» » Сверхъестественное Man's Best Friend with Benefits (2005– )

Сверхъестественное Man's Best Friend with Benefits (2005– ) Online

Сверхъестественное Man's Best Friend with Benefits (2005– ) Online
Original Title :
Manu0027s Best Friend with Benefits
Genre :
TV Episode / Drama / Fantasy / Horror / Mystery / Thriller
Year :
2005–
Directror :
John F. Showalter
Cast :
Jared Padalecki,Jensen Ackles,Christian Campbell
Writer :
Eric Kripke,Brad Buckner
Type :
TV Episode
Time :
43min
Rating :
7.7/10
Сверхъестественное Man's Best Friend with Benefits (2005– ) Online

The brothers are called to help cop acquaintance James Framton, now a police detective in East St. Louis, who fears his nightmares about committing ripper murders may be true, especially after finding his bloody shirt in the trash. The help cry actually was faked by his 'familiar' Portia, who approaches Sam in her canine form, and admits James became a witch, mentored by local Spencer Wallis. Posing as FBI agent, Sam worries, finding James's cop colleague Ed Stoltz seems building up a case against him. Portia's feline colleague Phillippe LeChat is part of a trap, which has the brothers puzzled which side anyone is on, while Sam works on why Dean is so reluctant to let him try the triple challenge from the tablet.
Episode cast overview:
Jared Padalecki Jared Padalecki - Sam Winchester
Jensen Ackles Jensen Ackles - Dean Winchester
Christian Campbell Christian Campbell - James Frampton
Mishael Morgan Mishael Morgan - Portia
Curtis Caravaggio Curtis Caravaggio - Spencer Wallis
Serge Houde Serge Houde - Ed Stoltz
Sebastian Gacki Sebastian Gacki - Phillippe LeChat
James Pizzinato James Pizzinato - Drexyl
Darcey Johnson Darcey Johnson - Josh
Winson Won Winson Won - Miles
Britney Katelyn Miller Britney Katelyn Miller - Hooker (as Britney Miller)
Adrian Neblett Adrian Neblett - Blind Victim
Michael Vairo Michael Vairo - John

The cat familiar that Dean is introduced to in the witch bar is named Philippe Lechat, which means "the cat" in French. This is a shout out to the Belgian comic Lechat by Philippe Geluck.

The building facade used for the witches club is the same facade used for Paddy's in "Its Always Sunny in Philadelphia".

We learn that Dean is allergic to cats.

Although the Winchesters knows James from a previous case, James Frampton never appeared in a previous episode.

Spencer refers to James' relationship with Portia as being all "Bella and Edward". This is a reference to the protagonists of the wildly popular Twilight series of books and novels. The Twilight movies were filmed in the lot right next to the Supernatural lot in Vancouver.

The name James Frampton may be yet another nod to the world of rock. Peter Frampton is a well known singer/guitarist.

During Spencer's memory spell, Dean sees Mary burning on the ceiling in their old home. However, Dean was not present in the room, only John Winchester witnessed her death.

Christian Campbell is guest starring in this episode. "Christian Campbell" is also the name of a character (played by Corin Nemec) from season 6

The witch killing spell the Winchesters were going to use on James was first introduced in Shut Up, Dr. Phil season 7 episode 5. As of yet the spell has not been used to kill a witch except Spencer.

Sam and Dean willingly return to St. Louis despite John's rule of not returning to a town where they had worked a job before (Unforgiven). This is also despite the fact that Dean was briefly wanted for murder here in "Skin" and that their Leviathan doppelgangers committed mass murder in a diner. Despite this, no one seems to recognize them, not even the police. Sam and Dean also make no attempt to hide themselves from the police and approach them openly. **The Leviathan doppelgangers were incapacitated and the brothers are, once again, thought to be dead by the law. This means that the people of St. Louis would not be watching for the brothers.

Body count: 4


User reviews

inform

inform

...because it was a truly awful one of Supernatural. If I didn't know the writers credited for this episode have credits on episodes dating all the way back to the first season (including some I really liked), I'd accuse them of never having watched the show before. The "witch community" featured in the episode a) comes out of nowhere, and b) isn't consistent with what we've seen of witches on Supernatural at any point in the preceding 7.5 seasons... was this a script for a different show where witches do hang out in an underground bar and sling lightning bolts around?

And even if that were the case, putting it back into its "native habitat" wouldn't erase some highly troubling things pertaining to the character Portia.

