Supernatural 8.03, “Heartache”
was the 150th episode of the series to be filmed (thought the 152nd
to be aired) and marks the third directing outing of Jensen Ackles. It also
continues the return to form we’ve seen this season delivering not only a
well-directed episode but also a tightly written stand alone
monster-of-the-seek episode.
Ackles takes his direction to the
next level this season. The episode itself also forced him to spend a lot more time
in front of the camera, making the job even more challenging, according to
interviews with him. The first shot pans from a skyline shot to a great crane
shot of a jogger and then down to the ground to a close up of the runner’s
feet, nicely mimicking the disorientation of the scene. This episode sees
Ackles experiment with a lot more different angles and close ups than in
previous episodes. Unlike many directors, however, the choices reinforce the
action on screen and aren’t merely distracting, such as the scene where the
victim is chanting and rocking in the jail. The camera comes down the dark
corridor and the view through the bars is claustrophobic. The camera pans away
before the victim takes out his own eye. Co-executive producer Jim Michaels
tweeted that they did actually film the guy taking out his eye, but it was too
graphic for television.
The scenes between the brothers are
shot seamlessly – there’s an art to filming Supernatural as the audience
expects to see and feel certain scenes in a particular way, such as those in
the Impala. Ackles has a leg up on any director new to the series as he’s been in every one of those scenes! A good
director knows when to stick with the tried and true. The audience expects
those scenes to have a particular feel, and they do. Ackles also reinforces the
emphasis on character through the use of lots of tight head shots.
As with every episode that Ackles
directs, he’s also put his own unique stamp on it, bringing something very
personal to the episode. Last year, his episode featured shout outs to his
roles in My Bloody Valentine and Batman: Under the Red Hood. This year
sees Alan Ackles, Jensen’s father, playing the first police officer they see
about the first murder. The scene is really fun as Alan’s character and Dean rub
each other the wrong way. Jim Michaels also tweeted that Jensen’s mother had a
cameo in the episode, making it truly a family affair.
Before I move into a discussion of
the story, I want to make a quick shout out about the return of the fantastic
motel room sets that Jerry Wanek is a master of. I particularly liked the one
in Boulder.
The episode was written by Brad
Buckner and Eugenie Ross-Leming. It’s a monster-of-the-week episode as Dean
convinces Sam to go after the thing mysteriously ripping the hearts out of
victims because they are currently stalled in their search for Kevin. The clues
were teased out slowly, and I really felt like I was uncovering the mystery
with the boys as they worked the case. I was at first puzzled by the reference
to Dr. Morrison, the professor from “Slice Girls”, who appeared in the THEN
flashbacks, thinking there might be a link to the Amazons, but it seamlessly
filled in who he was when Sam contacts him in the episode – tight editing to go
with the tight writing.
The title “Heartache” resonated with
the script on several levels. The obvious allusion is to the victims having
their hearts ripped out, but more symbolically, the story is about the love
between Betsy and Brick. He gives up his immortality because he doesn’t want to
live without her, and she ignored how he stayed young because of her love for
him. Their relationship isn’t really one of heartache, except that only he was
immortal, so they did have to part in the end. There is also the heartache that
we can see Sam experience in the too brief flashback at the end of the episode.
It’s very obvious that his heart aches to live a normal life: to have birthday
cakes, to have a dog and a girlfriend, to go back to school. And then there’s
Dean’s heart ache which is to hold on to his brother, to have his brother
committed to being by his side.
Dean says he’s gotten a new
perspective from the last year. He knows where he’s best and that’s hunting
evil with his brother by his side. But the year has given Sam a new perspective
too, and that’s to know he wants more from life. In some ways, Sam really has
changed more than Dean. How this plays out is going to be interesting. I think
that Sam can still be there for Dean in some ways without his having to be
physically present on every hunt. Of course, the end of the episode proves that
Dean does need someone to watch his back too, as Randa and her thugs would
likely have killed Dean if Sam hadn’t been there.
Sam ends the episode by trying to
convince Dean that he isn’t going to continue hunting after they find Kevin.
Dean just dismisses Sam because it isn’t what Dean wants to hear. He needs Sam
in ways that Sam hasn’t ever really needed him. He needs Sam to talk to, to
help be his conscience. These are themes that take us right back to the
beginning of the series, and I’m intrigued to see how they play out. I’m really
enjoying how the writers are showing that the events these guys have been
through have had lasting consequences and effects on them.
