Series Review: Supernatural Season 2 (2006)

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Rating: 8.5/10

 

Re-watching Supernatural is proving to be so much fun. Sam and Dean Winchester together are a prize package full of entertainment, and I am often unable to distinguish when it is time to go to bed while watching. Jensen Ackles and Jared Padalecki have the biggest bromance that comes across through the screen, and the chemistry between them is the biggest thing that makes the show work.

The monsters and storyline remain well written and thought out. There is an abundance of breathless moments, heart wrenching scenes (who can possibly remain untouched when Dean is struggling to deal with the possibility of Sam going to the dark side???) and gales of laughter as the brothers continue to bicker and prank each other.

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Season two has a recurring theme that introduces the theory that not all supernatural creatures are evil, and that Sam and Dean needs to be able to distinguish between the two. Dean’s insecurities and childhood trauma also plays a big role in here and shows you why he is so protective of his only remaining family member. Sam also has some character development and is able to still be likeable despite whining incessantly about his soul (I mean, seriously, get over it dude). I loved the inclusion of Henriksen, who is the purest form of a boss you can ever hope to meet – that conversation over the phone with Dean was epic! – Jo and Ellen, their MIT dropout redneck and Bobby. These semi-permanent characters and their return every few episodes shows that the boys have family even if they aren’t aware of it.

One of my favorite episodes is where Henriksen appears with a second shapeshifter incident, because despite being gross every time a shape shifter comes along, it is hilarious when Dean continues to unintentionally land under the scrutiny of the law so much. I’m really glad the actress that played Meg is out of the picture, because that was my only main irritant in Season 1. The JJ. Holmes episode is naturally freaky as fuck and extremely well thought out. Gosh, a ghost of a serial killer and him peering at them through their coffins… shudders.I also enjoyed the route 66 one again – I threw my tablet on my face the first time I watched it with that stupid ghost jumping through the window – but the episode highlighted again that all the supernatural beings aren’t bad.

I really enjoyed the season. It is great to see the show while it was still fresh and in its’ teething phase. I can’t wait to roll onto season 3 – if I remember correctly this is where Sam starts being really irritating, but the show is still really good. EEK!

 

Series Review: Supernatural Season 1 (2005)

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Rating: 8.5/10

Supernatural really is part of the staple diet for people who enjoy a good show. It provides an interesting story line, well developed plot lines and a great cast. This is my second time running through the series, and I really aren’t afraid at all this time around haha. There are still a few episodes where I am like – eugh, cannibal-hillbilly episode I’m looking at you, but I was endlessly entertained. I’ve retained quite a bit from the first time around, and the episodes are so interesting to see again. Sure, the CGI might be terrible and the cheese might be strong in a few places, but hey, this was a low-budget production in its’ first season and it was 2005 after all.

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Season one is SO good. Even Sam Winchester is tolerable, and if you want to know how much I adored him in seasons 4 and 5, just ask my favourite confidante. I’m team Dean all the way, not only because he is the most perfectly faced man I have ever seen, his character is well layered, extremely fun and ridiculous, and who the character is – you can’t help but love the guy who just wants his family back together.

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I think my biggest irritation in the season was Meg, the unbelievably annoying demon who just annoyed me endlessly. It probably had something to do with the actress as well – Nicci Aycox worked on my nerves from the get go. ugh.

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Supernatural “Asylum” (Episode #109) Image #SN109-0185 Pictured: Norman Armour as Ghost of Dr. Sanford Ellicott Credit: © The WB/Sergei Bachlakov

Favorite episode? Perhaps the one with the Asylum. It was well written and played well into popular culture themes.

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I really enjoy the main cast, notably Jensen Ackles as Dean Winchester. To think that guy started out as Eric Brody in Days of Our Lives – just so much fun there. DW is a great character and as mentioned earlier, full of layers. I actually thought Sam was okay in here, not as annoying as he becomes in season four. I really find it amusing that they would cast Jeffrey Dean Morgan as their father – I think he is a great John Winchester and super fine, but come on, the ages just don’t match up.

I cannot recommend this show enough – it is so much fun.

