Supernatural 9.23: Do You Believe in Miracles
Jeremy Carver
Thomas J. Wright
The ninth season has been the victim of a
great deal of meandering, and so it makes sense that this season finale would
also seem to be falling into the same trap.
It’s a good thing that the hook for the end of the season itself was
directly related to Dean’s descent, because of all the things that have been
explored in this “middle chapter”, that’s about the only one that worked.
With the situation in Hell firmly concluded
and Crowley in charge, the not-so-small matter of the angelic choir is the
biggest area of focus to consider. And
for better or worse, Metatron is the villainous side of that equation. After taking Castiel out of the resistance
leadership role, it felt like the writers didn’t quite know what they were
doing. On the contrary, it turned out to
be a smart move; Castiel might try to be a leader, when pushed to it, but he’s
much better as the soulful lone angel trying to do right by God’s design (and
Dean Winchester).
The biggest problem is that Metatron never
evolved into a consistent villain. His
power set was all over the map, and his motivations were a combination of
megalomania and ADHD. This is no more
apparent than his plan to “go viral” by posing as a human with miraculous powers. Was it really just to draw his enemies into a
fight on his own terms? In that regard,
it’s unnecessary; he had more than enough power and resources to set the terms
at any point. One could argue that was
the entire thrust of the “Meta Fiction” concept.
If there was a real surprise in this episode,
it was the absence of Dean losing his humanity altogether and ending up in a
brother vs. brother fight to the death with Sammy. It’s still in the cards; if anything, the
deferment works a bit better, now that Dean is apparently much further down the
demonic path than he ever was as a resident of Hell earlier in the series. And hence the reason why the demonic civil
war had to be resolved; it keeps the lines of control clean on that end. Not to mention that Dean is getting a taste
of his own medicine, since he’s getting the demonic equivalent of what he did
to Sam earlier in the season.
All that said, the narrative groundwork is
already well in place to restore Dean somewhere down the line. Why else go through all that trouble to
explore the possibilities with Crowley and his potential restoration? And while Castiel doesn’t want to be the
leader of the angels, his role in Metatron’s overthrow and ongoing humility
could mean a much greater and more organic following. A part of me still wonders if God will be
brought in before it’s all said and done; after all, if the angels really need
someone to lead them, and Castiel doesn’t want to do it no matter how much they
look to him for it, why not find the real Father to prevent yet another
pretender to take control and mess things up more?
In other words, even though the ninth season
has been a muddled mess, it continues to reveal that Jeremy Carver is sticking
to his three-season plan to make Supernatural’s
later years feel more cohesive with what had come before. The Sera Gamble era was hardly a high point,
but it has been reframed in some important ways by Carver’s first two
seasons. It really does feel like there
is a grand conclusion, or at least a solid landing point, coming at the end of
the tenth season.
- Dean’s descent has a shocking twist
- The end of the angelic civil war
- What was the point of Metatron’s plan?