sholio: sun on winter trees (SPN-dean dorky)
Sholio ([personal profile] sholio) wrote2007-05-18 09:08 pm

Supernatural season finale (spoilers, obviously)

Okay. Let me get something out of the way. I love Supernatural. I love the boys, I love the relationship they have, I love the guest stars, I love the whole concept of their world. It's a cool show.

I just didn't really like this episode very much.

*hides from friend list*

This is exerpted and adapted and kinda cross-posted from what I wrote in the comments over at [livejournal.com profile] derry667's LJ. I didn't realize I had this much to say about the episode until I started commenting on HER episode commentary ... but hey, whaddya know, I'm still the Long Comment Queen.

There were individual moments and scenes in the episode that I loved to pieces, in all their cheesy glory. But as a whole ... I think pretty much any of the scenarios I'd come up with, during the week, would have been more dramatic and fulfilling than what we actually ended up with.

Got a pretty high opinion of myself, don't I? *grin*

The trouble is, after last week's apocalyptic gorefest of character carnage, I was all geared up for something even bigger and explodier. Edge-of-your-seat tension and special effects and the feeling of laying it all on the line, building up to some kind of explosive finale -- that's what I was expecting.

But that's not what we *got*. What we got was a low-key character-focused episode, and -- dare I say it -- a rather scattered and heavy-handed one. The moment that really pushed it over the edge for me from fun cheese into "Oh please save me now" was John Winchester smiling at his boys while everybody cries and then I swear to freakin' Jesus ASCENDING TO HEAVEN IN A SHAFT OF LIGHT. I ... I ... WHAT?

Like I said, there were moments I really enjoyed. Dean talking to his brother's body (even though it was a leeeeeetle over-the-top), Dean selling his soul, Bobby's "OMFGWTF?" face when Sam showed up on his doorstep ... and I really *loved* that Dean's bargain came out into the open at the end rather than doing the big-secret thing again. And Ellen being alive! OMG, I love Ellen. And Bobby. And, since I was totally unspoiled (even though I'd kinda guessed something like this might happen), John showing up behind the demon and attacking it -- that gave me happy little chills. (Even if most of my happiness at seeing John was negated by what happened to him thereafter.) I'm not the world's biggest fan of John Winchester, but that moment when his face appears out of the gloom ... eee!

But ... it didn't hold together as a strong episode. The sense of suspense and tension, leading in from last week's episode, just completely unraveled as literally days go by between scenes. We're *told* that time is of the essence and portents of demonic activity are happening and so forth, but what we actually *see* is the characters moseying around not accomplishing things very fast. I know there's only a limited amount of stuff that they can pack into an episode, and I know that they had a lot of territory to cover -- but, well, that was the problem, wasn't it? Last week was so very suspenseful because things happened FAST. It was very tightly plotted, very quick. This week, well ... it almost felt like it was meandering by comparison. And when the suspense would start to ratchet up, we'd kinda veer off the main plot. Take the scene at the crossroads with Dean selling his soul. To me, it didn't really feel part and parcel of the main plot with the yellow-eyed demon. I mean, yes, that's WHY Dean is selling his soul, indirectly, but the way the scene played out, it could have happened in ANY episode. You'd think the female demon would have known that the other one was inciting Armageddon and have some kind of angle on it (using Dean to get herself an angle on ol' Yellow Eyes, for example) but she's just business-as-usual, doing a soul deal like normal. It's kind of hard to feel the tension of the onrushing end of the world when even the demons aren't too bothered about it.

And then we have the big reunion at Bobby's place, and rather than "OMG ARMAGEDDON", the tone is more like "big ol' road trip to save the world, and don't forget to stop at Six Flags on the way back!" I mean, yeah, demons, etc., but past the point where Ellen showed up alive, I wasn't really scared that we were going to lose anybody major. Last week *should* have had me in a frenzy of "My God, what if they kill Bobby and Ellen?" but the tone of the episode just didn't support that kind of worry.

