A Deeper Look at Season Six Dean Winchester
Buried in all that screwball madness, there is a touching sentiment that comes from Dean. He’s willing to stay in the alternate reality if Sam could continue to have that good life. A life that doesn’t exist for them in their world. Sam has wealth, a hot wife that loves him, no angels or demons to screw anything up, and all the bad in the world exists only in TV land. Who wouldn’t want that, let alone someone who has been cursed since the day he was born? He gets though the answer he really needs to hear. Sam doesn’t want to live in a world where they’re not brothers.
My Heart Will Go On
This episode is another reminder of how important family is to Dean and his unwavering loyalty to them, even extended family. It’s all he has. Sam, Bobby, and even Ellen and Jo, that meant more to him than anything. In the end it’s all clear, they look out for one another. Oh, and Celine Dion sucks (yeah, I had to get that in there).
Frontierland
Dean Winchester in the old west is a dream come true! Who doesn’t want to watch the equivalent of a wide-eyed jovial kid loose in a candy store? Best Dean Winchester episode ever. We haven’t seen this side of Dean in so long. Loose, freewheeling, happy, he experiences the perks of the job for once. He gets to be a cowboy! Sure, the serape thing doesn’t work out in old west Wyoming, but he adapts. We knew he would. He becomes the sheriff and looks oh so good doing it. He’s even telling raunchy jokes again! Joy, joy, joy. It’s good to see him back into old form. If anyone deserves this break, it’s Dean.
Mommy Dearest
Dean is back in his old form. His focus is so clear, get the bad guys and protect the innocents. He gets to be funny too, coming up with the best name ever for the new species of monster.
He’s still uncompromising though and draws the line when acts of humanity are required. Take the case of the two boys they “rescued” after their parents were murdered. It’s something he and Sam could painfully relate to. Castiel gets angry that they want to take the boys to their uncle because there’s a bigger picture. Dean refuses to stay. These boys need their family and that matters most. Sadly it’s that human reaction that’s used against them, but Dean wouldn’t have done it any different.
It’s also cool to see Dean Winchester have his fighting spirit back. They aren’t going to take any more harm from Mother of All. He will stop her once and for all, even going back to his reckless ways to do it. He won’t deal with her, for he doesn’t make deals with monsters. The memories of being forced to work with Crowley are too fresh. The best part though is he defeats Mother of All doing what he used to do, take huge risks that border on reckless. He’s got guts, you’ve got to give him that. Come on, you were all cheering wildly when he said “Bite me,” weren’t you? Welcome back Dean Winchester.
The Man Who Would Be King
Sigh. It doesn’t last.
Poor Dean. Between this and the next few episodes, an old theme is revisited. Anyone that has ever cared for him has left him. First there’s his unlikely friendship with angel Cass, someone he regards as family just like Sam and Bobby. Just like Sam a few years ago, Castiel has pulled the ultimate betrayal. He’s chosen a demon over him. Dean takes this hard, very hard. Dean learns of the plan, Castiel is going to open the door to Purgatory. He can’t allow that to happen.
He and Bobby try to keep Castiel out, but it doesn’t work. Castiel wants him to back his plan, but Dean refuses. He tries to appeal to Castiel and their deep bond, asking him to trust him. They can find another way, they can fix this. Castiel pushes the proverbial knife through his heart though, the plan doesn’t need fixing. Dean takes that as the ultimatum. He’s going to stop Castiel and his plan with Crowley. Castiel challenges him to do just that and doesn’t seem threatened. After all, Dean’s only a man. Ouch.
Let It Bleed
It’s a forgone conclusion that Dean was going to become unhinged over Ben and Lisa being taken and threatened. He went back to torturing, he single handedly took out a group of demons, and man did he let his violent side take front and center. His behavior even got Sam drinking again! All that’s stereotypical Dean though and to expect anything else could be considered out of character. But why he did that is something he’s said before. “Lisa and Ben, wherever they are, that’s 100 percent on me.” He won’t even accept Sam’s help. Oh yes, this man is drowning in guilt.
