I started writing this
on Saturday. I was at the hairdressers. My hair takes and inordinate amount of
time to do…have you seen the colour(s)? So I had a couple of hours on my hands
and thought I’d write up my review.
I already knew that
Jared was unwell. I already knew he was too ill to attend JIB6. And along with my
Aussie friends, I hoped that he’d be well enough to still make it to Australia.
Then Jared tweeted
those two scary tweets.
I didn’t know what to
do. I instantly tweeted him back and wrote on his Facebook wall, reaching out
and taking a few moments like he asked us to. Then I sat there in shock,
worrying, trying not to burst in to tears, feeling frightened, feeling helpless.
Like so many of you, I
consider Jared family, I consider him a friend. But my relationship with him is
unique – unique to this fandom family. Our friendship with Jared is not a
traditional friendship and in those moments following his tweets, I felt
acutely the real distance between how I feel about Jared and the reality of our
relationship. I can’t pick up the phone and make sure he’s okay like I would my
other friends. I can only message him via social media and hope maybe; just
maybe he sees that I’m thinking of him. Me, being just one voice among
thousands that poured love in his direction in the hours following his call for
help.
My festive day at the
hairdressers suddenly went to shit. I was getting my hair sorted for the Aussie
convention the next weekend. But now Jared wasn't coming – but worse than that,
and far more important, Jared was in pain and quite frankly, I was scared. Really scared. Scared for my friend.
I wrote off the rest
of the day and went home, crawled into bed and Skyped with my friend Hazel. We
talked about our beautiful Js, fretted about Jared, were honest enough to say
we were also gutted we weren’t going to be seeing him the following week, and
supported each other through what was a very strange and emotional afternoon.
When Jensen’s first panel at JIB6 commenced in the evening my time, I was relieved to hear him say that Jared was
home and resting. I felt a little better knowing that Jared was safe, and with
Gen and his boys. I decided I’d give the review another crack. So I popped on
“The Prisoner”. But there was Jared – okay it was Sam – broken and sad, trying
to reach out to his brother, tears in his eyes, full of pain…and I just
couldn’t do it. It just felt too close to the bone. Hearing Sam saying he’d
been the one out there, messed up, scared and alone. I had to turn it off. I was
having serious problems differentiating between what Jared was going through
and what Sam was going through. I decided I couldn’t face it. I closed my laptop
and put on Thor. I like Thor. I was torn between Captain America and Thor, but
Thor makes me laugh more, and I wanted to laugh.
Last night “The
Prisoner” screened on Aussie TV. I half watched it. I was catching up on JIB
vids…in particular that delightful vid of Jensen accidentally flashing the
audience his lovely tummy! I ended up watching the back half of the episode, where Dean is
killing all the things. I remembered how much I loved this episode. LOVED IT.
With a passion. So I decided to give this review business another shot.
So here I am. It will
be briefer than usual, my headspace is still a bit whackadoo (how the hell are
we going to survive the finale this week), but here are just a few random thoughts I've been mulling over about a
stellar outing in a season that has proven to be universally stellar.
Just when you think
Supernatural can’t get any more painful, it reaches right into your chest,
grabs your heart, drop kicks it against a wall and then gleefully watches as it
slides down and slumps to the floor, slowly bleeding out blood made of pure,
gut-wrenching, anguished Winchester love. Oh Supernatural, how I love that
thing you do.
Call me weird, or
possibly just a Supernatural fan, but “The Prisoner” was one of those episodes
that was insanely painful, but bloody brilliant and amazing to watch in an
oh-my-God-my-feels, kind of way.
The aftermath of the
death of the wonderful Charlie was always going to be catastrophically hurty,
but the brutally violent and bloody fallout surprised even me. I can’t say it
was, but it totally was, but really wasn’t, but kinda was, but kinda wasn’t,
but really was, absolutely thrilling…if you know what I mean.
Dean Winchester is
almost gone – but not so gone that when faced with blading a friend, he
stopped. He didn’t kill Cas (even though for a shocking moment I thought he
had), so Dean is still in there. But the Mark of Cain has the wheel – it has
taken Dean’s pain and anger and amplified it to the point where Dean is ball of
red hot, yet icy cold fury. He’s terrifying…and totally smokin’.
Dean’s angry words to
Sam hurt more than any words the brothers have ever said before - and let’s face it there have been
some corkers. They were words we never thought we’d hear, never wanted to hear,
and sure as hell don’t want to believe. And they were words we know, that in
his right mind, Dean would never say, believe or wish for. Dean is not in his
right mind, and thankfully Sam knows that.
I know Dean well
enough to also know this. I also believe that some of
Dean's anger aimed squarely at Sam is coming from anger toward himself. Don’t
think for a minute the thoughts, “If she wasn’t trying to help me, if she
didn’t love me, if I didn’t have the Mark of Cain – Charlie would be alive”,
haven’t gone through his head. Charlie was trying to find a way to save Dean,
and Dean will be painfully and deeply aware of this. That’s how he rolls. I
think that some of his anger is coming from this place, not just from a place
of fury at Sam for what Dean sees as Sam’s culpability in Charlie’s death. And
all of this, every single little bit of it, is being enhanced by the evil and
murderous intent of the Mark of Cain – whose power has been coursing through
Dean’s blood all season long.
