Bad
Day At Black Rock: A Lucky Break?
John’s
cursed rabbit’s foot
Tempts and snares a clever thief:
Will it doom his sons?
Episode
Summary
Imprisoned
hunter Gordon Walker persuaded another hunter, Kubrick,
to hunt down Sam Winchester, blaming Sam for the opening
of the devil’s gate and arguing that Sam is a monster
who deceived Bobby and other hunters about his true nature.
Meanwhile, the Winchester brothers fight over Sam’s
announced intent to try to get information from demon Ruby
was interrupted by a call on their dad’s old cell
phone reporting a break-in at a storage unit John had maintained
outside of Buffalo, NY that the brothers knew nothing about.
Investigating the unit, which was booby-trapped against
humans and spelled against demons, the brothers found a
depository that was an odd mix of weapons, family mementos,
and the evil spoils of hunts that John evidently didn’t
have any way to destroy, and instead locked away inside
curse boxes intended to hold the evil inside. Blood on the
floor was evidence that one of the thieves was hit by the
booby trap shotgun John had rigged to a tripwire, and the
dust pattern on a shelf showed that one curse box was missing.
The
boys tracked down the two thieves, Wayne and Grossman, only
to discover that they’d opened the box and that Wayne
had handled the rabbit’s foot that was inside, receiving
the benefit of unbelievable luck. That same luck worked
against the boys when they tried to reclaim the box and
its contents: Dean dropped his gun, which discharged, and
the ricochet took Sam’s gun out of his hands. As they
tried to get their guns back, Sam ran right into Dean, knocking
him off his feet, and as Dean got back up, he was clocked
in the face with his own gun as Wayne scooped it up. Grossman
was strangling Sam, up to the moment when Sam’s groping
hand closed on the rabbit’s foot – and then
everything changed. Sam broke Grossman’s hold and
kicked him backward, Dean’s gun jammed in Wayne’s
hand when Wayne tried to shoot Sam, and as Dean scrambled
back to his feet, Wayne stumbled backward and tripped over
his own, knocking himself out on the floor. Grossman, grabbing
Sam’s fallen gun and trying to brace himself to shoot,
brought a bookshelf down on his own head, knocking himself
out even as the gun in his hand sailed free of his grip
to land squarely in Sam’s. After the boys left the
unconscious thieves, Wayne had a gruesomely fatal freak
accident with a beer bottle and a cooking fork; his luck
turned as impossibly bad as it had been impossibly good
before. The rabbit’s foot had a new owner.
Dean
tested Sam’s new luck with scratch-off lottery tickets
while Sam called Bobby, discovering both that Bobby knew
about John’s secret stash and had built all the curse
boxes, and that Bobby knew the nature of the enchantment
on the foot: that it was cursed to kill people within a
week after they lost it, and that everybody loses it. The
good luck part of the deal won the boys free food at a restaurant
chain for a year, but when their pretty waitress turned
out to be the woman who had hired the thieves in the first
place and adroitly picked the foot out of Sam’s pocket
with a napkin, everything went wrong. Sam burned himself
on his coffee mug, spilled coffee in his lap, lurched to
his feet to escape the coffee and took down a waiter with
a full tray … and Kubrick and his partner Creedy,
the hunters searching for Sam, spotted the photo of the
boys winning food on the restaurant’s website, and
knew where to take their hunt.
Returning
to Grossman, the surviving thief, Dean persuaded him to
give information on the woman who had hired them, and the
description and her chosen alias were enough to let Bobby
identify her as Bela Talbot, a mercenary purveyor of supernatural
artifacts. Bobby found her location, and also found a ritual
that could destroy the foot and break the bad luck jinx.
Dean parked Sam in a motel to keep him safe and went to
retrieve the foot from Bela, but Sam’s bad luck meant
that the motel was the same one where Kubrick and Grossman
were staying, and the air conditioner in Sam’s room
caught fire for no reason. Attempting to put out the fire,
Sam set his own jacket alight, and then pulled down the
drapes and knocked himself out as he extinguished the fire,
as Kubrick and Creedy stood outside his window.
Dean
outwitted Bela’s pricey security system and faced
off with her, learning that her only interest was in making
money from the supernatural artifacts that she could find
and sell. Although she knew better than to touch the foot
and had handled it only with tongs, she wasn’t above
using other artifacts; she evidently had used and kept an
artifact similar to a Ouija board to interrogate the spirits
of people killed by the rabbit’s foot in order to
find out where it was, when she’d heard of interest
from a potential buyer. During the face-off, Dean picked
up the rabbit’s foot and used its luck to escape Bela’s
bullets, leaving her place in a shambles from ricochets.