Dean left his calm thinking behind and ruled with his heart. All that emotional rage clouded his judgment. I certainly understand that given the circumstances. However, it left Dean vulnerable. He’s been struggling ever since “Mannequin 3″ over his guilt of coming into Ben and Lisa’s lives and breaking their hearts. He knows despite his wants and needs, he should have never exposed them to his life. He sees them suffer here again and can’t take it anymore, especially when Lisa almost dies. He can’t take Ben being angry at him anymore. In a moment of weakness, he has Castiel wipe their minds. They won’t remember he existed.
This choice crushes Dean, and gets Sam angry (if anyone has a sore spot about having memories wiped…). Poor Dean, he actually has to say goodbye to Ben and Lisa by telling them he was the guy that hit them in a car accident and he’s sorry. They were forgiving, not knowing the real truth. No wonder Dean turned away and fell apart. He didn’t want forgiveness. He knows full well he’s far from earned it. This loss is as devastating as when he lost his Father. The overwhelming guilt, the despair, the loss, this is going to haunt him for a very long time.
On the other side is his strained relationship with Castiel and this is a headscratcher. Remember “When The Levee Breaks?” How Sam pleads with Dean to back him up, come with him to kill Lilith? The deal breaker was Ruby. Dean even calls Sam a monster and says he couldn’t be trusted. “Let It Bleed” plays out that scene all over again. Castiel appeals to their friendship, to all he’s done for Dean. “Has anyone but your closest kin done more for you?” Yet Dean refuses to stand down. Why? Crowley. I do wonder, wouldn’t Dean have learned? Sure he was right with Sam, but that did so much damage to their relationship. Wouldn’t it have gone better if he had stood by Sam’s side, no matter what? That’s exactly what Bobby tried to drill into his head in “Lucifer Rising” and it looked like he was getting through too. Now, he’s going down that same road. (Please note none of this is a criticism on the character, more a question of creative direction).
Sure Dean is stubborn. Sure he has a case of wounded pride. He doesn’t take betrayal well either. But again, wouldn’t the results have been different if he had stood by Castiel? There’s no way he could have guessed that Castiel would turn on Sam next, but it’s interesting how he reverts back to this pattern. Even after Castiel saves Lisa and Dean is grateful, all that happena is a “I wish this changed anything.”
The Man Who Knew Too Much
With his defiance of Castiel still firmly in place, everything continues to unravel for Dean. Castiel, like everyone else, knows Dean’s greatest weakness. He takes down Sam’s mind wall, putting Sam in a coma and kicking off the internal fight in his head. Dean can’t do a thing, which makes everything about a hundred times worse. All he could do is go after Castiel and Crowley in hopes of stopping them from opening Purgatory. He has to leave Sam alone to fight his own battles and hope that Sam will come around to help.
He makes that choice to do what Sam would want, even if it wasn’t the one he wanted to make. He has that much faith now in Sam despite everything they’ve been through. Yes, he spent a lot of season six worrying and trying to protect Sam and being there ended up make a huge difference, even if Dean didn’t realize it. The whiskey he drank left clues for Sam that he was at Bobby’s. He could smell it in his dream state. The same went for shining the light in Sam’s eyes, thus enlightening hi, to the presence of his stalking soulless counterpart.
Dean’s going into season seven with plenty of vulnerabilities. His speech to Castiel at the end, even though it’s placating, is truthful. He has lost a lot. Ben, Lisa, Castiel, and now possibly Sam too. At least the Sam he knew. Will he find his old fighting spirit, or will the burden’s of Sam’s issues and his own personal losses become too much? We have another whole season (and likely more to find out). I’m personally hoping that Dean gets his fighting spirit back, but he needs to address some of those lingering issues before that can happen. Hopefully he and Sam can lean on each other for healing. They both need each other more than ever.
Coming up next, A Deeper Look at Season Six Sam Winchester.
