Well, at least it didn't suck as much as I was afraid it would.
This late in the season, I'm glad there was a myth-arc reason for them to go back to the old west. I wasn't really feeling the plot again, though. The boys were out of their element, at risk of being permanently trapped in the past, and had a firm deadline and only one shot at grabbing the only thing they knew of that might destroy the Mother of All, but again I felt absolutely no sense of urgency or suspense. I was much more interested in finding out what Castiel was doing that was so bad that his own loyal lieutenant tried to kill him.
Speaking of Rachael, I wanted someone to shove her off her high horse. Yes, the Winchesters call Castiel when they need something from him, but it's not like Castiel only calls on the Winchesters unannounced for beer and pizza. He contacts them when he needs something from them too.
Why did it take Sam all night to ride out to Samuel Colt's, but only 3 hours to ride back? And is Bobby's address really the only address in Sam's phone? If not, how did Colt know to pick that one?
Umm, how come nobody mentioned exploding during the previous incidents of soul groping? Everybody and their cousin have had their hands all over Sam's soul, and there was also that kid whose soul Castiel touched. Nobody seemed to worry about nuclear soul explosions then.
Is there some law in Canada that says that Scott Hylands must appear in every single show that films there? Because I'm pretty sure he has. If he missed one, Nicholas Campbell probably had him covered.
The most fun in this episode was trying to spot all the western movie references crammed in there. I'm sure I missed a ton. Highlights were Bobby mentioning Deadwood (Jim Beaver was on the show of the same name), the Ennio Morricone spaghetti western music cue, and Dean's "Candygram for Mongo!" Blazing Saddles is one of my favorite movies ever. I've completely lost count of how many times I've seen it, and it never stops being funny. Oh, and I also had to laugh at Star Trek IV: Save the Whales because that's exactly what I call it.
I've had 'Sam & Dean on horseback and/or motorcycles' on my personal wish list since back around season 2. So, so close. Five seconds of Sam in the dark doesn't count. I'm still holding out for motorcycles.
This late in the season, I'm glad there was a myth-arc reason for them to go back to the old west. I wasn't really feeling the plot again, though. The boys were out of their element, at risk of being permanently trapped in the past, and had a firm deadline and only one shot at grabbing the only thing they knew of that might destroy the Mother of All, but again I felt absolutely no sense of urgency or suspense. I was much more interested in finding out what Castiel was doing that was so bad that his own loyal lieutenant tried to kill him.
Speaking of Rachael, I wanted someone to shove her off her high horse. Yes, the Winchesters call Castiel when they need something from him, but it's not like Castiel only calls on the Winchesters unannounced for beer and pizza. He contacts them when he needs something from them too.
Why did it take Sam all night to ride out to Samuel Colt's, but only 3 hours to ride back? And is Bobby's address really the only address in Sam's phone? If not, how did Colt know to pick that one?
Umm, how come nobody mentioned exploding during the previous incidents of soul groping? Everybody and their cousin have had their hands all over Sam's soul, and there was also that kid whose soul Castiel touched. Nobody seemed to worry about nuclear soul explosions then.
Is there some law in Canada that says that Scott Hylands must appear in every single show that films there? Because I'm pretty sure he has. If he missed one, Nicholas Campbell probably had him covered.
The most fun in this episode was trying to spot all the western movie references crammed in there. I'm sure I missed a ton. Highlights were Bobby mentioning Deadwood (Jim Beaver was on the show of the same name), the Ennio Morricone spaghetti western music cue, and Dean's "Candygram for Mongo!" Blazing Saddles is one of my favorite movies ever. I've completely lost count of how many times I've seen it, and it never stops being funny. Oh, and I also had to laugh at Star Trek IV: Save the Whales because that's exactly what I call it.
I've had 'Sam & Dean on horseback and/or motorcycles' on my personal wish list since back around season 2. So, so close. Five seconds of Sam in the dark doesn't count. I'm still holding out for motorcycles.
no subject
Date: 2011-04-24 04:15 am (UTC)From: