Anzahl der Beiträge : 1869 Alter : 47 Ort : Bayrisch Sibirien Ansehen/Reputation : 14 Anmeldedatum : 2008-07-10
Subject: 4x08 Wishful Thinking September 15th 2008, 22:09
4x08 Wishful Thinking
Bisher hab ich noch keine weiteren Infos gefunden.... :|
Melly Let's Go Hunting!
Anzahl der Beiträge : 393 Alter : 41 Ort : Velten Ansehen/Reputation : 1 Anmeldedatum : 2008-07-10
Subject: Re: 4x08 Wishful Thinking September 16th 2008, 11:21
besser ist das auch...
hinter diesem Titel können sich wieder fiese Sachen verbergen...
Melly Let's Go Hunting!
Anzahl der Beiträge : 393 Alter : 41 Ort : Velten Ansehen/Reputation : 1 Anmeldedatum : 2008-07-10
Subject: Re: 4x08 Wishful Thinking September 16th 2008, 18:23
ich hab da noch ein paar Info´s zu den Gast-Stars dieser Folge...
[WES] Late 20s - 30s, short, unemployed, nebbish and nerdy. A bachelor who was previously ignored by women but now has a beautiful girlfriend, is reluctant to give up his prize when confronted with the truth...
[HOPE] Mid 20s - early 30s, Wes’s girlfriend, a statuesque beauty who is completely in love and enamored by Wes. Obedient, servile, she has a childlike sense of joy doing any task for Wes...
Quelle: SpoilerTV
Melly Let's Go Hunting!
Anzahl der Beiträge : 393 Alter : 41 Ort : Velten Ansehen/Reputation : 1 Anmeldedatum : 2008-07-10
Subject: Re: 4x08 Wishful Thinking October 31st 2008, 13:36
die erste Preview ist da...
Melly Let's Go Hunting!
Anzahl der Beiträge : 393 Alter : 41 Ort : Velten Ansehen/Reputation : 1 Anmeldedatum : 2008-07-10
Subject: Re: 4x08 Wishful Thinking November 2nd 2008, 11:37
Sneak Peak Nr. 1
so ein frecher Teddybär... und die Gesichter der Jungs gehen schon wieder gar nicht
Naley Jared's Little Darling
Anzahl der Beiträge : 1869 Alter : 47 Ort : Bayrisch Sibirien Ansehen/Reputation : 14 Anmeldedatum : 2008-07-10
Subject: Re: 4x08 Wishful Thinking November 8th 2008, 10:35
Best and Worst Moments from "Wishful Thinking"
Friday, November 07, 2008
Last night's episode of Supernatural had a perfect blend of humor and gut-wrenching emotion. I can't think of another show on television that would feature a subplot about a booze-swilling bipolar teddy bear, then cap off the hour with a heartbreaking confession that could bring tears to the eyes. "Wishful Thinking" was not only another solid episode in what's shaping up to be a great season, but it was also another home run for writer Ben Edlund. I continue to find the installments written by Edlund or Jeremy Carver to be some of the best of the series.
While "Wishful Thinking" had plenty of wonderful moments, I decided to make a list of the top three, followed by one minor thing that annoyed me. Read on for the list.
Best Moments
3. "Kneel Before Todd!"
The end of the episode really packed in the comic book references. Not only did Todd have Hulk-like strength and enough Superman knowledge to whip out a "Kneel before Zod!" riff, but Dean (Jensen Ackles) tried to talk him down using the old "with great power comes great responsibility" speech from Spider-Man. I'm a huge comic book dork, so these shout-outs really made my spider-sense tingle.
2. Teddy Tries to Blow His Stuffing Out
It's no surprise that Ben Edlund, the writer responsible for an Angel episode that featured maniacal trash-talking puppets, would bring us the character of Teddy. A seven-foot-tall talking teddy bear who likes to drink booze and look at porn mags sounds like a completely hilarious notion, but Teddy really brought some pathos to the episode. It's not every day you see a stuffed animal try to blow his own head off. It'll go down as one of the funniest and most disturbing scenes in Supernatural's history.
1. Dean Opens Up to His Brother
Dean has always been one to internalize his emotions, but who knew he was capable of walking around and cracking jokes while remembering everything that happened to him in Hell? He was only gone for four months, but it felt like 40 years, which means Dean is dealing with a heck of a lot of torment. The fact that he's so well adjusted makes me wonder exactly what happened to him down there. He claims he was in unspeakable anguish, but there has to be something more that he's not telling Sam (Jared Padalecki).
One thing I love about Supernatural is that even standalone episodes contain wonderful, emotional moments that give us insight into the characters. The end of last night's installment was a perfect example of this. The episode delivered big laughs with its bipolar teddy bear and "Kneel before Todd!" shenanigans, then delivered a heartbreaking wallop in its final minutes.