And the hugging, the crying ... hmm. I'm a big squishy sucker for characters who care about each other. Friendship and brotherhood makes me EEEE! And I did enjoy this ... but ... it was the kind of squirmy enjoyment that comes from reading an over-the-top h/c fanfic -- where I know I'm gonna keep reading to get my fix, but I wouldn't really want to *admit* to having read and enjoyed said fanfic. A lot of this episode felt that way to me. On the one hand, I was getting an emotional high off of it, but on the other hand, it was kind of an embarrassed and uncomfortable emotional high, like I want to look around and make sure nobody notices me watching this ...

And yet, it *was* a justifiable scenario for all of the angst! It really was! I mean, Dean's brother dies, and then comes back from the dead, and his dad comes (temporarily) back from the dead ... cue up the chick-flick weepies. You certainly can't say it was unrealistic, given the circumstances. But it wasn't the tone I would have preferred. I guess that I like my emotionality tempered by a kind of distance. I don't want to have it all handed to me; I want to be able to fill in some of the gaps myself, if that makes any sense? Strangely, this episode almost made me *less* enthusiastic about watching it next year, because I kinda feel like we've seen the characters put through just about every possible emotional pace that they have. I'm not sure where the show could go from here. I'm not sure where I would *want* it to go.

And, of course, there was just a buttload of meta in my last Supernatural post dissecting Dean's insecurities and self-loathing, which I kept insisting he didn't actually HAVE (at least not as he is commently characterized by fandom). Hey, I DID say that I thought I was pulling back TOO far in an attempt not to go too deep! It's pretty completely canon now. And, again ... on the one hand I just want to pet Dean (poor Dean!), and yet, on the other hand, I kinda LIKE being left to read between the lines, rather than having the character dissected in the open like that...

Oh, but I DID love the final scene where the tables are turned and Sam becomes the protector rather than the protected one, though. Loved it so much. And Dean finally sees, really SEES, that his family cares as much about him as he does about them. I mean, given that this episode went out of its way to point out that he *does* have trouble with his own self-worth ... you could see on his face at the end, there, that he GOT it. Sam's willing to die for him, and he *knows* that now, he *understands*. I did get a lot of squee out of that.

I just wish the entire Armageddon story hadn't been such a let-down. I know I'm being whiny about it. It's just ... I have high expectations for this show, and it didn't deliver, and WAAAHHH. They spent two seasons building up to this final confrontation, and it was ... over in about five minutes. I know it's cheesy and cliched, but I wanted EXPLOSIONS damn it! *g*

A mediocre episode of SPN is *still* a really enjoyable watch, but I DID feel like this episode was kind of mediocre compared to what it could have been, and I was expecting a lot more. *grump*

Okay, I'll stop harshing everybody's squee and go away now. And I'll turn in my fangirl card at the door. *grin*

ETA: Okay, seriously, one more thought and THEN I'll shut up. Reflecting on the episode and my reactions to it, I think what really bugs me is that I felt like it was a really lame conclusion to the whole demon arc, but the writers tried to buy me off with a bunch of fanservice so I wouldn't NOTICE that the plot doesn't really hold together. *That's* what really twists my chain, I think.
ext_2160: SGA John & Rodney (Sexy John&Rodney)

[identity profile] winter-elf.livejournal.com 2007-05-19 06:52 am (UTC)(link)
well, I think it felt more like a wrap up (with possibilities) than the prior episode - because it was planned this way because they didn't know if they were getting renewal, and didn't want to leave it at an awful place if the show got cancelled. I mean, yea, I think pt 1 was a MUCH better season cliffhanger - would have been an 'oh my god' for months! But for the end of the show.. not so much. So, that's my reasoning.

[identity profile] derry667.livejournal.com 2007-05-19 07:33 am (UTC)(link)
but hey, whaddya know, I'm still the Long Comment Queen

Aw! I thought I had a shot at that crown! :-P


Okay, I'll stop harshing everybody's squee and go away now. And I'll turn in my fangirl card at the door. *grin*

You and me both, mate. I might just smuggle my fangirl card out and use it as a bookmark until next season starts.


