IGN: âNew Supernatural Showrunner on His Plans for Season 8â
(...) IGN: Was it exciting for you, daunting, or a little of both that you werenât going to be a part of setting up these storylines as much as seeing, âThis is the last crisis weâve left them with,â and kind of figuring out where those puzzle pieces will fit?
Carver: I donât know if youâre a fan of Top Chef?
IGN: Yes, I am, actually!
Carver: The Top Chef challenge where one chef starts, and then the other chef is blindfolded and has to come in and start? Itâs a little bit like that. The show always has the base to fall back on, which is the brothers. You can go a lot of different directions as long as these guys are at the center of it. So yeah, it was very exciting, but coming off a couple years where I was starting something -- thatâs still something Iâm still working through. Youâre being held to such an enormous canon. Itâs very easy to be in the room and throw something out there, and someoneâs like, âYou canât do that. We did that. We canât do that.â That said, itâs worth it. I think the staff is feeling very invigorated and fun, and theyâre introducing new characters and lots of new structural things to the show. It feels like weâre doing our best to keep things fresh and exciting.
IGN: Piggybacking off of what you just said about not wanting to repeat things, weâve seen storylines about both Sam and Dean returning from Hell and the very different way that that shaped them and they dealt with it. How will Deanâs time in Purgatory shape him, and how do you make it different from what happened before?
Carver: Iâll say this: each brother had starkly different transformative experiences over this past time that they were apart from each other. I think, first and foremost, theyâre still dealing within themselves about how itâs affected them, both emotionally and in the relationships that have sprung up in their time alone. Itâs the process of starting to be able to relate with each other anew that forms a lot of the basis for that -- at least in the earlier episodes. I think one of the things thatâs nice is that thereâs always secrets and everything, but what happens when it completely changes your outlook on life or who you are or what you want to be in 15 years? I often say itâs like when you talk to your best friend when youâre 20 and then you talk to them differently when youâre 30, because life is catching up to you. (...) IGN: When I spoke to Jared at Comic-Con, he talked about the fact that Sam is trying something Dean tried and failed at, which is to make a life away from this all and to find someone to settle down with. We know, from the beginning the series, that Sam is different guy than Dean. Might he be successful where Dean failed in that regard?
Carver: I think one thing weâre playing with this year is that success is very much in the eye of the beholder. Thereâs a lot of perception issues this year. What one brother might perceive as success may not seem that way to the other. Thatâs part of it - whatâs going on with each one. To answer your question, weâre very much exploring just that. I donât know that Supernatural will ever field the typical notion of success. The show has constantly played with that throughout the years, and I think weâre doing that again this year. (...) IGN: Based on what youâve revealed so far, Iâve seen some fans express concerns like, âDid Sam give up looking for Dean? How much did he try or not try to find him?â What can you about that, as far as what Sam was doing while Dean was gone?
Carver: I would say that I donât think anything is done without good reason. One of the things in the show is that, particularly this season, people might think one way about one of the brothers in the beginning. Again, it goes along with perception. I would just ask people to hold on to your hats and understand that weâre going to be exploring each brother, the very complex and difficult things that theyâre going through. No oneâs hands were completely clean at the end of last season. What you think might be a bad thing -- I donât think youâll think that as the season goes on. Weâre playing with expectations.
IGN: Are you structuring this season with an overall enemy? Is it going to be like weâve seen on other seasons as far as a threat that might pop up periodically and then build towards the end of the season?
Carver: Yeah, I think youâre going to see⌠The notion of the year is âquest.â Theyâre united in the search of something. One of the guys will start to present themselves as something of an obstacle this year, which will be the character of Crowley. He had somewhat of an uneasy yet fairly businesslike relationship with them. I think this year youâre going to see that theyâre very much on opposite sides of the fence in terms of this quest, as it were. Things are going to get a little dirtier with Crowley. Then we can certainly say that other baddies will emerge. Again, itâs very much perceptions this year, so I donât think itâs going to be as obvious from the get-go who is good and who is bad.
IGN: Castiel had a reduced role last year, appearing at the beginning and end of the season. We donât know why he left or where he went when he and Dean reached purgatory, but how much of a presence do you expect him to have this year?
Carver: One of the things were doing is, I think a lot of shows -- and I could be wrong; I could be speaking completely out of school here -- it feels like a lot of shows, when they send someone to Heaven or Hell, they largely ignore it when they come back. This year, weâve made the decision to go for it and really explore what happened in Purgatory and sort of introduce this new world and new characters and new relationships. Thatâs where weâll be coming in and understanding exactly what happen to Cas, why he flipped out there at the end of the finale, and what the time in Purgatory did to Dean. Itâs all going to be explored with great action, drama and melodrama. No one is more of a fan of Dean and Cas than I am. (...) [source]











