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Supernatural - 6.16 - ...And Then There Were None - Recap by Selina

5 Mar 2011

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Hey y'all! Blame my cat for the extra couple of hours it took to get this recap up: she's old and so we let her outside in an enclosed area so she won't get run over or get beat up by other cats in the area, only now it's spring time so her boyfriend cat from the other side of the fence got frisky and jumped up and got stuck on the roof! So I had to climb around trying to get him down.

I want to take a moment to thank you for all your comments last week (and every week), they really mean a lot and it's great to see what you all think (of Canada, mostly, but also the episode hehe) - both when you agree and disagree with what I've said! ;) So thank you!

Please check out theboxblog.net for more of this! Later today I am uploading a commentary about the Lost love triangle, so check it out if you're interesting, it'll be nice and controversial. But enough about that, let's talk about SPN. It was the last episode before a looooong break, but I think it gave us enough to think about till April, don't you?




If last week's theme was parody, surely this week it's horror!



From the very first moments it is made clear that this episode is nothing like last week! But that's a good thing, because crazy genre switches is the bread and butter of this show.

The redshirt of the week meets Mother of All at a gas station (of course, where else?). She calls herself 'Eve'. Clever. She wants to ride with Rick in his nice big red truck, and I already think it's sad that she had to pick such a nice truck driver to bring down bloody murder on, because I'm sure there are nastier ones! She tries to make out with him, but Rick won't have any of that nonsense. Rick refers her to Jesus. Because really, her hunger is for him. Um, what?

"Your Father made you, and then abandoned you. So you pray. But truth is, your apocalypse came and went, and you didn't even notice. A mother would never abandon her children like he did. You'll see."

Okay, I know this wasn't the case this time, but I hate it when evil things say "You'll see" and then kill the person they say it to. Because then how will they see?! But in this case I guess he did see. And I also understand now why Eve chose this particular truck driver. She's not interested in punishing the foul, but in corrupting the pure.


Next scene, Rick returns home to his wife - and smashes her head in. NASTY. Sometimes I think it's weird that I'm such a big fan of the show, seeing as how I hate gore and horror. I'm just here for the funny stuff, really.


Did I hear "Werewolf Dance Party"?



Bobby is back!! I'm still gutted we missed him last week, but at least he's in the show as much as he is. For someone who is not a regular, Jim Beaver sure is in the show a lot - especially compared to the actual regular Misha Collins! Where's he at anyway, wasn't he meant to be back on a permanent basis by now? I mean, okay, he did die last week but I've seen his tweets, he's out there somewhere! But I digress.

Bobby has found a spot of mystical convergence (hey, a Hell Mouth!), where Rick killed his wife. So the Three Stooges/Musketeers/Blind Mice/etc. head down there, where they are met with a very confused and sad Rick. He blacked out and doesn't remember what happened. And it's sad that he's been charged with his wife's murder, isn't it, because okay he did do it but it wasn't his fault! Now he's stuck in jail AND has lost his wife. Poor man.


Looking at the surveillance footage, the brothers and Bobby see Eve, but her face is creepy and rotted-looking. The only other time we've seen something like this is in shapeshifters, when their eyes give them away, but this time it looks like some absurd possession thing. Which I suppose it is, considering Mother has taken up residence in the poor virgin girl's body.

And, haha, coming in for Mother's Day. Funny. The hunters are scared of running into the Mother, since they don't know how to deal with her. It's good to be back on that mystery, as nice as last week's diversion was.


This town ain't big enough.... or, I guess it is.



Bobby heads down to check out the latest disturbance: a man killed six people with a hunting rifle. And look, there's another hunter in town: Rufus! I like him. Compared to the other horrible, morally gunkish hunters we've met, Rufus is like a fluffy bunny. Also, recurring likable characters on this show are so few and far between, we must cherish them for as long as they last.

Bobby and Rufus team up and examine the possessed man's body. They find black stuff in his ear - Mother's saliva, yuck.

They meet Dean and Sam, who are happy to see Rufus. What a bizarre, dysfunctional yet strangely sweet family all those hunters are. Makes me all nostalgic for the Road House.


