Difference between revisions of "1.10 Asylum"

From Super-wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Remove dead link for sides for Gavin & Kat)
Line 118: Line 118:
 
|Minutiae=
 
|Minutiae=
 
|Sides_Scripts_Transcripts=
 
|Sides_Scripts_Transcripts=
* [http://supernatural.oscillating.net/scripts/asylum.zip Sides for Gavin & Kat (zipped pdf files).]
 
 
* [[1.10 Asylum (transcript)]]
 
* [[1.10 Asylum (transcript)]]
  

Revision as of 07:42, 24 November 2012


Promotional image from Asylum
Title Asylum
Episode # Season 1, Episode 10
First aired 22 November, 2005
Directed by Guy Bee
Written by Richard Hatem
On IMDB http://imdb.com/title/tt0713610/
Outline Sam and Dean are trapped in an abandoned Asylum with a ghost who causes extreme rage in its victims.
Monster Ghost
Timeline 6-8 April, 2006 (speculation)
Location(s) Rockford, Illinois
[[{{{prevep}}}|« Previous Episode]] | [[{{{nextep}}}|Next Episode »]]

Synopsis

At the deserted Roosevelt Asylum, in Rockford, Illinois, police officers Walter Kelly and Danny Gunderson rouse some kids who have broken into the asylum. Afterwards Walter Kelly goes home and inexplicably shoot his wife and himself.

Sam has been checking up on their contacts - Caleb, Jefferson, Pastor Jim - to see if John has been in touch. While Sam and Dean argue about John’s whereabouts, Dean receives a text message from him, containing coordinates. The boys travel to Rockford and speak to Danny Gunderson about his partner’s death, who tells them that his partner chased the kids into the south wing of the asylum.

They find reference in John’s journal to kids who disappeared from the south wing in 1972. After a brief visit to the asylum, Sam and Dean track down a psychiatrist, James Ellicott, whose father Sanford Ellicott was the Chief of Staff at the asylum. Sam poses as a patient, and finds out from Dr Ellicott that the south wing housed the criminally insane, and that in 1964 the patients rioted, killing Dr Ellicott, whose body was never found.

The boys return to the asylum, where they discover Kat, who has been separated from her boyfriend Gavin. She insists on helping the boys find Gavin, and she goes with Dean while Sam goes off on his own. Sam finds a terrified Gavin who says that a ghost kissed him and tried to whisper something to him.

Meanwhile Kat is trapped in a room with a ghost, and Dean is unable to open the door. When Sam arrives he works out that it is trying to communicate with her, not hurt her. It whispers "One thirty-seven" to her, before it leaves, which the boys deduce is a room number.

While Dean goes to find the room, Sam tries to lead the kids out, but finds they are trapped. He leaves Kat with a shotgun to protect them, and responds to a phone call he thinks is from Dean.

Dean finds journals documenting Dr. Ellicott’s cruel experiments designed to test his theories that provoking extreme anger in patients would be therapeutic. When he finds Sam has left Kat and Gavin to respond to the phone call, which Dean didn’t make, Dean takes off to find him.

Dean finds Sam in the basement, and then locates a secret door which he thinks led to the hidden procedure room where the experiments were carried out. As he prepares to open it, Sam shoots him in the chest with rocksalt, blasting him through the fake wall. Standing over Dean, Sam expresses his rage at Dean, for thwarting his attempts to find John. Dean hands over his gun to Sam, who fires it repeatedly at Dean, only to find it is not loaded.

Dean overpowers Sam, and knocks him out. He searches the room and finds the corpse of Dr Ellicott, stuffed in a cabinet. As he prepares to salt and burn it, the ghost of Dr Ellicott appears and attacks Dean, until Dean manages to toss his Zippo onto he corpse. As it burns, the ghost disappears.

Sam recovers and seems unaffected. The boys escort Kat and Gavin from the asylum.

The next morning, while the boys sleep, Dean’s cell phone rings. Sam answers the phone – it’s John.

Characters

Definitions

Music

  • Bachman-Turner Overdrive – Hey You

Quotes

Kat (to Gavin): If we make it out of here alive…we are so breaking up.
Kat: So, how do you guys know about all this ghost stuff?

Sam: It’s kind of our job.
Kat: Why would anyone want a job like that?

