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Supernatural - Devil May Care - Review

Oct 19, 2013

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While last week’s episode focused on the angels, this week’s show belonged to the demons. Abaddon and Crowley dominated, while Dean, Sam, and Kevin dealt with their metaphorical demons – for Dean, his guilt and doubts about helping Ezekiel possess Sam; for Sam, lingering effects from letting Lucifer out of the cage; and for Kevin, anger and doubts about his mother’s supposed death.

The Highlights

Abaddon rocked. It’s been a while since we’ve seen a strong, menacing demon that actually felt like a threat. Yes we’ve had Crowley, but let’s face it. She’s right. Crowley’s a salesman. Alaina Huffman was a great casting choice who is paying off. Yes, bringing her meatsuit back after Sam burned her in the season 8 finale requires a suspension of disbelief, but I think you have to be willing to let certain things like that slide to watch a show like this. The definition of the powers demons possess has always been fluid, and I’m willing to let this one go to get a great actress back. Her scene was Dean was both menacing and steamy. It takes a lot for a demon to scare Dean Winchester, but it seemed that Abbadon was able to get under his skin.

Crowley also started his nefarious scheming, still being held captive in Sam and Dean’s dungeon, as he worked on Kevin. What he hopes to accomplish is unclear, but Crowley is scrappy. While he doesn’t have many resources on his side at the moment, being restrained in a devil’s trap, he’s good at turning things to his advantage, so Sam and Dean should watch out.

We got a great scene with Ezekiel letting the angel come out within Sam. The scene of him lighting up the diner was reminiscent of season 4, when angels were awe-inspiring and powerful. Jared did a really good job of transitioning between Sam and Ezekiel so that it flowed very naturally.

The Good

I’m really starting to like Kevin. He’s a kid who has been pushed into this absurd situation of being a prophet of God, being hunted by the King of Hell, being forced to remain isolated while scary things happen that he doesn’t truly understand or is prepared to confront. He’s a great addition to the team, and he’s merging into the group seamlessly. Kevin is filling a void left by Bobby. And as great of a character as Bobby was, Kevin’s different methods and personality will brings some freshness to the dynamics that was needed. Also, as the junior member of the team, rather than the all-knowing seer and parental figure, Kevin is not a risk for detracting from Sam and Dean having more active and influential roles in the action, which as the shows’ leads, they should have.

The scene of Sam and Dean looping Kevin into the call, unsure of how Kevin would respond, was awesome and one of my favorites from this episode. All three actors did a great job, but my eyes kept being drawn to Jared’s reactions. He has a very expressive face, and every now and then – not often enough in my opinion – he hams it up a little with a comic scene, and it’s really funny to watch. My best example of this from prior scenes was season 2’s The Usual Suspects. Sam and Dean are talking to the victim, and Dean is making brash, insensitive comments. Sam’s expressions alternate from disapproving looks shot at Dean to puppy-dog, sympathetic looks as he turns to the victim.

Sam with the angel wings and Dean with the heated foreplay with a demon was a nice switch up – although a little unsettling.

The pace moved along nicely.  Overall I enjoyed the episode on the first watch, and a lot of it seemed to transistion nicely from one action to the next.  On a second watch, I was a little more critical.  It's an episode I probably won't remember a few months from now, but it did its job.

The Bad

I need to start with the female hunter for this category. This was awful. The character was trampy, underdeveloped, and seemingly pointless. I guess the point was to reintroduce Sam’s guilt over letting Lucifer out the cage. Ignoring the other issues around this (that Sam in season 7 seemed to feel cleansed of that guilt after making it right and being tortured by Lucifer for more than a century), this character was annoying and a little offensive. Was the insinuation of sex with the vampire and the short shorts really necessary? And the conclusion – that she forgave a man she’s blamed for years for her family’s death – because she got a stern talking to from Dean – was a little absurd.

Dean used the “f” word with Kevin (family). I’m in the camp of those who thought Dean’s comment about considering Kevin family felt premature. He cares about Kevin, sure, but they don’t have that type of relationship yet. With other characters, being on the same team would be enough cause for them to start talking about family, but for Dean that term takes on whole new levels of meaning. And of course his comment that both he and Sam would die for Kevin brings up the unpleasant recollection that when Kevin was kidnapped from Crowley, Sam ditched his phones rather than try to look for him.

