Supernatural Hiatus Hunting: 4.17, It’s a Terrible Life
[This week, in addition to Alice’s wonderful recap, we also have a review of this hilarious episode – so enjoy another look back!]
This episode was an excellent reprieve from the heady Q&A, emotional/psychological ringer we’ve been dealt over the past few instalments of SPN. This episode made my favourites list from the teaser alone – got to love Health-Nut Dean! And this episode is now an answer to a trivia question – no Impala seen or heard. Sadness. Corporate Dean was an interesting “what-if” scenario – what if he had been given the chance at a normal life, would he have succeeded as he seemed to in this alternate reality? I found this contrast interesting given that in the alternate reality in What Is and What Should Never Be we saw Dean as a loser (apparently a drunk one) with virtually no prospects of success. Sam was hilarious in his tech uniform. I wish we could have seen what his alternate home life was like the same way we saw Dean`s – I`ll bet it was just as entertaining. [Dean Smith and Sam Wesson – GENIUS!]
The brother dynamic was back! Even though they didn`t know they were brothers. It was a real treat to have a smiling Dean and one who meant his snarky comments. “I’m going to do a public service and let you know, you over share.” DEAN! There you are! He and Sam were great and I’d bet J2 had a lot of fun shooting those scenes. [Was I the only one who thought Sam’s tech friend was like a geeky, less-attractive, less-cool Dean in the way he was making fun of Sam and bugging him about the dreams? ]
I was delighted by the Ghostfacers – especially all the digs at “those Winchesters” and the way Sam and Dean thought they were excellent, awesome sources of information. I also enjoyed the references to past characters: Ellen, Jo, Madison (was surprised this wasn’t Jess). This episode was full of throw-backs to the early days of SPN when our boys were on the road, hunting things, without apocalypses, angels and Hellfire at their backs. I loved it. Also, the MOTW reminded me extensively of old Doctor Ellicott (Asylum) right down to his electric-finger-whammy touch.
Lots of gruesome deaths in this one, along with plenty of blood and splatter. Through the whole elevator scene where the security guard was climbing out and then stuck himself back in, I knew what was coming and boy, were those twitching legs realistic and DISGUSTING! The best thing about this episode was the hesitation and lack of usual bravado by Sam and Dean that comes from witnessing everything and then some. Sam’s face as he’s insisting he’ll stay in the elevator and wait was priceless. “Call you back” and the accompanying expression had me in stitches, especially combined with the exchange between Sam and Dean about the blood all over Sam. I’ve miss the laughs and it was good to have them back.
I enjoyed the final scene between Sam and Dean. It really drove home the juxtaposition between this season and season one – back then it was Dean who was all gung ho about hunting and Sam who wanted the “apple-pie” life. It was an effective way of illustrating the complete 180 the characters have engaged in through this season.
The reveal scene, answering the WTF? question with an Angel-Fingers moment. (I wish I could have that much power with mere touch of two fingers to someone’s forehead). Dean snapping out of the trance was abrupt and struck a chord with me – it’s not the only wake-up moment that he’ll be granted in this conversation. I had to laugh at the “why am I so hungry?!” – ah Dean, always food first. Three weeks have passed since the “incident” with Alastair (or, that was the impression I got from the episode) so Dean seems to be in better physical form and it also seemed that with distance from the incident as well as the slight mental reprieve of the alternate reality, he was a little more pre-Hell Dean and a little less Sad-Despondent Dean. I liked that the writer’s introduced another angel as a tool to snap Dean out of his pit of depression. It had to be a character that didn’t have a particular bias towards Dean one way or another and one that Dean didn’t have a certain view on either. That is was Castiel’s boss was perfect – Castiel was middle management and when there’s a big kafuffle like the drama with Uriel, the head-honcho’s step in and realign things. His speech to Dean was well put (I especially enjoyed the part about the “classic cars” and “fornication” and the expression of agreement Dean gave the camera). At first, I took issue with his demand that Dean stop “whining” because I felt, initially, that it downplayed all the suffering Dean had endured. But, the more I thought about it, I realized it was exactly how Dean needed to be spoken to – how John would have spoken to his son – in order for it to get through effectively. It wasn’t cruel, it was effective and did what it was suppose to do.
I actually hissed at the TV when the credits came on, first because I was shocked the hour had passed and second, because I want to see Dean roar back to life like I always knew he would. This episode was a lovely treat for fans because we were given all of the elements of SPN that made us fall in love with it in the first place in addition to advancing the storyline in an it’s-about-time way. Overall, I loved this episode and can’t wait to see what’s coming next. Welcome back, Dean, welcome back.
No matter how many times I watch this episode – it still makes me laugh. It stands as one of the go-to’s among the Supernatural library to throw on when I need to smile, need something in the background or just need a Sam and Dean fix. You don’t need a heck of a lot of background information to enjoy this one – which is part of the beauty – but if you’re a long time viewer, the nuances piles on the cherries even years later.
This was the first episode I reviewed for WFB so it holds an extra special place among the nearly 200 we’ve now enjoyed together. My feelings are primarily the same – in particular that despite knowing how great an ass Zachariah turned out to be overall, I can’t help but enjoy his character’s tone and function in this episode. Even retrospectively, he still delivers a well needed, swift kick.
And the bottom line on this episode that will make me smile 10 years or 50 years on: Sam and Dean will find hunting, and each other, in every incarnation.
Questions of the week: (1) Look-back impression of Zach and his speech? (2) Anybody reminded a bit of Garth by Sam’s little friend? (3) What’s your favourite moment of the episode, pre-memory return?
For more look back with It’s a Terrible Life:
It’s a Terrible Life – Recap by Alice [Original]
It’s a Terrible Life – Review by Elle [Original]
It’s a Terrible Life – WFB Photo Gallery
Another solid episode from Season 4. Dean did a great job playing the douchey midlevel corporate management type. The one thing that stood out in this episode was how Sam seemed to be the one more drawn/attracted to the hunting life, even though he spent much of his life trying to escape it. Wasn’t sure if that was because the demon blood/psychic thing limited Zachariah’s ability to alter his reality, or that was truly Sam.
I absolutely adore this episode! It’s my favourite ghost story with “Provenance”. I loved all the ways that they ended up being like Sam & Dean but different at the same time in this alternate world. But I must disagree with you on just one thing: [quote]Yes, I caught the Smith and Wesson reference. Pretty clever, but rock stars would have been funnier. [/quote] I thought this was so clever to give them each a name that once put together is actually a gun, just like a Winchester rifle. Kudos to Sera Gamble on that one. 😀