Sam and Dean hear the news about season 12

Will Supernatural Ever Die?

Supernatural’s success has been almost… well, supernatural. But, with the CW recently announcing that it has renewed the show for a gobsmacking 12th season, you have to wonder: is the series worthy of its longevity? Or has it outstayed its welcome? Jayne Nelson gives her view…

[Spoiler warning for UK-pace viewers: contains a vague reference to an event in the second half of season 10]

Sam and Dean hear the news about season 12
Sam and Dean hear the news about season 12

After debuting in 2005, Supernatural spent its first few years looking like it was going to be cancelled at the end of each season. Renewal announcements sometimes took so long to happen that fans bit their nails and (possibly) made deals with crossroad demons to ensure they wouldn’t lose the Winchester brothers for good.

How times change. Now, 11 seasons on, it seems that it’s going to live forever.

“Both Jared and Jensen are having a blast,” explained Mark Pedowitz, head of The CW, at the Television Critics Association winter press tour earlier this year. “As long as they’re having a blast, it’s a great thing. The show is performing better than it did last year, better than you could ever hope. I’m very hopeful that we’ll see it again.”

Pedowitz has often mentioned that he loves the series, and ratings are impressive for a genre show on a small channel. Stars Jared Padalecki and Jensen Ackles do still seem to be enjoying it, so there’s no itchy feet to worry about – and if there was they’d put all their colleagues out of work, so them deciding to quit is not a decision they’d take lightly. Don’t expect the Winchesters’ trusty Impala to be garaged just yet.

Supernatural-season-11-jaredBut how is it possible for a show to be doing so well after so long? And is it any good? Surely it’s just going through the motions now?

The answer is… well, yes and no, actually. There have undoubtedly been ups and downs along the way; taking the show’s ninth and tenth years as an example, they were always watchable, but weren’t anywhere near as fresh and inspiring as earlier seasons. And the ratio of good to not-so-good episodes was weighted more towards the latter: in season nine, for instance, we were afflicted with one of the worst stories the show’s ever done, “Bloodlines” – a pilot for a spin-off that thankfully never happened (though we’d still like one about Sheriff Jody Mills, please – anyone? Anyone?). Meanwhile, a controversial death plagued season ten – not so much that it happened, because everybody dies on this show, of course, but more that it wasn’t executed (no pun intended) well.

But something else happened in that tenth year: “Fan Fiction”, the show’s 200th episode, which was a glorious homage to everything that had gone before and a beautiful reminder that, while there have been wobbles, the journey so far has been worth it. And then, four episodes into its current season, the showrunners managed to top even that with the sublime “Baby”, a gritty, darkly amusing and defiantly gory story shot from the point of view of Baby herself. Yes, 11 years into Supernatural and we’ve finally had an episode from the perspective of their ’67 Chevy Impala – and the fact it’s one of the finest the series has ever produced and not just a gimmick episode says it all.

With the help of “Baby”, season 11 has been largely flawless so far, with only a clunky, over-familiar opening episode spoiling the run. The rest has been top-notch Supernatural fun, with some truly freaky concepts – a serial killer murdering children’s imaginary friends, for instance – and the swagger and pizzazz of early seasons perfectly recreated.

Baby – the car’s the star
Baby – the car’s the star

Perhaps that swagger has come from knowing the show is still finding new viewers as it goes along – remarkable for such an old series, and probably the result of fans on Tumblr spreading the word (if you took away all the Supernatural gifs on Tumblr, the entire site would probably crumble like a sandcastle when the tide comes in). Perhaps it comes from the fact that showrunner Jeremy Carver – who worked on Supernatural in the early days before leaving to work on Being Human and then came back again – has finally hit his stride after a couple of years at the helm. Or perhaps it’s simply because the people who work on Supernatural can’t quite believe they’re still able to make it despite all the uncertainty in the past, and their delight is right there on screen for us to watch? We’re probably romanticising it, but you never know.