Finally, there were missed opportunities to have Sam interact with other characters and add a little balance to Dean’s one-on-one scenes with Abaddon, Ezekiel, Kevin, and the female hunter, compared with Sam’s scene with the male hunter. It’s almost a joke now with how lopsided this has become. The writers need to burn that memo from season 6 that said that going forward, a minimum of three-quarters of the interactions with guests and supporting characters will be with Dean. The missed opportunity of the week was between Crowley and Sam. There was a scene in which Crowley was left alone to think about his humanity – a change set in motion during the Sam/Crowley interactions in Sacrifice. Why not throw in a few lines of dialogue that has Sam reminding of Crowley of what happened that day? The added benefit would be that it would make it look like Sam and Dean have a plan and aren’t so incompetent around Crowley.

The Speculation

Was anyone else thinking that Ezekiel knowing everything that Sam knows is a really huge risk? It’s like the threat that Cas posed in season 7 when he was God and knew all of Sam and Dean’s habits. But this is even worse. Sam has a lot more knowledge about Sam and Dean than Cas ever did.

Since Kevin is now considered “family” by Dean, and seems to be prey for demon manipulation, does this mean he’s being set up to “betray” (disappoint) Dean?

20 comments:

  1. Didn't they first use a bullet with a Devil's Trap carved onto it to shoot Abaddon and then hack off her head to bury under cement? I think she knows the trick since she was the first one they pulled that trick on. It was in 8.12 As Time Goes By, and they even showed Henry and Dean working on the bullet.

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  2. Here's a video of Dean telling Abaddon about the "demon trap in [her] noggin."
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=99l9jbwWEcU

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  3. good review, very nice insight. I agree callling Kevin family is premature, Bobby has been the boys surogate dad since they were kid, and Cas have died a couple times for them, these 2 are no doubt family, but when it comes to Kevin, their relationship are not are as deep.
    Sure Kevin made great sacrifice to help the boys, the boys would have gratitue and maybe pity him, but the problem is they are not that close, they spend really little amount of time tgt.
    S7: meet Kevin, spend a few days with him while he translate the tablet, then Sam meet him once again when they rescue him from dick, then he's taken by Crowley.
    S8: spend first 2 epidsode (a few days) with Kevin then he took of with his mom, then they rescue him but put him under Garth's protection for most of S8, meet him only 1-2 times on the boat, then episode 21 they rescue him from Crowley again, and Kevin live in the bunker a few days (Episode 22-23) while the boys were busy fighting Crowley and curing him, then angel fell S9 begin.
    S9: They return to bunker, boys busy dealing wif abbadon, Kevin try to leave, Dean say he's family.
    So in total, The boys know Kevin for around 1-1.5 year, but most of the time seperated, the time they really been hanging out is at most 3 months. They barely can develop a solid friendship in that small amount of time, let alone "family".
    about the Huh, Abbadon is once tricked by the magic bullet, so she's prepare this time. And Dean did tell the hunters in the diner that they are using bullets curved with devil's trap, so Tracy(female hunter) shoot Abbadon hoping to immobilize her. But she's too dumb to shoot her in the head in that close range

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  4. Oops, you are right. I stand corrected. But the female hunter wouldn't have known that.

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  5. Thanks for the comments. I edited out the Abaddon part. Thanks!

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  6. About your speculation - I thought that if Ezekiel won't happen to be a bad guy that the access to Sam's feelings and memories gives him an unfair advantage of knowing and understanding everything about brothers without having to work for this, like stepping in someone else's shoes and taking all the credit for it. But you're right if he'll turn out to be an enemy, it could be even worse... And you know what? I kind of like the idea, even if it's very disturbing

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  7. I've pretty much accepted that Dean will have all the meaningful interaction with guest stars/side characters, it has become totally lop sided but then the show has been like that for a few years now and it doesnt look like it will change any time soon.

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  8. Thanks for commenting, and I'm glad you liked some of the review. On the hunter, we may have to agree to disagree. Before she kills the vamp, the van is rocking and there's sex noises coming from it. It's possible that they were fighting, but it really doesn't sound like it. I'm not criticizing a person, or even the character so much, as the creative decision to insert this detail for laughs - that she's prostituting herself for her job. The fact that it doesn't have to do with anything in the episode hurts its credibility, rather than helps it, in my opinion. If it were a detail that supported the theme of the episode, which seems to be guilt, then I would have been more understanding.

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  9. Thanks for commenting. I think it makes things more difficult if Zeke at least has an agenda that puts him in conflict with Sam and Dean, but I'm not sure I agree that I want him to know everything about them. Sam and Dean, without angelic powers, rely on the their wits and experiences as their primary weapon. It has to be at least a little bit of fair fight for it to be interesting.

