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I Know What You Did Supernatural

Fictional character in Supernatural

Ruby-red
Supernatural character
A split image. On the left is the head of shoulders of an attractive blonde woman in her early twenties. On the right is an attractive brunette in her late twenties with her arms crossed.

Katie Cassidy (left) and
Genevieve Cortese (Padalecki) (right), both equally Red

Get-go advent "The Magnificent Seven" (2007)
Last appearance "Destiny'southward Kid" (2020)
Created by Eric Kripke
Portrayed by Katie Cassidy (Flavor iii)
Genevieve Cortese (Season iv, 15)
In-universe information
Species Blackness-eyed Demon
Gender Female
Abilities Demonic possession
Invulnerability
Occult knowledge
Superhuman forcefulness
Telekinesis
Teleportation
Witchcraft
Good Martial Artist

Ruby is a demon on The CW Boob tube Network'due south Supernatural portrayed mainly past actresses Katie Cassidy and Genevieve Cortese. Created by the writers to aggrandize on the characterization of demons within the series, she first appears in the third season, wherein she assists series protagonists Sam and Dean Winchester in fighting her swain demons. By the fourth season, she has won Sam'south trust and begins grooming him to kill demons with his psychic powers, though Dean remains fearful of ulterior motives. The grapheme is killed at the finish of the fourth season. In the fifteenth season, Scarlet returns through flashbacks and a visit to the Empty, the angels' and demons' afterlife.

Though the fans at offset reacted negatively towards Cortese replacing Cassidy after the third season, Cortese and creator Eric Kripke felt that they became more accepting equally the fourth season progressed. While fan response to the graphic symbol was mixed overall, critical reception was mostly negative. A common criticism was underwhelming performances by Cassidy and Cortese.

Plot [edit]

Debuting in the third season premiere "The Magnificent Seven", Ruby (Katie Cassidy) trails Sam Winchester—a hunter of supernatural creatures—and eventually rescues him from a group of demons, whom she kills with her unique demon-killing pocketknife.[ane] She reveals her identity to Sam in "The Kids Are Alright", but claims to exist dissimilar from other demons and wants to aid Sam fight them. In return for his cooperation, she promises to save his blood brother Dean from the Faustian bargain he had made to resurrect Sam in the second season finale "All Hell Breaks Loose: Part 2".[2] Nonetheless, she refuses to tell Sam her motives.[2] [iii] Though he distrusts her and Dean wants to kill her before she can harm them, Sam decides to let her proceed to assist him with both saving Dean and fighting the hundreds of other demons who—similar Carmine—escaped Hell in the second flavour finale.[three] [four] [5]

Cerise's credibility builds throughout Flavour 3. In "Sin City", she restores ability to the Colt for the Winchesters to utilise in their war against demons.[3] The episode "Malleus Maleficarum" provides her backstory, revealing that she had been a witch during the Plague who sold her soul to a demon. She confides in Dean that, unlike other demons, she still remembers what it is like to be homo, citing this trait as the reason she is helping the brothers against other demons.[five] She returns in "Jus in Bello" to save the brothers from an attacking horde of demons. Upon learning that they have lost the Colt, she decides to perform a spell that volition destroy all the demons in the area, including herself. Withal, considering the spell requires a man virgin'southward centre, Dean does not allow her to perform it. Although the programme he comes up with instead saves himself and his brother, the people they leave behind become killed by demons pursuing Sam and Dean, which Carmine uses to rebuke the brothers for not listening to her.[six]

