The Columbus Dispatch

‘Supernatur­al’ stars reflect on CW show’s 15-year legacy

- Brian Truitt

After 15 years of CW’S “Supernatur­al,” Jensen Ackles admits that he and co-star Jared Padalecki aren’t very good at taking compliment­s or credit for the horror show’s epic run.

On their final day in Vancouver last September filming the series finale (which aired Thursday), when director Robert Singer called it a wrap and everybody else had walked off the set, the actors did something new: They basked in the moment.

“It was like, ‘We did this.’ That was pretty cool,’” Ackles recalls. “I mean, obviously we know that we didn’t do it by ourselves, but it was really the first time that he and I looked at each other and (realized) we should be proud of what we’ve built here. Because it Is something to be proud of.”

Adds Padalecki: “It wasn’t like, ‘Hey, look how awesome we are.’ It was like, ‘Hey, man, remember when we cried and we bled and we broke bones – literally? Remember all the alarm clocks when the sun wasn’t up yet?’ However this turns out, however it’s received, we gave it everything.”

The last episode of “Supernatur­al,” which followed a retrospect­ive special, finishes the story of monster-hunting brothers Sam (Padalecki) and Dean Winchester (Ackles), who began their long, winding, apocalypse-filled quest after tragedy and have since taken on every foe that heaven, hell and everywhere in between has thrown at them, usually set to a rock tune. (The final episode’s title, “Carry On,” is a riff on the 1970s Kansas hit “Carry On Wayward Son,” which became the show’s unofficial theme song.)

Even without Emmy Awards, “Supernatur­al” has become a classic show – finding new fans through Netflix binges and TNT reruns – and a survivor, a final holdover from WB (which folded in 2007) that’s outlasted many, many shows that have come and gone since its Sept. 13, 2005, premiere. Only a few prime-time network dramas have lasted longer, including “Grey’s Anatomy” (which premiered six months earlier), “Law & Order: SVU” (1999) and “NCIS” (2003).

“Not surprising­ly, as a 15-year-old show, ‘Supernatur­al’ is in some ways a little bit of an artifact of a different age of television,” says executive producer Andrew Dabb.

The previous week’s penultimat­e episode wrapped up the larger “Supernatur­al” mythology of angels and demons, as Sam and Dean outwitted God, aka Chuck (Rob Benedict), and their ally Jack (Alexander Calvert), the son of Lucifer and the new bearer of God’s power, said goodbye to the brothers after the world was saved.

The finale, in contrast, tells “a very personal story” centered on the Winchester­s and is “really devoted to the relationsh­ip and the journey these guys have traveled,” says Singer, an executive producer on the show since its inception.

Singer adds that they eliminated certain ideas early: No “enigmatic” final shot a la “The Sopranos,” for example, or nothing out of left field like the 1988 “St. Elsewhere” finale, when the audience found out a boy with autism had imagined the entire series, visualized in a snow globe.

“We wanted it to feel like the end of a very long novel,” Singer says. “It’s pretty bold what we did and quite moving.”

Padalecki, 38, finds it “really powerful. And if you’re not already crying by the last five or 10 minutes, then you don’t have a soul. You don’t have a heart.”

Down the road, Ackles would like people to talk about “Supernatur­al” the way he does about 1980s favorites like “The Goonies” or “Flight of the Navigator.”

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