Here’s the links to the other previous looks:
A Deeper Look at Season Five Dean Winchester
A Deeper Look at Season Four Dean Winchester
A Deeper Look at Season Three Dean Winchester
this is awesome! i need to watch more of six before seven starts! i havent watched the whole season but i do know how he was depressed Sam was gone and how at first he didnt want his soul back. the vampire epi was sad but cool at the sametime. gosh! i need to watch more episodes. since you mentioned the hell part. i cried at the ending when he was calling for Sam and he looked so scared 🙁 still Dean is a fighter! ^_^ nice page! i like it 😀
i like the points you make i agree! he has had to go through so much! seeing him sad or hurt is heartbreaking and when sam lied to him eventhough he was souless was wrong! i just want to give Dean a hug. i admit there were times i wanted to slap Sam for what he did to Dean but it wasnt his fault.maybe. but the whole beating him up and going in the hole now that made me sad/mad. Dean is one of the best hunters/characters on the planet! still reading your page but sofar i agree with the points you made 🙂
Awwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww Alice! This is so ouchy, but so good! I always say, and I’m only ever half joking, that I know Dean Winchester better than the ‘real’ people in my life. He has lost so much, he has suffered so much, but he just keeps moving forward. I love that about him, that he can do that, just keep moving, just keep ploughing ahead. Most of us would have curled up into a rocking ball by now but not Dean. Yes some of that is because he masks it all but some of it is because he’s that strong. He breaks my heart but he also floods my heart with love! I love this character with a (some would say unhealthy, but I know you wouldn’t) passion. I believe in Dean. I believe he will always pick up his bootstraps. I believe that kick ass, give ’em hell attitude is alwasy just lurking under the surface and I really hope to see a lot more of it in season 7. I hope the brothers can lean on each other, that their relationship is so that they can help heal some of the rifts and tears in their heart from the past seasons. Dean is awesome. That is all. Thanks Alice! I’m going home to watch me some Dean!
-AmyinSydney
Wow, Dean sure did have it rough this last season, didn’t he? *sniffle* Poor Dean!
I thought you brought up an interesting point with the whole Sam/Ruby and Castiel/Crowley parallel. You pointed out that Dean perhaps should have known better than to ask Castiel to choose between him and Crowley, especially since he asked Sam to choose between him and Ruby at the end of season 4 with disastrous results. I think that it was precisely because of those results that Dean refused to stand behind Cas – he had already seen what happened with Sam in a similar situation and was desperate to prevent it from happening again. Whether or not that was a smart thing for Dean to do, and however the ramifications of Castiel’s choice play out, I think we will have to wait until at least the first few episodes of season 7 to judge both Dean’s actions and Castiel’s. Hindsight is, after all, 20/20.
What a wonderful examination of Dean in season 6! I agree that this was perhaps Dean’s most difficult season yet, with Ben and Lisa, Sam, and finally Cas. Dean had so few wins this season, and so very many painful losses. I think that Dean is going to continue to be challenged mentally, physically, and emotionally in season 7, and I hope he can get a handle on his drinking (and drug use??) before he destroys himself from the inside. But honestly? If there is one character who can keep taking the punches and come back swinging, it’s Dean Winchester. I have faith. Can’t wait for S7!!
I had so many issues with plot and conflict continuity in season six that I overlooked how great Dean’s characterization was. This man isn’t the innocent devil may care guy we met in season one. I wouldn’t expect him to be. This a complex show with characters who are multidimentional. This article highlights that, but i think more importantly helps me to appreciate the season more. Thanks!
Loved the review!
Though I’d love Dean to get his fighting spirit back, I wanna see some more of Dean dealing with his issues. sure he’s not a caring & sharing kind of guy but seriously aside from his hell actual experience, he’d been in hell & back so many times & we never got the chance to see how he feels, properly. last time he had some talking about his feeling was in season 4 and still not much!
Excellent look at season 6 Dean. He’s had a rough ride, hasn’t he?
I agree that I hope he gets that fighting spirit back for this coming season. Despite the troubles Sam faces with his wall being collapsed and not being fixable, Dean might take that as a challenge to overcome. He hasn’t given up on Sam yet, why start now?
I really hope we get to see Dean examine what has happened to him and Sam in the past few years and where they should go next. Obviously there is no “out” from the life, but he has to find a way to make the best of it, to pull as much good as possible from it. Dean’s tenacity has gotten him into and out of a lot of trouble, and it’s that he’ll have to rely on again.
