hug… the Winchester brothers were back together again...but as usual, their road would not be an easy one. Wow…seems like a long time since that happened huh? Now, here we are staring down the barrel of the “Supernatural” season 8 finale and I have absolutely no idea where we’re going to end up. There are so many elements in play, all interwoven through the characters involved and I can’t even image which way it’s all going to go. Let’s check out the synopsis…
WHAT MUST SAM, DEAN AND CASTIEL SACRIFICE TO FOREVER SEAL HELL? With Crowley poised to undo all the good they’ve ever done as hunters, Sam and Dean find themselves cornered. But with Kevin’s help, the Winchester brothers bound into one last play against The Demon King. Metatron initiates a plan with Castiel to take on Naomi and the bureaucracy of Heaven. Alaina Huffman and Kim Rhodes also guest star. Phil Sgriccia directed the episode written by Jeremy Carver. Phil Sgriccia and Jeremy Carver. The big guns take us out! And they freakin’ better not kill Sheriff Mills, like seriously. Seriously. Just sayin’. So it seems that our favourite hunting bros are working a different angle to their angel friend. Will these two stories intersect? Will Castiel end up joining forces with the brothers, or will we go to hellatus with the angel well and truly on the outs with the Winchesters again. What will be the brother’s big last play against Crowley? And how far has the evil bastard got on his to kill list of all the people the Winchesters have saved? What kind of physical toll will this final trial take on Sam? Is his blood the blood they need to cure a demon? If the brothers don’t finish the trials, what will become of Sam’s health? Will Abaddon spoil the brother’s plans as she sets her sights on Crowley and Hell’s crown? Which characters will survivor and which characters will die? Here is the CW promo…
There's so much is going on in here. Naomi has Metatron – and it looks like Castiel is fighting for him. Cass has Kevin by the collar. Sam’s beating on Crowley. Castiel is telling the boys his plan – sounds like it’s at the cost of theirs. If Cass is going to shut the whole thing down, is he planning on starting the demon trials again, or is he planning on using Sam? What’s going on that Dean is yelling for Sammy to stop? Does he discover that what they’re doing is actually a trap laid to launch some other horror? How far will Abaddon get with Crowley. Sam goes flying through the window! No! Delicious preview anyone? ‘Ello boys. Is this scene taking place in Bobby’s car yard? And is the conflict at the end of the clip manufactured by the boys to lull Crowley into a false sense of security? I kind of feel like it is. I’m guessing that’s part of the big plan to grab the “salesman”. CHCH promo…
I don’t think the brothers will close the gates of Heaven or Hell, but…I’ve been surprised before. To be honest, I don’t want the gates of Hell closed because the demons are intrinsic to the mythology of this show. From day 1 they’ve plagued the Winchester brother’s lives and I would hate to see that conflict lost forever. Heaven…well that’s another story… I don’t really even have a wish list (except that Sheriff Mills survives and Naomi dies), I'm just looking forward to riding it out in shock and awe. Oh okay, I lied, I have one thing on my wish list...that the brothers are together when the dust of this finale settles and neither is dead and neither is parts unknown. If either of those things happen, you’ll hear my anguished cries from across the Pacific and beyond. I just don’t want them separated again. Not again. So, what about you guys…do you have theories, hopes, fears. What are you looking forward to? What are you dreading? I just know I’m damn well excited. Fasten your seatbelts fans… it’s going to be a bumpy night. Thanks for reading my last preview of the season! See you in reviewland! Enjoy the finale and CARRY ON MY WAYWARD SON! - sweetondean
For all the latest Supernatural info and article links, follow The Winchester Family Business on Twitter at @WinFamBusiness Comments (73)
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I am confused. It is only 2 days until Supernatural’s Season 8 finale airs in the U.S., but with so many plots and sub-plots still fluidly intertwining, I have no idea where this story is headed! I have totally given up on speculating, predicting or theorizing what is happening this season! I am intellectually baffled and emotionally exhausted. I think that’s a good thing. It means the series is unpredictable. It means I come back week after week for answers. These brainteasers are a significant part of my love of the show. I must say, though, that there are so many mysteries and layers upon layers of misdirection in this season, that I can’t keep them straight anymore! Can you help me? For all the latest Supernatural info and article links, follow The Winchester Family Business on Twitter at @WinFamBusiness