Either way, it means that season 12 will be cheerfully embraced by fans in expectation of another great year of stories, rather than approached warily like a show long past its sell-by date. In fact, it increasingly looks like Supernatural has no natural expiration date; when it looks like it’s starting to decay, a bit of TLC from the writers seems to bring it bouncing back to life. At this rate, Supernatural could well be on our screens forever. Carry on, wayward sons.

supernatural-season-11


Elias Toufexis panel MCM Birmingham (3)

Elias Toufexis panel at MCM Birmingham Comic Con

Elias Toufexis panel MCM Birmingham (3)

“One of my favourite things about doing these conventions is meeting all of you,” said Elias Toufexis to the audience that saw him during his panel on the Saturday of MCM Birmingham Comic Con.

Elias has appeared in sci-fi fantasy shows such as Alphas, Smallville, Supernatural and more recently in Bitten and The Expanse. He is also known for portraying Andriy Kobin in the video games Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell: Conviction and Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell: Blacklist, as well as the protagonist Adam Jensen in Deus Ex: Human Revolution and its upcoming sequel, Deus Ex: Mankind Divided.

Asked if there was a favourite TV show he worked on that he’d love to revisit, he responded that he loved working on Supernatural, in which he played Ansem Weems. “That was really fun, particularly because the character was fun,” said Elias. He also mentioned the recent sci-fi show The Expanse, based on James S. A. Corey’s series of novels, in which he plays the spy Kenzo. “It’s character based stories where lots of characters grow,” said Elias of the show. “It’s really cool. It’s kind of like back to the roots of science fiction. I had a great time.” He then noted how he plays good guys in video games and bad guys in TV shows.

Talk then turned to Deus Ex: Human Revolution and the game’s multiple scenarios. “The best thing about playing Adam Jensen is that I have to justify every choice that the player would make,” said Elias. “I have to either record or performance capture every choice that the player could possibly make. Then I have to justify that as an actor. It doesn’t matter if I disagree or not.” As an example, he explained a moment in the game where a girl dies and her mother asks how she died. “You can choose to say, ‘You don’t want to know’, or you can choose to say, ‘I don’t know, nobody told me’, or you could choose to vividly describe exactly how she died. I was reading and I thought, ‘Why would anyone pick this choice? Who would make that choice?’ But you have to justify it anyway.”

Deus Ex Mankind Divided (Adam Jensen)Elias revealed that Deus Ex: Human Revolution took four years to make, in which he would work four hour sessions, two or three times a month. As a comparison, he noted that the upcoming sequel, Deus Ex: Mankind Divided, took two years, but he would go in for weeks at a time. “There’s so much to record, so much to performance capture,” he said. “We’ve finished the game, for all intents and purposes, but I’m going back next week to do a trailer, probably do a few pick-ups.” He was hopeful that there would be more Deus Ex games in the future, describing how Adam Jensen was such a well loved character. He then added that Eidos Montreal initially weren’t going to bring Adam back for the sequel. “They were going to go a completely different way, but the fans loved him so much that the creators realised that and said, ‘We got to get him back, we got to make this series about him rather than just about that world.’”

When asked about fan reactions to his work, Elias recounted a touching story about meeting a fan of Deus Ex: Human Revolution. “This young guy was in a wheelchair, paralysed from the waist down. He says to me, ‘I played Deus Ex, and I forgot that I was paralysed.’ When I hear people say things like that, it has very little to do with me personally, it’s more to do with the game, but when I meet people like that who are excited to meet me, that’s what makes it all worth it.”

When asked about the success of Far Cry Primal, in which Elias voiced protagonist Takkar, he said that when recording for the game he wasn’t so sure if gamers would go for it. “This is kind of a caveman-esque survival game. But people seem to love it.” He added that he enjoyed working on the game because it was not in English. “I had to learn a whole new language. We sat around for a couple of days going to these classes and this language, it was made up, but they based it on this Proto-European language.”

