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1.7 Hook Man
Lori: "It's like I'm cursed or something. People around me keep dying."
Sam: "I think I know how you feel."
It wouldn't be a series about urban legends without doing the Hook Man. Unfortunately, it was more about the Hook Man, and not so much about Dean and Sam. And even though we had the requisite clever twist (that it was Lori, not her father), tracking such a famous and widespread urban legend to only one church and one person didn't feel quite right. A legend this big should have been, well, bigger. Plus I couldn't help thinking -- puritanical preacher, rebellious daughter, parties, dancing -- this was just a bloodier version of "Footloose."
The B plot was Sam having a little romance with the extremely dangerous Lori. Except that he wasn't, because he still wasn't ready. We saw Lori in the rearview mirror of the Impala as the boys left town. Nice symbolism there.
Bits and pieces:
-- Dean loved the parties. They were his idea of the college experience.
-- Why would arrest records going back to 1851 be stored in a library? And wouldn't there be more than two boxes of them?
-- It was so wasteful melting all that silver. I wish they could have found a way to keep the melted silver for bullets or something.
-- At least they had shotguns full of rock salt. Since salt has already been introduced as a ghostly deterrent, that worked for me.
-- This week, the Impala took us to Eastern Iowa University. And the brothers masqueraded as fraternity brothers from Ohio. And church-goers.
Quotes, all of them Dean's:
"Nice job, Dr. Venkman."
"Saved your ass. Talked the sheriff down to a fine. Dude, I'm Matlock."
"Dude. Sorority girls. Think we'll see a naked pillow fight?"
"Remind me not to piss this girl off."
(Standing in the graveyard covered with dirt) "That's it. Next time I get to watch the cute girls' house."
Two out of four stars,
Billie
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