Worst Moment
It's not a specific moment, but I did feel that Ted Raimi was sorely underused in the episode. Those who aren't fans of the actor likely didn't think anything of it, but I was hoping to see a bit more of sad, lovelorn Wesley. If the day ever comes when Supernatural recruits Bruce Campbell for a role, I demand they give him more screen time.
Quelle: BuddyTV
Naley Jared's Little Darling
Anzahl der Beiträge : 1869 Alter : 47 Ort : Bayrisch Sibirien Ansehen/Reputation : 14 Anmeldedatum : 2008-07-10
Subject: Re: 4x08 Wishful Thinking November 9th 2008, 11:28
Und hier hab ich für euch mal wieder eine sehr detailierte Review von CW Source, die aus genau diesen Gründen auch hinter nem Spoiler verschwindet..
Spoiler:
Supernatural: Wish I May, Wish I Might...
Posted by Sarah on November 7, 2008 3:04 PM
Supernatural gives us a cautionary tale on that hoary old cliché "be careful what you wish for." Why? Because whatever it is, it will come back and bite you in the butt. That was demonstrated in the form of existentially angsty teddy bears, invisible naked teens, true loves that have lost all sense of perspective, even really bad sunburn. Oh, and if you wish for a jalapeño sub? You're just asking for trouble!
The boys come to town after a woman reports an encounter with a ghost. It came to her as she was getting out of the shower, scaring the crap out of her. When she ran, she fell down the stairs. The ghost followed her downstairs and helped her up, and kept saying "Please, don't tell my mom!" Hee!
After that things get weird weirder. A local (small-h) hunter claims to have encountered Bigfoot, and when the boys check, they see really, really big footprints. They follow them to a liquor store, where they discover the monster cleaned out the foofy drinks and the porn. When they leave the store, they see a cute little girl on her bike, laden down with bottle and porn. She drops it off at the story with a note of apology.
The guys follow her home. The girl is Audrey, and all she ever wanted was a teddy who was big, real and talked. She got it -- but it didn't turn out how she thought. "He's sad all the time! Not ouch sad, but ouch in the head sad. He says weird stuff and smells like the bus!" The teddy is drinking heavily, watching the news, and bemoaning the purposelessness of life. Tea parties just aren't doing it, and when you're tired of tea parties, you're tired of life. And he is -- the teddy tries to shoot his brains out, only to discover that his brains are fluff, and he can't die. The horror! Fortunately, Audrey is staying with a neighbor at that point, so she won't be introduced to existential angst until high school.
Audrey tells the guys how walking-talking-angsting Teddy came about -- she wished for him in the wishing well at the local Chinese restaurant! Dean tests it out and presto, his footlong Italian sub with jalapeno shows up. The well works! The boys pose as health inspectors and shut the restaurant down. The guys find an antique coin that just won't budge -- not even when they come at it with a hammer and crowbar. The coin turns out to be a cursed Babylonian bit that causes chaos. If someone drops that coin in a wishing well, it grants their wish -- along with everyone else's. The only way to turn it off is to get the person who threw the Babylonian coin to take it back and turn the wishes off.
The guys figure out that Wesley Mondale (Ted Raimi!) the geek they've seen with an improbably hot, impossibly smitten woman trailing after him, was patient zero. Wesley is starting to see the downside of his wish -- yes, Hope is smitten with him, but she can't think about anything or anyone else. It's starting to get annoying -- and depressing. He eventually breaks down and tells the guys that yes, he wished from Hope, but no, he doesn't want to wish it away. The boys insist. Hope overhears. Uh-oh.
On the way back to the restaurant, the guys see Todd, a tiny, picked-on kid, hulk out and overturn an SUV full of his tormentors. Well, that's not good. Dean volunteers to take care of the kid while Sam and Wesley get the coin. Wesley is still unsure, but when they get to the restaurant, Sam is hit by a convenient bolt of lightning. Hope wished Sam dead -- she didn't want their love to end. That does it -- Wesley takes back the coin. Todd loses his strength as he's in the process of choking the life out of Dean, but Dean still takes a second to pretend that Todd is still superstrong and warn the bullies against picking on him. Hope forgets that Wesley exists again, but hey, at least Sam's alive.
Everything is back to normal -- Audrey's sunburned, confused parents are back in town, and she's carrying her now-normal teddy (which has a gaping, fluff-spewing head wound. Hee!) The coin is melted down, and all the wishes are gone. But we're not done -- Dean admits that he does remember everything that happened to him in the pit. Sam asks him to talk about it, but Dean refuses. I won't lie anymore, but I won't talk about it. How could you help? Sharing and caring won't heal unspeakable demonic torture. The things he saw, there aren't words. There is no forgetting. There’s no making it better. He can't forget, no matter what, and Sam can't make it right. Sam would never understand, and Dean can't make him understand. Sam's just going to have to deal with the silence.