Meh. It was OK. I was just happy that Garth survived the episode.
It definitely wasn't one of their best, but it I didn't think it was that bad. I was kind of surprised that they actually left it with Garth still with his new family.
Yeah, with Kevin dead, they really need to introduce at least one more recurring good guy. Right now it kind of feels like the only actual good guys around for more than one episode are the Winchesters and Castiel. For a couple minutes last week I thought maybe they were doing that Tara, but they appeared to kill her off, and then this week I thought they were bringing Garth back into the fold, but the end made that look unlikely.Same here. I thought he was a goner and that the other Werewolves would turn out to be killers. I'm still afraid they might go back to it in a future episode and screw it up. Garth should go back to being the new Bobby, because they need somebody in that role. And, at this point, that somebody should be based at Men of Letters HQ.
I'd really like to see the MOL HQ become a bustling beehive of activity over the next couple of years. Garth, Charlie, and the kid with the Golem would be good to have around. And they could introduce some new characters who don't die.
I'd really like to see the MOL HQ become a bustling beehive of activity over the next couple of years. Garth, Charlie, and the kid with the Golem would be good to have around. And they could introduce some new characters who don't die.
That's what I thought during the episode. One more team member for The Supernatural Avengers.^Heh. The Supernatural Superfriends.
The big downside of a spin-off is that it limits the ability of the writers to really mess with the Supernatural universe in the regular show's grand finale. I agree with RJDiogenes that Sam and Dean should really end up as game-changers in some way.
Almost every episode for as far back as I can remember usually ends with some sort of Sam and Dean conversation drama, some more meaningful than others. This time I thought it was an especially important moment. Dean didn't save Sam just because he wanted his brother to live, he also did it for purely selfish reasons, because he didn't want to be alone. That's totally in line with Dean's character going all the way back to the pilot. He's just not wired to be by himself.Not a bad episode. Though I've noticed lately, they end the show with some brotherly drama. "Come on, Dean. You wouldn't allow me to die because you're afraid of being lonely. "
Leave that stuff to the Wincest-loving slash fanfic writers.
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