In the wake of Bobby's death, Dean gets to take care of a sassy teen and play dress up in the 40's with Krycek.
****Spoilers ahead****
Read more...

Tags , , , ,

Bobby's taken one to the dome--will the mid-season finale be the end of Sam and Dean's surrogate father?
****Spoilers below the break.****
Read more...

Tags , , , ,

Take a comic book, put it on TV, and the fans go nuts. Take a TV show and adapt it to a comic and… Not so much. Mainly because most of them are shockingly bad. That said? There’s been a few TV to comic book adaptations that don’t just not suck, they’re actually good. Here are ten of the best:

10. True Blood

IDW’s recent comics based on the sweaty, dirty HBO vampire series may lack the wall-to-wall nudity, but they make up for it in crazy creatures and buckets of blood. It’s tough to nail the voices of “real” characters, but these comics do it swimmingly… Fake sounding Southern accents and all.

9. Supernatural

Read more...

Tags , , , , ,

A mostly so-so episode has a pretty jarring ending leading into the mid-season finale.

****Spoilers right off the bat, so be warned.****
Read more...

Tags , , ,

Please note: calling out a trope and making a whole episode out of it does not automatically make said trope funny again. Case in point: this week's clunky episode of Supernatural that sees Sam getting married under mysterious circumstances to Sam and Dean superfan, Becky Rosen (Emily Perkins, who, I'm just now realizing is Brigitte from the first two, very, very good Ginger Snaps movies). The sum total gag of the episode (and I don't feel like this is really any kind of spoiler at all) is that Sam is magically roofied by a painfully nerdy fan, and it's all kind of a big bummer all around since the episode does nothing more than tread water and avoid the main storyline of the season. We get it, you guys don't know what the deal is with Leviathan, either.
Read more...

Tags , , , ,

To the best of my knowledge, I've never met anyone who went to a psychic or called a psychic hotline back when that was a whole thing. Well, in this week's episode of Supernatural, Sam and Dean investigate a series of murders in a small town that just full of sham psychics and clairvoyants.
Read more...

Tags , , ,

In this week's episode, Sam and Dean get murderous doppelgangers, while Bobby attempts to MacGuyver some kind of means of hurting Leviathan.
Read more...

Tags , , ,

Charisma Carpenter and James Marsters return to the CW as bickering witches in this week's episode.

After four straight weeks of pretty dark/emotionally-grim episodes, "Shut Up, Dr. Phil" attempts to bring the funny to Supernatural with Sam and Dean investigating a series of improbable murders in a small town linked to a married couple on the outs (Carpenter, Marsters). While the War of the Roses meets the frequently called-out Bewitched premise has a lot of promise, as with last week, there's not enough time to spend with the interesting villains.

Those villains, of course, being--no big spoiler here--married witches played by former Buffy and Angel alums Charisma Carpenter (still fine--yeah I said it) and James Marsters (does this guy age at all). As wealthy bigwigs in a small town, their escalating tensions are causing some of the local plant life to rot, statues to explode, and acquaintances and friends to die gory, agonizing deaths. With the exception of a bit of counseling at the end of the episode and a last-minute save of a potential victim, Sam and Dean don't have a whole lot to do this episode, placing a lot of it on Marsters and Carpenter. Unfortunately, more than a third of "Shut Up, Dr. Phil" is structured like a mystery, requiring Sam and Dean to catch up to where any viewer who watched the preview from last week starts off: that is to say, they're dealing with dueling witches. It's also a shame that Carpenter and Marsters' characters don't exactly share a lot of screen time--these are two actors who can do heated/funny bickering well and it's a missed opportunity keeping them separated for so long.

Read more...

Tags , , , , ,

This week's episode of Supernatural feels like the first truly missed opportunity of the season, opening up an intriguing can of worms about Dean's character along with the repercussions of his actions and then promptly shutting all of that down with "monster of the week" nonsense.

Without any new leads on Leviathan, Sam and Dean follow up on a series of improbable murders in a small town. Each of the victims has some horrible incident for which they were responsible, and in each case, their deaths somehow mirror the thing they did. Doing a little research, the boys learn that it's none other than the Egyptian god Osiris, played by Iron Man and Star Trek (2009) actor Faran Tahir. Apparently, every few years he shows up in a random location and sits in judgement of people feeling profound guilt, dooming them to a poetically just death (i.e. the hit and run driver is run down in his own apartment, etc.). Still shaken up by killing the demon mother from last week, Dean crosses the sardonic god's path, opening up a perfect opportunity to take a look at the kind of messed up life the elder Winchester brother has led up to this point. Read more...