Sound off on the episode below – Did
you like it? Hate it? Love it? What about Jensen’s directing? Sam’s hair? I
have to confess, I’m kind of liking Sam’s hair...
Next week’s episode, “Bitten”, looks
to be another great episode that pushes the boundary on story-telling. Be sure
to visit all the spoilers for the episode here...



Really great review!
ReplyDeleteI agree with pretty much everything you said. Jensen's directing was so good! And I enjoyed the MOTW plot in this episode. It was interesting having the deal with God being attached to the organs. (Like the sisters ghost in Mannequins, except I found that to be a sadder ending.)
I'm still really excited for the rest of the season and looking forward to next weeks episode! Maybe another werewolf!?!? :-)
"Sam’s hair? I
ReplyDeletehave to confess, I’m kind of liking Sam’s hair..."
X
I'm glad that Sam has his hair so long this season for at least it gives us something to talk about as there seems to be nothing else for us to discuss about him other than that.
Hated it. Don't believe or recognise this version of Sam that didn't look for his brother, and doesn't seem happy to have him back from the dead. The whole 'Dean needs / loves Sam more than Sam needs / loves Dean' is what they are selling us, but I'm not buying it. It is a betrayal of Sam's character and of the strength of the bond that has been at the heart of the show since the start.
ReplyDeleteThe tone / characterisation in s8 has been way off right from their reunion at the start of ep1. None of it feels true or consistent with the characters and their back story.
I actually really liked the episode if we take out the peeks at Sam's story. I really don't like what they are doing to Sam this year. I can't believe that they feel that character growth is taking Sam to the same place he was in season 1. Sam saying he wanted out of the family business after they took care of YED in Salvation (season 1) just about cut my heart out. He is even looking into college again. It is really hard for me to believe that there won't be one college kid that will realize Sam is one of the two brothers that went on that killing spree a "couple of years" ago. I can see Sam retiring into the new Bobby (researcher extraordinaire), but college, wife and a dog.... *yawn*.
ReplyDeleteExcellent episode! Jensen outdid himself this time in the directors chair. And I don't know, I think both boys being conflicted about where they are in their lives and what they really honestly want is perfect after all they've been through. Dean's always loved the hunt. Hunting and family. It's what it's always been about. Sam has always wanted normal. And now that he had a real taste of it, it's hard to let it go. The question will be, how does this all come together in the end? I'm looking forward to finding out.
ReplyDeleteyet Sam is there hunting with Dean and he has his back even if it appears his heart lays elsewhere? If there is anything I've learnt about Sam over the years is that you can not make him do something he doesnt want to do, he is with Dean because he wants to be that I'm sure of. I just dont think Sam realised how much he was going to be leaving behind, I think he thought it was going to be easy and it clearly isnt.
ReplyDeleteI do also wonder if maybe Sam and Amelia had some kind of agreement that if Dean returned (no matter how probable or improbable that may have seemed) then Sam would leave to be with his brother?
Oh! I like that theory about Amelia! And this is a terrific point about Sam too. I think nothing is going to be as clear cut as it may seem...
ReplyDeleteIt's too bad that you disliked the episode so much. I agree with tvmonkey that if there wasn't that strong bond between them, Sam wouldn't be there at all. For me, the characterization is bang on - but I think we will see that more as the back story unfolds. I mean who would have thought Sam would sleep with a demon and drink demon blood either? Ruby/demon blood seemed more ooc to me...
ReplyDeleteWell, of course, I 100% agree with this!
ReplyDeleteCollege students aren't nearly as observant as you think they are! At least not when it comes to "mature" students - they rarely give them a second glance! ;) I think that as always both brothers are a little bit right. I think that in the end, Sam won't be able to just walk away. And it tore my heart out when Sam chose Ruby over Dean at the end of S4 and when Dean kept saying he wanted out of the hunt - but we've grown past all of those things. Sam as much as said they would "work it out". Right now the only way Sam has ever seen to have normal is to cut hunting out of his life entirely - he did it before when he went to Stanford too. But he is older and wiser now. I'm trusting him (well, Carver!) to figure this out. Sam is a brainiac. I think he's going to figure out that he can't just abandon Dean...