Returning to the motel just as Kubrick was planning to shoot
Sam, he saved Sam and knocked out Kubrick and Creedy with
a pen, a simple sidestep, and a remote control … and
the foot.
Performing
the necessary ritual in a cemetery after dark, Dean scratched
off a last handful of lottery tickets before consigning
the foot to the fire – only to be stopped by Bela,
who shot Sam in the shoulder to persuade Dean to take her
seriously. Ordered to set down the foot, Dean started to
comply, and then tossed it at her, triggering her natural
reflex to catch the thing. Realizing that she was now cursed,
she reluctantly completed the ritual to destroy the foot
and left – but not before picking the lottery tickets
from Dean’s jacket pocket, leaving the brothers as
penniless as usual.
Commentary
This
episode was delightful and hilarious, but with a solid core
beneath the laughs. Ben Edlund has a gift for offbeat, off-the-wall
humor, and the improbably bizarre streaks of rabbit’s
foot luck, both good and bad, were a perfect demonstration
of his talent for the absurd. Director Robert Singer pulled
off lovely stunt and effect sequences that must have been
a positive bitch to set up and nail. Here’s hoping
we get to see outtakes on this one in the season’s
gag reel, because there must have been some doozies! Creator
Eric Kripke was doubtless rubbing his hands in glee at Wayne’s
gruesome end by meat fork; knowing exactly what had to be
coming didn’t detract from that gross-out one little
bit.
Darker
things and deeper things lurked beneath the laughter, though.
The opening fight between the boys revealed that Sam had
admitted to his conversation with a demon, and that her
claim to be able to help Dean weighed heavily into Sam’s
choice not to douse her with holy water and try for an exorcism,
but he denied that she had told him anything else. Sam is
still keeping his ever-growing body of secrets about what
happened to him as a baby, about their mother having recognized
the Yellow-Eyed Demon, and about their mother’s friends
and relatives all being systematically eliminated. Dean
diagnosed Sam’s basic problem with unerring accuracy
– “She knows what your weakness is –
it’s me” – but didn’t refuse
to follow Sam’s announced strategy of trying to use
Ruby to learn more about the escaped demons and their plans
for the war.
Almost
lost in the fight was Dean asking Sam if he was all right,
if he felt okay, and Sam’s irritated response of “Why
do you keep asking me that?” I couldn’t
help but flash back to Everybody Loves a Clown,
with Sam constantly pressuring Dean and asking if he was
okay until Dean lashed out in anger to force him to stop.
Now Sam’s the one keeping secrets, and Dean’s
the one sensing that something’s not right …
and Dean has the added burden of the YED’s niggling
question about whether the Sam who came back is 100% pure
Sam, and the nightmare memories of Sam possessed and definitely
not feeling like himself. It was a brief moment, but it
was there – and then it was overtaken by other things,
left to hide behind Dean’s eyes.
Sam
kept another secret from Dean during the episode, at least
for a while. When Bobby told him about the nature of the
curse on the foot, Sam didn’t immediately share the
information with Dean – not the bit about someone
losing the foot dying within a week, anyway. Immediately
after Sam lost the foot and fell on his face outside the
diner, Dean asked whether his luck was now going bad, and
mused, “I wonder how bad?” Sam obviously
told him by the time they went back to Grossman’s,
but I found it interesting that he evidently hadn’t
mentioned what he knew until the curse’s stinger had
gone firmly home.
John’s
hidden stash was a revelation. Here was yet another secret
that he had kept from his sons, and it spoke volumes. After
the fire, the Winchesters never really had any home except
the Impala, and the car had no room for mementos of the
past. John may have conceived the storage area as a safe
place for a weapons stash and for hiding dangerous things
taken on hunts that he didn’t know how to destroy
safely, but he also used it to hold precious memories that
he couldn’t carry along and yet couldn’t bear
to leave behind. Sam’s soccer trophy and Dean’s
first sawed-off shotgun speak to the very different childhoods
the two boys experienced even though they were living them
together, and I wonder what other things of theirs were
in that storage unit? I wonder whether we’ll ever
learn.
This
episode showcased that John Winchester is always present
in his boys, even a full year after he died. Something tells
me that John will be a tangible presence for as long as
the series lasts, and then some. That makes me feel oddly
comforted and satisfied, and still wanting to learn more.
We haven’t yet begun to plumb John’s secrets.
Why did he never tell them about the storage unit, even
after they were grown and could be expected to take measures
to keep themselves safe against what was stored there? Keeping
it secret while they were children was just common sense,
but what was operating in John to keep it hidden once they
were grown? What was he afraid of? And had he ordered Bobby
not to tell them about it, or did Bobby simply keep the
secret on his own, out of habit? On this show, secrets breed.