Together, the four of them go to the place where the two possessed people worked. And look what we have here: another couple of hunters! It's Gwen and Samuel! You know, in a way it's long overdue for hunters to run into each other like this, because while America is huge, lately there HAVE been several very intense hotspots where Sam and Dean have gone to fight some ultra big bad, and you'd think other hunters would have got a whiff of that too. But here they are and it's a big happy family reunion... at least to the extent that Dean doesn't blow out Samuel's brains. And wait, is this the first time Samuel has met Bobby? I guess so.

There is brother angst, because Sam wants Dean to calm down and Dean is annoyed. What else is new?


"You must be the guy pretending to be their father." "Well somebody ought to."

YOU TELL HIM, BOBBY!

Okay if it's ever a question of Bobby vs. anybody, just know that I'll be siding with Bobby, 'kayyy? I love love love the Dean/Sam/Bobby relationship, I think it's the best part of the show. First of all, he's a better father figure than John ever was (sorry! But it's true), and it's even more amazing because the three of them have never been stuck with each other, or forced to work together because of twisted family loyalties. Bobby reached out to the brothers because they needed him, and that made them a family. And family is really what this show is all about!

Tension is pretty high after that though. Sam stands his ground by Bobby's side (!), and tells Samuel he got his soul back. There's great close-up shots, but Rufus interrupts the camera by demanding some plot development instead. Samuel tells them a bit about Eve, how she's the creature from purgatory who 10,000 years ago mothered all the monsters, apparently. That's it.

Gwen is shocked that Samuel would kill Dean (as I'm sure Mary would be, as well!), and goes to confront Dean about it. For a moment, she looks like Bella from Twilight, but I'm sure that was unintentional. Gwen is cool though, whoever she resembles, and -


Oh. Dean shot her! Jeez. I think after last week I'm feeling a bit numb to the big character deaths, I mean they already killed Kripke so nobody is safe! Still though, here was the one family member who had even a slight chance at redemption and inclusion into the Winchester family... oh wait, obviously she had to be killed off, lol. This isn't the Sam, Dean and Gwen show. Still, it's too bad.

Dean runs off, and it becomes obvious that he has been infected by Mother. Wow, they really are powerless against her, if she can infiltrate the most sacred!!


"We're gonna wanna find Dean before he finds us."


This is just like in 'Born Under a Bad Sign,' when Sam was a shapeshifter (what? Shapeshifter? I meant possessed, sorry, still thinking about the eye thing) and he terrorised Dean and Jo, remember?? Except this time it's Dean who's the danger to the group. And let's take a moment here to rejoice at the fact that, for once, it is Dean who is unpredictable and Sam who we, as the audience, can trust! Because that doesn't happen often.

Sam tricks Dean by calling his phone, and Dean finds himself outnumbered. Dean tells them that "a worm thing" crawled out of his ear; he just woke up and is confused. This scene seemed off to me, and though in retrospect I know that it really was as straightforward as it seemed, I just find it strange. Dean seemed like he was lying, but he wasn't. Oh well.

Rufus picks at Dean's ear, which is a random touch of comedy (I do like those), and does find traces of the black goo like Dean said. Bobby suggests that they should all put their guns away, as they now don't know who has the worm and who doesn't. Haha, ew. But it's a very sensible suggestion! Because we've only got Rufus left as collateral damage before it starts being threatening for key characters and/or characters we care about! Not that I don't like Rufus of course but you know what I mean.

What I still don't get though is when the "worm thing" became lifelike, because before it was Mother who spit it in the truck driver's ear wasn't it?


They all put their guns away - and stow them into a locker. NOT the locker with the "I <3 to Polka" sticker on it though, the one next to it. See, this is why you need me to do these recaps, bet you didn't pick up on that very important distinction DID YA?


Nothing makes sense! But it's super exciting.



Now the hunters are stuck in that place with the worm, and do we know why they are staying there and not you know... leaving? I think I missed something there. I do like the cooped-up, lockdown vibe that's going on, but to me it just doesn't make much sense why they'd expose themselves to the worm for no good reason. Maybe someone can explain that to me in the comments.