If I were advising a friend who was starting the show from the beginning, I'd probably point out a few other episodes that fell a little flat and could probably be skipped. This is the one I'd tell them outright not to waste 40 minutes on. It gets a 3 based on "production wasn't too bad", but I kind of want my time back.
Brick my own

Brick my own

Just saw this episode again on a TNT repeat. I forgot about it, frankly. I remember disliking it because as others have mentioned, it wasn't a Winchester story. In fact, it felt like one of those Supernatural episodes that you find out was supposed to be a back door pilot. I don't think that is the case here, but I think I might have liked it if this had become its own show. The detective is intriguing and well cast. Almost perfectly Gothic noir. Reminded me a LOT of Mike Carey's LUCIFER comic (that happens to me a lot watching Supernatural).

But the problem is that it feels so OFF as a Supernatural episode. We're told these characters have history with the boys, and that right there for us die hards is frustrating. Because we're sitting there trying to remember and it turns out it is a one and done situation, not a call back.

We're also asked to care about characters to a level I think is unrealistic since we don't know them. We're not invested. It's as if we're supposed to be just because we are TOLD the Winchesters are invested (at least Sam is).

Without getting all rambling, I'll just say it felt like a half baked premise that could have been so much more. Last few seasons we keep hearing how CW is trying to get a Supernatural spin off going and I'm thinking, hell, this would have been a good candidate. Just give us a couple more episodes with these people and then let them go on their merry way.

That ship sailed, I suppose.
Hrguig

Hrguig

I work in the film industry and write for TV and film myself. I'm an award-winning scriptwriter, a director, and jack-of-all-trades in the film industry. I also watch a LOT of great TV. This is what I wrote about this episode:

Just finished watching one of the best TV episodes I've ever seen. Supernatural, season 8, episode 15. Brilliantly done. Incredibly intelligent writing. Excellent dialogue full of rich subtext, sometimes as much as two layers deep. Great story that works well as a standalone package, fits the series episode format, doesn't give too much away, has surprising twists, and some plot events that leave you on a cliffhanger with two equally possible scenarios of what's actually happening, then comes back later, advances them both further and yet still keeps you hanging. Same level of complexity with subplots. Showed solid development in the main plot arc and the main season arc. Introduced a solid advance on a major shift in the character dynamic between the brothers over the last couple of episodes, and shows their relationship go through a very strong arc within the episode and come out much deeper and better for it. Shows the brothers working at cross purposes, so that they are competing rather than cooperating, and that creates a whole lot of plot and character and relationship impact through the conflict in scenes through the entire episode. Referenced the critical events in the characters story arcs, kept the characters completely in character, introduced some very clever new ones, brought out superb performances from all the main cast. Even the guest stars had a relationship arc that worked well, full of depth, a picture of two people in love but beset not only by events, but also by internal conflict in themselves and also internal conflict in their relationship. Lots of excellent, truly funny and intelligent humour that references in-jokes running through the series. Plenty of reward for fans who have been watching the series, because there's so much depth. Strong conflict, nail-biting climax that really hits hard with the characters being forced to face deepest fears. Surprising story twists that are fully explained and never demand suspension of disbelief. Some extremely clever devices that work within the context of the episode plot to resolve the main story arc.

Boom. Pretty much as close to a perfect piece of TV writing as I've ever seen. Truly a superb script.
Undeyn

Undeyn

Boring! As Supernatural tries to reinvent itself Man's Best Friend with Benefits is the mixing of Vampire diaries, and Supernatural. Supernatural's Man's Best Friend with Benefits had genre of clichés, up tight scornful characters, jealous rivals, and lovers who sacrifice for each other. The lighting and directing exactly was like Vampire diaries. The episode involves helping a cop that helped the boys before. I do not remember the character at all in any other episodes. . Is there a discrepancy here? I found the story and direction too soap operaish, but my wife loved the episode. I give this episode a 3 and my wife gives it a 7. Cut it down the middle the above mentioned episode is a 5 out of 10.
Steep

Steep

This was a boring episode. I don't know if we've seen this Frampton guy before, but I don't remember him and glad I don't. Something about this guy just bugged me. Maybe it was because he was sleeping with his dog. I'm also bummed they didn't explain the history or lore behind familiars. Another thing, I never much like the witches episodes. They seem to have no limit to their power, but not in a cool god like way, as they are usually just regular people. Why don't Sam and Dean start using more witchcraft like things? They would be way stronger to kill demons and monsters? Also, this was entirely outside of the main story line, which typically happens about this time during the seasons. Hopefully this is the last joke of an episode before they get serious about extending the plot towards the finale.