Road Trip
- Episode aired Jan 14, 2014
- TV-14
- 43m
IMDb RATING
8.9/10
4.1K
YOUR RATING
Dean and Castiel ask Crowley for help in finding Gadreel and getting him out of Sam's body.Dean and Castiel ask Crowley for help in finding Gadreel and getting him out of Sam's body.Dean and Castiel ask Crowley for help in finding Gadreel and getting him out of Sam's body.
Mark Sheppard
- Crowley
- (as Mark A. Sheppard)
Wesley MacInnes
- Corey
- (as Wesley Macinnes)
- …
Tatiana Turner
- Demon with Dog
- (as Tatiana Szalay)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWhen Dean says "Welcome to the party, pal" this references the same quote that John McClain says in Die Hard (1988).
- GoofsDean knows that Castiel is once again an angel, but he burns Kevin's body instead of waiting to see if Castiel is strong enough yet to resurrect him.
- Quotes
Dean Winchester: Cas, I'm sorry.
Castiel: About what?
Dean Winchester: Kicking you out of the bunker. That's uh- you know, not telling you about Sam.
Castiel: His life was at stake.
Dean Winchester: Yeah, I got played.
Castiel: I thought I was saving Heaven. I got played, too.
Dean Winchester: So, you're saying we're both a couple of dumb asses?
Castiel: I prefer the word trusting. Less dumb. Less ass.
- ConnectionsReferences The Bullwinkle Show (1959)
Featured review
Moves the season along nicely. Some nice Crowley moments
One of things I find disappointing in the later seasons (and to a lesser extent in seasons 4, 5) is just how much of each season is devoted to the ongoing plotline. The show is at its best when it is exploring individual stories that connect strongly to the central narrative. The mythos episodes are entertaining but they end up feeling creaky and overburden with narrative debt. This episode is a good example of this tendency while also largely working-that stops happening in later seasons when the show becomes a tired muddle. There is no story in this episode in itself. It is merely a collections of scenes that wrap up prior events or start future ones. It is all entertaining in large part because the writing is crisp enough and the developments are not necessarily predictable. If anything the episode is about Crowley and Sheppard is always entertaining. But something is *missing* in episodes like this. the certain spark that allowed each mythos episode to feel new, exciting and unique.
helpful•51
- CubsandCulture
- Sep 18, 2020
Details
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content