Samuel leaves, and Dean and Sam follow him - leaving Bobby and Rufus on their own. I sense trouble. Bobby looks maaaad. There is clearly some unfinished business between the two of them.

Out in the corridor, Sam and Dean confront Samuel. They are angry with him for feeding them to Crowley. Samuel doesn't want to apologise, especially not to Sam who he claims did much worse things. Dean promises to kill Samuel the moment they finish the case, and it's so sad that things have happened this way. I mean, here Samuel is back from the dead and the brothers finally had a chance to connect to family - Mary's family no less - and look where they are. Sam and Dean really will never have anyone but each other, will they? (Hey don't smile, I meant that in a sad way!)

But uh-oh - Samuel's got the goo! And a gun. He runs off and Bobby and Rufus arm up again. So much for the no gun plan! We don't even know if the goo can infect more than one person at once!

Sam saves Dean from triggering a trap which Samuel set. All the lights go out, and poor Sam is separated from the group! This also reminds me of something we've seen before, in a really early episode, but I can't remember what it was.

I have another question too: don't people work here? Why is it such a scary, run-down place full of pipes and lockers?


I Know What You Did Last Summer... so don't shoot me.



Sam finds Samuel... who tries to play the family card. "Mary's still my daughter. And you're still named after me." And he uses the leverage that he still knows what Sam did when he was soulless, to stop Sam killing him. But um, guess it didn't work, because Sam shoots him! Youch, guess I was wrong about Rufus dying first! And now we'll never know, damn it Sam!

The others come to find Sam, who is shocked but claims that the worm is in Samuel, not him. God, no one can trust each other, can they?

Bobby and Rufus, the new dream team, go to the bathroom the car together, leaving Sam and Dean on their own with Samuel's body. I hate it when they split up! Sam can watch Samuel, Dean can watch Sam. Aw man, if this really is the end of Samuel, that would be terribly anticlimactic.


"What would mom say?"



What, about her son shooting her father? Aww, poor Sam. I really like Dean's response though: "I think she'd say, 'just because you're blood doesn't mean you're family'." And that applies to their relationship with Bobby, too. And to the fact that Dean and Sam aren't "just" blood, they are the ultimate definition of family. You have to earn it.

Just then, the light comes back on - I guess they earned that - and Bobby and Rufus come back to cut into Samuel's skull. God, isn't it enough that he died? These hunters are so rough. Bobby gets all sentimental: "It was my fault, Omaha. I should have listened to you. I never said I'm sorry, Rufus. You lost her because of me..." I wonder what that's about. "I will never forgive you for what happened," Rufus tells him. That is so sad, because I like them two as a team. Poor Bobby.

AAAH Samuel is alive!!!!! Just as Rufus begins to cut him, he wakes up! I did NOT see that coming - but for a moment I was really excited that he wasn't really dead, because I think it's weird for his story to just end like that.

But Bobby electrocutes him, and the worm finally gets out - and Samuel dies again. Bobby and Rufus are alright though... but where is the worm, now?


Four To Go...

I'm starting to worry about that episode title, 'And Then There Were None'! The four remaining Survivors are now more suspicious of each other than ever, as the worm is loose again. Dean reasons that it must be in either Rufus or Bobby, as they were knocked out, but as we know it can infect people when they are awake too, so really it could be in anyone.


lol and they all check for goo. None of them seem to have it, but Sam has a plan. They all need to get electrocuted. Cause... that always ends well. I HATE getting shocked, it feels really weird and a little bit sweet in an electric kind of way, so I feel for them. Sam and Dean seem uninfected (though how would they know, with that mop on Sam's head?), as does Rufus (though his pacemaker might not be), but when Rufus tries to do the test on Bobby... Bobby stabs him! OH MY GOD I AM SO SHOCKED... hahahahaha. Ohhh they should pay me for this!

Anyway Rufus dies, predictably. Now we've only got the three untouchables left! The brothers knock Bobby out and tie him up (well it's only fair, he's done it to them), and try to shock the worm out of him. And Dean keeps talking about herpes.

