Mystery Spot: Dean's your weakness. The bad guys know it,
too.
Tuesday’s
nightmare trick:
Over and over again,
Watch your brother die.
Episode
Summary
Investigating
the disappearance of a man from a reputed “mystery
spot” in Broward County, Florida, the boys checked
out the tourist trap after hours on Tuesday, but things
went horribly wrong when the panicked owner unintentionally
shot Dean, who died in Sam’s arms. Sam woke up immediately
afterward to discover Dean alive and the day apparently
repeating again. When Dean suggested their after-hours visit,
Sam hurriedly advocated an immediate one instead, and Dean
agreed – only to be hit and killed by a speeding car.
And the day reset again.
Sam
lived through over a hundred repetitions of Tuesday, trying
with ever increasing desperation to save Dean, only to see
him die a hundred different ways while everything else about
the day and the other people in it always remained exactly
the same. Starting with the third repetition of the day,
he told Dean what was going on, and although Dean didn’t
really believe him, he tried to help, always reassuring
him that together they could figure it out. The truth emerged
after Dean realized that a woman who bumped into him every
day was the daughter of the missing man they were tracking
when it all began. Sam, investigating the man, learned that
he was a pompous, self-publicizing debunker of mysterious
phenomena, and Dean observed that he seemed to have gotten
his poetic just desserts by disappearing in one himself.
Hard on the heels of that observation, Sam realized that
a businessman who was always in the diner with them at breakfast
had ordered strawberry syrup instead of maple, and that
no one and nothing in the diner ever changed, except him
– and on that realization, the day reset again, this
time without Dean having died.
Waking
to the certainty that he had solved the mystery, Sam went
to the diner with a wooden stake hidden in a bag. Followed
the businessman out, he threatened the man with the stake,
explaining his deduction that the man had to be a Trickster
god – and the man morphed under his hands into the
very Trickster who had bedeviled them in Tall Tales.
The Trickster said that killing Dean wasn’t the point
of the exercise; that the joke was on Sam, never figuring
out that he couldn’t save his brother. Noting that
Sam really couldn’t take a joke, the Trickster promised
that they would wake up on Wednesday and be out of the loop.
Sam, still angry and obsessed, said it would be easier just
to kill the Trickster, but the Trickster said that couldn’t
be allowed, and snapped his fingers …
And
Sam woke up on Wednesday, to different music on the radio
and Dean brushing his teeth rather than tying his boot.
Relieved and spooked in equal measure, Sam pushed for them
to leave without eating breakfast. Dean went downstairs
to load the car while Sam got dressed and packed, and was
shot during a robbery attempt by the out-of-work guy from
the diner. As had happened on every Tuesday, Dean died –
but this time, Sam didn’t wake up. And Dean stayed
dead.
A
montage of scenes showed Sam’s life from that point
on through several months into the future, in which Sam
became a ruthless hunter methodically and mechanically tracking
down and killing demons, vampires, and anything else that
crossed his path, treating his own wounds, robotically executing
his routines, and not answering phone calls from Bobby while
maintaining his own obsessive hunt for the Trickster.
In
his last phone call, Bobby reported having found the Trickster,
and Sam met Bobby at the Broward County mystery spot, the
last place where the Trickster was known to have worked
his magic. Bobby said that he had found a ritual that would
summon the Trickster, but that it needed a gallon of fresh
blood to work and had to happen that night. When Sam started
out to find a person to kill, Bobby protested, and told
Sam that it would be better if Sam killed him rather than
an innocent, maintaining that Sam and Dean were the closest
thing to family that he had, that while he was old and nearing
the end of his trail, Sam could keep on saving people, but
that he needed Dean. Sam agreed, but exchanged Bobby’s
dagger for a wooden stake before stabbing him through the
heart, saying that Bobby wasn’t Bobby, but the Trickster.
Looking down at the dead body, Sam started questioning,
finally wondering brokenly if he’d actually made a
mistake and killed his friend … and the body disappeared,
the stake flying through the air into the Trickster’s
hand.