ReplyDeleteAny speculations on where we might be going with Sam this season? It's been the traditional story arc to focus on Dean in the first half and Sam in the second. I'm really thinking there is a lot more than meets the eye here. I think both the flash of Cas at the end of the last episode and this flashback at the end of this episode are both going to turn out to be misleading...
ReplyDeleteSam has always wanted normal, except in season 4. Dean really can't exist as a hunter totally without Sam. In that he hasn't changed. He may find it easier to kill, but less forgiving, and hide the compassion he had, but he's still Dean. I agree that the season is more like season 1. I also agree that it is better written, better directed, and has a direction. Carver is doing a great job. I enjoyed last night and I am enjoying every episode.
ReplyDeleteWhat I do like is the family dynamic is back. Yes, it is more like season 1, but the needs are there. They are talking, telling each other more than they have. Sam is telling Dean what he wants in bits and pieces. They are both hurting. Dean really does need Sam. Someone has to have his back. It's been Sam for quite a while. Sam leaves, Dean won't make it.
You know that's right...things haven't even begun to unwind with either brother. There's got to be more to Amelia than just pretty vet lady in the park, esp since Sam just up and left her in the middle of the night without explanation...there's something more there.
ReplyDeleteOn the other side of the coin, although we didn't see him this ep, the whole Benny thing has me wondering...Dean latches onto him because he's a pure hunter and Dean can truly understand that instinct, even though he's a vamp. But at some point Benny is gonna cross a line that even Dean can't be okay with (I mean, he is a monster after all). Will it have to do with Sam? Or even Amelia? (probably not, but you never know). And that catalyst maybe the trigger that ends up with Sam staying a hunter and not becoming normal again (ha, that sounds funny.)
This season is one of my favorite beginnings to any season so far because there is so much mystery and so much going on just beneath the surface. Nothing is being given away...the story has to play out.
I don't understand why Sam says he found something that he never had... a "normal" life... I thought he had a "normal" life when he first left and was at college and in love with Jess?
ReplyDeleteSam said a long time ago that he both didn't want and never could have a normal life. To me I find all the flashbacks to feel pushed and unnatural. It's just not what Sam would do.
ReplyDeleteJensen did an incredible job with directing. I thought the story itself was good but not great. Not sure why, I think because of the way Sam was acting throughout the case.
Interesting the part you said about how they did film him taking his own eye out. As the scene was playing I was wondering if they were going to show it happen. They've done gory before and have said this season had more blood so I braced myself but it didn't happen. Our loss, I love a good "stabbing one's eye out" scene.
Great review! Thanks :)
I loved everything about the episode. The monster storyline was great, the end scene with Sam actually being normal and celebrating his birthday definitely hit me, and the episode still had all the fun entertainment that Supernatural carries out so well
ReplyDeleteI liked it--something of a return to form after last week. Monster of the week episodes can be fun, though I have to confess that Supernatural didn't really begin to click for me until we got the epic armageddon storyline; the first couple of seasons I enjoyed well enough, but the larger canvas of the huge story arc worked better for me.
ReplyDeleteThat said, there's clearly a larger arc lurking here--let's hope it's better than Eve or the Leviathon ones. (Admittedly, once you've done armageddon, it's hard to come up with a satisfactory follow-up.) I hope we start to see more of the backstory unfolding, especially Sam's, because at this point where he's at is less clear than where Dean's at. I personally have no problem with the notion of Sam wanting to have a normal life--his brief flirtation with acepting his freakness seemed to me to be more of the anomaly than his desire for normalcy, and let's face it, ever since armageddon ended, the whole notion of Sam being a freak, possessed of demon powers and so on, has been quietly ignored--but I do find the notion of him not even TRYING to find Dean or Kevin difficult to swallow (not impossible, as some Sam fans clearly do--and fair enough), so I hope we're going to get some more insights soon. (I also found how the show resolved Dean's "normal" life with Lisa to be not only highly unsatisfactory but implausible in the extreme and not even logical, so it's not like the show hasn't had problems before dealing with the whole "normalcy" thing.)There have been hints that there's more to his story than meets the eye (e.g. the way Sam left Amelia, that he seemed pretty clearly to be lying to Dean about that, the whole question of why he left her and came to the cabin in the first place), so let's get to it, guys!