Bobby talks in a creepy deep voice, and moves his head like he's in a GaGa music video. I guess that's evil for you these days, huh? Eve would be so disappointed. But the worm is comfy - it's nice inside Bobby, and it doesn't want to leave. I bet. It plays on the brothers' feelings, that they love Bobby (can I get an AWWWW?), and they don't want to kill the worm because it'll kill Bobby too. This is just like demon possessions!


She's pissed. She's here. And it's gonna be LEGENDARY!



Sorry, I thought that was a much more powerful statement. Wormy says he's new and that Eve created him. Eve led the brothers there to tell them that... what I said just now, plus some stuff about pain.

Dean shocks him some more but the worm won't budge. "We'll just have to do what Bobby would want us to do," Dean says, and they intensify the pressure. Oh man, this is horrible! They fried him! Finally the worm gets out (what a nasty little bugger - but ultimately unimpressive. Guess that budget really got cut, huh?)

And Bobby isn't breathing.

Good thing we follow Jim Beaver on Twitter and know he's back for some more episodes though! Because the next scene, which we might think was Sam and Dean burying Bobby... was of course the three of them burying Rufus. You know, in the third season of Buffy they have a lot more success with an emotional fakeout like this, when it looks like Cordelia dies and the next scene is a funeral - which we pan away from as Willow and Buffy walk past, talking about how Cordy will be okay. This scene really reminded me of that, except the directing didn't take it all the way where it needed to go, because it didn't feel as powerful as it could have done.


Bobby might not be dead though, but he's sad. He talks about his wife getting possessed and him killing her... with Rufus' help. Rufus taught him about hunting, and they were a team for years ("kind of like you two knuckleheads"). Until Omaha, when Bobby did something Rufus could never forgive. And we might think that this foreshadows something that will divide Sam and Dean, if not for Dean's rough dismissal. "He should have [forgiven you]. It doesn't matter. At the end of the day, you two were family. Life's short, ours are shorter than most. Are we gonna spend it wringing our hands? Something's gonna get us eventually. And when my guts get ripped out, just so you two know, we're good." Clean slate. Cause they're family. Which was the point made about whatever Sam did that Samuel knew about, because now we'll never know, and it doesn't matter anyway. We love him, and Dean and Bobby love him, no matter what.

Bobby pours some whiskey on the grave, and shares a drink with Rufus one last time.


Rating: 2/5
Consider that rating an A for effort, but a D for execution. I think I got a crooked perspective on this episode though, and I won't be offended if you disagree with my assessment. I guess I just didn't feel it. First of all, most of the time I was just trying to figure out why they were all stuck in the building and didn't leave or burn the place down, and thinking that it must be a dream sequence, as surely Gwen, and then Samuel, couldn't just die like that? The whole worm thing came out of nowhere and just seemed SO convenient, I really was just waiting for the final twist which never came. Because seriously, Mother spits into a truck driver's ear, creates a monster worm, which infects two randoms before hiding in a (conveniently abandoned) building waiting for a bunch of hunters? How must that pitch have sounded in the writers' room? Of course it's a good point to make that these guys are IT, that really aside from Cas (hey, why didn't they call him?) this handful of people is all that's standing between evil and humanity... but really, a worm?! A worm. Honestly I was tempted to give this episode 1/5, but in the end I gave it a bit extra because the idea of a house of terror for hunters who already mistrust each other, not knowing who is against who, is technically a great concept, and it could have been brilliant. But in my opinion, there was no real suspense, or excitement, and I didn't feel much besides bewilderment. I also thought it was a strange, random, rushed way to tie up some loose ends by killing them. Samuel was surely brought back for a reason, and that reason can't have been to round up some ultimately irrelevant mega monsters and then get killed by a worm? His entire presence was completely undermined by his anticlimactic (though violent) death, and I was so excited to see him try to bring back Mary! Why bring him back at all, if nothing came of that or his character in general? It annoys me because it makes me feel like the writers are rushing. Gwen and Rufus were less important, but I almost thought their deaths were so predictable, they were unnecessary. I mean a surprise would have been if Gwen actually survived, as she was plot-wise the most likely to die. The family theme was disjointed and half-hearted... but I DID like the point that was hammered home that family doesn't equal blood and vice versa. Bobby, Dean and Sam have already been established as the core family of the show but it's always nice to be reminded of their bond. Ultimately though, I wasn't impressed. I felt like I could have been, but though I was glad to get back to the Mother story, if that's the best she can come up with, so far I am not impressed. Hope she brings it in a bit bigger way (send like, a snail after them next time. A really big, slimy one. THEN we'd be talking!) after the break.