Contrary to her promise to Sam, Cherry-red tells Dean that she cannot actually save him from Hell and that she had lied to Sam to get him to listen to her.[5] However, in the season finale "No Balance for the Wicked", she tells Sam that she had lied to Dean and that she truly can help Sam save him. Her plan is to train Sam to harness his latent demonic abilities so that he can use them to kill Lilith, the demon who holds the contract for Dean's soul. Believing that Ruby is trying to dispense Sam into giving in to his dark side, Dean tricks her into a devil'south trap—a mystical symbol capable of rendering demons powerless—and leaves with Sam to face Lilith. Ruby frees herself and tracks the brothers down during their entrada, simply gets expelled from her host body by Lilith and thus is non nowadays at the confrontation between Lilith and the brothers, with her whereabouts at the fourth dimension unclear.[7] The 4th season episode "I Know What You Did Concluding Summer" states that she had been sent back to Hell. Eventually, Cherry returns and offers Sam her assistance in taking revenge on Lilith for Dean'southward death in "No Balance for the Wicked" as well equally in stopping Lilith'south apocalyptic plans. To appease Sam, who dislikes her using a living host against the host's volition, Ruby takes possession of a torso recently declared to be dead (Genevieve Cortese). They have sex together at to the lowest degree once, and she brings him out of his downwardly spiral towards self-destruction. Consequently, Sam now trusts Ruby implicitly.[viii]

Ruby begins training Sam in using his demonic abilities to exorcise (and later, kill) demons,[8] and continues to do so in undercover post-obit Dean'due south resurrection by the angel Castiel in the 4th flavour premiere.[nine] [10] [11] The episode "On the Head of a Pin" reveals that she is feeding Sam her demonic blood to boost his powers,[12] and by "The Rapture", he has become addicted to drinking her blood.[13] [14] In the following episode "When the Levee Breaks", Sam and Dean have a heated confrontation over Sam's trust in her and the negative influence she has on him, leading to a vicious fight which ends in Sam strangling Dean and Dean severing ties with Sam.[xiv] In the season finale "Lucifer Rising", Cherry-red insists that she and Sam must murder a demonically-possessed woman despite the adult female being alive and pleading for them to let her become, as Ruby argues that Sam needs to also potable the adult female's claret in society to be able to kill Lilith; Sam eventually agrees. In the episode's climax, Crimson keeps Dean from interfering while Sam succeeds in killing Lilith. Afterward, Ruby reveals that she is a double-amanuensis working for Lilith who has just tricked Sam into setting the demons' revered god Friction match free with Lilith'southward expiry. With Sam's help, she is killed past Dean with her own pocketknife.[15]

In season 15's "Destiny's Child," the Winchesters acquire from the affections Anael that she and Red occasionally worked together when they had common interests and Anael gave Ruby the Occultum, supposedly to sell it for a lot of coin. Anael claims that Ruby hid it in Hell and was killed before she could sell it off, simply this proves to be a trap as Anael hires demons to impale Sam and Dean. Needing the Occultum to continue with their program to kill God, Castiel has Jack transport him into the Empty then he tin can ask Ruby herself where to find it. The Shadow, the being that rules the realm, reluctantly allows Castiel to talk to Cerise who takes on the grade she had when she died. Cherry reveals that, in reality, Anael approached her with the suggestion that they hibernate in the Occultum until the Apocalypse was over. Crimson never told the affections where she hid the Occultum, but offers Castiel the location in exchange for his help in getting out of the Empty since that would effectively resurrect Ruby. Sympathetic with Ruby due to his own time in the realm, Castiel agrees to at least try, which the demon accepts. Ruby-red whispers the Occultum'southward location in Castiel's ear before disappearing. However, Ruby fails to mention the hellhounds she left to guard the Occultum, causing Dean to think Ruddy was trying to kill them like Anael did earlier they decipher Ruby'south clues and locate the artifact.