The
Trickster confirmed that he’d just been playing with
Sam. Sam pleaded with him to bring back Dean, but the Trickster
maintained that Dean was dead and in Hell. As Sam continued
to beg for his brother, the Trickster observed that he was
trying to teach Sam a lesson, that the brothers constantly
sacrificing themselves for each other led to nothing good.
He warned Sam that Dean was his weakness, and that the bad
guys knew it, that this would be the death of him, and that
– like it or not – this was what life would
be like without Dean. Sam continued to beg him to return
them to before all this had happened, and the Trickster
made his own decision.
And
Sam awoke to Wednesday, and Dean brushing his teeth. In
an excess of emotion, Sam hugged his brother, confessing
that he’d experienced enough Tuesdays. Dean remembered
only that Sam had been whacked out on Tuesday, and that
they’d encountered the Trickster. Sam insisted on
leaving town immediately, but wouldn’t allow Dean
to go down to pack the car alone. Heading out the door,
Dean observed that Sam didn’t look good, and asked
if anything else had happened; Sam said only that he’d
had a really weird dream, and followed him out.
Commentary
and Meta Analysis
This
obsession to save Dean? The way you two keep sacrificing
yourselves for each other? Nothing good comes out of it.
Just blood and pain. Dean’s your weakness. The bad
guys know it, too. It’s gonna be the death of you,
Sam. Sometimes, you just gotta let people go. … And
like it or not, this is what life’s gonna be like
without him.
My
take on the Trickster is that he actually is on the boys’
side when it comes down to the demon wars. After all, humans
and human follies are his playground, and his world would
be much less fun if demons took over the planet. I don’t
think he wants that, and opposing the demons directly would
take effort and not be fun, so he has a vested interest
in helping the Winchesters win. He’s not a demon himself,
nor inherently evil. His practical jokes tend to have a
cruel edge, but they aren’t necessarily fatal. They’re
designed to appeal to the self-serving weaknesses in people,
but people who choose wisely and resist the bait can emerge
unscathed. He also doesn’t go after folk who are truly
innocent. I believe that the Trickster genuinely likes the
boys, as he claimed back in Tall Tales. They aren’t
his customary prey because they truly care for each other
and for other people, they’re funny, and they can
take a joke even when it’s on them – and I think
all of that factored into his decision back then to let
them go believing they’d won their contest with him.
I’d
guess the Trickster started his game with the Winchesters
purely for fun and a little payback, since they turned up
so conveniently on his doorstep, but I think it rapidly
became something more focused and serious. Killing Dean
over and over in steadily more absurd ways really was funny
from the Trickster’s perspective, and even we could
appreciate the humor as long as we knew it wasn’t
permanent, wasn’t real. Dean himself could appreciate
the joke and why the Trickster would find that part of it
funny; just look at him asking Sam if his death-by-speeding-car
had been cool, like in the movies. What made it not funny
at all, however, was the emotional impact it had on Sam.
But the very fact that Sam couldn’t step back from
the situation and come to realize how pointedly contrived
it all was pointed up his loss of perspective and his need
to shore up his emotional defenses against enemies who would
exploit them in earnest.
I
think that the Trickster gave Sam several lessons to learn,
all of them important ones. Judging from the expression
on his face at the end of the episode, I think Sam has realized
all of them, but how that will affect his actions remains
to be seen. I’ll explore each of them separately.
Focusing
on saving Dean blinds you to the true picture. The
Trickster’s prank exposed a basic weakness in Sam’s
heart/mind interaction, because it proved that when Sam’s
focus is fixated on saving Dean, he starts thinking linearly
and ignores what could be vital information simply because
it doesn’t seem directly related to saving Dean.
From
the moment Dean died and came back the first time, Sam stopped
investigating the case that had brought them to Broward
County. It wasn’t until a hundred Tuesdays later,
when Dean deliberately broke pattern to speak to the girl
who bumped into him on the street and learned that she was
the missing man’s daughter, that Sam went back to
hunter basics and started investigating the first victim
for clues as to how his disappearance might be related to
the strangeness in which the brothers were trapped. Even
then, the obsessive nature of his research prevented him
from thinking about what his reaction to the missing man’s
writings suggested about the nature of what had happened
to him. It took Dean – who shares some of the Trickster’s
own sense of humor – to note that the disappearance
at a mystery spot of someone so self-proclaimed as a debunker
of mysteries smacked of just desserts, before Sam stopped
to think of whose modus operandi that would fit.