Quotable:

Samuel: "You must be the guy pretending to be their father."
Bobby: "Well somebody ought to."


Have a great break you guys, and sound off in the comments.. Episode 17, airing April 15th, is one of the big ones: we're going back in time for the Colt - and I mean the MAN! Exciting times!

29 comments:

  1. 2 out of 5?? This episode was awesome. Oh and Sam was possessed, he wasn't a Shapeshifter.

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  2. I loved the episode - best of S6 so far.

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  3. Actually, look at the last CW schedule, Western episode is suppose to be on April 22th and the My Heat will go on is suppose to be on April 15th

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  4. I did mean possessed, thank you, I was still thinking about the shapeshifter eyes on video recordings. Fixed it.

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  5. Dean was the shapeshifter in season 1. Sam was possessed by Meg. I think the worm thing was interesting, because it can infect anyone at anytime and I am assuming she is creating more then one worm thing. They didn't leave, because they needed to know what they were up against. They wanted to destroy this thing. However I am thinking Eve will have met more men and done the same thing to them. This isn't the end of that worm thing and Eve will have more monsters for them to deal with. As to Samuel and Gwen dying, I am thinking people just don't really care.

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  6. "I do like the cooped-up, lockdown vibe that's going on, but to me it just doesn't make much sense why they'd expose themselves to the worm for no good reason. Maybe someone can explain that to me in the comments."

    I think it's because they thought the worm was in someone and couldn't risk letting it escape and wreak havoc. If Samuel had left, the death toll would be huge.

    I enjoyed both this episode and this recap. I felt And Then There Were None was a brilliant addition and one of the best of the season.

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  7. Great review! I agree with a lot of the criticism you have. There were as always plot or story holes, but I found the episode on whole entertaining enough for me to consider it "awesome". It was the first time in a long while I felt that they were on a path that dealt with the seasonal arc. The Alpha arc did not seem permanent to me... and was not in the end. Mother Eve now seems to be the one and this episode felt like it was moving somewhere to me.

    I wondered if it was a dream sequence too, it all felt wrong if it was real. Who set up the booby traps, why couldn't they leave or rip it apart or burn it like you said. Plus the killings were all a let down to me with the exception of Gwen's for shock value. Even in that I think they missed a chance to have it mean more if they had killed Rufus or Samuel first.

    I guess I learned a while ago that SPN will do what they can with the budget they have and I think they thought they could make do with a worm. The worm itself did not bother me, but the size of it did. How does something bigger than an eardrum sneak into an ear without people noticing? It can possess live people and control them but dead people too?

    Totally think this was a clean up episode too. They closed a lot of "unfinished" plots with the Campbell deaths. I think it was their way of course correction. limiting the possible stories to deal with and now being able to move onto their desired big bad, Eve.

    I still do not know what to make of Eve. Is she the mother of all monsters, the mother of all life, the other of all humanity,or the mother of all sin? Not enough info yet for me to decide. I think with SPN's last two seasons being so based in Christian religion mythos, it would not surprise me if she were THE Eve. Was Lilith The Lilith? They make their big bads similar enough to established "historic" characters that people can relate and read in, but do they come out and say it exactly? Not so much. It's their world and we are just watching what they do with it.

    One thing I do not agree on is this blood does not equal family. The Winchester bloodline seems to be powerful and have the mystical association with it. I know they do not need to like family, but blood is family on more levels than not to me. Look at their long lost blood half-brother. He played a part because of his blood... the Winchester blood. That was what made him family. Who a person chooses to associate with is a circle of friends... family members are blood relations (or adopted relations, those married in etc).