Being the protagonist, Elias just had to voice his character in Far Cry Primal (since we don’t see Takkar), but everyone else had to go through performance capture and therefore remember their lines from the made up language. “One day I went in to the mo-cap stage and fed my dialogue to these actors,” recalled Elias. “I remember them all getting mad at me because they had to memorise it all and I was just reading it off of the page.”

Elias Toufexis panel MCM Birmingham (1)Being a Batman fan, Elias was then asked how he would voice the Dark Knight. He began by saying that he was really looking forward to the upcoming Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. “I like that all they did was modulate his voice it seems,” said Elias of Batman’s voice from the footage he has seen so far. “He’s talking normally and he has to modulate his voice. I like that. People complain about Christian Bale in The Dark Knight, but he has to change his voice, because people are going to recognise Bruce Wayne in that suit. If I were doing it, I’d probably do something similar, probably closer to Christian Bale.”

When asked if there were ever any moments where he messed up a line when recording a game, Elias said that if that happened, he would just redo it. But performance capture was a different thing. “When you have the tight suit on you, with the dots all over you and the camera on your face, you can’t stop, because a lot of times the camera is controlled by the player. So you can’t cut and redo it. I’m sure there’s footage of me screwing up, I’m sure there’s Jensen going, ‘Son of a bitch.’”

A question from the audience asked what the favourite part of making a game was. “When the game comes out, meeting people like you is one of my favourite parts, definitely.” said Elias. “In terms of making it, I would say the performance capture.” He described how he loves performance capture and that it’s “really a lot of fun.”

An attendee then asked Elias about having to keep secrets when it comes to working on massive gaming franchises. “All I do is keep secrets,” he responded. “I lied to my friends and family for three years about Deus Ex: [Mankind Divided].” He explained that he knew straight away that Adam Jensen would be back for the sequel, but he couldn’t say anything to fans, friends, family or press when questioned about whether or not he would be returning. Also, when the trailer for Far Cry Primal was released, he ignored people on Twitter asking him if he was in it. “I’m sure I’ve already lied to you all at least two or three times in this panel. That’s just the way it is, man. I sign one of the NDA’s.”

He was then asked if he were to have his own augmentation, what it would be? He explained that he would have the CASIE augmentation. “The one that sends out pheromones, so everybody does what you want them to do, or you can convince people to do things,” he said. “I think I’d do that. In the end, that’s the best super power. It’s like the bad guy in Jessica Jones. You just constantly tell people what you want. You don’t need to be able to jump out of a plane if you tell the pilot [to] land the plane.”

Elias Toufexis panel MCM Birmingham (5)Talk turned to the show Alphas, in which he played Cornell Scipio, who is able to produce fire by rubbing his hands together. “Alphas was basically Agents of S.H.I.E.LD. before Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. came out,” said Elias of the show. “I loved that character. I did burn myself a couple of times, but I got to start fires!”

Elias was finally asked what he expects the players to get from the games he works on. “It depends on the game, right?” he responded, describing how Far Cry Primal was dumb fun, but Dues Ex: Human Revolution had a lot of social and political commentary. “Especially in this new one, Mankind Divided, it’s all about racism really. You’ll see when you play it, a lot of it has to do with racial issues.”

Sam and dean Winchester Supernatural

Review: Supernatural Seasons 1-9

Which horror title would we like to spend Halloween with? That was the question posed by Warner Bros., which offered a spine-tingling list of delights to choose from. From classic frights and cult hits to the latest terrors, teen thrills and small screen scares. But one title stood out in particular, and in a way it encapsulates everything in that previous list.

