Devil’s Bargain


In the same way it was readily apparent Crowley wasn’t of the mind to betray the plan – that he would stick with the devil he knew (excuse the pun) in the form Sam and Dean – it was just as obvious Rowena was a wild card. Any safe bet would have been on traitor from the jump. Rowena always brings such fun even in the darkest of circumstance and this was no exception: she’s manipulative, self-centred, forward-thinking as a master chess player yet pouty as a two-year-old and never short for quips. Again, one of the best moments was the reaction to the news of Amara as God’s sister – but even this was topped by her squeeful delight at hearing Lucifer’s name.
All told, watching Sam, Dean, Crowley and Rowena together was brilliant fun even if the situation at hand was so tense I didn’t exhale for 42 minutes, give or take. Each character plays well with the others and knows exactly the right point to press to get the other to do what they want – exchange between Crowley and Rowena are particularly entertaining: full of acidic barbs and twisted mother-son drama.
This deal was on the books from the start, watching it come together – at least part of it in some way or another – did not disappoint.
Raising Lucifer

Finally, the nitty gritty of the vision, the Cage, the who, how, what, when and where. Dean and Sam hash it all out and Sam is more passionately convinced these visions are from God than ever (burning bushes aren’t signatures, let’s all make a note of that, and can be forged) which finally persuaded Dean to at least explore a possibility of a conversation with Lucifer. The plan was well thought out: Crowley can’t afford to free Lucifer, so it is in his interest to ensure the Cage stays firmly and totally locked; he has access to the Cage and really, if it’s a chat with Satan they need, then there is no reason Sam can’t be outside those bars like a detective talking to a psychopath in an isolation prison cell.
Of course, this is exactly how it should have, and nearly did, all play out. Except for two not-so-minor details: the Cage sucked Sam in and it wasn’t God talking to Sam. This was a twist I didn’t expect. Lucifer (or another dark entity sending the visions)? Definitely. Rowena doing something wonky with the markings? Yes. Sam giving in to the vessel requests? Maybe. Lucifer getting out? Yes. Sam going into the Cage? Yes. But Sam going into the Cage after a conversation with Lucifer and realizing he wasn’t getting the information he need and discovering it was Lucifer all along who planted the visions? Umm….no.
The entire event of raising Lucifer was a creative way of getting to exactly what the season has seemed to be heading toward in the most unanticipated way. The writers manipulated the expectations cleverly and played with the anticipations throughout the episode. It took time to put together the deal between Rowena, Crowley and the Winchesters; as well for Rowena to find the spell translations, yet there wasn’t the loss of time within the episode itself or a sense of deadline: this took place fairly quickly. Lucifer himself arrived in flourish and flame and was – not unexpectedly – suave, charming and mostly unhelpful for all his chatter while passing the time building to his offer. Again, a deal from Lucifer wasn’t unanticipated either, not really.

Masterful Manipulations
After so many years, it was eerie to see these characters together again. Nevertheless, it was a welcome delight to watch Jared and Mark play off one another: Mark Pellegrino plays such a fun Lucifer, so charming and manipulative – he knows he has something the other guy wants and he entertains himself watching them wiggle on the hook asking for the favour. Meanwhile, Sam is encountering not only the traumatic past the cage and Lucifer represent but he is fulfilling his Godly visions and might be able to ascertain something to stop Amara, so he is acting humble and hesitant for much of the conversation. Quite a dichotomy.


Dark Bliss


More and more, Amara presents like a lost child than pure evil. Though unquestionably she goes about things wholly wrong and needs to be stopped: is there any element to her that seems to be, and forgive the cliché, looking for love? She seems too impassioned in her angry search for her brother to just want vengeance. So the question is: what is the rest of that story? (The one that doesn’t have a Daddy).
Bonding Time

The longer Dean and Amara stood together, the higher my uncomfortable levels rose. My god, they have chemistry in such a terrible way! It’s intense, binding and makes me want to snatch Dean and run away somewhere safe. This was an odd seduction if ever there was, but in a good way. The dialogue reveals so much about Amara and as far as exposition goes, Supernatural has mastered the art of keeping it interesting. Never mind that Dean and Amara together keep the viewer on the edge of their seats just for shear instability and unknowns that are the foundation of the entire relationship. Having said all that, the more Amara talks and the more we learn about her and that she is more a searching, hurt soul than an evil that needs vanquishing. She’s not a good guy, undoubtedly, but she isn’t the same as many of the villains the Winchesters have crossed before either.