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  8. This was the first episode that I actually enjoyed the execution of! All of the other episodes have been great ideas but had just something missing, poignant moments or SAM (with a soul, I mean, but I won't start that). Other than Edlund's epic 'The French Mistake', this has been the most 'Supernatural' styled episode.
    Sorry that turned into more of a rant than I intended!!

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  9. I agree. I thought it was the best episode of Season Six for me... despite the flaws.

    Also I think the worm itself was more a vehicle to bring Eve back in, and rid themselves of non-Eve related unfinished plots. Not as important for what it was... but more for what it DID. It showed Eve is a very capable big bad. She can create monsters at will, seemingly innocuous worms that are capable of bringing great peril to our heroes and the world itself.

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  10. THIS. In Like A Virgin she was just a virgin that came out of a hole. In this episode she showed tremendous capability and the ability to create so many deadly creatures that they will outweigh the human population. On a shallower note her face was pretty creepy.

    However, I did like the unnamed monster worm and it was refreshing that it had to be killed with electricity. Silver has been used to death to kill things.

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  11. Hey, Darq,
    I've got to agree with your comments on the idea that blood does not equal family. To me, even given his betrayal, Samuel was dismissed as 'not family' way too easily. I mean when you look at the brothers' history, there's a lot of stuff that one or the other did which the other saw as betrayal at the time. And even with his betrayal of the brothers, to me Samuel didn't come off as totally evil, certainly not a real 'monster' and he was trying to get his daughter back. I can see the guys wanting nothing to do with him, but wanting to gun him down? And your point about Adam is well taken.

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  12. Didn't mean to sound rude, just a pet peeve of mine. Still think you rated it way to low though :)

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  13. >>> They find black stuff in his ear - Mother's saliva, yuck.

    I would say the black stuff was the slime from the worm thing that she created / hatched / delivered... but still total *yuck*...

    >>> most of the time I was just trying to figure out why they were all stuck in the building and didn't leave or burn the place down,

    The building wasn't abandoned... they just had a massacre and it was shut down (grieving and stuff, ya know)... The guys weren't leaving because there was a monster they had to find and kill...

    >>> What I still don't get though is when the "worm thing" became lifelike, because before it was Mother who spit it in the truck driver's ear wasn't it?

    I would say the worm thing was kind of larval at first and it was growing every time it infected someone... It was pretty big when it came out of grandpa.

    >>> This also reminds me of something we've seen before, in a really early episode, but I can't remember what it was.

    When Sam got isolated from the group, it was a throw back to "Fresh Blood" (Season 3), when they were trying to find a vamped up Gordon.

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  14. lostrocks4ever5 March 2011 at 22:57

    i also got a very croatoan vibe from this episode more than any of the other ones mentioned

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  15. lostrocks4ever5 March 2011 at 23:02

    i liked this episode
    i felt though that, once gwen died, we knew they would all die. except of course bobby, sam and dean
    they can never die
    not really anyhow
    i liked the whole suspense part of this episode
    it felt very reminicent of the old supernatural, all dark and creepy and monster hunting
    i did feel that the whole worm thing was just to introduce them all to mother because they really were just guessing and had no real info yet

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  16. This was way different then the last weeks meta episode. And though I loved the meta-comedy, this one was just more SN like. Actually I am about to say I finally find my favourite season 6 eppie. The one I can watch without even thinking about Eric Kripkes leaving.

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  17. ok after caged heat, this is my second favorite episode so far in season 6. that was really good and i have plenty of OMFG moments and i like it. there were a lot of action and a lot of comedy too. and Samuel is dead! finally! that was the greatest thing thatve ever happened so far. but i feel so sorry about rufus :( i mean that guy really made me laugh a lot in this episode and when he and bobby meets sam and dean, that was a great moment just like the old days like you said.
    and plus, "All the lights go out, and poor Sam is separated from the group! This also reminds me of something we've seen before, in a really early episode, but I can't remember what it was." it was on the "Fresh Blood" in season 3 where Gordon traps Sam to kill him.