Okay, seriously, one more thought and THEN I'll shut up. Reflecting on the episode and my reactions to it, I think what really bugs me is that I felt like it was a really lame conclusion to the whole demon arc, but the writers tried to buy me off with a bunch of fanservice so I wouldn't NOTICE that the plot doesn't really hold together. *That's* what really twists my chain, I think.

Y'know, I think you may have hit the crux of it. The heavy-handedness of it all. The hugging. The mega-slice of emo!Dean. The appearance of Daddy Winchester - back from hell and all smiles and tears. It's like they thought if we whack the fans with all the stuff they've been clamouring for for a year or more, then they won't bitch about how flawed it all is. And what elephant in the corner?
ext_3572: (supernatural everything)

[identity profile] xparrot.livejournal.com 2007-05-19 07:52 am (UTC)(link)
Heh. I think I actually enjoy the show more not being completely invested in it. I love watching it; I don't bother to analyze it much, or fic it, because I don't see terribly much to analyze. SV is so frustrating because everything is opaque, nothing is explained (there is no explanation; but that doesn't stop us from looking). SPN is the total opposite. I'm not watching it for the plot, because the plot has never been all that cool. It's pretty much always predicatable, path of least resistance; and the few times it isn't are spicey but not eye-opening. I'm watching it entirely for the characters.

And it's fanfic. I keep saying this and I mean it. Not just because the plots are from fanfic cliches. But because those hidden places, the subtext of character motivation and emotion that usually is found between the lines and only held to the light in fic, is open and explicit in SPN. If smarm and h/c are emotional porn, then SPN is pornographic in a way few shows are. It gives us the nudity and the penetration and the money shots.

Erotica can be sexier than porn because it leaves things to the imagination; porn is visceral, cheap, but satsifying in its way. The one problem is that it always has to have a climax, but to keep that climax satisfying, it has to keep showing more, revealing more, or else it gets boring. Which is the problem SPN is having, that it's given so much fanservice that it's running out of places to go. I think it's got enough for another season but I've got doubts it can maintain it after that.

I guess, for me, I completely agree there wasn't much there besides fanservice - but I was okay with that, because it's why I'm watching.
naye: A cartoon of a woman with red hair and glasses in front of a progressive pride flag. (supernatural - one perfect moment)

[personal profile] naye 2007-05-19 08:30 am (UTC)(link)
Damn, you always say smart stuff in smart ways and I wish I'd seen this comment before starting on my own long and rambling and not half as sense-making as yours! (Though it's funny - for you it's not being intensely into it that gives it the free pass, for me it's that it's the show I love the most right now, and I don't want to spoil that experience with nitpicking...)

So, in other words, most of my comment below can be summed up with what [livejournal.com profile] xparrot said.!
naye: A cartoon of a woman with red hair and glasses in front of a progressive pride flag. (dresden files - anvils!)

[personal profile] naye 2007-05-19 10:02 pm (UTC)(link)
*pokes in*

Yes! To "Nightlife" - yes, exactly that! They're enjoyable, and have plenty of stuff that could be fandom gold, but it's too fandom already. It's all there. You can't imagine Nik and Cal loving each other more than they already do, caring for each other more, risking more, giving more, or going through more hell together than they already have - than they're doing, in the books. The writing is brilliant, the characters really great, but it leaves nothing for me. It's all there. And this makes it the perfect example of needing gaps to fill in! For fanning purposes, a story like this works much better as a fic. While with the Dresden books, you're not prepared for the emotional impact you suddenly discovers it has on you, when Harry gets some unexpected help, or makes a new ally, or goes all out to protect someone he cares about... It helps that the rest of the books are funny and awesome, but I fell in love with it because it has those moments.

And, also yes to suddenly understanding the shippers a whole lot better...

Okay, I haven't had food yet, and my brain doesn't work well on no food, so no more discussion right now. But I'll be back! After food, or after sleep I don't know, but I have so much to answer! ♥
naye: A cartoon of a woman with red hair and glasses in front of a progressive pride flag. (dresden files - wise ass)

[personal profile] naye 2007-05-20 11:53 am (UTC)(link)
Interesting! And, of course - YES!