Tags , , ,

Jensen Ackles (Dean) directs this flashback-heavy episode as Sam confronts a past hunt.
Read more...

Tags , , ,

Search Posts

Top Categories

  1. Animation
  2. Anime
  3. Comic Books
  4. Daily Geek
  5. Hobby Gaming
  6. Interviews
  7. Manga
  8. Tech
  9. Toys
  10. TV
  11. ACT-I-VATE
  12. Android
  13. Announcements
  14. Apple
  15. Apps
  16. Archaia
  17. Archie Comics
  18. Aspen Comics
  19. Avatar Press
  20. Baltimore Comic Con
  21. Bandai
  22. Best Of
  23. Bif Bang Pow!
  24. Birthdays
  25. Bluewater Productions
  26. Books
  27. Boom Studios
  28. C2E2
  29. Cartoon Network
  30. CES
  31. Comedy Central
  32. Comic Book Conventions
  33. Comic Strips
  34. Comics For Kids
  35. ComiXology
  36. Costumes
  37. Creator's Commentary
  38. Crossovers We Want To See
  39. CW
  40. Dark Horse
  41. DC Comics
  42. Diamond Select Toys
  43. Digital Comics
  44. Disney Publishing
  45. Dragon Con
  46. Drawn and Quaterly
  47. DS
  48. Dynamite
  49. Emerald City Comicon
  50. FanExpo Canada
  51. Fantagraphics
  52. Fantasy
  53. First Look
  54. First Second
  55. Five Minute Recap
  56. Flashpoint Facts
  57. Free Comic Book Day
  58. Fun
  59. Funimation
  60. Geek Gifts
  61. Gen Con
  62. Gentle Giant
  63. George R. R. Martin
  64. Giveaway
  65. Graphic Novels
  66. Halloween
  67. Hasbro
  68. HeroesCon
  69. HBO
  70. Heavy Metal
  71. Horror
  72. Hub TV
  73. IDW
  74. Image Comics
  75. Indie
  76. Jakks Pacific
  77. Kaiyodo
  78. Kidrobot
  79. Kotobukiya
  80. LEGO
  81. MAD
  82. Magic
  83. Magic: The Gathering
  84. Marc Silvestri’s PopGeek Blog!
  85. Marvel
  86. Mattel
  87. Mayfair Games
  88. McFarlane Toys
  89. Mezco Toyz
  90. Microsoft
  91. Midtown Comics
  92. Mobile
  93. Motion Comics
  94. Movies
  95. MTV Comics
  96. Music
  97. NECA
  98. New York Comic Con
  99. News
  100. Nintendo
  101. Onell Design
  102. Oni Press
  103. Pantheon
  104. PC
  105. Power-Con/ThunderCon
  106. Press Release
  107. Previews
  108. PS3
  109. PSP
  110. Reviews
  111. San Diego Comic-Con
  112. Science
  113. SDCC
  114. Sega
  115. Shocker Toys
  116. Shounen Jump
  117. Sideshow Collectibles
  118. Sony
  119. Sports
  120. Square Enix
  121. Stan Lee
  122. Star Wars
  123. Steam Punk
  124. Studio Tour
  125. Thanksgiving
  126. Top Cow
  127. Top Shelf
  128. Toy Fair 2011
  129. Trailers
  130. T-Shirts
  131. Twitter Round-Up
  132. Uncategorized
  133. Underground Toys
  134. Updates From The Bat-Cave
  135. Vertigo Comics
  136. VIZ
  137. Video Games
  138. Webcomics
  139. Wizard World Inc
  140. Wizards of the Coast
  141. WonderCon
  142. Woodsy's World of Star Wars
  143. Wii
  144. Xbox 360
  145. Yen Press
  146. CES 2012
  147. Gift Guides
  148. Holidays
  149. Valiant
SPONSORS
AD:
©2012 Viacom International Inc. All Rights Reserved. MTV and all related titles and logos are trademarks of Viacom International Inc.