Dean has been on the
brink for sometime. Sure, he hasn’t been killing all the things, but I’ve seen
his desperation to stay Dean manifesting in different ways.
Dean has been clinging
to Sam almost too tightly, leaning heavily on Sam’s belief in a cure, or his
belief that Dean can live with the Mark, to get him through. He’s been keeping
his relationship with Sam on an even keel, surprising all of us when he’s apologised
in moments we thought he’d tear Sam a new one. If Dean doesn’t get angry, if he
keeps that in check, maybe the Mark won’t take hold, maybe the Mark won’t flick
a switch…
A large part of why I think Dean is so angry is that he was trusting so hard, believing so hard in his
brother. Believing that Sam believed in him. All the lies that went before and
all the heartbreak and tragedy they’ve caused – Dean was trusting and believing
that his brother wouldn’t make those same mistakes, wouldn’t make his mistakes.
And so when it turns out Sam has been actively going behind Dean’s back, saying
one thing to Dean while doing another, lying and working with someone they know
to be evil – an error of judgement both have made - that not only shattered Dean’s
grasp on hope, it shattered Dean’s trust in
his brother. And that trust is something they've both worked so hard to regain.
If Dean was in his
right mind, he would be angry, but probably get it – he’d do the same thing,
and he knows it – but Dean is not in his right mind, nowhere near, because
something is taking control of him from within.
In Dean’s eyes, Charlie
was another person who died because of the Winchesters, because of Dean. She
was family, full of love and life. Dean adored Charlie. I think Dean’s not just
furious at Sam, he’s furious at himself, at their family, at their life,
remembering all those who have fallen in their aide. He didn’t want anyone to
get hurt trying to help him; he didn’t want anyone to die trying to save him and he thought he'd made that clear.
And
the Mark of Cain means that no logical thought will help him see through how
wrong all of this guilt and how wrong all of his finger pointing and blame placing
is. Because all the Mark wants is blood and all it needs to feed it is rage.
Dean was hanging on so tight – Charlie’s death pushed him over that edge.
Of course, not Dean,
nor Sam, nor Cas, nor Charlie are responsible for Charlie’s death, that falls
solely at the feet of Eldon Styne – but right now, drowning in anger, drowning
in pain, drowning in guilt, neither Sam or Dean can see that.
Sam is desperate; he’s
terrified he’s going to lose Dean. He’s said more than once that Dean’s all
he’s got. Dean really is all Sam’s got. Sure they’ve got friends out there but
no one is ever going to come close to what Dean means to Sam. And Sam doesn’t
function so great without Dean. We’ve seen before how that manifests. You can
see the panic in Sam growing as he sees the tell tale signs that Dean is losing
control surface more and more. And now he has the weight of Charlie’s death and
his brother’s hate filled words all slamming his heart. But Sam is not giving
up. This time he’s determined to save his brother. It’s like he’s painfully aware
he’s tried in the past and not succeeded. This time nothing is going to stop
him. I’m so in love with Sam’s determination. But in reality, he is as out of
control as his brother is…just in a different way.
In the midst of all
this is Castiel. Watching as his friend disappears before his eyes. Knowing
that if that happens he will have to kill him, or watch him murder the world.
Not fighting back as Dean beats him to a pulp, even though he’s a fully charged
angel who could send Dean flying across the room with a flick of his wrist.
Standing by his other friend as he desperately tries to save his doomed
brother. Offering Sam what advice he can, knowing that everything that he’s attempting
to save Dean is a bad idea, while also knowing that in the long run he’ll support
Sam regardless. Because neither of them want to lose Dean.
And Crowley, who was
so desperate to feel the touch of humanity again, he tried to be good…only to
be turned upon by someone he had foolishly trusted. When Crowley’s eyes turned
red and smoked? Holy cow. I screamed at my TV. I always knew that there was
more to him than he’d ever shown us. He’s been playing possum for a long
time…not letting on what he truly was…playing the frenemy card! Now he’s been
betrayed by not only Sam, but also by his mother Rowenna. Hell hath no fury
like a King of Hell scorned! I always knew Sam would have zero issue killing
Crowley…but I think it took Crowley by surprise.
Then there’s the wild
card, Rowena, who is yet to show her hand. I don’t know what she’s up to, but
I’m pretty sure it’s not helping Sam save Dean.
“The Prisoner” was
delicious, filled with wonderful words by the wonderful Andrew Dabb, lovely
sets, stunning lighting, brilliant directing, captivating character moments,
truly shocking scenes and performances that hit it out of the park even for a
show that hits it out of the park constantly. Both Jensen and Jared were mind
blowingly good in this episode, but I think this was possibly one of Jensen’s
finest performances – if not his finest. The moment before he shot Cyrus, the
scratching of his head with the gun in his hand before he pulls the trigger…I
think that may be my favourite moment ever. Ever. Just for the breathtaking
acting of it. Spectaculacular!
Now we’re on the
brink of the season finale and I have no idea what’s going to happen. None
whatsoever. Season 10 has been remarkable and I’ll be sad to see it finish…but
I have a feeling next season will lift that constantly rising bar, again.
And I can't help but think, in amongst all the feels we're bound to be feeling during the season finale, we'll be thinking about our friend Jared, and hoping he's doing okay.
Love ya, big guy. Always Keep Fighting.
-sweetondean