Sam: I had a crappy guidance counselor.
Dean: You’re not gonna try to kill me, are you?

Sam: No.

Dean: Good. Because that would be awkward.

Trivia & References

Filming Location: Riverview Hospital; The Old Terminal Pub
Dean: I'm Nigel Tufnel, from the Chicago Tribune.
Spinal Tap: This Is Spinal Tap is a 1984 documentary, directed by Rob Reiner about heavy-metal glam rock band Spinal Tap.
Dean: [to Sam about John] I love the guy, but I swear he writes like friggin' Yoda.
Yoda is a character in the Star Wars universe. Yoda speaks in an unusual manner by placing verbs (and more frequently, auxiliary verbs) after the object and subject. In linguistic typology this is the "Object Subject Verb" format. A typical example of Yoda's speech pattern is from Return of the Jedi: "When 900 years old you reach, look as good you will not."
Dean: [to Sam] Let me know if you see any dead people, Haley Joel.
Haley Joel Osment starred in The Sixth Sense, in which he played 9-year old Cole Sear. Cole has psychic abilities; he "sees dead people," and is rather emotionally scarred by this ability.
Dean: Hey, Sam, who do you think is a hotter psychic: Patricia Arquette, Jennifer Love Hewitt, or you?
Arquette plays psychic Allison DuBois in the TV series Medium; Hewitt plays psychic Melinda Gordon in the TV series Ghost Whisperer.
Dean: Man, electroshock, lobotomies, they did some twisted stuff to these people. Kind of like my man Jack in Cuckoo's Nest.
Jack Nicholson played Randle McMurphy in the 1975 film One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (based on the novel by Ken Kesey). McMurphy, a serial petty criminal who has been sentenced to a fairly short prison term, decides to have himself declared insane so he'll be transferred to a mental institution, where he expects to serve the rest of his time in (comparative) comfort and luxury. Of course, the institution is a very bad place, and very bad things happen (all completely "natural"), but I don't want to spoil anything. :)
Dean: Spirits driving them insane. Kind of like my man Jack in The Shining.
Another reference to The Shining, a film in which Dean's Man Jack (Nicholson) plays a writer driven insane and homicidal by a haunted hotel.
Sam: No, Dean, I mean it was weird that she didn't attack me.

Dean: Looked pretty aggro from where I was standing.

"Aggro" is a common slang term originating in Britain and widely used in Australia, South Africa and New Zealand. It can be used to describe aggressive behaviour, or a situation that is a source of irritation to the speaker (e.g. "These roadworks are causing more aggro than they're worth," he muttered.) Dean probably picked up this term from association with tourists while on the road, as the term is not widely used in the States.
Could also possibly be a reference to computer gaming: the term "aggro" is used as a measure of how much hate/aggression a computer-generated foe holds for a player. The more aggro something has for you, the more likely it is to attack you. Whether Dean would be familiar with gaming terms is questionable.
Dean: All work and no play makes Doctor Ellicot a very dull boy.
Yet another reference to The Shining. This is possibly Dean's favorite movie. This line refers to a scene in the movie where Jack Nicholson's character, Jack, has been supposedly writing for months. His wife has heard him, day after day, pounding away on his typewriter. Finally, when he is elsewhere, curiosity get the better of her. She walks to the typewriter, and sees the sheet in place. Written on it are endless repetitions of the single sentence "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy." She looks through the stack of papers neatly placed to the side with increasing horror; the book Jack was working on consists of only the repetitions and permutations of layout of that same sentence. Over and over, through hundreds of pages.
Dean: Doctor Feelgood was working on some sort of, like, extreme rage therapy.
Most likely a reference to the Mötley Crüe album because, well, it's Dean.
The background story of this episode is similar to the 1999 film House on Haunted Hill starring Geoffrey Rush and Famke Janssen. Both involve ghosts of professors at abandoned mental asylums who carried out twisted procedures on their subjects.
Kat later appeared on the Hunter's Blog, although it has no content, and there is no confirming evidence it is the same character.
The episode was filmed at the Riverview Hospital, a location used in other Supernatural episodes and many Vancouver-shot TV shows. See also Shooting Locations

Minutiae

Sides, Scripts & Transcripts

Promotion

File:Asylum Promo Poster.jpg
Promotional poster for Asylum