Again, great look at Dean here, Alice. He’s had a rocky ride, yes, but I’m very hopeful for season 7 regardless.
Thanks so much for this insightful piece. Really gets me ready for the next season! So excited! Thanks Alice, always love to read your work!
Wow, Alice, that was one of the best essays I’ve read on this site so far. So much depth. I absolutely love Dean, and yes my friends and family always have to remind me he’s fictional, but you know what? I don’t care! He’s the best fictional character there is. He’s flawed, he’s vulnerable, he can be funny, maybe not so much this past season, but he makes me laugh and he makes me cry. So many times I’ve watched this show and I can’t help but think, “Oh, no, poor Dean”. He’s been tested so many times, lost so many people, it’s actually quite sad when you think about it. This is why I watch a lighter episode after a heavy handed one. And what keeps all of us fans coming back for more is the beautiful relationship between Sam & Dean. I will be looking forward to your essay on Sam next. That poor boy has been put through the ringer so many times.
[quote]
2) Lisa and Ben? I actually don’t count that as much of a loss, really. All Dean has really lost is the fantasy Lisa and Ben represented. I’m hoping he’ll deal with this issue a bit and come to the realization of what we already know–that isn’t the life for him, and Ben was right in that it’s not because Dean’s some awful thing (we all know he’s not). It’s because Dean isn’t happy that way. As you said, he has a lot of guilt about the situation, but I hope he can see past it and heal.
3) Sam. Sam is broken in new and interesting ways, sure. But Dean hasn’t lost his brother, and I don’t think he’s going to in Season 7. Sam is holding on specifically for Dean’s sake, we know. So maybe things will be hard, but Dean has the power to help Sam, and we know that this is one task to which Dean is better suited than anyone.[/quote]
Absolutely. I think Dean loves Lisa and Ben truly, but it was more of the fantasy than the reality that drew him into their home. He has secretly pined for the so called “apple pie life” that he so teased Sam about in season 1 the whole time. Here was his shot, and it was doomed from the start. I think he knew that, too. He just couldn’t help himself but try. One hand he had that fantasy, the other he had the promise to Sam.
As for Sam? I think Sam is much more resilient than we’re giving him credit for. You’re right. He’s only walking and talking because he can’t imagine leaving Dean alone in the outside world. Will Sam struggle this season. YES. Will he be totally and irrevocably broke—possibly. Will he find a new balance? I’d hope so. And the whole time, I think Dean will have that purpose back concerning Sam while he handles his own issues with hunting and the “life.”
Alice,
You’ve captured beautifully the success of Dean’s characterization in season six. I especially love how you underlined the subtly at play with Dean’s conflicting emotions and obligations. I liked season six, and one of the reasons I did was because of Dean’s development and his isolation and confusion as well as his understanding of where he belongs, what he does, and how he tries to negotiate those issues.
Brilliant essay, Alice. Thank you for sharing.
-Linda
Hi Alice,
I’m finally back home to my computer (oh, the stories I could tell!) and this is one of the first SPN articles I’ve had time to read, since the beginning of July. It was great, and very thought-provoking.
What I particularly liked was the way you honed in on the fact that what Dean has always wanted was just to keep Sam human. And RoboSam is not human. Like you said, all the pain and suffering Sam will go through now because the wall is broken — at least he’s a person and can feel that.
It very much echoes what Dean said to Bobby in “When The Levee Breaks” and Sam is detoxing from the demon blood.
[i]DEAN
No. I’m not giving him demon blood. I won’t do it.
BOBBY
And if he dies?
DEAN
Then at least he dies human![/i]
I think for Dean, keeping Sam safe and keeping him human are now all one in the same.
What I continue to struggle with is why everyone was so opposed to reuniting Sam and his soul? Surely that’s what Real!Sam would have always wanted. He would have been and is now appalled at what he did while he was soul-free. So, again Dean was just acting in Sam’s best interest. I think of it as Dean having Power of Attorney over Sam, and vice versa. They make decisions for each other, when the other is not in his right mind.
