Hello again, Fellow Hunters. This is it. The money time. After 8 months of Monsters, Angels, Demons, Families, Saving people and Hunting things, we're ending another season of our beloved Supernatural. And we're ending it with a double-dose of our favorite hunters on TV! So in order not to mix things up, and since every episode focuses on different things, I'll recap each one on its own. So, without further ado, let the recapping begin!
Carry on my wayward sooooon…
Oh, right, double-feature, not yet. Lisa and Ben in the "Then"? No, no, no! Ah, who am I kidding, I knew this was coming. But why? I mean, Ok, they didn't have the best send-off in "Mannequin", but that entire episode wasn't that great, and I never liked them anyway! Couldn't they just leave it at that? Apparently not…*Sigh*. Other than that, we got Cas-gone-evil, yadda yadda yadda. Wait… Dragon lady?...
Carry on my wayward sooooon…
Oh, right, double-feature, not yet. Lisa and Ben in the "Then"? No, no, no! Ah, who am I kidding, I knew this was coming. But why? I mean, Ok, they didn't have the best send-off in "Mannequin", but that entire episode wasn't that great, and I never liked them anyway! Couldn't they just leave it at that? Apparently not…*Sigh*. Other than that, we got Cas-gone-evil, yadda yadda yadda. Wait… Dragon lady?...
- 5/21/2011
- by Matan Bahar
Greetings, fellow hunters! Another Friday has passed, and with it, another episode of Supernatural! And the penultimate episode of the season, no less! (Well, technically, 21 is the penultimate episode, but since 21&22 are on the same night, I consider this one the penultimate).
Before the recap, I want to touch a subject I didn't get around to last week. Supernatural Got Freakin' Renewed! Well, it was pretty obvious, but yay! But I think Season 7 will be the last.In any case, I hope they decide in advance about the last season. I mean, not to wait and see how the ratings are and then decide. Before it even begins, they need to say "This is the last season, let's plan in accordingly." Anyway, I'm glad the boys will be back on September. Losing the only Two CW shows I watch in the same year (This and Smallville) would've been devastating. So bring it on,...
Before the recap, I want to touch a subject I didn't get around to last week. Supernatural Got Freakin' Renewed! Well, it was pretty obvious, but yay! But I think Season 7 will be the last.In any case, I hope they decide in advance about the last season. I mean, not to wait and see how the ratings are and then decide. Before it even begins, they need to say "This is the last season, let's plan in accordingly." Anyway, I'm glad the boys will be back on September. Losing the only Two CW shows I watch in the same year (This and Smallville) would've been devastating. So bring it on,...
- 5/7/2011
- by Matan Bahar
Previously, Samuel Colt made the world's largest Devil's Trap (Does Guinness know about this?) , Dean time traveled to 1973, Eve came from Purgatory and created the herpes worm but she was all talk and no action
In Sunrise, Wyoming on March 5, 1861, standard spaghetti western music plays on a dusty deserted street. Two cowboys with spurs that jingle-jangle standoff while nervous townspeople appear through windows. Apparently 3 people live in Sunrise. The cowboys dramatically draw back their coats in tandem and we flash onto a Sheriff badge. Well howdy Sheriff Dean. He looks intensely as a clock nears noon. Yep, it's an old-fashioned showdown. Guns are drawn but we fade to a map of old Wyoming. Bwah! It's a Bonanza-style title card. As flames burn the middle, a flaming yellow "Supernatural" appears, before the discordant sound of the usual glass breaking. They always get the title sequence for "very special" episodes dead right.
In Sunrise, Wyoming on March 5, 1861, standard spaghetti western music plays on a dusty deserted street. Two cowboys with spurs that jingle-jangle standoff while nervous townspeople appear through windows. Apparently 3 people live in Sunrise. The cowboys dramatically draw back their coats in tandem and we flash onto a Sheriff badge. Well howdy Sheriff Dean. He looks intensely as a clock nears noon. Yep, it's an old-fashioned showdown. Guns are drawn but we fade to a map of old Wyoming. Bwah! It's a Bonanza-style title card. As flames burn the middle, a flaming yellow "Supernatural" appears, before the discordant sound of the usual glass breaking. They always get the title sequence for "very special" episodes dead right.
- 4/25/2011
- by Dahne
DVD Playhouse: January 2011
By
Allen Gardner
Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (20th Century Fox) Sequel to the seminal 1980s film catches up with a weathered, but still determined Gordon Gekko (Michael Douglas, who seems to savor every syllable of Allan Loeb and Stephen Schiff’s screenplay) just out of jail and back on the comeback trail. In attempting to repair his relationship with his estranged daughter (Carey Mulligan), Gekko forges a reluctant alliance with her fiancé (Shia Labeouf), himself an ambitious young turk who finds himself seduced by Gekko’s silver tongue and promise of riches. Lifeless film is further evidence of director Oliver Stone’s decline. Once America’s most exciting filmmaker, Stone hasn’t delivered a film with any teeth since 1995’s Nixon. Labeouf and Mulligan generate no sparks on-screen, and the story feels forced from the protracted opening to the final, Disney-esque denouement. Only a brief cameo by Charlie Sheen,...
By
Allen Gardner
Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (20th Century Fox) Sequel to the seminal 1980s film catches up with a weathered, but still determined Gordon Gekko (Michael Douglas, who seems to savor every syllable of Allan Loeb and Stephen Schiff’s screenplay) just out of jail and back on the comeback trail. In attempting to repair his relationship with his estranged daughter (Carey Mulligan), Gekko forges a reluctant alliance with her fiancé (Shia Labeouf), himself an ambitious young turk who finds himself seduced by Gekko’s silver tongue and promise of riches. Lifeless film is further evidence of director Oliver Stone’s decline. Once America’s most exciting filmmaker, Stone hasn’t delivered a film with any teeth since 1995’s Nixon. Labeouf and Mulligan generate no sparks on-screen, and the story feels forced from the protracted opening to the final, Disney-esque denouement. Only a brief cameo by Charlie Sheen,...
- 1/21/2011
- by The Hollywood Interview.com
- The Hollywood Interview
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