That explains romance! Or rather, why I get annoyed with stories that are all about romance, but don't mind it when it happens along the way. (And I love happy married couples. Probably because they're already past the stage with all of the misunderstandings and angst and potentially annoying stuff, and just count each other as their most important person, and they complement each other, and that always gets me, no matter what the character constellation - partners, marrieds, best friends, rivals...)

I also completely agree on "Nightlife". It's pushing all my buttons, but it kind of knows its doing it, and while it's a fun kind of read, I don't need to see where the characters are going, because I know Nik will do anything for Cal, and I know Cal would die for Nik, and while there is an "aww"-factor to seeing them in action, it all plays out as expected. And that's where Robin comes in, and I again have to agree 100% with you - he's my favourite character, hands down, especially after also reading "Moonshine"! Because he's more ambiguous, because he's not an open book to me as a reader, because he claims to be all about looking out for number one - and that means that his caring comes as a that pleasant surprise you were talking about! When someone like Robin goes out of his way to do something for another character, that's noteworthy. That's the kind of thing that makes me squee. Which explains the Dresden books, because like you said - they're full of that stuff! ♥
naye: A cartoon of a woman with red hair and glasses in front of a progressive pride flag. (supernatural - winchester brothers)

[personal profile] naye 2007-05-19 08:23 am (UTC)(link)
See, I get what you mean, at the same time - I would probably have been thinking a lot of those thoughts if SPN wasn't the only show I'm even close to fanning on right now. Okay, Heroes is great, but I've only known it for about a month. Supernatural has my Fandom Immunity card right now, where I only occasionally go at the more stupid parts of the plot (end of Heart, Dean's plan in Folsome Prison Blues? I'm looking at you here!), and... enjoy the rest for what it is. Which makes me kind of boring to talk to, on a show-analysis level, but it also means I keep my expectations kind of low (oh, I've learned my lesson well from other fandoms), and rejoice at the fun stuff!

Of course, that doesn't mean I don't think they should have done more with the YED, taken a page out of Writing 101 and shown, not just told us about the big apocalyptic stuff, and not brought John back just to turn him into sparkly lights. Which is why I'm happy you wrote this post! Then I don't have to! Someone's pointed it out already, I can nod and agree, an go back to my warm fuzzies over the hug and Bobby and Ellen and Dean's smile at the end. ♥

I have to wonder, though - it was teleplayed by Eric Kripke, and I'm wondering if he's becoming something of a weak link, writing-wise. Okay, not weaker than John Shiban and the Amazing Plots of Nonsense, but... Most of the really intense, awesome episodes? Have been written by Raelle Tucker and Sera Gamble. And Kripke's a fanboy, and clearly loves the brother-stuff, and creating the series was genius, but. I'm not saying he does a bad job and I hate him, but... Well. It was the only episode of the season he's written since "In my Time of Dying", and while he might still be a great idea-guy, and driving force behind the series, maybe other people write it better? ...just typing it out makes me feel bad, because he created the whole thing, but, but...

What I'm trying to say is that I still have enormous faith in the series as a whole, because there are people writing who I believe would have done a season finale more - probably more like what you wanted (last episode was written by Sera), and that I would have liked even more than I did this. Okay, part of the thing that seems to be getting to you is that they wrapped it all up very nicely, and that was probably a production staff decision - one I think was a good one, because in case they didn't get renewed, this wouldn't have been a bad way to end the series! I've had too many shows cancelled on me on cliffhangers, and it sucks. But. We have a couple of extremely talented writers on staff, who get the characters, and can write them intense without going over the top, and have a wonderful way with subtext (Dean has self-worth issues), without having to turn it text (YED and Bobby both commenting on said issues).

Oh, and this! I want to be able to fill in some of the gaps myself, if that makes any sense?