Last
point on the storage unit: here’s hoping that the
boys have relocated everything in it to a new secure and
demon-proof location, since Bela knows where the collection
was. She might have means to determine what else was hidden
there, even though she was smart enough not to take on John’s
protections herself but to work through expendable cutouts,
and her larcenous soul would clearly be tempted by the collection
of curse boxes, if nothing else. I also do wonder if the
collection might come into play at a later date, especially
if a situation arises where the boys are desperate for something
else that Bela has and have to contemplate a trade, even
when that trade might release a cursed artifact that they
would much rather destroy. This show loves walking fine
moral lines …
Bobby
was the hidden player of the night. When Sam called, Bobby
was working on what looked suspiciously like the Colt. The
gun was in pieces on the desktop, and that barrel was unmistakable
even though I couldn’t see the engraving on it. And
sitting to his left was the box we’d seen back in
Daniel Elkins’ house, the storage box built to house
the Colt and its special bullets. (Okay, little quibble:
the boys didn’t pick up the box when it was there.
They didn’t know its significance until they ran into
John afterward and he asked them whether they’d seen
an antique gun, and Dean mentioned finding the box. So,
how is it that Bobby has the box? Did they go back and pick
it up? Did Danny Elkins name another hunter – say,
Bobby Singer? – in his will, such that Bobby got all
of Elkins’ possessions, including the box and the
books? Did it mystically appear? I’m just …
observing …) Our artificer – our maker of charms
against possession and curse boxes to contain powerful evil
– appears to be trying to understand the Colt. I’m
staying tuned for the next chapter!
Bobby
also has evidently been involved in major damage control
regarding the public image of the Winchesters. In The
Magnificent Seven, Isaac and Tamara were blaming the
boys for opening the gate; in Bad Day at Black Rock,
Kubrick tells Gordon that word in the hunter community is
that Sam checks out as being just a hunter, and that Bobby
has been telling people that they did everything they could
to stop the gate from being opened. Kubrick’s new
hunting partner Creedy also isn’t inclined to condemn
Sam out of hand, with no evidence beyond Gordon’s
word, given Bobby’s report of events. Bobby swings
some weight in the hunter world.
Second-last
notes go to Gordon and Kubrick. Gordon is dead-set on killing
Sam Winchester, whether by himself or through a proxy, and
nothing will convince him otherwise. It was bleakly amusing
to see Gordon realizing how insane Jesus-freak Kubrick was
in his perception that God had sent him on a mission to
kill Sam, without being able to perceive that his own resolve
was equally deranged. I’m not that worried about Kubrick,
now that he doesn’t have the help of the rabbit’s
foot curse making Sam vulnerable, but Gordon is a whole
different level of scary.
The
final notes, but definitely not the most minor ones, go
to Jared Padalecki and Jensen Ackles, because they made
it work. Ben Edlund is a very funny writer and Robert Singer
has a positive gift for camera work, but this story could
have gone over the slapstick edge into farce had it not
been for the performances from both boys to sell the humor
without overselling the situation. That was a delicate balance
delightfully measured! In previous episodes, especially
with reaction shots and one-liners, the show has given most
of the comedy, particularly the physical comedy, to Jensen,
who has nailed it every time. This time, the lion’s
share of it rested on Jared, and he did beautifully. Special
mention must be made of his hurt “kicked puppy”
look on losing his shoe (loved how his stockinged toes curled
and uncurled!), the way being told not to scratch his nose
immediately led to his nose itching and begging for a scratch,
and his disbelieving exasperation at realizing that the
air conditioning unit was dying without him even having
touched it. Jensen’s look on Dean getting clocked
with his own gun and his delivery of “I’m Batman!”
are also way up there in the hilarity zone. Both of these
guys can do pratfalls with the best of them, and I’m
glad we had the excuse to see them show off.
This
week, though, I’m betting that we’re going to
start down a much darker path. The light fun has always
carried a dark edge, and I think the shadows are getting
longer. After all, there’s a war on. None of us can
afford to forget that. And now that the introductions of
Ruby and Bela have been accomplished, it’s time for
the season to get down to serious business. It's not for
nothing that the last shot of the episode was Gordon repeating,
“Sam Winchester must die.”
Cautionary note: This week, I’ll be up at the “Something
Wicked” convention in Vancouver. I don’t know
how that will affect my ability to get an episode commentary
out the door, but I’ll try! (Although given how late
this one got out, you might not notice any difference …)
And I’ll plan on blogging about all the Vancouver
fun while I’m up there, so stay tuned.
Added:
Oct 22nd 2007
Reviewer:
Bardicvoice