I did not realise Molly was dead till Sam said that David was alive. I missed it completely, which is really strange because I was one of those people who figured out Bruce Willis' character was dead about 20 minutes into the Sixth Sense.
Anyways to rehash the episode.
+ Molly is a very cool female character - she was brave when she needed to be, loved her husband enough to stay in a situation that was obviously dangerous, was correct to be weary of Sam&Dean but smart enough to realise that whatever they ran over was definitely not human. The word I'm looking for is 'adaptive'.
+ I like the very horror/urban legend feel of this episode. For me, the thought of having a crash in the middle of nowhere and waking up alone, not being able to find your loved ones and knowing there's something out there that could be hurting them - that is my worst nightmare.
+ I -love- the build up of the ghost, the reveal, just love it. However, the bright orange light made me cringe slightly. I kept on hoping they were just going to have her walk off into the distance until she disappears. Basically, you won't be able to tell whether she honestly disappears or if it is just an optical illusion. The cheese kind of hurt.
+ Dean against the wall made me wince and just brought back memories that made me hurt for him. It was probably much worse for him. But he did look hot like that *headdesk*.
+ Dean's comment about Sam being an walking encyclopedia of weirdness made me happy, Sam's reaction made me laugh.
+ Sam's whole 'sugar-coat' comment made me smile.
+ Dean's love for his 'baby' (the Impala is love) will never stop being awesome.
ETA: + "Doesn't really matter, Dean. Hope is kind of the whole point." THERE! THIS IS WHAT I WANTED FROM 'Houses of Holy' - it should have been it but it WASN'T! I will LOVE 'Road Kill' forever and ever because of this line.
1992 was fifteen years ago. This is just so bizarre.
- Location:home
- Mood:
mellow
Comments
And DON'T READ THE SPOILERS! Not for this episode, it will spoil your enjoyment.