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Series Review: Gilmore Girls Season 3

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What I liked:

Lane Kim’s rebellion: Lane’s quirky nature has been repressed by her mother her entire life, and it is amusing to see Lane starting to openly rebel against it. I found the purple hair incident really amusing and Rory’s baffled support throughout very endearing.

Rory and Dean’s breakup: Hehe, it was nasty. Rory had partially deserved it because she cheated on Dean, and was so inconsiderate to his feelings. Both Alexis Bledel and Jared Padalecki did well in this scene and I was impressed with their emotions flying everywhere.

GG3 Rory and Paris

The bi-centennial speech: Paris freaking out over live television and referencing Rory’s virginity and her lack of it was cringe-worthy but had me laughing so loudly.

GG3 Rory and Jess

Jess and Rory, finally: I only liked Dean in Rory’s life as a first boyfriend: Nice and all, but someone who you love and then move on. He’s not her equal on so many levels, and I think them together in the long run would be disastrous. Jess challenges Rory and he is her intellectual equal. He is always honest with her and it doesn’t matter to him what other people think of their relationship.

Jesse vs. Dean: That fight was one just waiting to happen and it was so well executed. I was very entertained and changed sides constantly who I was cheering for.

Luke: He’s just the greatest guy in the show. Even though he easily loses his temper and doesn’t have much time for silly town events, he has a soft heart and will do anything for his family and friends.

The buying of the Dragonfly: YAAAY for Lorelai and Sookie getting their inn!

Rory’s graduation speech: WOW. I had to watch it three times and I got chills every single time. It was beautiful and touching and appropriate and her grandparents and Lorelai seemed so genuinely touched.

GG3 Snowman

What I didn’t like:

Rory’s treatment of Dean: This is the first time we get a good view of how bad Rory can behave, and I was not impressed with her kissing Jess while she was still with Dean. Dean can be grating and immature and silly, but he does not deserve to be cheated on (no one does). I also thought that her taking out her cheating on her mom all the time is unfair.

GG3 Lorelai and Jess

That said, Dean: Dean gets annoying really fast when he gets on his high horse and his constant jealousy pisses me off. I also really don’t appreciate how he towers over Rory and shouts at her, it is rather terrifying and screams abuse to me.

Jess: He is one of my favorite characters but also an annoying one because he constantly messes up the things that are important: school, his relationship with Luke, his relationship with Rory. I love his cocky attitude and his bad ass nature, but sometimes I want to pull his ear and tell him it is time to act like the adult he so desperately wants to be. He made me angry a lot of the times because he mistreated Rory emotionally and that was not fair at all.

Alex: He seemed nice, and Billy Burke is so young in here, but the relationship between him and Lorelai was clearly a subplot and undeveloped. It would have been nice to see more of him and Lorelai together and how their relationship ended, for which there wasn’t even an ending.

GG3 Lorelai and chris

The Lorelai and Christopher flashback: Wow, it was so fake. And those kids? The girl could pass for a younger Lauren Graham but that teen boy would never grow into Christopher. EVER

Rating: 8/10

I enjoy this show so much. A big plus for Gilmore Girls is that it never runs dry and constantly evolves to keep the characters growing and the audience entertained. I really enjoy all the characters – they are quirky and unique and there are a ton of them. The cast works well together and you can see that they are having a blast. Season three had a good momentum and managed to balance the story of Rory at Chilton with her relationship dramas and small town life really well and Lorelai also got her emotional and career development. Both Alexis Bledel and Lauren Graham are much more comfortable in their roles and seemto have settled into their characters.

The support cast provides endless entertainment as with their small town lives. I especially enjoy Kirk very much. He is so awkward and the things he gets up to makes me laugh the entire episode through. I’m really happy he was promoted to a series regular because Sean Gunn does a fantastic job with his role. Miss Patty (Liz Torres) also provides chuckles with her dancing school and her open perving about gorgeous younger men makes me want to high five the lady. Then there is Michel Gerard (Yanic Truesdale), a man whose view on life and work should be celebrated. His constant sarcasm and determination to do as little as possible is truly admirable, as well as the bit of sweetness he can exhibit for the people he cares about.

I am also particularly pleased that Gilmore Girls never do that annoying thing where a story arc keeps running indefinitely. Rory gets her three seasons at Chilton, because it fits with the necessary time frame and then she applies to college. She also GOES to school and constantly studies, something that sorely lacks from shows like Pretty Little Liars where you wonder how those girls are planning to get their school certificates.