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  18. Supernatural Junkie5 March 2011 at 23:36

    I really liked the episode. It felt like a true SPN episode. The lockdown in the factory was creepy and had me on the edge of my seat. If Eve could create the worm that easily (it really looked like a millipede - even creepier), then just think what she can come up with if she really tries.

    I didn't question why the gang stayed locked down in the factory instead of running. Sam and Dean don't roll that way.

    I was shocked by the deaths of Gwen, Samuel, and Rufus. I didn't see any of them coming. I did think it felt a little odd having 3 important deaths in this episode. It felt like a nice neat tie-up of the first half of the season.

    It looks like Bobby has gotten over his feelings about Sam. When the steel door closed, separating Sam from everyone else (like the episode where Sam was locked in with the hunter-turned-vampire who wanted to kill him - I can't remember his name????), Bobby seemed genuinely worried about him.

    I agree that more suspense could have been built if we'd only seen the boys at the grave site for a little while. I hated to see Rufus go, but maybe this will serve to solidify the relationship between the guys and Bobby even more.

    Loved the Johnny Walker Blue send off. Rufus would've really liked that!

    Can't wait for the hellatus to be over. Why do shows have to take such a long winter break followed by a long spring break? How about us fans??????

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  19. I too liked this episode. In my personal opinion best one after "Appointment in Samarra" (Let's face it... Death owns the screen :P )
    Nice insight there! From all these seasons we really have come to know that SPN has some unthinkable twists up there sleeves... I mean they tweak mythos and history as per SPN tone. I guess this is there take on olden rumors. Eve looks promising as big bad for this season!

    And I totally agree with you last lines " I do not agree on is this blood does not equal family...".
    We have already been told that Winchester Bloodline has some meaning from both John and Mary's sides. Writers have left many hints throughout to ponder for us.

    And with Eve around I'm doubting that we'll end with "Adam" (as in biblical Adam) in Winchester "Adam" (Lucky Sera... namesake is too convenient and she said herself that Adam will be heard later) [I once read that Adam's birthday wasn't a deliberate decision it's known as "Michaelmas"-Feast of Archangels]. So I guess they may try to wrap up other loose ends this way too!

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  20. Yep! True SPN feel! I really miss the creepier and horror centered episodes of S01. And this episode had well not SO strong but close creepy feel to it!
    My brother thought the worm looked like those 'Goulds' from Stargate :P
    And yeah the brothers should feel more for Bobby and bond stronger... he's been a real adoptive and caring father (I don't consider John in that department!)

    Hellatus!!! Great Real Time Tactics (RTT...hehehe) to glue fans to fandom! Like... "Don't go anywhere... we'll be right back in few mom- SEVERAL DAYS". Argh... poor me! :(

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  21. I have to say, I totally agree with everything you said about this. I like the IDEA of the episode, what with all the hunters trapped in a dark, abandoned building, not knowing who to trust, it's just..creepy. Or it could have been. It wasn't at all, no suspense, no mystery, just..awkward and confusing. In my opinion anyway. I mean, why kill Gwen, Samuel, and Rufus? What was the point? Was it necessary? Gwen I understand, Rufus, I think would have been better off being one of the very rare people they don't kill, Samuel's death wasn't satisfying AT ALL. What was his purpose anyway? Why did they even bring him back..just to kill him? Dean almost stepping into a booby trap? Hello, he's been a hunter all his life, he knows better than that. All the hunters giving up their guns? And putting them into a fricken LOCKER? They're all hunters who KNOW how to pick locks and, oh yeah, there's a monster down there, they NEED their guns. It just seems like the characters aren't being written to their full potential anymore. Even the actors almost seem less into what they're saying.

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  22. Loved the episode. DIdnt read your review just the part where you explain the 2/5 (cause i loved it and I dont want to be corrumpt lLOL!)

    They werent stock in the building, but if they left the warm could have infected any body it was strategic to stay in.

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  23. He is still there :( dont say that *cries*

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  24. The worm didn't just STAY at the building; it was weakened(hence it left the black goo inside the dead's man ear), so at its weakened state, it needed to use more people to keep itself alive me thinks, so that's why when the hunters went investigating, it was a part for the worm. I like the story actually, and a whole lot too. Ended certain character's lives, but it was needed for Rufus and Gwen(certain characters can't last forever). Samuel, however, needs to return. His ending was very anti-climatic.

