the_other_sandy: Black and white TV (TV)
Boy, it's been a long two months. I missed you, show.

So, it's been one month since Dean's confession in the mid-season finale, and Dean has been working them both non-stop since then. They're even sleeping in the car. I suppose it's even odds whether he was working himself that hard so he wouldn't have to think about what happened to him in hell, or whether he was working Sam that hard so that Sam wouldn't have the time or energy to pursue the issue further. Probably a little of both.

I liked the main plot. It was interesting to see what a "haunting" felt like from an innocent family's perspective. Of course, the haunting turned out to not really be one. Jeremy Carver could have just as easily called this episode "The Revenge of Missy Bender." It was the first time in awhile the Winchesters have had to deal with a human monster.

I wish Sam had had a more proactive role in the episode, though. Dean picked the job. Dean herded the family around. Dean tracked the feral daughter through the house. Dean rescued the son. Sam? Read Rebecca's diary and then ran up to each scene just as things finished happening. I understand that the main focus was on Dean trying to make up for torturing those other souls in hell (and enjoying it), but I don't think it would've taken the focus away from Dean if Sam had had a little more to do. Maybe I'm just cranky because it's been two months and I wanted to see both brothers get their badass on.

When Suze answered the question of whether or not her family was okay with, "We're the opposite of okay, but we're together," I was really hoping that was an object lesson Dean would take home with him, but so far, no dice. Maybe later in the season. I'd really like Dean to realize at some point that he can lean on Sam for awhile.

My only real issue with the episode was with the feral children. I can cope with them being locked up and ignored (it's tragic, but it happens in real life). But Danny said "the girl in the walls" told him that he could stay, yet the feral children who turned up in person later in the episode seemed to be completely non-verbal, which is what you'd expect from their circumstances. And who was scribbling the notes in blood? Granted, "Go" and "Too late" aren't exactly Shakespearean in scope, but they might as well be in Swahili to someone who can't read or write, and somehow I doubt these two kids were home schooled. The whole plot was an interesting idea, but the feral kids we eventually saw seemed very different from the ones who were anonymously terrorizing the house earlier.
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the_other_sandy

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