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Supernatural - Episode 9.10 - Road Trip - Review

19 Jan 2014

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Supernatural returned from its winter break this past week with a strong episode focused heavily on Dean’s guilt. Road Trip delivered some great dialogue and filming effects, as well as set up more story on both angel and demon fronts.

The episode starts with montage set to an emotional Dean giving Kevin a hunter’s funeral and dealing with the fallout of Gadreel’s betrayal and murder of Kevin. It ends with Dean walking away from Sam and Castiel to seek revenge on Gadreel alone. In between we see the story play out on a few fronts – Dean, Cas and Crowley (yes, Crowley) on a mission to save Sam; Gadreel falling further as he kills his best friend; and a jockeying between Hell leaders for the loyalty of demons. But throughout these various stories, there is a repeating verse voiced by the many characters that we had also heard in a previous episode, and that’s that they’re doing what they have to do.

We’ve seen Dean since the start of the season – since the start of the series really – make a lot of questionable choices based on the emotional programming set in his personality as a child. He’s not only been unable to let go of Sam, he’s become addicted to taking on the burden of everything, and everyone else’s decisions, alone. While he wants Sam by his side, he also doesn’t want to treat Sam as an equal. This came to a head in season 5 when Sam forced Dean to start acknowledge that their partnership needed to be a two-way street.

While you can chalk this up to the codependency set up in Dean’s childhood – left motherless and with a mostly absent father, Dean overly bonded to his younger brother who he been tasked with taking care of. But Dean’s inability to trust in others goes beyond Sam and Dean’s relationship. When Cas was struggling in season 6 with learning about free will and leadership and was making mistakes, instead of listening to Cas and being a mentor, Dean responded with an inflexibility and a demand that Cas blindly trust him and follow his orders. Dean’s sense of responsibility over others was portrayed to have reached absurd levels in season 7, when Dean was forced to account for things he felt guilty of, and Jo’s choice to become a hunter was one of them. That was a choice that was clearly never ever Dean’s to make.

While Dean has been overprotective of Sam in the past, this season Dean’s sense of responsibility over his brother stretched to new levels – to the point where not only had Dean made a decision about Sam without Sam’s consent (to help an angel possess him so that Sam could live), but Dean continually lied to Sam because he believed – he knew – he was doing something to Sam that Sam wouldn’t want.

Road Trip ends with a somewhat cryptic comment from Sam, following Dean’s assertion that he’s poison – that when people get close to him they get killed, to not “go thinking that’s the problem because it’s not.” The exact meaning in Sam’s comment is unclear. It could mean that Dean’s too hard on himself. It could mean the brothers’ codependent relationship and Dean’s unwillingness to let Sam go is the problem. It could mean that Dean’s lying to Sam is the problem. It could mean that Dean’s unwillingness to truly trust in and relinquish some control to others is the problem. Or it could mean that hunting is the problem.

Personally I’m hoping it means that it means that Dean’s inability to think things can change – that he can change – is the problem. Dean’s always felt stuck. He’s not happy hunting and he’s not happy not hunting. He wants Sam with him hunting, but he wants Sam safe and alive and living the normal life Dean could never have. He doesn’t see a future for himself because he doesn’t think he can change. So fingers crossed we’ll finally see some real movement forward with Dean, and that Sam – who seems to see things more clearly – will help him to get there.

The Highlights

The episode starts off where we left off – Gadreel had taken off with Sam’s body after killing Kevin and leaving Dean behind. Gadreel, meeting his handler Metatron at a bar, gets orders to kill another person. This person he will learn is the vessel of his best friend, Abner. After Abner advises Metratron that the key to happiness is “getting the one thing you want most and never letting it go,” and that the price is worth paying, Gadreel decides that getting back into Heaven with Metatron is his key to happiness, and that betraying Abner is the price he is willing to pay.

Meanwhile, Dean and Cas decide to use Crowley’s Samandriel experiments on Gadreel/Sam in an effort to communicate directly with Sam so that Sam will cast out Gadreel. They need Crowley’s help, and Crowley is able to use this to bargain for his freedom. When Gadreel proves more difficult to bypass than expected, Crowley double-possesses Sam. Crowley, Gadreel, and Sam have it out inside Sam’s head, and Sam casts Gadreel out.  Gadreel then finds his way back to his previous Tahmoh Penikett-looking vessel, and Sam remembers everything that happened while he was possessed, including Dean’s lies.

The Good

It was nice to get some forward movement with both Dean and Sam. It was great to see Sam actively take back control of his body and force Gadreel out. We’ve seen too much of passive Sam lately, so here’s to hoping this is a sign of a more active Sam to come.