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  10. This is obviously a Sam vs. Dean issue as well, but the reason I'm bringing it up in my reviews is because it's a critical issue as well. The show is based on a relationship, and for the relationship to have emotional impact, the characters need to pop. We really need to believe on some level that they're alive. And when we have so little development of one, we have a fandom that is reaching back to memories of what the characters used to be to put everything in context, rather than being absorbed in the current developments. This drives me batty because I just don't see any rational reason for this approach. It just hurts the show. And since I'm writing reviews, I'm going to point out the weaknesses where I see them.

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  11. I just thought that it would be interesting if they needed to come up with another way of fighting, behave in ways they'd never normally do because they'd know that there is an enemy who knows their ways

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  12. That makes sense. :)

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  13. I think the sex noises were fighting. The idea was that we were initially expecting to see a young woman picking up a guy who helps her out, then the van is rocking, don't come a knocking. When we see his head being chopped off, we realize she's a hunter.


    I don't think there's any real reason she would have sex with the guy and they wouldn't have had time to do anything, as she killed him almost immediately.


    They were going for shock and then reality. It's a little annoying but I didn't feel like she was being portrayed as a prostitute.


    They did something like this in the last episode with Krissy, where we saw her making out with a guy, and we thought they were in danger of a monster, only to quickly realize this was a trick to kill a monster.

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  14. I agree that Kevin is not "family" to Sam and Dean. Frankly, I'm not sure if he would even want to be, given his history with them. I think that this was done for several reasons - the show wanted to make up for how Sam and Dean treated Kevin last season (which was pretty darn bad), and Dean was also telling Kevin what he needed to hear. There was a certain undertone of manipulation in his comments, just a little, that unsettled me.


    I'm glad you said you were unsettled by the Dean/Abaddon scene. I've noticed a lot of focus on how "hot" it was. While Jensen Ackles and Alaina Huffman have terrific chemistry, the actual content of the scene was very disturbing. She was talking about the pleasures of torture and slaughter, the nightmares Dean probably has never stopped having since his 40 years in Hell. I really hope this is leading to something for Dean.


    I agree that Sam should have had interaction with more characters. I would have liked him to talk to Tracy, the hunter, at the end of the episode. Or apologize to Kevin. As always Dean seems to run interference for him.


    I don't really think the show needs a new Bobby but I do like Kevin in the role, although I don't need to see anything again like the way he treated that female officer.

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  15. You're probably right in that what you describe was what was intended, and that possibility had occurred to me when I first watched it, but they did leave it a little too convincing so it still leaves doubt in my mind. There seemed to be a time jump from when she got into the vehicle to when the vamp died because the camera refocuses and they're in different places.

    But anyway, this is all beside my original point. If her role storywise was to remind Sam of his guilt, why sex it up and distract from the story - which already had a lot going on?

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  16. I think they just wanted a flashy scene to intro the character, and get some viewers interested. It was distracting, but not as much as their deciding not to have her talk to Sam about what he did.


    I didn't think she just automatically forgave him because of Dean. I think she decided to keep everything to herself and get on with the job (and life). But I wish we had heard more of her view.

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  17. Yes! and we know how good Jared can be playing evil I still to this day freak out over born under a bad sign its Awesome.

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  18. I'm actually gonna have to go with they were NOT fighting, yet nor were they having sex either. When the vampire falls out of the van, and Tracy steps out, the vamp's pants and belt are still on. I'm going to have to say there was just some heavy petting and grinding going on. And of course there would be a time jump; she's pretending she needs to be somewhere, so they have to drive. She'd butter him up and flirt and further paint herself as someone she's not along the way, build up the mood. As for why sex it up? Many reasons. To distract the vampire so it's easier to kill when he's off guard, to surprise us, to show female hunters may have to resort to seduction methods more often, to make it more believable that as a hunter, she was captured by demons b/c they simply caught her off-gaurd, etc. And there's always going to be little things that don't have to do with the main storyline. Little awesome moments like a smooth, deceiving Tracy. It didn't horribly distract from the story b/c it was brief.

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  19. My other thought was that rythmuc shaking of the van was her sawing off his head. But them wouldn't she have been splatteredwith blood?

    I can't imagine that she could have fought him off for long in such close quarters. No matter how well skilled she is, she looks like she weighs about 90 pounds, and he would overpower her. She would have to have taken him by surprise - which supports the sex theory.

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  20. Yes, she definitely would have had to taken him by surprise since the vampire would have definitely overpowered her, hence the flirting and grinding. I still don't think it's sex, just some really heavy activity, b/c I doubt she'd have sex with a vampire, even for a case. And his pants and belt were still in tact. She also got out of that car pretty quickly with her shorts still on. She'd probably just distract it enough through grinding and fake moaning or something before chop goes his head.

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