The
clues to how to stop the cycle of Dean’s deaths and
get out of the joke were always there, waiting to be discovered
along with the Trickster himself. Sam just never looked
at them, because they didn’t seem to lie along the
straight line to saving Dean. By focusing on saving Dean,
Sam made it impossible for him actually to save Dean, because
he failed to look far enough to see what was really happening.
It’s
going to be the death of you. I think it was
Sam’s obvious failure to get the point of the first
joke – that his focus on saving Dean had totally blinded
him to realizing the truth of the situation – that
made the Trickster decide to up the ante by giving Sam his
deadly Wednesday and all the days that followed it. Seeing
Dean die again on Wednesday, when he should have been safe,
tipped Sam into an obsessive revenge path that made John’s
similar reaction to Mary’s death pale by comparison.
We saw Sam reduced to a mechanical, robotic hunting machine
fueled only by his grim determination to get his brother
back or get his own revenge on the Trickster. No life, no
joy, no laughter, no caring, no love, no friendship, no
indulgence in bittersweet memories, no acknowledgment of
pain, no human impulses at all: the Sam that we and Dean
know and love didn’t exist any more. His flat willingness
to kill a random innocent person to get the blood for the
ritual to summon the Trickster demonstrated graphically
how far he had gone. If he’d been able to get Dean
back, his brother wouldn’t even have known him any
more, and would have been horrified at the price.
For
all intents and purposes, Sam was dead. His body moved and
his mind computed, but his soul was empty. Terminator-Sam
was less human than demon-possessed Sam. Nothing got through
to him until he’d killed Trickster Bobby and then
faced the moments of uncertainty that finally made him wonder
if he’d made a mistake and actually killed the real
Bobby, misled by his own obsession. And the worst thing
was that he had done it all to himself through the choices
he made after Dean died.
The
scariest thing for us – and now, hopefully, for Sam
– is the realization that he’s already taken
a few steps down that path by forcing himself to make hard
choices and do brutal things without hesitation or much
remorse, all in his attempts to save Dean or face living
without him. Part of that nightmare future is already here,
but now Sam knows it; the question now becomes whether having
seen that future, he’ll make different personal choices
in order to avoid the soulless suicide of it.
Dean’s
your weakness. The bad guys know it, too.
The Trickster isn’t the only one to have realized
that the way to make Sam dance to a specific tune is to
pull the strings on Dean. Look at Ruby, dangling her non-existent
ability to help save Dean in front of Sam’s nose in
order to get him to talk and cooperate with her. Dean realized
it back at the beginning of Bad Day at Black Rock
and used virtually the same words (She knows what your
weakness is – it’s me!) to Sam even before
he learned from Ruby that she doesn’t know any way
to save him.
We
still don’t truly know what Ruby ultimately wants,
since we already know from what she did to Sam that we can’t
trust anything she says. I’m not reassured by what
Ruby told Dean at the end of Malleus Maleficarum,
that what Dean had done in knifing Tammi was pretty tough,
that Sam wasn’t there yet, and that she wanted Dean
to help her get Sam ready for life without him, to fight
the war on his own. In retrospect, it sounds as if Ruby
wants Sam to become what the Trickster’s future drew
from him, a ruthless machine with no brother by his side,
willing to do whatever it would take to achieve his ends.
However
hard it may be, the only way that Sam can fight effectively
is if he makes it impossible for anyone to manipulate him
through his love and need for his brother. He can’t
allow the enemy to predict his behavior or dictate his course
by threatening or killing Dean. If Sam lets Dean’s
loss or the threat of Dean’s loss destroy him, the
bad guys win.
The
corollary, of course, is that Sam is Dean’s weakness,
and Dean did exactly what Sam must avoid when he sought
out the Crossroads Demon after Sam’s death. The Demon
knew that Dean would give anything to have Sam back, and
she used that knowledge to broker the deal for Dean’s
own self-damnation. Only lately has Dean come to realize
the full price he will pay: that barring a miracle, he will
eventually become what he fights, what he hates, and wreak
on people the very destruction that he currently tries to
prevent. The Trickster’s lesson for Sam is that he
has to learn from Dean’s experience, and not go the
same way.