Gilmore Girls Season 3 provided easy, fun and hilarious television time. It is a great pick-me-up, and I think plenty of people would have fun with this!

Series Review: Gilmore Girls Season 2

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Rating: 8/10

There is no other way to watch Gilmore Girls other than binge watching. I continued from my epic return to Stars Hollow in Season One, immediately joining Rory and Lorelai again for their escapades. I can’t imagine giving this show anything below an 8. Gilmore Girls makes me the happiest and watching it is the best. Season two also performed really well and the storyline evolves just enough to prevent the show from stagnating. I really thought the addition of Jess’ character was an inspired move, he brings something to Rory’s life that makes her existence as colorful as her mothers. Below is a rundown of my likes and dislikes… enjoy and let me know if you’ve ever watched it and what you thought!

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What I liked:

Max Madeena and Lorelai’s relationship getting the axe.  I loved Max, I truly did, but he is not the man for Lorelai. (Luke is, duh). Max is very sweet and a wonderful character, but he just seems… too nice for Lorelai.

Lane’s bigger role. I adore Keiko Agena in her role of Lane Kim, and I find her and Rory’s friendship so very sweet. I was very happy to notice Lane gets her moments in the story and that she is developing and having fun.

Rory and Paris… round two.  Paris is rather terrifying but I really enjoy the character. She is so insecure and stressed about being a success and that and her short personality does not make her the best person to be around in trying times. I did enjoy how she and Rory got onto a better level here and how Rory could even be friends with a person that had treated her the way Paris did.

Jess for the win! Ah, Milo Ventimiglia is the best thing in Stars Hollow since Luke’s diner. He’s hilarious, sarcastic, cocky and brutally honest and I love when he is on screen (he’s honey to the eyes too, but that pales compared to his awesome character. My favorite scene with him is where Luke pushes him into the lake, it’s just a small push and Jesse is flying. I laughed for hours afterwards. It’s also pretty clear that Jesse is a much better fit for Rory than Dean is – he’s her equal and won’t treat her like she’s breakable all the time, something very good for a girl as pampered as Rory is.

A Movie by Kirk

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Possibly made my year.

The episodes: All of these episodes are hilarious, sweet and well shot and you never even think of the time. Although there is some strange acting here and there it’s not grating because the show is shot so well.

Improved relationships: Especially between Lorelai and Emily Gilmore. It’s quite clear that they are both very responsible for the damage that was done between them and they are such an entertaining case study for the mom/daughter dynamic. I love Emily’s wit and sarcasm and how she always has an answer – she is an older version of her daughter although both would fervently deny it.

Luke, forever. He’s so cranky and his wild tangents entertain me. He never stops bitching and has so many gripes with the world. He is actually also very sweet and has a good heart, which I love because he tries to hide it so well.

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What I didn’t like

Sheesh, there is basically nothing. The only thing that causes minor irritation, and it is truly minor, is Dean. He can get very grating at times and his excessive jealously and over protective nature annoys me (maybe it is strengthened by Jared Padalecki flashbacks from Supernatural season four). It is very minor though, and I really do enjoy the character most of the time.

I also think that it was completely wrong that they didn’t show Sookie’s wedding to Jackson. Sookie is a major character in the story, and it would have been lovely to see how she got her big day.

Really, if you haven’t seen this show and you really enjoy happy things, I think that you give it a try. It is worth the watch and easy and fun.

Ultimate Throwback Thursday: Gilmore Girls Season 1

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Thoughts while having Gilmore Girls years later:

I hope I can be as cool as Lauren Graham when I grow up. Epitome of cool.

Lorelai is so funny. The things she says!

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Totally relating to the weirdness of Lorelai and Rory.

Rory gets a D

How ridiculously cute is Alexis Bledel? She’s so teensy and innocent and adorable.

I want to move to a small American town.

I love Miss Patty. Her voice is so smoky!

Sixteen year old me did not fully appreciate all the man in Luke. Heeeyyyyyy

Nor did sixteen year old understand how hot Max Madeena is

Twenty five year old me likes Luke and Max. A lot

HAHAHA look how young Jared Padalecki is

Jared Padalecki is doomed to have awful hair in shows

Was Jared Padalecki a six foot giant baby too?