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  25. I just flat out disagree with 90% of this review. The 10% I do agree with: the deaths in this show are soooo understated... Sheesh, Dean, you just unloaded a gun on the same Gwen who saved your ass from a vamp! And Bobby, you already effed up with Rufus long ago, what about now? I guess I won't complain too much because the angst factor is slightly lower than usual, but it seems to be turned down at the wrong time.

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  26. Yeah when Sam got isolated I was like "OH CRAP...this has Fresh Blood written all over it!"

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  27. AWESOME *kiss*

    "Bobby is back!! I'm still gutted we missed him last week, but at least he's in the show as much as he is. For someone who is not a regular, Jim Beaver sure is in the show a lot - especially compared to the actual regular Misha Collins! Where's he at anyway, wasn't he meant to be back on a permanent basis by now? I mean, okay, he did die last week but I've seen his tweets, he's out there somewhere! But I digress."

    Yeah, but lets be honest here......Misha is a regular in 'name' only.....c'mon, he's in the show as much as he was last season, when he 'wasn't' one.....The only difference i can see is prob the lil bump in his paycheck....He occur's 'irregulary' in the show, and i think i'll still be saying this after the season ends but on the brighter side.....lot's and lot's of BOBBY<33

    "Rufus is like a fluffy bunny. Also, recurring likable characters on this show are so few and far between, we must cherish them for as long as they last."

    RUFUS is/was AWESOME....sadly RUFUS is no more...I am hurt, cause i was rolling around in the 'lovefest' greeting between my, untill the episode ended OTP4 :((

    "What I still don't get though is when the "worm thing" became lifelike, because before it was Mother who spit it in the truck driver's ear wasn't it?"

    Ok, here goes, FYI - I suck at explaining....right, When EVE spit the worm in the trucker's ear, It was obviously 'sentient' and capable of altering the victim's 'behaviour'...She's a 'whatever' she is...so she prob made it in her 'whatever' she is...passed it on to 'Jesus' trucker....he passes it to others in the town where he lives...someone who works at the 'cannery' clearly picked it up...passed it on, and so on.....cue our boys showing up.....Hope that helped :D

    "NOT the locker with the "I <3 to Polka" sticker on it though, the one next to it. See, this is why you need me to do these recaps, bet you didn't pick up on that very important distinction DID YA?"

    Awwww.....we need you always....Your recaps are AWESOME.....and YOU GIVE US PICCIES :D

    *jumps excitedly up and down at pics"

    "but to me it just doesn't make much sense why they'd expose themselves to the worm for no good reason. Maybe someone can explain that to me in the comments."

    Me again...YAY....they can't risk the worm infecting more people....hence locking themselves in with it....and remember it's in one of them....there's another risk :D

    "Aw man, if this really is the end of Samuel, that would be terribly anticlimactic."

    Anticlimactic....He gets DEADED twice.....shot in head.....electrocuted....it's an honour to get 2 deaths in this show LOL.....no, the writers prob know we hate him, so reward.....After everything he did....he does not deserve to go out 'redemption' style or battling demons....he goes out like the WORM he is...HAha see what i did there :D

    "Cause they're family. Which was the point made about whatever Sam did that Samuel knew about, because now we'll never know, and it doesn't matter anyway. We love him, and Dean and Bobby love him, no matter what."

    Awwww...very sweet <33

    I disagree with your rating for the episode though.....This episode deserves a 4....screw it....5 rating....but i still love you despite this <33

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  28. "poor Sam is separated from the group! " This was when he killed Gorden. A door shut in between the brothers and Sam has to face Gorden by himself and wraps a wire around his neck...

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  29. "(hey, why didn't they call Cas)" I half expected Sam to call for Cas when Gwen was dying. I'm guessing they didn't because they realize that Cas is very busy with his angel civil war. In the French Mistake it was hinted that he almost died or that his life was in imminent danger.

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