Charmed/The Jung and the Restless

From The TV IV

Jump to: navigation, search
The Jung and the Restless
Season 8, Episode 19
Airdate April 30, 2006
Production Number 62015-08-175
Writer(s) Cameron Litvack
Director(s) Derek Johansen
← 8x18
The Torn Identity
8x20 →
Gone with the Witches
CharmedSeason Eight
 This article about an episode needs to be expanded with more information.
Please help out by editing it.

The Jung and the Restless is the ninteenth episode of the eighth season of Charmed, and the one hundred seventy-fifth episode overall.

Guest Stars:

Contents

[edit] Plot Overview

The Halliwells are divided in their game plan to encounter the Jenkinses with Piper ready to vanquish them on spot, Paige somewhat ready and Phoebe unable to do so. Christy tries to manipulate Billie into thinking that the Charmed Ones are selfish and are not working towards the Greater Good and convinces her sister to look into their inner truths to confirm this. Billie arrives at the Manor and puts the Charmed Ones in a deep sleep with the help of a potion and enters their dreams, ultimately coming up with the conclusion that the Charmed Ones aren't necessarily selfish for their desires.

Meanwhile, a darklighter targets one of Paige's charges in an attempt to kill Paige.

[edit] Notes

[edit] Arc Advancement

[edit] Happenings

[edit] Characters

[edit] Referbacks

[edit] Trivia

[edit] The Show

[edit] Behind the Scenes

[edit] Allusions and References

  • The title of the episode is a pun of the CBS soap opera The Young and the Restless and for the psychologist Carl Jung, who studied the concept of the collective unconscious, which is explored in this episode.

[edit] Memorable Moments

[edit] Quotes

[edit] Reviews

  • Overall Grade: B after 1 review.
  • Review Breakdown: A+: 0 A: 0 A-: 0 B+: 0 B: 1 B-: 0 C+: 0 C: 0 C-: 0 D: 0 F: 0
  • This is arguably one of the better episodes of this dismal season and although it is understandable that the Charmed Ones' had these particular desires, I felt that there was a little too much exposition, which could have been truncated, thus allowing for more depth into these desires as they were a little too obvious, unlike in a better dream episode like "Sand Francisco Dreamin'." Admittedly, I did enjoy the mystical blue hue effect in the Dream World as well as the moment with the Charmed Ones nestled by the fireplace, which is something that hasn't happened in quite some time and it's even more endearing because the sisters all live in separate residences at this point of the series. Grade: B --Contrivance 22:56, 19 August 2006 (EDT)


Personal tools
sponsored links