Chad Michael Murray was the perfect school boy in the 2000s

Tristan is SUCH a highschool boy

Paris would still make me cry

I like Paris. She’s very honest and that rocks

Still scary though

So many references and puns make sense now.

These older shows are so tame with sexy time.

Sookie is the best. Her little dances and sweet nature makes the show.

Melissa McCartney should have stuck to this instead of becoming so generic. I really love her in here.

Michelle. The embodiment of such superb sarcasm warms my heart.

Cutest first kiss EVER

Luke’s rants. I can watch him go into full explosion mode every single day because the energy he puts into it is so entertaining. A huge up for Scott Patterson for being such a perfect Luke.

Emily Gilmore’s dry wit. How can she and Lorelai not see how similar they are?

The relationship between Rory and her grandfather is so endearing.

How HOT is Christopher? Lorelai gets all the pretty guys. No fair.

These girls understand my devotion to coffee

Rating: 7/10

I’m currently having the best time watching Gilmore Girls again. It has that special feeling that reminds me of childhood, I used to avidly await this show each week. It’s by far not the most complex storyline or exceptional acting I’ve ever encountered, but it’s so sweet and so much fun to watch that it is quite easy to forget the flaws!

Halloween Week: Cry Wolf

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Plot: Eight unsuspecting high school seniors at a posh boarding school, who delight themselves on playing games of lies, come face-to-face with terror and learn that nobody believes a liar – even when they’re telling the truth. (via IMDb)

So much cute in this pic!
               So much cute in this pic!

Scare O’Meter: 1/5 – The equivalent of having to listen to more of the Oscar Pistorius Case

Rating: 6/10 

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Cry Wolf was better than expected. When the friend I visited mentioned that it is a good movie I was like erm, YOU were the one that told me Grown Ups 2 is funny, but persistent was the friend and we watched it. The movie is obviously low budget, but the actors acted just fine, the horror wasn’t too much (I don’t even think classifying this as horror is correct), and it had a few tinges of scary but not enough to keep me awake. I enjoyed Jared Padalecki much more in here as in Supernatural, because he wasn’t shedding a damn tear every time something scary happened. Seeing Ian Morris pre-Pretty Little Liars and Once Upon a Time was fun – his British accent is the best thing ever to happen and he just seems so sweet. Jon Bon Jovi plays the sleazy teacher in here, and he surprised me the most with his acting chops. He did the slick, slimy teacher so well I was repulsed all the time, which was something they were aiming for.

I could have told everyone in that school that Dodger was Dodgy, because she looked the part, played the part and was generally a spoiled rich girl in desperate need of attention. I really didn’t like her much, because the tricks she pulled werenot that far from the manipulative lengths a lot of women of a certain calibre would pull if they wanted something their way.

The movie didn’t drag its’ butt so it gets major points there, and the storyline was clearly outlined and not immersed in a pool of confusion, something that happens way too much with low budget films. It had a nice little plot twist near the end, something completely surprising, at least to me, which made a lot of things more realistic that had happened earlier on.

Series Review: Supernatural Season 2

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CONTAINS SPOILERS

My previous experiences with series’ based primarily on the supernatural have been more in line with Vampire Diaries. When my friend recommended that I watch Supernatural, I initially thought I would watch a few episodes and then it would phase out for me. I have to admit that I have rarely been this impressed with a series.

Supernatural revolves around the lives of two demon hunters, brothers Sam (Jared Padalecki) and Dean Winchester (Jensen Ackles). In season two their focus is tracking down the Yellow Eyed Demon Azazel, who is responsible for the deaths of their parents. Azazel visited Sam as a child, like many other children, giving him the ability to see into the future, and killed Sam’s mother when she caught him in the act.

The first episode opens with Sam, Dean and their father John in the hospital after a car crash caused by Azazel’s henchmen. John (played by Jeffrey Dean Morgan) and Sam only sustain minor injuries, but Dean lies dying in a coma. Meanwhile, Dean has an out-of-body-experience where he walks through the hospital as a “ghost”. He witnesses a Reaper taking people away as they die, and he himself is visited by the Reaper. Dean is saved from death when his father trades in his own life in exchange for Dean’s. John dies after whispering something in his eldest son’s ear.