Makes sense. So much sense. In my last deep discussion on the whys and wherefores of fanning (especially h/c fanning) with [livejournal.com profile] xparrot, we sort of came to a conclusion that the filling in the blanks is what fandom does. And if there are no blanks left, the material can be awesome and amazing and even full of what should send one into paroxysm of fanning, but it'll do - nothing. It might elicit a squee and a feeling of warm fuzzy, but it won't make that kind of wham-impression, where you can feel the characters take up residence in your brain, and you want to read them and write them and analyze them. (To us it also explained why such a huge part of the SPN fandom seemed to be Wincest - we're given so much in the show, it's the only blank left!)

Anyway! No need to hide from me, at least. Everyone's entitled to their opinion, and besides, this gave me a great opportunity for interesting fandom discussion. ♥
naye: A cartoon of a woman with red hair and glasses in front of a progressive pride flag. (supernatural - dean smiling)

[personal profile] naye 2007-05-20 11:09 am (UTC)(link)
Hee~! I'm really glad you liked it - I've never put that particular feeling in words before myself, so I'm happy it works for you!

It's not that I don't acknowledge the *existence* of a certain amount of stupidity in canon, I just don't want to dwell on it. Like glossing over the flaws of a particularly annoying, but endearing, boyfriend. ;)

Yes, that, exactly! I mean, it's still fun to analyze stuff like "what do they mean to each other", and speculate about characters' childhoods and personalities and whatnot, but going into the actual show and its faults is just... You can see why others do it, but it's not for you. Maybe later, when you're not quite so busy loving all of its good parts to bits, and ignoring the bad parts. (Were you ever in "The Sentinel" fandom? Because - wow. Bad show; excellent fandom! I did a lot of analyzing Jim and Blair and the non-existent mythology of the show, but the episodes themselves were left pretty much alone, except for the choice bits of cute interaction, meaningful exchanges and interesting use of Sentinel powers.)

Kripke - I've seen him in interviews! He looked male to me...! But he's a huge, giant fanboy, and the female writers are obviously getting a lot of input. The result makes it seem like he's a 15-year old fangirl, and it's funny.

Mainstream American comics! Now there's something I'm not familiar with at all, but the general idea of having one or two creators, and then a whole bunch of other people coming in to interpret that creation? Very interesting. So you can say that you love this particular series, but only that particular guy's vision of it, while you hate another interpretation of the same basic characters?
naye: A cartoon of a woman with red hair and glasses in front of a progressive pride flag. (supernatural - one perfect moment)

[personal profile] naye 2007-05-20 11:38 am (UTC)(link)
First things first - your icon! Made me squee a little on the inside, even though I have no idea what's going on, and only a vague guess at the characters. (SGA?) It's perfect, in so many ways. It's like an official h/c icon!

Okay - yes. And, again, this is one pretty good explanation why so many people are turning to the Wincest in this fandom. It's all that's left. And even those who might not have been into incest before might find themselves... I don't know, shoved in that direction? By the lack of things to do elsewhere in the fandom. (I'm still not reading any Wincest, because incest is a huge, huge squick for me. But I can see why others would go for it here.)

As for my own h/c junkie self - yeah, Supernatural has my Fandom Immunity card, but it doesn't have my full fanning love. I will occasionally look for fic, but I almost never find anything that sucks me in or breaks my heart or makes me tingle in all the right places. The show already did that, and anything else feels - redundant? Which is obviously not the way most people feel about the show, but it's pretty obvious from this discussion that it has something to do with the h/c, and how the show serves it to us in large helpings almost every week. (The food analogy could go a long way, really, because after a yummy feast it doesn't really matter how delicious a treat you're offered - there comes a point where you just can't eat any more. This shouldn't reflect badly on any of the cooks, not of the original meal, and not of anything served after, but is just a statement of facts. So maybe sometimes you don't want the first feast to be quite so filling, because then you have no room left for those sinfully good dessert courses. They might not always be be that nutritional, but they're still satisfying on a whole different level...)