We start this episode with another familiar face---Tommy Collins---as he goes to a cabin for the first time since being rescued by Sam and Dean from a Wendigo back in season 1. He is skittish, hesitant about this, but there. We can imagine that he is trying to finally put behind him what had happened all those years ago---that it is time to move on from that frightening experience. Unfortunately, Tommy hears something rustle outside the cabin, making him fear that yet another Wendigo has come to finish him this time. He falls back in a panic, clutching his blow torch, and begins to bleed profusely only to be ripped apart by some invisible force. Something else---something other than a Wendigo is responsible for killing Tommy, but what? Meanwhile, the Winchesters are trying to figure out the final step in their quest to close Hell forever. They know what the Third Trial is---to cure a demon---but now they have to answer the question of how. Thankfully, they have access to a treasure trove of information in the Men of Letters Bunker---and they come across an unusual exorcism that could be the key to completing the Third Trial. Father Thompson, back in 1958, was attempting a new version of the ritual. The brothers unearth footage of his attempt, and watch as a possessed woman struggles against chains. Everything seems standard. The demon threatens everyone and is violent. The priests are trying to subdue and expel the demon---but as the footage continues to roll we see that Father Thompson does something completely different. He slices his hand open and places the bleeding gash across the demon's mouth. Not unlike when an angel kills a demon, we see the demon's eyes flash white and its host falls over dead. It is obvious that this attempt failed---but that isn't the end of it.
We watch Castiel bumble his way through a convenience store, making a mess as he goes. He lacks understanding of basic shopping mores---only to exasperate the clerk. His shopping list is a first step at bridging the gap between him and Dean: Busty Asian Beauties, beer, beef jerky---and the ever elusive pie. Before he can punish the clerk for not having pie, Metatron steps in. He has a plan that he wishes to share with Castiel---perhaps one that will help him atone for what he has done since the Apocalypse had been averted. It's at least worth hearing the Scribe of God out. The plan is to shut down Heaven---to complete their corresponding Trials and lock all the angels in Heaven for a long overdue family meeting. He tells Castiel, “Angels get uppity, slam the pearly gates.” But Metatron, scribe that he is, has not the strength to undertake them himself. He needs the help of a warrior---in this case Castiel---in order to make it succeed. It would seem that he has taken the Winchester's admonishing to heart and has decided to become a player. It is yet more evidence that they are the ones influencing things more than anyone else. Metatron's decision is a direct reaction to their accusations that he turned his back on humanity and allowed angels to wreak havoc on the world in his absence. Much like Castiel, he must right this wrong, too.
Back with the Winchesters, they seek out the remaining priest from the exorcism footage---Father Simon---to learn more about what Father Thompson was trying to do. He tells them that a demon is really only a human soul twisted by its time in Hell, and that if one could heal that damage it would be possible to make a demon human again. He tells them that Father Thompson continued to practice his new exorcism---and that he filmed these tests. If anyone is going to have this footage, it will be the Men of Letters, and so the Winchesters return home to dig through the archives. They come across an even more shocking clip of Father Thompson's exorcisms. He has chained yet another possessed person and is making yet another attempt at the test that failed in the earlier footage. We watch the black and white grainy film as the priest asks the demon how it felt to kill the man's children. In typical fashion, the demon screams in delight that it was “Orgasmic.” This time, the priest injects the demon with something---making it howl in agony. We learn that it is his blood purified by confession---and it is one of the tools in his arsenal to cure this demon. The test is a grueling one---going on for hours and many more doses of the purified blood. Each time, Father Thompson demands to know how it felt---and each time it seems that the demon's glee at the children's deaths gets a little less. Finally, after the last dose and the demon is no longer fighting his chains, we see the priest ask one more time, “How does it feel” only to get a human response back. “They were screaming. And I laughed. Why did I laugh? I'm sorry. I'm so sorry.” It is a major breakthrough---and it proves that Sam and Dean can complete the Third Trial. It is possible to do it.