After the cremation of their father, Sam and Dean struggle to deal with their loss. They continue to work as demon hunters, and end up at Harvelle’s Roadhouse, a place frequented with hunters. They meet Ellen and Jo Harvelle and the highly intelligent Ash, who uses his skills to track demons. Dean and Sam investigate the murders of visitors of a carnival, and discover that a demon of Hindu mythology takes the form of a clown and then murders the parents of the children who invite them into their homes. While not appearing as a clown, the demon takes the form of a blind knife thrower. They kill the demon with a brass pipe. Afterwards Dean starts to deal with the loss of his father by beating up his beloved Impala.

In the next episode the brothers investigate cattle mutilations and find that is was vampires who chose to live off the blood of cattle rather than humans. They meet another hunter, Gordon Walker, and Ellen warns them that Gordon is dangerous. Sam is taken captive by the vampires, and learns that they are reformed, and do not kill humans. Sam tries to convince Dean that the vampires should be left in peace, but Gordon starts to torture the vampire to prove that they remain evil creatures. Gordon tempts the vampire with Sam’s blood, but after she refuses, Sam and Dean save her and leave Gordon behind after tying him up.

The boys visit their mother’s grave to bury their father’s dog tags, and they become suspicious when they notice that the ground surrounding another grave is completely dead. They discover that a woman named Angela Mason had been brought back from the dead as a Zombie, and are busy killing everyone who wronged her as a mortal. They kill her with a silver stake. Dean apologizes to Sam for his behavior and reveals his troubles with dealing with his father’s death.

Sam has a vision where he sees a man committing a murder-suicide, and Ash helps them track Andy Gallagher. Andy’s mother died in the same way as Sam and Dean’s, and they head over to Guthrie where they manage to prevent the man committing crime, but is unable to stop committing suicide. They learn that Andy has mind-controlling abilities, and that his twin brother, Ansen is responsible, not Andy. Ansen almost kills Andy’s ex-girlfriend, but is killed by Andy. Sam starts to worry that he will end up evil, as everyone like him does eventually, but Dean assures him that he won’t allow that to happen.

After Ellen refuses to allow Jo to investigate the disappearances of blond women in an apartment building, Sam and Dean head to Philadelphia to investigate. Jo secretly follows them and offers her help. They realize the ghost of America’s first serial killer H.H. Holmes is behind the disappearances, and Jo is taken captive by him. They find Jo and other victims in a sewer system under the building and free those alive. They trap the spirit with salt and seal the chamber’s entrance with concrete. Jo reunites with the furious Ellen, and she reveals that Jo’s father died while hunting with John Winchester.

Next, the brothers travel to Baltimore to investigate murders. They are arrested on a previous (false) murder charge of Dean, where a shape shifter impersonated him. Sam manages to escape. One of the detectives, Diana Ballard (played by Linda Blair) sees the apparition of a murdered woman, and sets out to help Sam track the missing heroin dealer when Dean’s insists. The spirit leads them to her body, so that she can be burned and laid to rest, and upon the retrieval of the corpse they find a necklace incrementing Diana’s partner, Pete Sheridan. Pete drives Dean from the police station planning to kill him to clear his own name, but is tracked down by Sam and Diana, and admits to killing the woman and the lawyer and his wife. The spirit distracts him, and Diana kills Pete. She lets Dean and Sam go and tells them to continue saving people.

When Sam and Dean find out that hellhounds are behind an alleged suicide, they realize that the man sold his soul to a crossroads demon in change for success. They track down another man, who made a deal with the demon to cure his wife from cancer and now he is being hunted. Sam stays behind to protect him, and Dean sets out to summon the demon. He traps her, and only releases her when she sets the man free from his terrible fate. She does so, but taunts Dean by revealing that John is suffering in hell.

Sam has a premonition of Dean killing a man, and they travel to Riversgrove to find out what is going on. They soon find that al communication has been cut off, and that the town’s people won’t allow anyone to leave. They head to the doctor’s office, where she tells them that the town’s people are infected with a sulfur containing virus. They deduce that it is a demonic plague, and when one of the nurses become violent because of the plague, Dean kills her, but she has already infected Sam. Sam proves miraculously immune to the virus, and they are able to leave town.