I wonder if there is an Ultimate Fandom Recipe somewhere out there, with just the right levels of fulfilling that h/c craving, while still leaving enough gaps for it to be interesting to pursue further? The manga "Saiyuki" comes pretty close in my case, but because of the One Creator (oh, adding a paragraph on that theory below!) issue, it doesn't quite do the trick. It would be interesting to at least come up with what the main ingredients are!

Yes, and One Creator - another thing that came up in that big fandom discussion I had with [livejournal.com profile] xparrot, where we were saying that TV shows are often better for the filling in of gaps and interpreting, because so many people are involved in the creation of it. You can look at a TC show and see things that the actors put in, the director put in, the writer put in, and then analyze the whole of it from a perspective of knowing that the actors have great chemistry, but seeing how that adds a whole different level of meaning to that particular relationship... With many great manga series, it's the same person writing and drawing - showing us the characters, their thoughts, their relationships, and their world. There things that are there to analyze between the lines were probably put there by the One Creator, who also (hopefully) know how they want the story to progress, and what all of the characters true motivations are. Thus, there is less left for the readers to play with.

Which makes me wonder about the Dresden books, because they're all written by Jim Butcher, but... Maybe it's how they're spaced? Yeah, they're a series, but we only meet Harry and friends for a brief while each year, and then months pass where we know very little of what any of them do. Plus, they're written from a first person POV, which means that everything that Harry isn't explicitly aware of is still open for interpretation. Hm. I should really move this up to the Nighlife/Dresden discussion, shouldn't I? I'm pretty sure LJ is going to cut me off soon anyway.
naye: japanese script flowing off a hand onto paper (words flowing)

[personal profile] naye 2007-05-21 02:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, this list is so interesting! And there's got to be something like a h/c gene or something, because I can only nod vigorously in agreement to most of these! Some I hadn't even thought of myself, so -really cool reading. I should write my own list, just out of curiosity, to see how much actually overlaps with yours...

But, yes - a list of things that will almost always keep me from fanning definitely involves things such as a show with no humor or no life-threatening moments, and the balance of ensemble/special relationships. I loved watching Firefly, but like you, because I loved all of the characters, and they never got to develop to the point where there was one relationship in particular I could latch on to, it didn't make me fan on it in the sense of "wanting to participate in fandom"-fan.

Battlestar Galactica (the new version) is a good example, to me, of a show that's got a lot of good points, but fails at humor. I watched the first season, and then I was just to bleaked-out. Same with LOST - none of the cast particularly caught my interest, even though the general idea is way cool, and the production values are so high. In the end I just felt the producers were just yanking my chain without knowing where they were going, and I stopped cold.
naye: the going merry go on blue waters with the words "follow your dreams" (dreamship)

[personal profile] naye 2007-05-21 02:43 pm (UTC)(link)
I couldn't write anything for a fandom where the author didn't approve of fanfic either. And if I knew the author was bothered by a particular interpretation or something, it might actually lessen my enjoyment of such fic, even if I'd liked it before. It's a matter of respect. Corporate entities don't create in the same way, which leads to my feeling free to play around in their worlds without ever feeling guilty about it - so, yep, pretty much agreeing with everything you said again.

Oh, who are these authors with fic sections of the official forums? I like them already!
ext_3572: (Default)

[identity profile] xparrot.livejournal.com 2007-05-21 04:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Eee - there's so much here, I don't know what to comment, and don't have much to add anyway! (Very long and rambly...!)

...Only now I gotta figure myself out, since SV fandom isn't really h/c, and breaks a lot of my molds, and yet still is one of my more hardcore fandoms to date. I'm thinking a part of it might be that it's the opposite of one creator. Superman is pretty much one of our greatest modern myths; it's all but public domain. So one's own interpretations...carry more weight, somehow? There's so much canon to draw from, to pick and choose; it's make-your-own-sundae and you can have your choice of any ice cream and topping...

As far as h/c, and having too much of a good thing - because I have those problems with the Nightlife books; they don't engage me because there's not enough left for me to dig into. It's an archeological excavation - but there's no need to get down and dirty when the earth's already cleared away, and where's the fun in that! (I wonder, too, if part of the problem is in that hoary old truth of writing, always show instead of tell - in Nightlife especially the narrator is always explaining to us how much his brother means to him. I'd prefer more action, less confession.)