Sam and dean Winchester Supernatural

Supernatural was a revelation when it launched. With a killer first episode – in the true sense of the phrase – it saw Sam (Jared Padalecki) and Dean Winchester (Jensen Ackles) carry on “the family business” of hunting monsters and saving people. The show first aired in September 2005, at the same time that a very similar series was reborn: Kolchak: The Night Stalker. Kolchak is not only a cult classic of 1970s TV, it was also a major inspiration for The X-Files. When Mulder and Scully’s adventures finished, X-Files writer and producer Frank Spotnitz brought the character of Carl Kolchak back to small screens.

On paper, there were many similarities between the two shows. Kolchak was a journalist investigating weird goings on and trying to get to the truth about a traumatic event in his past. Sam and Dean were two bickering, wisecracking brothers, also looking for answers to mysterious deaths in their lives as they drove around America in a Chevy Impala. Yet the two shows couldn’t be more different.

Stuart Townsend’s lead was a dreamy wordsmith who ended every episode eulogising in a way that we thought South Park had put an end to forever with its, “I learned something…” final lines. Sam and Dean, on the other hand, would frequently pop a trunk full of guns and knives and kick the crap out of ghosts and creatures (when they weren’t doing the same, emotionally and physically, to each other). The result? The weepy Night Stalker was cancelled due to dire ratings in November 2005, just weeks after it first started airing. Supernatural is currently in its 11th season on US TV. Enough said.

The enduring popularity of Supernatural can be attributed to so many things. It’s crammed with pop culture references and some cheeky winks at the audience (one of our favourites is when Sam asks Dean, “You’ve never seen House of Wax?” – another of Warner Bros. horror titles – the gag being that Padalecki is in it). It also breaks the fourth wall in much more overt ways than those clever asides, and if you haven’t witnessed that yet we’re not going to spoil any of those episodes here as they’re some of the best available. Let’s just say fellow fourth wall breaker Deadpool has a lot to live up to when his movie finally hits cinemas.

But the real reason to love Supernatural is for its horror chops. The initial monster-of-the-week format allowed writers and directors to play with different horror styles. The first season alone mixes everything from creature features and Ring-style Japanese chills to slasher fare and more classic ghostly goings on. When the show switches into longer story arcs, it never loses the monster hunting element, as Sam and Dean work cases amidst world-ending events.

So while we could have plumped for The Exorcist, watched Freddy tear through teens in Nightmare on Elm Street or flick through a bloody bibliography in The Vampire Diaries, we’ll be reliving the highlights of Sam and Dean’s epic adventures again. Who can say no to 195 mini horror flicks in one batch? As the song says, “Carry on my wayward son, for there’ll be peace when you are done…”

 


First Pics From Supernatural Season 11
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The X-Files: New Trailer & Poster

 

WhoRunTheWorldbanner

MCM London Comic Con panel: "Who Runs the World? Girls!"

WhoRunTheWorldbanner

A fantastic line up of women swept onto Theatre B at MCM London Comic Con on Sunday afternoon for the last panel of the day, titled “Who Run the World? Girls!”. The seats were packed, the aisles crammed, and some punters snuck closer to sit on the floor in front of the stage when they had nowhere else to go.

In order of appearance, came Merrin Dungey and Victoria Smurfit from Once Upon a Time, Felicia Day (The Guild, Supernatural), Willa Holland (Arrow), Renée Felice Smith (NCIS:LA), Emily Wickersham (NCIS), Annie Wersching (The Vampire Diaries), Jadyn Wong (Scorpion) and Rila Fukushima (Arrow).

These women have fought and waited many years to get roles that are more than ‘some guy’s little sister’, or the ‘black best friend’, or the ‘love interest’. Now they’ve started to see a change, in TV shows especially, as they star in shows as women characters who can carry their own plot line rather than propping up male protagonists.