Dean finally reveals that on the night their father died, John told him that he either had to save Sam, or kill him. They head to the roadhouse to try and find more psychic children like Sam, and end up finding Scott Carey, who had been murdered the previous month.  They meet Ava Wilson, who, like Sam, is able to see into the future, and predicted Scott’s death. She “sees” Sam being killed in an explosion, and it turns out that the crazy demon hunter Gordon is behind it. Sam nearly dies, but is saved once again by Dean, but then Dean is taken captive by Gordon. Sam saves Dean, and Gordon is arrested when the police find him. The brothers goes to check that Ava is fine, but find that her fiancé has been murdered and she is gone, probably taken by the demon.

During the next episode Sam and Dean investigate murders at the Piermont Inn. It is run by Susan, a single mother, who lives there along with her ill mother (Susan) and young daughter Tyler. Tyler has an imaginary friend, Maggie, who turns out to be the ghost behind all the murders. They discover that Maggie is the ghost of Susan’s deceased sister who died as a child.  Susan had been practicing hoodoo to keep her away, but Maggie had returned after Susan became too ill to practice it anymore. Maggie attacks Rose, and Rose is saved by Sam and Dean. When Maggie tries to kill Tyler, Susan offers up her life to save Tyler.

Sam and Dean head to Wisconsin to investigate some robbery-suicides.  A former guard thinks it is a Mandroid (half man, half machine), but the brothers realize that it is once again a shape shifter causing havoc. They manage to locate the next target, and head to the bank to try and catch the shape shifter. Hell breaks loose when the security guard arrives to capture his “man-droid”, and takes the people hostage inside the bank. Sam and Dean employ Ron’s help, but before they can catch the shape shifter it morphs into someone else. Ron is killed by the police when he moves out into the open. FBI Agent Victor Henriksen arrives at the scene, telling Dean that the SWAT team will swarm the place inside an hour. Sam and Dean kill the shape shifter, and manage another miraculous escape when they get away by posing as SWAT members.

In Providence, when murderers claim that they were sent by angels to do so; Sam and Dean find that the victims weren’t exemplary citizens, and they set out to find if there is any connection. They find the common link is a shared church, and find out that one of the priests were killed outside the church. Dean is a skeptic to whether it really is an angel, and he summons the spirit of the priest. The spirit believes him an angel, but another priest convinces him otherwise and puts his soul to rest. Dean finally considers the presence of God when he witnesses a man being impaled in a truck after Dean chased him when he attacked a woman.

Dean finds Sam covered in blood after being missing for a week, and discovers he murdered another hunter. Sam runs away from Dean after knocking him out, and tracks down Jo where she is working in a bar. He plays mind games with her, but Dean arrives before he seriously injures her. Afterwards, Sam goes to visit a friend of their father’s, Bobby Singer (Jim Beaver). Bobby traps Sam when he gives Sam beer to drink that has been laced with holy water, and together with Dean they force the demon to leave Sam’s body.

Bobby helps Sam and Dean identify a Pagan trickster that is loose on a college campus in Springfield. They find that the trickster is the janitor, and he fakes his own death and escapes.

Next, they meet a woman, Molly, whose husband is missing after they crashed in the road to miss hitting a man. The man chases after her, and she meets the Winchesters on the road, begging them to help her. After a while, they reveal to her that they are chasing the spirit of Jonah Greely, and burn his corpse when they find it. They tell Molly that her husband is alive and well, and that he has married again, because she is also a ghost. After accepting that she is indeed dead, she moves on.

The brothers head to San Francisco to investigate werewolf attacks, and meets Madison, a secretary to the latest victim. They suspect her obsessive ex-boyfriend Kurt of being the werewolf when she discloses his violent streak. Dean searches for the werewolf, and Sam stays with Madison to protect her, ignoring their attraction. That night, Madison becomes a werewolf and injures Dean while she tries to kill her ex-boyfriend. They realize that Madison knows nothing of her nightly activities, and attempts to save her when they find out that it is possible for a werewolf to be saved if his sire dies. They kill the man who turned her, and when Madison doesn’t turn into a werewolf the following night, she and Sam sleep together. She later turns again, and when she realizes that she hasn’t changed, and begs Sam to kill her.

