Hammer of the Gods
- Episode aired Apr 22, 2010
- TV-14
- 1h
IMDb RATING
9.0/10
6.3K
YOUR RATING
The Winchesters are abducted by a group of renegade gods who want to use them as a bargaining tool to stop the apocalypse.The Winchesters are abducted by a group of renegade gods who want to use them as a bargaining tool to stop the apocalypse.The Winchesters are abducted by a group of renegade gods who want to use them as a bargaining tool to stop the apocalypse.
Keith Dallas
- Ganesh
- (as Keith Blackman Dallas)
William J. Phillips
- Convenience Store Clerk
- (as William Phillips)
Austin Basis
- Kenny Spruce
- (uncredited)
A.J. Buckley
- Ed Zeddmore
- (uncredited)
Brittany Ishibashi
- Maggie Zeddmore
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
So many hurt religious people criticising this episode. Get a life. All religion is make believe like these episodes.
Even in the episode it was mentioned that the Pagangods were weakened because not many people believed in them anymore. But even an atheist would have thoughts about the devil. Everyone knows who he is and that gives him power so the fact that he was able to defeat them so easily doesn't make the gods weak, it just meant that he had more people believing in him that made him stronger. Just think about it though, because before I even watched this I didn't even know who Odin or Kali were. I didn't even know about Loki until I saw this episode and if I didn't know, just think about anyone else who probably watched it and had no clue. But the devil? Everyone could recall who he is even if they hadn't read the bible.
This is one of the very best episodes of the show. The story is just goofy enough, with enough wit and charm to be fun. There is just enough blood and guts that the episode ends up being a little scary. And there is enough of the ongoing arch that this episode feels needed to fill in the pieces.
The show has always taken the side of humanity, every day life over the supernatural. The ethos of the show is to embrace the warts of every person because of being human is to be alive. It has a working class vibe and the boys don't intellectualize all that often. Gabriel saying the Lucifer that he would shiv Michael if he was here too is the best expression of the show's central them in its entire run.
Add in the show at least tries to de-westernize the underlying mythology-Kali complaining about Western arrogance really hits home-and this is a really great episode.
The show has always taken the side of humanity, every day life over the supernatural. The ethos of the show is to embrace the warts of every person because of being human is to be alive. It has a working class vibe and the boys don't intellectualize all that often. Gabriel saying the Lucifer that he would shiv Michael if he was here too is the best expression of the show's central them in its entire run.
Add in the show at least tries to de-westernize the underlying mythology-Kali complaining about Western arrogance really hits home-and this is a really great episode.
So funny when Dean asks Kali "How you doin'?".
I have always thought that Dean looks - and acts - a lot like Joey in Friends and I have been waiting for him to say that line - in that voice.
Loved it!
I have always thought that Dean looks - and acts - a lot like Joey in Friends and I have been waiting for him to say that line - in that voice.
Loved it!
Did you know
- TriviaThe Elysian Fields are the part of the Greek mythological Underworld where the souls of the heroic and the virtuous go.
- GoofsActors who play the gods match the origins of the respective deities (Kali looks distinctly Indian, Odin matches the looks of a stereotypical Scandinavian, Zao Shen is played by a Chinese actor etc.), yet Ganesha, a Hindu deity, is inexplicably portrayed by an actor of African, not Indian descent.
- ConnectionsFeatured in MsMojo: Top 10 Friends References in Other Shows (2024)
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