Felicia Day expressed that even male side-characters tend to be more developed than female ones, so when she watches a show, she defines a strong female character by asking, ‘Can this woman carry the weight of the show?’. She further explained, “I think that, when we say ‘strong women character’, it becomes a cliché sometimes because you think of a girl in leather pants just kicking a man in the face. But I think we’ve gone so much past that now. If you really ask what people mean, I think, my interpretation is that it’s a woman character who you can understand her emotional point of view, and can imagine her carrying the whole piece, no matter if she’s the lead, or the second, third, or fourth lead.”

“If you look at entertainment, frequently you will see other men characters in a movie or a TV show with the ability to carry a show because they’re so fully realised emotionally, but frequently, especially if a woman is a love interest, you don’t understand who she is, she just moves with the plot to enable the man character to do what he needs to do. I think that’s what is very exciting to see, especially on genre shows, where you can see any one of the women on this panel carrying the show, because their characters are very strong, and to me that’s what strength is.” The audience clapped hard for a few seconds at this great description.

Despite progress being made in female representation, however, there’s still resistance to women having more vocal and prominent roles, especially when marketing these products. The panel was asked if they had encountered this kind of resistance from higher-ups in the industry, and Annie Wersching, who voices Tess in The Last of Us, said, “I remember with The Last of Us there was an issue where the higher-ups didn’t want Ellie to also be on the cover of the game, they wanted it just to be Joel, just the guy, and Neil Druckmann, the director, and Naughty Dog fought for her to be there because she’s just as much the main character as Joel. So, I think it also takes the right people to make the doors open when some narrow-minded people at the top don’t always want that, but I thought that was crazy that they didn’t want her on the front.”

On a lighter note, a member of the audience asked if there was a Marvel or DC superhero they wanted to play. Merrin Dungey said a version of Batman. Willa Holland said a female Flash. Renée Felice Smith said, “Well, this isn’t Marvel or DC, but I’m a big fan of Neil Gaiman. I’d love to play Death. I think it’s a story that has to be told, and cinematically it could be really beautiful and really visual.”

Next, someone pointed out that Emily Wickersham’s character on NCIS has an obsession with sitting on tables, and was this a choice of hers or if it was a habit Emily had before the show? “When I came in and I first auditioned for the role,” Emily began, “it wasn’t written in the script for this scene in the squad room. I was leaning up against the desk, and I guess I just, I didn’t really think about it beforehand, I just hopped up on the desk. Didn’t really think about it during the scene. After I got the part of Bishop they were like, ‘Oh, by the way, loved what you did. Also, a new addition to your character that we’re gonna continue with is we’re gonna put you on surfaces. You’ll do a lot of your work on surfaces—decks, floors, file cabinets—so, I guess they liked it.”

This question extended to the rest of the panel, and Renée told a tale about how she got one show part because she had a bloody knee. “I had fallen outside—I’m a terrible klutz—and I fell on the gravel. I came in, I got a bandaid and put in on my knee, and when I came in and they’re like, ‘Oh, that’s her, that’s the girl, she would fall and have a bloody knee!’ So, that—that’s it.” Her dry tone of voice as she said this sent laughter ripping across the audience.

After a question to do with which Salvador brother does Annie Wersching prefer working with, the panel host asked, since the panel all work with a lot of “great looking men”, do they find that a lot of the questions they get are about the men? “The most frequent question I get asked,” said Willa, “is how is it working with Stephen Amell, and how hard is it playing his sister and not being attracted to him? I’m not attracted to him, guys! He’s my brother, not in real life but on TV. There’s nothing there. But I get asked that all the time, ‘Is it hard—do you want to touch his abs?’”

Merrin Dungey and Victoria Smurfit, on the other hand, most often get asked what it’s like working with Lana Parrilla, who plays Regina Mills in Once Upon a Time. “It’s probably the only show I’ve done where the question is about a woman, and I really actually love that,” said Victoria, “because you do get asked a lot, ‘What was it like doing a bed scene with Phil le Blanc?’ So it’s really nice to be always asked, ‘What’s Lana like? What’s Lana like?’ And, for the record, she’s magic.” The audience aww’d at how sincere Victoria and Merrin’s admiration was for Lana Parrilla.