Sam's phone rings and it is Crowley on the other end. He has called to tell them about Tommy Collins---that they should check the Denver news and see his handiwork for themselves. As they walk away to deal with Crowley in private, it gives Abaddon the chance she needs to make her escape. It is a creepy sequence as she calls a hand back to her host body, allowing her to dislodge the bullet. It proves that she is an extremely powerful demon---perhaps more than the “salesman” currently running Hell. While that is significant, the Winchesters have more pressing things to attend to as Crowley sends them on a wild goose chase. They arrive too late to find Jenny Klein dead in her oven. She is the second victim in this chain of those they had saved in the past. From there, Crowley sends them to a hotel not far away---where an old friend waits. As the door opens, Sam is shocked to find Sarah Blake on the other side. It has been seven years since they last saw one another. She lets him in, and he explains to her what is happening. Crowley is after her---just as he was after Tommy and Jenny---and Sam will do whatever it takes to save her from the same fate.
The clock ticks down to Crowley's appointed time---and the phone rings. It is Crowley on the line, taunting the brothers as they frantically search for the hex bag that is causing Sarah to slowly choke to death. He tells the brothers that it is a fitting end for her, as “From what I understand, Sammy took that bird's breath away.” It is a devastating scene, a heart-wrenching moment as they rip the room apart. They toss the bedding, rip the cushions off the couch, and dump anything they can in order to find it. All the while Crowley's gravely voice taunts them, telling them that they will fail. He wants them to cease the Trails, to hand over Kevin, and to surrender completely. His actions are desperate ones. All through the season it has been Sam and Dean that have been in control. It is their actions that dictate everything that has happened in one way or another. They chose to close Hell. They chose to undertake the Trials. Crowley has tried everything he knows to stop them. He has maimed Kevin. He has threatened his mother. He has kidnapped Kevin not once but twice. Crowley has done all that he can to throw them off their track. And so, he reaches for the last bullet in his gun: using Sam and Dean's reason for hunting against them. “Saving people, hunting things, family business.” Their motto has often been what has carried them through their darkest hours. It is what allows them to get back up again after a crushing defeat. Sam and Dean know that while they may suffer and struggle in “the life” they are the reason that there are so many out there alive and well, saved from some horrible fate at the hands of a supernatural creature. Without them, these people would be dead. We see that devastate Dean in “What Is and What Should Never Be.” The knowledge that these things could have been stopped is what pushes him to break the djinn's control.
The Winchesters big kill track record has one common thread: the enemy threatened or killed a loved one. Azazel, the first major demon the Winchesters defeated, tormented them for two seasons. His undoing was simple and utterly complete. It wasn't in killing Mary. It wasn't in killing Jessica. It wasn't even in killing John that gave the Winchesters the strength to finally defeat him for good. It wasn't even infecting Sam with his demonic blood and trying to turn him into a solider for Hell that did it. Azazel's fatal mistake was kidnapping Sam and allowing Jake the opportunity to stab him to death---in front of Dean. That moment solidified Dean's resolve more than anything else---and while it made him sell his soul to revive Sam---it also allowed him to finally pull that trigger on the Colt, putting that bullet between Azazel's eyes and ending his reign of terror. We see that pattern repeat with Lilith. She keeps her distance largely from the brothers in season 3, only to make her fatal mistake in its finale. Her sending the hell hounds to slaughter Dean in front of Sam sealed her fate for good. It may have taken another season for it to come to fruition---and while Dean may have been resurrected by Castiel long before that time---it was still her fatal mistake. It galvanized Sam, causing him to seek her end despite any costs. She threatened Dean simply by being alive---and the younger Winchester simply could not allow that to stand. Even if he had to turn to the dark