Crowley was awesome in this episode. When Crowley was selected for Sam and Dean’s demon-curing trials last season, I had my doubts about what this would do to Crowley’s character. I don’t want to see Crowley become an ally, but at the same time, no one can really stay scared of Mark Sheppard. He’s just too likeable. I think the balance reached with Crowley’s character fits him well. He’s been soften by the humanity he regained, but he’s still always working an angle, and far from trustworthy. Crowley had a number of great lines this episode. My favorite Crowley moment was Sheppard’s delivery of his explanation that drilling into an angel was more art than science.

Cas was also well-written in this episode. The character’s portrayal has been inconsistent from week to week to say the least, but this week we were treated to supportive, intuitive Cas – a characterization that makes sense considering how much exposure he’s had with humans over the years.

There were some very nice filming effects in this episode. The scene that stood out in particular to me was the confrontation inside Sam’s head. There was an dream-like element to the scene, with extra contrast
or lighter saturation and extreme close-ups, giving it an older-film feel and reminding me of a Hitchcock movie.

The Bad

There was a lot of character history and psychological baggage for Sam around the issues of possession and having his control taken away. The last angel who possessed Sam was Lucifer. Enough said. We may get more fallout from Sam’s side of this story in the second half of the season, but looking at what’s been shown up to this point – calling the exploration of Sam’s side of the possession story unsatisfying is a huge understatement.

Sam’s reactions in the final scene were rushed. While I’m not necessarily opposed to where we ended with Sam – which seems to be a tired acceptance and a clarity of the situation – brushing Sam’s entire perspective off with a cryptic comment that’s meant to be more about Dean than about Sam is not adequate.

This arc might have worked much better if Sam had become aware of the possession earlier in the season but had chosen to hide his knowledge from Dean because he trusted that Dean had his reasons and he wanted to see where this was going. In that case, Sam could have cycled through the emotions from learning of a betrayal – shock, disbelief, anger, and finally acceptance – over the course of four or five episodes rather than the little over two minutes that was allocated to it. We’ll have to see if more attention is paid to this in the second half of the season, but I’m skeptical there will be.

Next, I’m certain I’m a minority in this, but I didn’t think the choice of Bob Seger’s Famous Final Scene for the opening montage worked. It’s is a great song. I love it. But it’s a melancholy song about the acceptance of the end of a relationship, and the tone didn’t fit. The words of the songs that are selected don’t have to match up exactly, but the tone does, and this felt like a miss.

The Speculation

Metratron makes a comment that he’s flipped a switch so that there will be no more prophets. Meanwhile, Crowley shows little interest in Dean’s blood. The only blood he seemed to want was Kevin’s. So this leaves us with the possibility that Kevin’s prophet status was the key for undoing Metratron’s spell, or possibly stealing control of Heaven away from Metatron. And Crowley had been wanting Kevin’s blood. Could this be the makings of a plan for Crowley to steal Heaven from Metatron?

21 comments:

  1. The are great supernatural episodes and there are not so great. The only highlight in this one for me was Crowley. I love how he is sort of becoming buddies with winchesters. I have a bad feeling about how it will end, but i wish they became friends.

    I am glad they didn't drag out kicking Galadriel out of Sam storyline. The scribe though... i don't think i ever hated a supernatural villain so much before. He is a d-bag and he needs to die

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  2. I liked this episode a lot more on a second watch than on the first. TBH, I hate how the show has completely buried Sam's perspective on what's gone on, and that one factor has been coloring everything for me lately. I put off writing this review, but after going back and rewatching it, I had to admit that a lot was really well done. The writing was tight, the filming effects were great, and Crowley really did have some great lines. One thing that stood out to me was the continuation of the theme of the characters saying they did what they needed to do from one episode to the next. It pains me to say it, but we've had almost no consistency between episodes written by different people since early season 7, so I'm taking that as a good sign. Everything's not perfect yet, but I see signs of improvement.

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  3. Hmmm. Discus just ate my response to you!


    What I had said was that my reaction was better on the second watch of this episode than on the first. I have a big problem with the lack of writing for Sam's perspective in this possession story so far, and that's reached the point where it's coloring everything else for me. That's partially why it took me so long to go back and rewatch and write this review. Sometimes I need to step back and get more perspective.


    With that said though, there were a lot of really good elements that I appreciated more in the second watch. Crowley owned this episode in my opinion. He was awesome. Agree with you on Metatron. He's annoying the crap out of me.

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  4. I think this was a pretty good episode, not the best, far from bad. I think you hit on a number of thoughts I had.

    Dean was extra raw and guilt ridden this episode. But starting with the Famous Final Scene montage something was off. Dean especially this season has taken a lot on his shoulders, I for one to see that guilt a little more focused so that maybe Dean can start to understand and deal.