I also appreciated you highlighting the violent killer that is exists in both brothers. (Remember Sam killing Gordon with just his hands and a length of barbed wire?!) What I think is really sad for Dean is that he is choosing to define himself by that one character trait. Dean’s low self-esteem means he’s always looking for the worst in himself, and it’s always there to find. (That’s true for anybody. Does the phrase “I look fat in this dress” ring any bells for anyone?)
I’m also not sure that Dean refused to go along with Castiel’s plan slowly because he felt betrayed. I didn’t see it as a near-replica of Season 4 with Sam & Ruby.
I think Dean wouldn’t go along with Castiels’ plan because he had learned from Season 4’s problems. He knew opening Purgatory was a bad idea, no matter what Castiel believed. Dean’s mistake — the one he keeps making in my opinion — is that he never communicates why he believes something is wrong or a bad idea. He just says the equivalent of “No.. It’s my way or the highway” and nothing will piss off people, and angels!, faster than someone who is unwillingly to at least listen to their side of the argument. (Perhaps you were saying the same thing)
The story of Sam’s life seems to be misfortune piled onto curse piled onto pride piled onto body blow after body blow.
I think Dean’s life story is a little simpler, but equally as tragic. It’s love and loss piled onto heartbreak and grief.
I fear the writers might take him down the drug path. That’s what would happen to a real person. It seems too banal for Dean, and too much against his “go down fighting attitude”. There are suggestions that Season 7 will force Dean to do some soul searching about why he hunts and why he’s good at it. Hopefully, he’ll make peace with it and we’ll see more of the BadAss Dean (and maybe a little more Sniper!Dean.. guh!!)
And I did just find a quote that intrigues me. Again from Season 4 and WTLB. Cue the ominous music:
[i]DEAN
Fine, I’m in.
CASTIEL
You give yourself over wholly to the service of God and his angels?[/i]DEAN
Yeah, exactly.
CASTIEL
Say it.
DEAN
I give myself over wholly to serve God and you guys.
CASTIEL
You swear to follow his will and his word as swiftly and obediently as you did your own father’s?
DEAN
Yes, I swear. Now what?
CASTIEL
Now you wait, and we call on you when it’s time.[/i]
So now Cas is the new God. Do you think he’ll remember making Dean promise to serve God, maybe even call him on it?
Sorry to be long-winded. It’s what happens when I have two months of pent-up Supernatural thoughts!
Cheers all!
I think Pragmatic Dreamer has touched on something that doesn’t always get much face-time; Dean’s lack of self-esteem. He was coded for the first three seasons as being a devil(!)-may-care, blue-collar tough guy, but after his resurrection it was made quite clear than Dean has suffered – and continues to suffer – a lot. I thought the Ep ‘Sex & Violence’ was a dead give-away; he doesn’t indulge in anything because his ‘desire’,’id’ whichever is so beaten down as to be non-existent. I’ve always wondered whether the writers would touch on Dean’s PTSD post-hell, and I think the very few mentions of him being alcoholic/drug-addicted (though not fully supported by the canon)reflect this. Can he really have dealt with those forty years just by confessing to Sam what happened? I’m not sure. But he’s my favourite TV character by a long shot, and I just hope he gets some inner peace, eventually.
oh dean!! and can i just add what an amazing job jensen ackles did with dean this year. seriously blew me away many times.
i completely missed the ‘maybe drugs too’ references in the episodes. maybe i was too busy angsting for dean and admiring jensen. i’d love to hear them though – can you share?
Hi karen bg,
yeah, I haven’t seen all of season 6, but the one reference to drug use I can remember is at the beginning of “Mannequin 3” when Sam is recovering from his brush with his hell memories and Dean offers him food and a bottle of pills. Sam asks what the pills are and Dean just replies, “Effective.” This exchange has made some fans speculate that Dean has started taking drugs, possibly antidepressants or even something else, in order to cope with everything he has had to cope with. Hopefully we will not have to see Dean struggling with drug abuse as well as everything else this upcoming season, but I do think this issue must be addressed. Maybe someone who has seen the entire season can tell us if there were any other references?
