Buffy the Vampire Slayer 7.13 | "The Killer in Me"

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Buffy the Vampire Slayer 7.13 | "The Killer in Me"
Hallucination!Daniel helping annoying Sam in "Grace"
5.01 | 7.13
7.13, but with fem!dean (or deanna)
this means there must be some ancient tribe of men, similar to the amazons, who mate with women, impregnate them, and in a very short time, these women, unaware of the pregnancy (because they don't have normal symptoms or a swollen belly, as is common), give birth to the next generations. This is how they reproduce
which means that dean will suffer a sudden labor after having slept with this mysterious man the day before. There's no time, and Sam assists the delivery. Dean feels it from the moment her water suddenly breaks. She shouts to sam that something is coming, and sam is desperate: "hospital?!" "no, sam, it's coming! it's coming now!" she feels it, she feels it. Sam picks her up, lays her on the bed, and dean starts pushing. In less than five minutes, there's a baby in sam's arms, and dean is in shock because she's just given birth to a damn baby. Sam realizes this while dean is holding the baby and makes the connection: "the victims, they also gave birth days before. They didn't realize it, and they gave birth... three times, four times. It's not a coincidence, dean." Damn, dean is barely trying to process that she just gave birth, and the baby in her arms is nursing from her. And sam wants to talk about the case? well, not exactly. Sam is worried sick because he wants to say that whatever killed those women will come for dean and the baby too
while sam looks for something to eat because dean is yelling at her (sam didn't want to leave her alone), the baby is kidnapped, and now they're desperate to find him. Everything unfolds exactly as in the original episode. The boy grows incredibly fast, appears in the apartment when sam isn't there, and tries to kill dean. Dean tries to convince him not to... she held him in her arms, felt his warmth. The boy doesn't seem to give up, and sam kills him without further hesitation
after this incident, dean goes through a terrible ordeal. They even take a break from the leviathans. In the car, after what happened, sam tries to tell her that the boy was a monster, but dean insists that he also came from her; she gave birth to him, and now he's gone
(it's the closest she ever came to being a mother, and she still remembers sam holding the baby with great excitement)
happy mothers day dean winchester
joshdonna + "hi"
requested by @explosionsintheskyy
Damn, I know everyone has already said this, but First Person Shooter really is a bad episode. Like. They never even explained how the game worked?? Like is it VR? Projections? How was it killing people? Or why they didn't just like open up the door to the room when people were starting to die? Like, the whole thing reads like something I wrote when I was twelve.
Like "Hello my name is Jade Blue Afterglow. I fight with a 14th century broadsword and dodge bullets with backflips. And I feed on testosterone." And also the little melodramatic run the programmer girl does from the room and then Scully going after her, and the whole exchange between them and like... Idk how to put it into words but like..... all the shots.... the whole script...... it would be funny if it weren't like..... so pitiful compared to the usual level of x files writing? Like, I can't believe this is a real script. That they okay'd this.
I feel like part of the problem is that the X Files usually benefits from kind of being vague/mysterious with the phenomenon they encounter, it's like the whole vibe of the show. (Which is interesting, since other sci-fi shows rely on at least implied specificity through techno-babble.) However, being really vague with a premise like this really does not work... it ends up just being sci-fi done badly. If they wanted to go in this direction they ought to have tried something like... "oh look we found this video game on a hard drive in like a landfill somewhere, I wonder where it came from or what it does...?" They've had some episodes that still honored the mysteriousness of the X Files premise, while still dealing with techno-anxieties, AI, and etc.
The only people on the team who gets a pass on this one is the costume/props department, cause the one good thing to come out of this episode is that Mulder and Scully DO look cool asf.
The X Files 7.13 – "First Person Shooter"