    Gadreel as awful as he was I felt I understood through Jared's nuanced hints and insight into the character. That torture scene with Crowley was was so disturbing but fascinating in gad reels defiance, and Deans determination. Interested to see where this goes now that he's been expelled.

    And I'll set aside my reservations about the angel and demon possession, I'll go along with it because Crowleys reveal to Sam was fantastic, as well as Sams slow realization and devistation as he took in the enormity of what's happened to him and to Kevin.

    I too feel like the build up of Sams realization over how many episodes deserves more than two minutes sight. The story should demanded it. That said, the insight that we did get between Sam and Dean again was fantastic. It was cryptic, mirrored by the setting on a bridge in the dark of night with a searchlight in the background. This was ai think s mirror into Sams insight at the moment just himself coming out of the dark of his own possession, and their consequences. It was a georgeous scene, nine years in and these guys still pull off the most amazing scenes.

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  5. I am not a fan of Dean/Sam fights. I really hate it when they are on the outs with each other and it happens a lot (it's one thing that is consistent). So i just grit my teeth and pull through just like they always do.
    For me the Road Trip was another one of the "bad" episodes because it concentrated solemnly on one brother lying yet again to another and them dealing with the concequences and all the angst that usually follows. If i had to sum the episode in one word i'd say Depressive.

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  6. Sam is always in the back sit. Dean is my favorite because we always see his emotions, what he is going through, his tears and suffering. Sam either doesn't get enough screen time or Jared is not as good as Jensen. Personally I think it's the second, i just don't feel the same amount of sympathy when he is crying than i do when it's Dean. Though sometimes i do get fed up with Dean always getting hurt, but it's more of a protective thing over my favorite character rather than annoyance with his acting.

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  7. I disagree with you on Jared's acting. I think he does a great job with Sam, especially because Sam has less screen time. Just to put this into perspective, at BurCon Jared mentioned that he had 23 days off with no shooting this season and Jensen had 1. When you add this to the fact that Jared was playing 2 characters the disparity in screen time is even bigger. If you then factor in that one of the Jensen lite episodes was Bad Boys which focused on Young Dean and it really gets unbalanced.



    I understand you like Dean better. A lot of people do. It is possible you would feel that way if the screen time was more equitable. I do think the huge gap in showing Sam and his POV really makes it more difficult to understand Sam. It's hard to sympathize with a character who is not on screen. And when he is on screen the writers refuse to give him a POV.

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  8. Agreed. Jared is probably the most underrated actor in this cast. When you think about all of the different characters he's portrayed on just this show alone it's pretty impressive what he's been able to accomplish. I think the audience doesn't sympathize with Sam because of his lack of perspective in the narrative, and while I've heard many people praising his performance as Gadreel this season, I've hardly seen any praise for how he's played Sam. That's because Sam as a character is almost completely non-existent in the narrative this season and that's not Jared's fault. It's the writers' fault for not giving him anything challenging enough to show off his talents.

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  9. So it never occured to you that is the first thing rather than blaming Jared for you lack of sympathy for a character you cannot relate to .

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  10. I used to think the same that the problem is the lack of screen time only, but as i watched Jared struggle his way to act through different scenes over the years i came to believe it's not the only reason. He maybe doesn't get enough pov but he( like someone pointed out) had plenty of different characters and versions of Sam to play over the years and he just didn't blow my mind away at all.
    Like i said it's my personaly view, Jared stans shoudn't get upset or anything. I still love Jared just not as much as Jensen.

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  11. Oh, baloney! I love Jensen more is a fine statement. Personally I admit that Meryl Streep doesn't move me one way or the other, but I would NEVER say she is a bad actress. But that isn't what you are doing. You are slamming Jared and calling him a weak actor. So don't expect people who like Jared to not get upset. If I said that Jensen wasn't a good enough actor for the show (and I never would because Jensen is a very good actor and portrays Dean beautifully) you would have an absolute COW.

    Like Jensen better, fine. Like Dean better fine, but don't denigrate Jared to build up Dean or Jensen and then not expect some blow back.

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  12. I'm curious what you mean when you that something felt off from starting with the montage. Personally I feel Dean has been a little off all season. Dean has always tried to save Sam, but he's usually up front about it after the fact. His decision to start lying to Sam about the angel, and the way the lie kept building and he got so used to lying, was taking things a step further than the usual patterns the two have. Maybe what he saw in Sam's head - that Sam was ready to go - threw him. And Dean's not used to his plans backfiring, so this is all new territory for him.


    Nice comment about the bridge setting.

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  13. That's a good point about Sam being exhausted and not wanting to get into it with Dean. I do think there was more meaning though, so hopefully the next episode will elaborate on it more. It looks like Sam at least talks to Cas a little in the next episode, so maybe (fingers crossed) there will be something of some substance.