The drug “implications” only came up twice. The first was Mannequin 3, just like kmarie said. The second was way more obvious actually. It’s in “Let It Bleed” when Dean is interrogating the demons in Bobby’s garage. Sam comes in and offers to help. He mentions Dean is running on coffee, whiskey and “whatever else he’s taking.” Chances are it’s just amphetamines, but who knows?
This was spot on! It’s the main reason why season 6 was so painful to watch, beside the bad writing.
Never noticed any “bad writing” myself this season. (or any other season for this show). Season 4 was the most painful for me to watch, as it split up the brothers and that is the worst thing to happen as far as my enjoyment of the series holds. Even so, I wouldn’t trade season 4 for any other TV show ever!
Alice, that analysis was completely awesome and I couldn’t disagree with a word of it! Completely enjoyed reading it over and nodding to myself in agreement. Dean is such a fascinating and complicated character, endearing and maddening at the same time, brave and fearful (of what goes on with his Sammy) and completely and sadly loaded down with low self-esteem. He never sees himself as worthy unless it is helping others, but never himself. He just has to be useful or he is so very depressed. I hope in season 7 he regains his badassery cockiness and wins a few more battles than he has losses. Hasn’t he lost enough? Mercy! I would like to see him laugh and have a little fun again like he had in season 1.
In other words, I just love Dean Winchester and really want a little relief from suffering now and again.
Looking forward to the Sam essay. That poor boy his had all his fears come true and he needs some relief also. As long as he loves his brother and watches his back I can take a lot of their misery, but split them up and it is almost unbearable! 😥
Great essay Alice! Thank you. 🙂
Awesome essay, Alice. 😆 Season 6 just piled more and more angstiness on Dean. I kept asking myself how much more can the poor guy take without breaking?
Dean also has a huge stubborn streak and a firm belief that he is right. I know when I watched Sam begging Dean to just this once “trust him”, I was yelling at Dean to trust Sam. (Ruby had me totally fooled). But Dean was right, Ruby’s road was the wrong way to go. I don’t believe standing behind Cass and opening Purgatory would have been a good idea either. (Just a small quibble).
Your essay brought up so many excellent ideas and gave me lots to ponder on for the next 20some days. Being fairly new to the site, I haven’t read your previous “Dean: season articles. Looking forward to reading those.
With all the terrific reviews, games, articles, etc, on this site, the hellatus has breezed by. 🙄
Regarding Dean’s attitude about about Cas working with Crowley, I
Regarding Dean’s attitude about Cas working with Crowley, I don’t think it was Cas working with a demon that was the biggest issue (and I would have liked it if the writes were more clear about this). It was that Cas was actively working against the Winchesters while pretending to be on their side. Plus, they were talking about opening purgatory. If Dean thinks that is a BAD IDEA, why should he ignore his own instincts and opinions just because Cas says so?
I was beginning to think that I was the only one who felt this way. I too thought it was more about Cas working with Crowley, while Dean and Sam were completely clueless pawns. It would be nice if this is clearly explained in this upcoming season.
I think there is one important history of Dean’s that we seem to forget. Dean learned from Death that one shouldn’t mess with the “Natural Order”. What people forget is that it was Dean’s un-death in “Faith” the first to screw up with the natural order. The Reverend said that god (or the Angels) told him to to that. And then John added to that by exchanging his life for Dean’s when it was pretty obvious Dean was about to say yes to Tessa.
I think the most tragic thing about Dean’s story is that most of the devastating events in his life were made by other people or beings and he was the direct sufferer of those actions.
With regards to Castiel and Deans relationship, I think “The man who would be King” is a showcase of how blind Castiel has become. God is in everything and every being. For the entire episode Castiel asks for directions from God, not realizing that maybe Dean’s request to not open Purgatory and to trust him, is God answer.
to be honest i was fed up this last season with sera gambles dean assanation to his character she makes out like he s a drunk and then the ref to the pills taking everything away from him it s about time dean was back on top and not unhappy all the time why should he have to take everything on his shoulders all the time he deserve a bit of happiness for once i would have been happier if he had nt wiped ben and lisa s memories he did nt have the right to do that which there again makes him look bad i hope the writers have a lot better season lined up for dean in season 7.z