The Winchesters head to the set of a horror film to investigate the killings there. They find out that a slighted screen writer put Latin summoning rituals in the film’s script, and are summoning the dead through it. They confront him, but he is killed when the spirits turn on him in anger for what he has forced them to do.

During their next supernatural hunting stint, Sam and Dean purposely get locked up in prison to find a ghost. Agent Henriksen shows up again and tries to extradite them. Their public defender believes in their innocence, but says that they can only stall the extradition for a week. Dean is attacked by the vengeful spirit, and they find out from another inmate that she is Nurse Glockner, who used to kill infirmary patients. Dean convinces the public defender to find out where she is buried, and after escaping, they head to the cemetery to burn her corpse.  Their informant gives false information to Henriksen, and the FBI heads to the wrong cemetery and Sam and Dean escapes.

During the third last episode of the season, Dean is attacked by a djinn, and finds himself in a world where everything is perfect. His mother is alive, Sam’s girlfriend is still alive, he himself is married, and his father died a natural death. Even though Dean enjoys his new found happiness, he is haunted by a young woman. He discovers the djinn’s lair, and forces himself to return to the real world where Sam saves him.

In All hell breaks loose, Part 1, Sam is taken captive by the yellow eyed demon and left in an abandoned town. There he meets Andy and Ava again, along with Lily and Jake Talley. Dean and Bobby head over to the roadhouse to find clues, but find it burnt to the ground, along with Ash’s ashes, and Ellen nowhere to be found. Andy, who has mind controlling abilities, is able to tell Dean of Sam’s location through telepathy. Sam is visited in a dream by the demon, who tells him that they have all been bought together with one purpose: the last survivor gets to lead Azazel’s army. He shows Sam many things; like how his mother and girlfriend died. Afterwards, Ava reveals how evil she had become by setting a demon loose on Lily and Andy. Jake kills her, and then attacks Sam in distrust, but Sam manages to knock him unconscious. Bobby and Dean arrive, and see how Sam is killed by Jake.

In the last episode, the devastated Dean sells his soul to a crossroads demon in exchange for Sam’s resurrection, and is given one year to live before the collection of his soul. Ellen arrives at Bobby’s house, and after she proves that she isn’t a demon, she gives them a map that Samuel Colt, the creator of the only gun that can kill Azazel, created a giant devil’s trap using railway lines. Jake goes to the center of the trap, where an old cowboy cemetery is, and opens a doorway to hell. Sam kills Jake, but it is too late – the demons climb out. Azazel enters, and tries to kill Sam and Dean, who is now in possession of the Colt gun again. Azazel gets the gun again, but when he tries to kill them, the ghost of John Winchester appears and the distraction causes Dean to get possession of the gun and finally kill Azazel. John’s spirit moves on, and the boys can see he is going to a better place. Sam promises to save Dean’s life, as Dean has done it so many times for him. Bobby and Ellen tell the boys to prepare to hunt again, as so many demons are now set free.

Rating: 8/10

I simply cannot describe how phenomenal this show is. I am constantly amazed how well it has been written, acted out, produced and executed. It is rare to find fresh material in the overpopulated supernatural genre, and even though this season is actually quite old, I am so impressed with it. All the emotion in the show is one of the factors that make this show so fantastic. Sam and Dean’s relationship is certainly so profound because of the chemistry between Jensen Ackles and Jared Padalecki. They manage to appear as true siblings, teasing and irritating the hell out of each other frequently. It is so sad how neither of them ever manages to find true happiness. I nearly cried like a baby when Sam had to kill Madison, after finding out she is still a werewolf. How unfair when he finally managed to connect to someone after Jessica! Dean’s relationship/little sister affection with Jo saddened me. Why couldn’t he just date her and be happy?

Their only venture into popular mysticism, it would seem, was the one episode where the vampires were trying to live morally. I enjoyed even that, and it portrayed another thing; that all hunters weren’t necessarily good. Gordon is such a tool, and I really enjoyed seeing him cornered. I have to say, I cannot wait until he meets his end.

It is a good thing that Sam and Dean are finally being hunted by the FBI. It would be completely unrealistic to commit so many crimes and not get cornered.

I would definitely recommend this show to everyone!