Characterization [edit]

Prior to Ruby'due south introduction in the third season, serial creator Eric Kripke summarized the graphic symbol equally "ruthless and a footling crazy and crude around the edges", calling her "[a] little unhinged" because she lacks the "moral conscience" that Sam and Dean have.[xvi] Katie Cassidy, the extra who portrayed Ruby in the third season, described her every bit a "boot-ass, bad-ass" ally of Sam and Dean's who "likewise likes to stir upward a little trouble."[17] Co-ordinate to Cassidy, Cerise is "mysterious", "manipulative", and in command of her situation,[17] being "always ten steps alee of everybody else".[18] On this, Cassidy proclaimed that Ruby "knows what she wants, and she's out to go it".[17] Actress Genevieve Cortese, who played the character in the fourth flavor, deemed Cassidy'due south incarnation "very tough" and "difficult to get shut to".[xix]

In taking over the role, Cortese felt "conflicted over where Cerise is at present versus where she'south come up from" and explained that her own portrayal of the character was a "total 180 from [how she was] concluding season",[20] existence calmer and "more than fear-driven";[21] afterward a give-and-take with Kripke on the grapheme's mindset, Cortese saw Ruby as being in a "lonely, desperate" state of affairs.[20] She tried to make Ruby seem "as innocent as possible" to make viewers question her true allegiance,[22] and to "bring more of a humanity" to Ruby than Cassidy had.[21] For instance, taking from the third season finale in which Dean is sent to Hell, Cortese portrayed the grapheme as having some guilt over his death, fifty-fifty though Ruby was not responsible for it. The actress as well acknowledged that Cherry-red was likely manipulating Sam when she claimed to remember how it felt to be human, but suggested that there was as well an chemical element of truth to her character's words.[20]

Cortese believed that Scarlet brutal in love with Sam over the class of the season, though she questioned whether this was "true dear" or her existence "in beloved with what he can practice".[22] As Cortese noted, "He has something she tin can nurture. Information technology's almost like a mother bear and her cub [in terms of] how protective she is... Sam'southward all [Ruby has], so it's almost like giving birth, in a weird, messed-upwardly way."[21] She stated that the sex activity scene between her character and Sam was "about two people who are so broken and sad" and compared information technology to similar sex scenes from the film Monster's Ball.[20] Although Ruby eventually reveals herself as a traitor,[15] Kripke wrote her final scene with the intention of depicting Ruby every bit "the opposite of evil" and to evidence that Crimson does care about Sam, despite her manipulation of him to free Match; Kripke explained that, in Cerise'south mind, she had to lead Sam down that path because "it was for his own good".[23]

Development [edit]

Ruddy was described equally a "demon hunter" in press releases prior to her debut so that her true demonic nature would surprise the audience.[16] The writers created Ruby to modify the perception of demons into more than of a greyness area, rather than the prevalent belief of "black and white", "They're evil, we're adept" approach previously used in the serial.[24] However, the writers likewise planned for Crimson to touch on the brothers negatively by facilitating the story arc of Sam falling into evil—which had been ready in the 2nd flavor, only without follow-through—and causing a fracture in their relationship. Knowing this, the writers were amused by fans questioning why they were "trying to make [Ruby] likable".[25] Despite Ruby-red's overall betrayal of the brothers,[15] author Sera Take chances commented, "[Ruby] brought the idea that you can't just dismiss demons as things that demand to be killed correct away. They could be useful, and while fundamentally untrustworthy, there might be crusade to trust them in a given state of affairs."[24]

Fearing that introducing the character as an "[accessory] to the boys" would hinder their chances of successfully integrating her into the series, the writers intended that Cherry-red should be "a character in [her] own correct" and accounted her an antagonist "with [her] own interests and [her] ain motives" rather than a love interest to Sam or Dean,[26] which they felt had been their fault in their introduction of the widely disliked Jo Harvelle in the second season. While they were not planning on a romance between Ruby and either of the Winchesters in the 3rd season, however, they were open to the possibility in the future, with Kripke saying, "If the chemistry is at that place, and we see the sparks, and nosotros want it to happen, and the fans desire it to happen, it'll happen."[16] Due to "protective and occasionally nervous" fans, Kripke meant to introduce Red in "small-scale doses". Wanting fans to know the show would always be about Sam and Dean, and null else, he stated, "[Ruby and Bela are] there for of import plot elements, only it'south non the Ruddy and Bela show, nor is it almost the four of them cruising around in the Impala together. It'south about the guys."[27]