It's NOT Sam. Carver throw a bone to Cas and Misha fan. And killed the Idea of the show.
ReplyDeleteYes! Exactly! Sam is going to freak out over Benny - I'm wondering if Dean's 'turn' as an almost-vamp is going to have any play here as well. But I'm thinking that Sam is going to realize that leaving Dean on his own might not be a good thing. Dean has said repeatedly that Sam has acted as his conscience... Maybe Sam is going to see that Dean really does need him... or maybe it will just be jealousy! Whatever it is, I'm also loving how the season is slowly unfolding. I really do trust Carver to be giving us clues and I think the pacing is good. We get a bit but we're still hungry for more!
ReplyDeleteBut even then he knew that his Dad and Dean were still in the world hunting and could draw him back in at any time... This last year he was truly alone...
ReplyDeleteThanks! I have to say I liked how Sam was acting throughout the case - he was back to being brainiac Sam, I thought. Another nod to season one when Sam was really the research specialist... I kind of liked when he gave Dean grief for being surprised that Sam was doing the research. For me, it feels consistent for someone to completely change what they want after suffering so much loss. I know a lot of people wanted a return to the season one dynamic - and that's what this feels like to me. I'm sensing that you prefer a later season Sam? I'm still playing wait and see - but I think there's going to be a lot more to Sam's change of heart - and I can't imagine he's ever going to get his normal..
ReplyDeleteI'm hoping for the actual eye-gouging in the S8 DVD deleted scenes!!
Yes, yes, and yes!
ReplyDeleteI agree! And when has Dean ever been able to deny Sam what he wants? Dean's speech sounded a lot like he was trying to convince himself that Sam didn't mean it when he said he was getting out. In the end, I think Dean will let Sam go, but Sam won't go because it's one thing to accept that your brother is dead and quite another to abandon him.
ReplyDeleteNow, about Sam's hair....it looks like during his year off he even got a chance to color it! Looks more reddish-brown than previous years. I like the length too, although I would hope they don't go any longer, I think they've reached the limit. And it's a much better look than the greasy theme he had going on last season. Now instead of flat greasy hair, he's got fluffy flowing hair! It's so purdy! LOL!
ReplyDeleteHe may have been alone...but he wasn't "free" from the hunter life....as shown by the flashback of him being terrified that something had taken Amelia because he couldn't find her for a bit.....his response wasn't "normal"..... Sam will never be able to have a "normal" life......and I thought he realized that a long time ago, which is what confuses me...
ReplyDeleteI don't understand that the episode showed us that Dean needed back up - he;s been saying it since day one of season 1. He said it in this okayish episode. Jensen is growing as a director true but it was okay.
ReplyDeleteAs for Mr doesn't realise what he says hurts sometimes. I know he wants to go off and have a normal life, it is his right and Dean is in denial about it. But the bit where he tells Dean that he can go off on and slash and hack on his own and wouldn't have to explain himself to anyone after Dean saying that he is his best human being when he is has you to talk to while you've seen him come close to losing it with people? Sam, that is right up there with your 'I didn't have anyone to cut the crusts of my PB&J' comment in heaven when your brother was falling apart.
Please writers can we get a sensitivity chip for Sam as beginning to think that when it comes to his brother, tact isn't his forte.
As for the birthday cake thing. Have question as not from Texas so know nothing about the temperatures there but don't think that he never received a cake in his life before. Wasn't Amelia in a summer dress on a bright lovely day? And isn't Sam's birthday at the beginning of May? Is it possible that he wasn't expecting the birthday surprise not because he never had one before but because it wasn't actually his birthday? Say it was a date that he wrote on a form to get the dog and she just used it? .
Absolutely correct GG
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed the story as well and I felt Jensen's directing showcased it wonderfully. I thought the interaction with his dad was perfect - just enough friction. I need to read all these comments to see if anyone mentioned where his mom was in the show. I'm fairly new to the fandom and I don't know what his mom looks like. Time to put on my Sam cap and do some research :-) Looking forward to Bitten next week.
ReplyDeleteI know! I've been thinking the same thing! Suddenly, Dean and Mary aren't the only blonds in the family! LOL!
ReplyDelete