"It's our Grand Canyon"
There's something about a show like Supernatural that can deliver
devastating emotional episodes, and then also be hilariously funny.
After the long, long strike-induced hiatus, Supernatural returns.
Well,
sort of.
After the familiar "Then...Now" previously sequence, the
screen fritzes out and we see these two guys who are decidedly not Sam
(Jared Padalecki) and Dean (Jensen Ackles), but look kind of familiar, breaking into the epic story of
the Winchesters. Turns out it's Harry and Ed, a.k.a. The Hellhounds
from season one's lighthearted episode "Hell House." Harry and Ed have
a new reality TV series that's like the reality TV series Ghosthunters only without the
professionalism and budget of TAPS.
The Ghostfacers group -- Harry, Ed, Ed's sister Maggie, their friend
Spruce, and eager young intern Corbett -- are investigating a house
that's haunted once every four years, on leap year. They have a lot of
cameras, computers, and research (headquartered in Ed's father's
garage). They're geeky, terribly earnest, a mix of technically savvy
and bumbling, and in the end, valiant.
Hang on. Isn't this show supposed to be about these two brothers, Sam
and Dean Winchester? Who the heck are these Ghostfacers people, why
should we care?
Well, I have a few reasons.
It doesn't take too long for Sam and Dean
to enter the episode -- photographed this time on hand-held video
cameras. Supernatural never seems to run out of ways to examine its
compelling leads in fresh ways. This is the ultimate outsider POV
episode, as the Winchesters stumble into the Ghostfacers' hunt. Or did
the Ghostfacers stumble into the Winchesters' hunt? In a show
structured the way Supernatural is -- a two-character, partnership show -- it's
difficult to introduce secondary characters, let alone ones that show
up in more than one episode. "Ghostfacers" strikes the ideal balance
needed in a guest star-focused ep. It manages to stay focused on the
emotional journey of the two leads, while presenting entertaining new
characters in the Supernatural 'verse.
Don't be fooled: the episode is still (almost) all about Sam and Dean. Which ironically means that while the fictional series Ghostfacers hijacks Supernatural, it's actually Sam and Dean who hijack Ghostfacers.
There's
the exchange caught on camera where Sam loses his temper and smashes a
chair against a door to demonstrate that the ghost has trapped them
all. He complains to Dean that it was Dean's idea to be there: "You
happy? Let's go hunting the Morton house you said, it's our Grand
Canyon...You've got two months left. Instead, we're going to die
tonight." There's a lot of Winchester emotions packed into that 30
second scene. Leap year means an extra day in Dean's year before his
time's up and he has die and go to Hell, and Dean chooses to spend that
extra day hunting with his brother. I probably don't need to point out the significance behind the Grand Canyon reference (see season two's "Hunted"
if you need a refresher). Those two words are enough to make many Supernatural viewers choke up.
We
also get to see Sam lose it and blow up at his big brother. It's a
moment that is actually larger than it appears to be through the lens
of the fuzzy camera.
As in any routine episode we see Sam and Dean's concern for each other,
as well as the reasons for the irritations and tensions.
Tucked in among the Ghostfacers, we get Sam and Dean
partnership dynamics as well as a look at how they cope with stress.
Dean gets progressively more annoyed, grouchy, and -- as he gets more
worried -- snarky. Sam's annoyance is more stern and quiet, but no less
boiling. First the ghost snatches the hapless, sweet-tempered Corbett.
About halfway through the episode, it snatches Sam.
Which in turn gives
us a fascinating look at Dean. Now fully pissed-off and frantic, Dean
keeps yelling for his brother and yet holds himself together, taking
the role of leader to protect the amateur group. His focus is on
finding and saving Sam, but neither brother seems to lose their
instinct to protect not just each other, but the civilians.
In the
scenes where the ghost has Corbett and Sam trapped together, we see
Sam's square-jawed determination, fear, anger, and also his focus on
trying to save Corbett. All while wearing a silly party hat.
Ed, Harry & co., ostensibly focused on recording spirits, fix their cameras on the Winchesters, and seem to find them just as Other and enthralling (and often terrifying) as the ghosts.
We also find out that Sam and
Dean do, in fact, curse. A lot (bleeped out by Ghostfacer editing).
I thought the episode did a good job establishing, in very little time, the Ghostfacers' relationships. Corbett's crush on Ed was well handled. It's
played for laughs, but gently. After the ghost kills Corbett and his
spirit gets stuck in a loop, Ed has to step up and give a
heartfelt speech to snap Corbett out of it and allow him to save the others
from the Morton ghost. That scene could have been a disaster -- maudlin
or disrespectful. Instead, it turned out poignant. I also liked that Ed and
Harry intone what sounds like weighty, wise quotations in their
farewell tribute to Corbett that don't appear to be actual quotes from
anything. (I googled.)
Given the bleak main story arc of this season -- Sam preparing for the
demon war, Dean's year running out -- this was a welcome change of pace
before we head into the home stretch of the final three episodes of the
year. It's also good to see Sam and Dean interacting with others. At
its core, the show is about them, and that's how Supernatural should
be, how it is at its best. However, TV characters don't exist well in a vacuum and a
number of intriguing supportings, villains and allies, have
passed through Sam and Dean's lives. Some stay; most don't.
They all
give us new insights into our favorite ghost hunting brothers.
Supernatural 3x13, "Ghostfacers"
Writer: Ben Edlund
Director: Phil Scriccia
Guest stars: Travis Wester, Austin Basis, A.J. Buckley, Dustin Milligan, Brittany Ishibashi