    Please don't bring up Amy and the way that was resolved. ;-) That's one storyline I think everyone would like buried and forgotten!

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  14. I think a lot of this is personal preference. There were periods when I was really pulled in by Sam and Jared's portrayal of Sam (it's how I grew so attached to the character), but in truth that was more around seasons 3-5, when the character was written with a lot more depth. I think Jared works with what he has, but if the writers have no plan or direction for the character, he can't work with something that's just not there. And it's harder to connect to these other characters Jared has been playing (Gadreel, soulless Sam, Lucifer ...). They're not as fleshed-out or relatable as Sam or Dean.


    With this fandom, the fact that there's so much fighting between Dean fans vs. Sam fans vs. Cas fans proves that there's no one "good" actor/character. If there was, the others wouldn't have such strong fan bases.

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  15. Wow! Straight to the name calling b/c someone offered a different perspective. If anyone is a "Stan" here, I think it's you!

    Go ahead and love Jensen. But keep your Jared bashing to yourself b/c no one cares what you think of his acting!

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  16. Jared did everything in this show, completely different characters and versions of his character every year, a lot of new challenges, he just did everything any actor would do during a complete long career in just one show.



    We don't see Sam's emotions that much, but when we see it, Jared just do a brilliant job, sacrifice anyone?


    It is actually pretty clear what you wanted to do by your comment anyway.

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  17. I agree I also feel Dean has been a bit off this season, and I felt that way again here. On the one hand they are exploring the lengths Dean will go when Sams life is on the line. On the other hand they seem to be exploring the idea of Deans guilt and self loathing in such an abstract way I'm not sure how I should feel about it. Are we headed towards a place where we will see him deal with some of his emotional damage, or will it also be swept under the rug like so much of Sams own emotional baggage seemingly dealt with off screen. I would just like to see the brothers have each other's backs again, and help support each other and make each other stronger both individually and together.


    I can see what you mean, Dean being so thrown at the insight into Sams willingness to let go. I don't see Dean as controlling, but I think he is not one to recover quickly when the rug is swept up from under him. I think that is how much he was thrown and is still thrown at Sams willingness to let go. I get where Sam is coming from, but I also get where Dean is coming from. Even if the writing is a bit all over he place so far this season.

    I'm guess I'm just looking for a little more consistency when it comes to characterization, for both Sam and Dean. At this point I think I get more of the characters pov through the actors performance over what is explicitly spoken on screen. And that is just frustrating, and that's why I think I find both Dean and Sam a bit off so far this season.

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  18. Dean never demanded Cas obey him blindly in season 6 or ever. He tried to help Cas see the error of his ways. He even said he was there for Cas.

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  19. No, he did. He reached out to Cas until he found out Cas was working with Crowley to find Purgatory, and then he laid down the ultimatum - his way without debate or he's take Cas down. It's a pattern with Dean. When he gets emotional, he channels John Winchester's style of dealing. This is the relevant part of the transcript from The Man Who Would Be King. He's not listening to Cas's plan or talking through the flaws in it. He's saying that Cas has to blindly trust and follow him.

    CASTIEL I want you to understand.
    DEAN Oh, believe me, I get it. Blah, blah, Raphael, right?
    CASTIEL I'm doing this for you, Dean. I'm doing this because of you.
    DEAN Because of me. Yeah. You got to be kidding me.
    CASTIEL You're the one who taught me that freedom and free will --
    DEAN You're a freakin' child, you know that? Just because you can do what you want doesn't mean that you get to do whatever you want!
    CASTIEL I know what I'm doing, Dean.
    DEAN I'm not gonna logic you, okay? I'm saying don't...Just 'cause. I'm asking you not to. That's it.
    CASTIEL I don't understand.
    DEAN Look, next to Sam, you and Bobby are the closest things I have to family -- that you are like a brother to me. So, if I'm asking you not to do something...You got to trust me, man.
    CASTIEL Or what?
    DEAN Or I'll have to do what I have to do to stop you.

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  20. Asking is not demanding nor following blindly. Cas pride was what kept him from admitting he made a mistake and was in over his head. He asked and warned Cas that he'd do what it took but he never demanded anything.

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  21. Sorry, but I see it differently. To me, telling someone, "I'm saying don't...Just 'cause. I'm asking you not to." is asking them to follow blindly - because you're not entrusting them to have a voice in what happens. And telling them "I'll so what I have to do to stop you" if they don't do what you "ask" basically changes it from a request to a demand. A better approach would have been to hear Cas out, talk through the risks, talk through the alternatives, and try to come up with a solution that both sides feel comfortable with. It would involve collaborating and sharing leadership, and that's something Dean has problems with.

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