The next question to the panel asked what advice would they give to young women wanting to go into acting and other male dominated jobs. Renée answered first, saying that it’s important to embrace your idiosyncrasies. She felt that one of the reasons she’s been employed is because she sounds different and she looks a certain way. “I think that’s a good thing—letting your differences define you. Embrace yourself , be comfortable with yourself, and don’t be afraid to be yourself. I guess that would be my advice.”

Merrin sternly added, “Get a thick skin, because not everyone is going to like you, and it doesn’t matter. You have to love yourself, you have to trust yourself, and you have to be brave. Something happened not too long ago where I was CC’d into an email that I wasn’t supposed to see. I read some stuff about myself that I didn’t want to hear—that somebody had an opinion about me—and I had to go back and work with this person. You have to have a thick skin, particularly as a woman, because we have this thing about wanting to be liked and to people please. That is not going to help you get the job, or to get the job done.” Her frankness caused another round of applause and the panel nodded in agreement.

Things turned to social media as the panel was asked what it was like to receive direct reactions to their characters online. After a few glances up and down the table, Felicia Day inched closer to her microphone. “I’m very lucky to be mostly on the internet with my work,” she said, “which sometimes can be disheartening, but 99 percent of the time it’s very encouraging. When I hear from people with Charlie from Supernatural, she’s a geek who’s a lesbian, but she’s not defined by those traits. She is a human being, she’s fully fleshed out. We’ve seen an amazing journey for her, and she happens to be these other things.”

“I think, especially on TV, we see people in categories like, ‘best friend’ or ‘love interest’ or ‘evil person’, and all the characters on this panel seem to be more nuanced. I think that’s where you see people respond and be inspired to either be who they want to be, or follow a path they never would have followed before. That really is what the most beautiful thing is about being an artist—whether an actor, or a painter, or a writer—you’re affecting change in other people.”

This eventually led to someone asking how the women on the panel dealt with frustration when working in the field of acting. Victoria leant to the mic and said, “Wine,” to everyone’s amusement. When no one else elaborated, the host asked, “Is that it? Anything other than wine? Is that a panel of wine-os?”

Laughing, Renée elaborated, “I think I would just say talk about it, like with anything else in your life, when something starts to bubble up and you feel the rage burn inside of you, talk about it. I had a situation on set very early on where a camera person kind of scolded me in a way that, I felt, he wouldn’t scold anyone else on the show, but because I was brand new and I looked like I was a sixteen year old little homeless child, he felt that he could throw his weight around with me. So, from day one I had to be really straight forward and say, ‘Hey, please talk to me as you would talk to everybody else. I’m trying to do the best job I can and the only way I can do that is if I’m respecting you, then please respect me.’ And so, I think, just being vocal and getting it out there, rather than pushing it down is the healthiest way to deal with it.”

On the flip side, Merrin added to this, “I think that’s true, but I also think that you have to stand up for yourself and have your boundaries.” She referred back to the unkind email she’d read and said that there was no way to talk about it with the person involved. She just had to go in and get it over with. “Some things you can’t always work out, because some people have a higher position and they don’t want to hear about it, or whatever. It’s called a job for a reason. Sometimes you just need to go and be great, do your job to the best of your ability, be on time, be kind and polite—because you didn’t win the lottery, you just got a great job—so respect everybody. Just go do your job.”

The panel rounded off by talking about what motivates them to get up in the morning and go do their job—for Willa it’s the passion she receives from her fans, for Annie it’s to make her mother proud, and for Merrin it’s to provide for her kids and to be an inspiration to them.

After forty-five minutes of great questions and answers, the women walked off stage to a thunderous round of applause and much cheering. If you haven’t seen any of their shows, hop to it! They’re involved in fantastic stories right now that are part of, what many are calling, the “Golden Era” of TV.