Note to the writers on Hawaii Five-0: See? It is possible to creatively give your leads a break without killing the show. And if Brad Buckner and Eugenie Ross-Leming can do it, believe me when I say that you can too. Because I think this is the first episode by these two writers that I didn't hate like burning.
I loved the change in perspective from Sam and Dean's view of the empty house to Bobby's view of the ghost Grand Central Station. I had never considered what it would be like for a ghost to walk into a haunted house. And it was a great way to reveal that Annie was already dead.
Why does the show always come so close to giving us a kick-ass female hunter, only to fail at the last second? I mean, I liked Annie and I would like to have seen more of her as a hunter, but did the show have to make her the hunting community bicycle? It added nothing to the plot or anyone's character development.
I got a little worried when Haskell said that the only two ways to move objects were with zen or rage. Let's face it, Bobby's never been very zen. I don't want him to become a vengeful spirit, but that looks like the fate of all ghosts. Maybe the boys can keep him "human." But I think I have to agree with Dean: "What are the odds this ends well?"
I loved the change in perspective from Sam and Dean's view of the empty house to Bobby's view of the ghost Grand Central Station. I had never considered what it would be like for a ghost to walk into a haunted house. And it was a great way to reveal that Annie was already dead.
Why does the show always come so close to giving us a kick-ass female hunter, only to fail at the last second? I mean, I liked Annie and I would like to have seen more of her as a hunter, but did the show have to make her the hunting community bicycle? It added nothing to the plot or anyone's character development.
I got a little worried when Haskell said that the only two ways to move objects were with zen or rage. Let's face it, Bobby's never been very zen. I don't want him to become a vengeful spirit, but that looks like the fate of all ghosts. Maybe the boys can keep him "human." But I think I have to agree with Dean: "What are the odds this ends well?"