You
can’t save your brother. Sometimes, you just gotta
let people go. This
one is a killer, but ultimately, it’s true. Sooner
or later, we all die, and we all die alone. We can take
steps to avoid dangers and rescue each other, but eventually
the end comes, and we can’t change that – not
without a whole new rash of unacceptable consequences. In
our real, non-Supernatural world, we sometimes
try to cling to someone even when life and soul are effectively
gone; medical science can keep a body breathing and nourished,
but that doesn’t mean the person we loved is alive
in it. Sometimes, the hardest thing to do is to let go,
and to not blame ourselves for failing to save the person
we lost.
At
the same time, however, letting go can sometimes be the
way to hold on. Sometimes the only way to free ourselves
to take action is to accept at the outset that we might
fail and lose the thing we most want. Think of the heartbreak
in a kidnapping or hostage situation, when the choice has
to be made concerning whether to attempt a rescue or not.
An attempt always carries with it the chance of a backfire,
of the loss of exactly what the rescue would be intended
to achieve; but without the attempt, survival still isn’t
assured. Do you take the chance and hope for the best, or
let your emotions freeze you in place, helpless to act?
The choice is yours, but the only way to make it is to accept
all the potential consequences. Dean and Sam face a similar
dilemma, with a similar choice. Does Dean try to free himself
from his deal, and take the chance that Sam will die? Does
Sam turn his attention away from saving Dean to go for broke
against the demons, and take the chance that by winning
in the bigger fight, he might either lose his brother or
create the chance to save him? For both of them, it’s
Hobson’s choice, do it or not, and even a right guess
has no guarantee of happiness.
Sam
has Dean’s example to show the dangers and unintended
consequences of holding on. At the same time, both boys
know that John escaped Hell intact even after having made
a similar deal, so life is not without hope. What choice
Sam will make, I think even he doesn’t yet know. But
unlike Dean, he has the advantage of foreknowledge to inform
his choice, and because of that, the realization that he
doesn’t have to choose precisely the same way he did
in the Trickster experience of his potential future without
Dean.
And
one last thought on this particular lesson. Much depends
on the emphasis you put on the sentence, You can’t
save him. If the emphasis is on you, the implication
is that someone else could do the saving.
The
Trickster didn’t have to release Sam from his world-weaving.
He didn’t have to give Dean back to Sam. None of what
happened was real to anyone but Sam; no one remembers any
of it, except Sam, who remembers it all, and who hasn’t
told Dean the worst of it, about what happened when the
Tuesdays stopped and Dean still died, and Sam went into
his own Hell of revenge.
What
might the Trickster choose to do, if Sam takes his lessons
to heart? Could the Trickster save Dean, if Sam can’t?
If anyone has the power, it would seem that he would. Would
he choose to?
Production
Notes
I
have to start this off with a gloating personal note: I
really enjoyed seeing the show shooting in Steveston again,
with the repeated Dean and Sam walk-and-talk down Moncton
Street, a street I’ve walked down myself. The mobile
potted palm and the sunny shooting weather they had most
of the time helped to sell the location as being in Florida,
although I did have to chuckle at the death-by-golden-retriever-Tuesday
when rain on location gave the lie to Sam saying that nothing
ever changed, and at the air being so cold when Sam and
Dean went after the disguised Trickster that their breath
was visible! Ah, the joys of shooting on location and having
to meet the schedule, no matter what the weather does to
you …
Everything
about this episode makes me marvel. The balance was adroit
and everything fit. The music was great, from the delightful
use of Asia’s “Heat of the Moment” and
Huey Lewis and the News’ “Back in Time”
through the techno-beat of the original score by Jay Gruska
underlying Sam’s descent into mechanical precision.
I loved it all.
The
script by Jeremy Carver was crisp and tight, punching every
button of humor and pathos, driving forward clearly through
the selected repetition of Tuesday moments with a sure hand
on the characters of both brothers, and illuminating Sam’s
descent after Dean’s death. I am extraordinarily glad
that Jeremy joined the writing team this year, and hope
to see more of his work next season as well. I loved the
way that he used the Groundhog Day device of repeated
time to actually drive Sam’s character development,
and the decision – likely a combination of writer
and director – to show Sam’s descent into robotic
obsession purely through visuals, with no dialogue except
Bobby’s one-sided voiceovers.