Amara cannot be killed by the Angel-Blade, but Dean was able to overcome his don’t-stab-Amara tendency to attempt to kill her. Or, did he really know on some level it wouldn’t work? This entire scene made me anxious. Dean looked confused and unhappy, but the souls in Amara are an interesting bit of information as well. We know she took in a number of demonic souls – does this mean an answer to defeating her lies in there somehow? Who else is rolling around inside Amara? Where does the answer to Amara lie then: loving her, killing her, ensouling her or humanizing her? Theories?
Standout Visuals
As has been especially consistent this season, there are some spectacular images throughout this episode. This plot affords a dark pallor through most of the story and the grim tones and shadows are done beautifully.
Hell and Lucifer’s cage in particular are darkly manifested, striking pictures. The sigils (lit up or dark) with the fire around the Cage, which appears on a platform, while Lucifer prowls and Sam hesitantly lays out his case offers nothing less than we’ve come to expect from the art/set department and underscores the enormity of the moments, the darkness of the players and power in the room.


Finally, every exchange with Amara in the field cuts a strong picture but individually the two that stand out most are her encounter with Dean and the final engagement with the descending angels. Each moments speaks to two separate levels of Amara. One, Dean and Amara alone in the wide, colourless field with Amara still the dark figure but so much less imposing and more alone looking that she has been throughout the episode to this point. Two, as the angels begin to descend Amara is an arresting figure once again – though alone she is powerful, dangerous and unstoppable against the sky, field and oncoming clouds of Heavenly forces.


This episode was rich with optical highlights as the entire season has been. Almost every scene had something worth noting. What was your standout moment?
Final Thoughts
Forty-two intense, flowing minutes ripe with drama, dark storyline and as many answers as questions. Season eleven has been delightfully exceptional and this white-knuckled-heart-clenching, stomach-dropping, can’t-breathe-right mid-season finale did not break pattern. Just reflecting again on the episode makes me anxious. Sam is stuck in the Cage with a manipulative Lucifer, Rowena was in on the game – though Crowley wasn’t – Dean doesn’t yet know what’s going on. Who’s going to make that call? Many angels are about to die at Amara’s hand and she’s got eyes on Dean for their bonding opportunities. Questions we’re left with? Did Sam know Rowena’s seals would fail and/or plan with her to get into the cage? What about Michael? Will Dean ask Amara for help with Sam in the Cage? Where is God, exactly? And finally – where the heck is Castiel when all this is going down?!
So yes, it was awesome. What did you think? Thoughts, theories, questions and speculation below!
Comments
So, no I didn't hate it. It was a good episode, just needed more action and more definitive threats. But it's hard for me to be on the edge of my seat because there's so much uncertainty. Is Sam REALLY in the cage or is that all some kind of trick by Lucifer or Rowena or ..... Gabriel.... hehehe. Are the visions REALLY from Lucifer? Is Amara REALLY in heaven?, because if she is, then I think that's exactly where she wants to be and she played all the Angels for fools. She's looking for God, so I'm pretty sure her ending up in heaven was part of a plan she had.
I can appreciate that we don't have any answers to these questions yet, but for me, knowing at least some of them would help me be more tense about what's coming. Because if the answer is "no" to any of those questions, then I'm truly not worried at all for what's coming next. LOL. Sounds a bit harsh, but just sayin'.
I'm anxious to see what's coming, I just wish I was more nervous and worried and "left on the edge of my seat" like a cliffhanger usually makes me feel. But, because there's uncertainty about Lucifer and that cage and Rowena's spell, I just can't get myself worked up about anything yet. So, we'll see.
reach even outer for Sam... Puzzling. Personally, I'd kill an angel (a bad one) to know what's in store for us.