8/10
Haven't you seen Pet Sematary?
1 November 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Sam suggests visiting Mary's grave, while Dean is uncomfortable with the idea claiming that the grave is not more than a headstone put by a stranger, since after the fire there was no body to bury. Sam, who sees that this was about her memory rather than just visiting a grave, suggests that Dean drop him off and go to the "Roadhouse", But he doesn't want to leave Sam alone, he doesn't want to be alone and most important he doesn't fit there. So he goes with Sam but refuses to go near the grave, only to find himself near another of some "Loving father". Clearly still unable to deal with John's death, he wanders away till he stumbles on a grave of a girl buried a few days earlier with dead plants in a perfect circle around it. Believing that Dean is just imagining things, Sam is not interested to look it up, But Dean insists to check things out. It turns out that the grave belongs to a girl called Amanda who died in a car accident after discovering that her boyfriend was cheating on her. Neil, Amanda's friend and secret admirer brings her back through some necromantic spell in Ancient Greek. Furthermore, Amanda is dangerous, she kills her former boyfriend and goes after the girl with whom he cheated on her. Not knowing how to kill her, the boys lure her back to her grave and rebury her, however Sam ends up breaking his wrist.

On "children shouldn't play with dead things", Dean voices to Sam for the first time his anger towards John death and his guilt as he thinks John made some unknown deal to trade his life for Dean's.

My favourite seen is when Dean was pouring out his anger on Angela's father, thinking he was the one who brought her back. (He was probably visualizing John, slashing him for bringing him back to life, referring to the zombies as "viscous, violent and so nasty that they rot the ground around them" which was actually the way he sees himself after coming back to life).

I just wish that Sam would have said something to comfort Dean, any thing. Like how much he meant to him, how much he needs him. but I guess no words could do the job.
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