powers given him by Azazel, he would do it to kill her. Zachariah makes the same mistake---finally giving Dean the chance to stab him in the face. He has used both Sam and Adam against Dean to make him say yes to Michael. In the process, he causes both of them to choke on their own blood. He believes he has won. Dean, after all, tells him to call down Michael. But he has walked right into a true Winchester trap. Dean winks to Sam and makes a quick move to finally end Zachariah for good. It is the fatal mistake so many keep repeating. Lucifer also made this fatal mistake---although by proxy. Meg corners the brothers and their allies the Harvelles, leaving them to watch both women die in an explosion so they can go track the Devil down and shoot him. He tried to convince Sam that he could bring him love, all the while destroying those the Winchesters loved in the process of trying to make Sam say yes. In the end, his lack of understanding the brothers and their bond---and most importantly why they do what they do in the “family business”---allowed Sam to wrestle control and send Lucifer back where he belonged: the Cage. Dick Roman also made this fatal mistake spectacularly in his murder of Bobby Singer. He was the father figure the brothers had relied upon since childhood--- and his loss haunted them for the remainder of season 7. Avenging Bobby was crucial for the brothers---especially Dean---but he was the symbolic personification for why the Winchesters hunt at all---to save people, to bring good to the world, and to leave it a bit better than before they started. Dick Roman underestimated that drive or what Bobby meant and it caused him to be sent back to Purgatory at Dean's hands. Here, Crowley has now made this same fatal mistake in killing Sarah Blake---and he doesn't realize it. He thinks that he has won. He thinks by crippling the brothers this way that they will capitulate, that they will take the deal on the table and hand over the Tablet and Kevin and end their pursuits of the Trials. He thinks, by doing this, that he has managed to finally derail the Winchester's plan. He could not be more wrong nor more foolish. He has finally underestimated “those denim wrapped nightmares.” As his speech accentuated the horror occurring before the brothers, he also hit another nerve. He reminded the brothers why they do what they do. They had invested to the cause earlier in the season---and to one another in “Torn and Frayed,” but Crowley has now reminded them why. Why do they put themselves through this suffering? Why do they sacrifice their health and happiness to commit to “the life?” Simple: saving people, hunting things, family business. They do this because it betters the world. Sam and Dean may dream of normal, of that far off apple pie life, but they are doers. They cannot sit idly by and watch others suffer when they can do something about it. The guilt they would feel at allowing others to die on their watch would be far worse than being “in the life.” Hunting helps them to make the world brighter---when they are often surrounded by darkness so often. Sam and Dean hunt because it gives them a purpose no other career path ever could. It makes them stronger, better, and those they save stand as a testament to that fact.
As soon as Crowley hangs up, Dean throws the phone against the wall, revealing the hex bag hidden inside. It is too late. Sarah is dead. Sam is shocked and devastated---both brothers are. They lost this time---and it is painful. It cuts deeply into them as a once upon a time win has now forever turned into a horrible loss. In that moment we can see easily how it could cripple them. Crowley's plan is effective and powerful---and if they let it happen he will truly win. We are left with the brothers, devastated by what has transpired. Sam's expression is heartbreaking, despondent, and broken. He tells Dean “I'm saying... Maybe this isn't one we can win. Maybe we should just take the deal.” It would seem that Sam wants to do just that, let the King of Hell walk away with a big win. His pain is too raw to bolster any determination, his body and mind too sore to fight. But what has really happened here is that Sam has transformed back into the little brother---and he is desperately reaching out to Dean. He needs his big brother to lean on, to prop him up, and to remind him that it's not over. And Dean delivers.
It's fairly certain that Sam and Dean will “kick it in the ass” again, punishing Crowley ultimately for his fatal mistake.