At any rate - Nightlife reads like fic; it's nothing I haven't read before. What gets me about SPN is that I've almost never seen a show like it, with that much onscreen. Hearing and seeing it, not just reading it - delights me! I wouldn't want every show to become like SPN (or else what would I fic for?) but one such show is terribly fun. (especially when it's written by fangirls - I don't feel like I'm being talked down to; I feel like the creators enjoy it as much as I do. Which is important to me, too, in fanning, though I can't say why, exactly. But I like to know the work I care about is respected by those who made it...)
naye: A cartoon of a woman with red hair and glasses in front of a progressive pride flag. (hearts in notebook)

[personal profile] naye 2007-05-19 09:13 am (UTC)(link)
Eee~! ♥ As you can probably tell, I'm enjoying it hugely - I'm just not used to doing it much (at least not with people I haven't known for years and years), and as such have very little confidence in my ability to say anything even remotely interesting. So now I'm grinning like an idiot - this comment totally made my day.

[identity profile] kodiak-bear.livejournal.com 2007-05-19 03:26 pm (UTC)(link)
This is a long post and a long bunch of replies, so I didn't read every reply and I don't know what's been said, but the one thing that stuck out to me was the armaggeddon comment. My take on it is that the 'bad' that was building up happened. The demon army was released. They didn't stop it and now they've got to deal with the aftermath.

It's kind of funny to have our positions reversed. I was seriously let down by most of the SGA second half of season 3 episodes, but this finale hit a home run for me.

For me, the worst happened, the demonic portents and all the build-up spilled over and I'm pretty sure something seriously bad-ass got free, a demon bigger and badder than the Yellow-eyed guy, because it ripped through the Devil's Trap like butter, something not even the YED could do (and holy water didn't work on *him*).

So whatever got loose is going to be a lot of trouble.

The thing with John, what they did is just about the only thing they could do. His body was salted and burned, there's no way he was going to realistically come back. So they resolved the whole 'dad in hell' thing nicely, and in the process, let Daddy save Dean again. I think having him not say anything at all was even the best choice. Anything he said would've been picked apart by people. Look at what happened in the episode Home, people got angry because Mom didn't seem to do enough for Dean, so there was a nice balance here. And now that he's free of hell, his spirit had to go, because that's what salting and burning does, right? So, even though a part of me wishes the character wasn't gone, I think the resolution was the right one. Now we don't have the pain of him in hell.

I know a few ppl have said the end with the YED was anti-climatic, but I loved it. My only nit is I think they'd have done better if they'd just left it at Dean's "Well, we can check that off the to-do list." The 'this is for our mom' didn't bug me, but it had that little bit of cliche clinging to it.

So far, the only spn episode that just hasn't worked for me was Route 666. That's one out of 44, much better track record than SGA. And I could hug them for not leaving us on a God-awful cliffhanger. I really hate those.
ext_2207: (SGA - Sheppard rounds the bend)

[identity profile] abyssinia4077.livejournal.com 2007-05-21 02:04 am (UTC)(link)
I'm so glad to see I'm not the only one!

I just watched it today - over with a friend who is a ragging SPN fangirl and she's been flailing at me since Thursday about how awesome the episode was gonna be and...meh.

Like you said, there were good bits. Dean talking to Sam's corpse. Bobby. Ellen. Bobby. More Bobby. The Pentragram in Wyoming. Sam pointing out that maybe he could protect Dean too.

But...as excited as I was to see John, the long staring moment and then going to heaven on a beam of light was just...too much. And the plot was so randomly jammed together (how did those rail road ties get bent? what on earth is going on? what's the demon's plan? why was he dumb enough to get anywhere near the colt? why did he leave the bullet in the colt?) and the almost ant-climatic ending to the YED was just...dull.

I understand why they didn't leave a cliffhanger - just in case they got cancelled. But...c'mon!