Cassidy originally auditioned for the office of Bela Talbot,[17] but ultimately received the part of Ruby. As opposed to using traditional demonic abilities such as telekinesis, Crimson instead relies on conventional martial arts and her demon-killing knife.[1] Cassidy trained in kickboxing alongside Bela'due south actress Lauren Cohan to be able to perform Crimson's martial arts skills,[17] prompting her to attempt as many of the fight scenes every bit she could rather than rely on her stunt double.[28] Earlier filming for the third flavor began, she and Cohan decided to watch previous seasons together to catch up on the bear witness.[17] Cassidy as well prepared by looking to Sharon Stone'south performance in the film Basic Instinct for inspiration due to Cherry's manipulative ways.[29] As Cassidy explained, "[Rock's grapheme] always has the power, and there's this mystery well-nigh her."[30] Costume designer Diane Widas had Ruby dressed in dark colors and then that she would blend into shadows, also giving her pleather jackets and narrow jeans to allow Cassidy to be more active.[31] Because of Cassidy's height difference with the lead actors—she is 5'7" while Sam's role player, Jared Padalecki, is half-dozen'iv"—she had to wear tall, spiky high heels that at times made her lose balance.[26]

Rather than introduce some entirely new body for Ruby that'll get disruptive for the audience and disruptive for Sam, why not keep going back to a performance that we're loving?

Kripke on the determination to keep Cortese.[32]

Kripke cited budgetary reasons for Cassidy's deviation subsequently the third flavour.[33] [34] According to Cassidy, however, Warner Bros.'s uncertainty well-nigh what management to take Ruby in prompted her to leave when the opportunity to star in the serial Harper's Island arose.[35] To "make the best out of a bad situation", Kripke and the writers planned for Ruby-red to take on a new host every few episodes for the fourth season. They believed this would "keep [viewers] guessing", and provide a "cool character that nigh shows don't have the ability to do".[34] Auditions for an unnamed "dear interest" were held to recast Crimson with a new actress, and Cortese was hired for the function. She was and then informed that she would actually exist playing Reddish.[twenty] Earlier the first episode she was in aired, however, she was said to be playing "a small-town waitress" named Kristy who had become "romantically involved" with Sam after Dean's expiry.[36] Cortese played the first of what was expected to exist many incarnations of Ruby, just an impressed Kripke ultimately chose to keep her in the role because she "brought a lot of the different colors and vulnerabilities to Scarlet that [he] was really looking for".[32] Although Cortese viewed DVDs of Cassidy'due south portrayal,[20] she tried to make the character her own at the producers' asking rather than emulate Cassidy.[37] She was non as concerned with how Ruby was received by the audience—stating "if people don't similar her, they don't like her"—as much as she was with using her performance to "answer questions" most Ruby and her human relationship with the Winchester brothers, such equally why Sam and Dean were standing to work with Ruby-red in the quaternary flavor.[twenty]

Reception [edit]

BuddyTV staff columnist Don Williams felt the add-on of Ruby was a "inexpensive ploy" to attract teen male viewers, that the grapheme distracted viewers from the "brotherly bail that made the show so special in the first place," and that Cassidy "was cast more for her looks than her acting prowess."[38] Nonetheless, he afterward admitted Ruby "remains one of the more interesting and ambiguous evildoers on the series."[39] Although IGN's Diana Steenbergen had looked frontwards to Ruby'due south introduction, she ultimately establish the third-flavour incarnation a "wasted" character who did fiddling to amend the series. Her primary concerns consisted of Ruby's "unlikable and manipulative" qualities and her tendency to make the Winchesters "look stupid." Cassidy "never quite [pulled off]" the "tough chick" persona of Buffy the Vampire Slayer 'due south Faith or Battlestar Galactica 'southward Six.[forty] Boob tube Guide's Tina Charles, yet, liked Ruby'due south action-packed introduction in "The Magnificent 7."[41] She was "intrigued" by the character in "The Kids Are Alright," and felt Cassidy was "doing a skillful job."[42] Ruby made a "plausible addition" to "Malleus Maleficarum," with Charles finding information technology "cool" to learn Ruby's backstory due to its implications for Dean's storyline.[43] Karla Peterson of The San Diego Union-Tribune thought Cassidy "wasn't awful" in "The Magnificent Seven."[44] Though "non slap-up enough for Ackles to actually play off of" in "Malleus Maleficarum," the actress was "good enough to brand her weaker interim chops kind of work for her."[45] While under the impression that Cherry-red had been killed off in "No Residue for the Wicked," Peterson wrote that the character "got gone just as [she was] getting interesting" and accounted her a "decent traveling [companion]."[46]