Best Lines: Clerk: DUDE! Dean: We'll figure this out. We will. And we'll get it done. We'll kick it in the ass like we always do. Dean: Oh, yeah, 'cause that was the most freaky thing was the vocabulary. What about the bloody high five or the chest burster? Anything else on the film, like director's commentary, sequel, maybe? Metatron: Yeah. According to him, you and I have a lot in common. We're both free thinkers. We're both on heaven's most wanted list. I thought we could socialize, maybe grab a bite. Metatron: Yeah. Just -- just picture it. We ride to the rescue, save the day -- make a great story. Sam: We figured kitty didn't need her claws. Abaddon: The salesman? Sarah: I do miss the old haircut, though. It's amazing that we're already to the season finale. Get ready to hear “Carry On My Wayward Son!” For all the latest Supernatural info and article links, follow The Winchester Family Business on Twitter at @WinFamBusiness
For all the latest Supernatural info and article links, follow The Winchester Family Business on Twitter at @WinFamBusiness
For all the latest Supernatural info and article links, follow The Winchester Family Business on Twitter at @WinFamBusiness
The Cure
Frankenstein Telekinesis
Forgiveness and Pie
On the note of forgiveness, I think my favourite scene in this episode was Castiel in the grocery store. First we have more demonstrations of him trying so earnestly but failing to fit in the human world. Secondly, the sweetness of what he was doing – just writing about it makes me saw “aww” aloud. Finally, threatening the cashier for pie. So badly I wanted to see Castiel bring all the food back to the bunker, pie included, and have Dean understand how much Castiel was trying to earn his forgiveness. Was it a huge, jump in front of a bullet, fall into a hell pit, and take on a hell hound Supernatural level gesture? Maybe not. But it was the meaningful sincere attempt of a friend. The scene was shot perfectly too, with the music and the only dialogue being the annoyed cashier exclaiming “dude!” every so often. Half-Breeds and Trials
I’m also curious to know the effect performing the trials will have on Castiel. Metatron made me suspicious in this episode and just as Sam gets sicker has he continues to perform the trials and there is an element of great sacrifice involved there, I wonder if the real reason Metatron didn’t want to perform the Angel trials himself is something like: as those trials are complete you lose your grace and become mortal ergo Castiel will be human and stuck on earth once he’s finished? Metatron was the scribe, he knows the details verbatim and he has demonstrated cowardliness and self-interest at supreme levels, so yeah, kind of not entirely buying what he’s selling. Final Thoughts This episode ended up a lot different then what I expected. I certainly didn’t expect the emotional punch that was the ending - Crowley’s speech to the Winchesters was a devastating blow to the confidence that only moments before her death Sarah had commented on and this scene was brilliantly done with the frantic search and panic comfort cutting back and forth with Crowley’s cool, malicious and matter-of-fact statements about how things will be going forward after a harsh but nevertheless accurate analysis of the boys.
Speaking to the final exchange between the boys, Sam’s hesitation to continue with the trials while Dean is steadfastly determine to move forward despite the threat of civilian casualty it makes me wonder if this is the sacrifice that has been spoken about for so long. Castiel and Metatron’s subplot drama with the waitress is actually the perfect analogy: Castiel hesitated to kill the waitress because she was an innocent bystander in all this though as Metatron put it her death was a necessary for the greater scale good of Heaven (putting aside the merits of “good of Heaven” for the time being).
For all the latest Supernatural info and article links, follow The Winchester Family Business on Twitter at @WinFamBusiness
Okay, ladies and gentlemen, after a fantastic chat with fellow WFB author Bookdal, we have come up with an extra-special Theory about the entirety of Season 8. We think we’ve found a way to explain all manner of inconsistencies and strangeness that’s been happening this season. Not only that, but our theory even redeems Sam’s early-season behavior! Not possible, you say? Read on and see what you think after you’ve heard what we have to say. For all the latest Supernatural info and article links, follow The Winchester Family Business on Twitter at @WinFamBusiness
For all the latest Supernatural info and article links, follow The Winchester Family Business on Twitter at @WinFamBusiness
As is typical at about this time every season, I feel like my head might explode. There is so much going on that I feel the need to categorize my thoughts in list form rather than a typical review. So please bear with me as I go all “type A” on you right now. For all the latest Supernatural info and article links, follow The Winchester Family Business on Twitter at @WinFamBusiness |

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