Kim
Manners remains my favorite Supernatural director.
The repeated walk-and-talk scenes with Sam and Dean were
irresistible, and displayed a subtle mastery of timing as
all the pieces of that walk repeated with clockwork precision.
The choreographed scenes in the diner were priceless, as
were the glimpses into the brothers’ morning routines.
And finally, Kim has a positive gift for drawing real emotion
from his actors. Dean’s first and last deaths in particular
were heartbreaking, especially in what they did to Sam.
For actors to throw themselves so totally into the moment,
they have to trust their director. Kim shines. I’m
also betting that he designed the brilliant (and cost-saving!)
editorial montage of scenes from past episodes that were
cut with new the footage to provide the chilling look at
Sam on the hunt after Dean’s Wednesday death. The
new and the old tied together with Bobby’s phone call
voiceovers were convincing and utterly terrifying. The careful
differences in the life details between Sam with Dean and
Sam without Dean were striking, illustrating on every level
just how dramatically Sam had changed without the need for
words.
Together
with praise for the writer and director, this is also a
shout-out to the entire production design and props crew,
because their attention to detail really helped sell the
entire concept. The precision of placement in the Tuesday
motel room and the diner spoke to careful notes and lots
of production continuity photos! Seeing the Impala’s
trunk converted from Dean’s casual structure to Sam’s
rigidly organized recreation of John’s arsenal; noting
the precise, ruler-straight regimentation of the research
material posted on the post-death motel walls; observing
the persnickety gun-cleaning kit that replaced Dean’s
habit of spreading guns and tools on every surface; even
seeing the bed going from rumpled to straight and the toothpaste
tube gone from messy to neat – every physical set
detail eloquently conveyed Sam’s transformation from
little brother into Terminator Sam. The tacky motel room
designers crafted another winner with the flamingo-obsessed
Tuesday room, and even threw in the running gag of the Magic
Fingers for Dean. All the supporting actors did a great
job with the repetition of the day.
And
what can I possibly say about Jared Padalecki and Jensen
Ackles? It’s a shame that awards shows snub genre
series, because these two actors are giving us their hearts.
I can’t think of any other pair of actors who could
have delivered so perfectly on the diner scene with their
precisely unified dialogue! I want to see the outtakes …
Jared’s
Sam ran the gamut from little brother irritation with his
big brother’s messy habits (shades of Tall Tales,
for anyone who was particularly alert!) to utter and absolute
shock and grief over Dean’s sudden and meaningless
death, through confusion, fear, worry, frustration, exhaustion,
and despair. In an incredible turn, he gave us Sam’s
transformation into a ruthless machine with a thousand-yard
stare, and then showed him breaking down back into the grieving,
bereft little brother begging to have his brother back.
When Sam woke up the last time to discover Dean alive, his
driven stalk across the room and his fierce hug said more
than words about his love and his need. Jared owned this
episode.
Jensen
did a lovely job supporting Jared with his rendition of
Dean. Dean clearly couldn’t quite believe what Sam
was telling him, but he nonetheless threw himself into doing
whatever his brother needed from him, and Jensen’s
face and body conveyed both the uncertainty and the decision
simultaneously. He nailed making every Tuesday both exactly
the same and yet totally fresh and new for Dean. He made
Dean’s first death in particular dreadfully, heartbreakingly
real. And I particularly loved his subtle Dean responses
in the final scene, first to the uncharacteristic hug and
finally to the expression on Sam’s face, realizing
not only how traumatized Sam was over repeatedly seeing
him die, but that there was something more still unspoken.
Dean
and Sam may be each other’s weaknesses, but they are
also each other’s strengths. Trickster-Bobby spoke
for both of them when he told Sam, You need your brother.
The trick for both of them will be finding a way to prevent
that need from being used against them. Now, they have more
incentive than ever.
Added:
Feb 18th 2008
Reviewer:
Bardicvoice