Oh dear. Senior moment.
On this board it appears to be just you. Even on the episodes I don't like that much out of a typical 41 minuet episodes I usually find more then 5 minutes of material that I enjoy. Hell even the episode I hate, hate Changing Channels had that much material.Hasn't that been the formula all season--35 minutes of filler then 5 minutes of interesting character stuff/plot revelations/mythology. Or maybe that might have just been how it felt to me.Given the way they handled Death, he couldn't have had a stand alone episode. It would have been a five minute conversation and 35 minutes of filler.![]()
I was obviously being a bit facetious with the remark I made--I didn't literally mean there was barely 5 minutes of enjoyable material in a given episode. My point was that the season felt sorta aimless for me.On this board it appears to be just you. Even on the episodes I don't like that much out of a typical 41 minuet episodes I usually find more then 5 minutes of material that I enjoy.
It really for me isn't about whether something is a standalone or myth episode--it is more of a case of whether I liked it.But I also have a harder time deciding what is a stand alone episode (more this season then any other). Are the horse men episodes part of the myth arc, how about the anti-Christ episode? Because I really enjoyed all of those.
I will personally disagree, I found it an overall middling season of television even considering how crappy tv has been this year. Honestly, the only shows that I have consistently enjoyed that I have so far gotten to watch and found above average this year were LOST(though it hasn't been as good this season as it can be), Legend of the Seeker, The Vampire Diaries(which really surprised me by how strong it has been as a series).But it was (for me certainly) above average television. By far. Great? Nope, but good.
3) The Pagan gods all eat humans, apparently.
Jeez that was MATT FREWAR!!??!!! Now I have to watch it again! Kick me for not looking at casting credits.If I had one complaint about this episode, it's how brief Pestilence's time was. I admit, out of the Four Horsemen, Prestilence was always my least favorite conceptually. But Matt Frewer was just fantastic as him..
I might have missed some lines, but I didn't quite get that. The pagan gods seem to be supernatural creatures that are off the scale compared to a shapeshifter or whatever. But they draw power from human death, that was spelled out in the Christmas Green Man episode. They get more power when they have worshippers who sacrifice to them (like the Aztecs, Kali, and AFAIK the Green Man). If I had to pin down a theory, I would say they were creatures who stepped into the roles of existing mythology to take advantage of the deaths available to be dedicated to them. So Odin jokes about Ragnorok because it really has nothing to do with him, he just stepped into the role.I don't get it.... that hotel god episode basically stated that each god was created when enough people believed in them then they formed existance.... would'nt that be the same with with the catholic mythos... yet.... death said that god (implying the christian god) and him were created at the beginning of things.... and who knows which one is older... yet... that mythos also implies that god is all knowing... all seeing and transcends death.... what's going on... do the writers even pay attention to the stuff they spew out...
Jeez that was MATT FREWAR!!??!!! Now I have to watch it again! Kick me for not looking at casting credits.
I might have missed some lines, but I didn't quite get that. The pagan gods seem to be supernatural creatures that are off the scale compared to a shapeshifter or whatever. But they draw power from human death, that was spelled out in the Christmas Green Man episode. They get more power when they have worshippers who sacrifice to them (like the Aztecs, Kali, and AFAIK the Green Man). If I had to pin down a theory, I would say they were creatures who stepped into the roles of existing mythology to take advantage of the deaths available to be dedicated to them. So Odin jokes about Ragnorok because it really has nothing to do with him, he just stepped into the role.
Uhm, if you think the Norse didn't partake in ritual sacrifice, your information is terribly wrong. Odin had a particularly odd form of sacrifice associated with him in the form of hanging and strangulation.Except that nobody ever sacrificed to Odin. Like I explained, the Viking gods are near universally (with the exception of the evil trickster Loki) good guys, because the Vikings desperately needed good guys on their side. The Viking gods never demanded any sacrifice. Further, Odin doesn't joke about Ragnarok, he says he wonders what's he's doing here, because the Judeo-Christian apocalypse has got nothing on him, he's prophesied to die at Ragnarok.
I haven't quite seen that Lucifer, Michael and the other angels and demons are necessarily totally Judeo-Christian. They are just as much Zorostrian, or Enochian. It's more like a series of crazy mystics and prophets have occured through history and talked about them, and the stories got mixed in with the Judeo-Christian books. But maybe that's just the agnostic in me struggling with how much I enjoy the storyline...
If anything, Supernatural seems to espouse a deistic point of view. A creator God/being is there, but he doesn't interfere much. That's how I see it. I enjoy the storyline, too.I haven't quite seen that Lucifer, Michael and the other angels and demons are necessarily totally Judeo-Christian. They are just as much Zorostrian, or Enochian. It's more like a series of crazy mystics and prophets have occured through history and talked about them, and the stories got mixed in with the Judeo-Christian books. But maybe that's just the agnostic in me struggling with how much I enjoy the storyline...
I understood deism to be the watchmaker analogy. God made the "watch", wound it up, and then let it alone to work away. God doesn't keep meddling with the gears and springs, or even adjust the time. I could be way off though.
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