In her debut, Cortese impressed Peterson "even less than the old Ruby."[47] While Peterson was accepting of the sexual relationship between Carmine and Sam, she felt the "seduction came out of nowhere" in "I Know What You Did Last Summer." Contributing to this problem was Cortese'south inability to "pull it off," making the "whole thing [feel] gratuitous and impuissant." Conversely, Peterson enjoyed the performances of actresses Anna Williams and Michelle Hewitt-Williams as Ruby's temporary hosts in the episode; the former was "slap-up," while she found the latter "sassy" and "[missed] her already."[48] She "loved" Scarlet'south death in the finale, describing it equally "a beautiful thing."[49] Similar to Peterson, BuddyTV's Williams considered Cortese's interim "a bit distracting," simply noted she improved over time.[50] Steenbergen considered Cortese an "acceptable Ruby," merely wrote that the actress' portrayal was often "as well girlish to connect with the previous incarnations of the character."[51] In contrast to Williams, Steenbergen felt that Cortese "seemed out of her depth in the acting department" towards the end of the season.[52] Ruby's seeming betrayal of Anna Milton in "Sky and Hell" would "have added some welcome layers to her grapheme" in Steenbergen's opinion, but the character's true intentions made the grapheme development "less exciting."[53] However, Steenbergen accounted Reddish's overall cant of Sam a "great revelation."[54]

Like BuddyTV's Don Williams, fans were very wary at first of bringing in female characters to the male-dominated prove.[28] To brand matters worse, Kripke wrote a lackluster scene intended solely for the audience process. Fans quickly came across it on casting sites, and adult the feeling that the character "really [looks like she sucks]." Withal, Kripke believed that fans would change their minds nigh Red later on learning that she was a demon.[55] By the middle of the third flavor, Kripke felt enough fans were "responding positively to vindicate the grapheme,"[56] and that near were "finally embracing her" by the third season finale,[34] with Cassidy's version of Ruby even being dubbed a "fan favorite" afterward.[37] When the graphic symbol returns in the fourth season, she is very dissimilar from her 3rd season analogue. Cortese felt that while the drastic change made fans angry, the flashbacks provided in "I Know What Y'all Did Last Summer" shed some low-cal on Ruby's new mindset and made fans more accepting of the grapheme.[20] However, the overall criticisms towards Cortese's operation made her reluctant to return for an episode in the sixth season, although she eventually accepted when she learned she would be portraying herself.[37]

Despite the generally negative reception to Cortese in the role, fans voted her version of Ruby-red the 32nd sexiest female grapheme in fantasy and science fiction film and television in a 2012 poll past SFX for the Superlative 200 Sexiest Characters In Sci-Fi, making her the highest-placing female Supernatural character in the list, chirapsia out Jo Harvelle at number 53 and Ellen Harvelle at number 77.[57]

References [edit]

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  2. ^ a b Author: Sera Run a risk, Director: Phil Sgriccia (October 11, 2007). "The Kids Are Alright". Supernatural. Flavour 3. Episode two. CW.
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  49. ^ [i] [ dead link ]
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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruby_(Supernatural)

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