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Smells Like Teen Spirit
Season 6, Episode 15
Castle-6x15
Air date February 17, 2014
Written by Chad Gomez Creasey and
Dara Resnik Creasey
Directed by Kevin Hooks
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Smells Like Teen Spirit[1] is the fifteenth episode of the sixth season of Castle.

Summary[]

The murder of a high school mean girl draws Castle back to one of his many alma maters, where he is giddy to learn that the evidence points to a surprising perpetrator – a teenage telekinetic, throwing him and Beckett into a real-life “Carrie”.

Recap[]

Promo[]







Cast[]

Main Cast[]

Guest Cast[]

Quotes[]

Castle: I'd offer a theory, but I'm too busy having detention flashbacks.
Beckett: You must've spent a lot of time in this hallway.
Castle: More than I did in class.
Beckett: I bet that principal hated you.
Castle: I'm wondering if "hate" is a strong enough word. Principal Duncan had to hire a crane to get that cow off the roof. But I’m sure that old battle-ax is long since retired. Put out to pasture, so to speak.
Principal Duncan: Was that a bovine reference, Mr. Rodgers?
Castle: Principal Duncan, you're, uh...still here.
Principal Duncan: And sadly, you have returned.
Castle: Ah, "A Starry Night" -- the winter ball. Did I tell you that Principal Duncan expelled me just before Prom?
Beckett: Castle, no! You mean you didn't go to your own prom?
Castle: And my date would have been Audra Dobson -- so unbelievably hot.
Beckett: Well, if it's any consolation, I missed my prom as well.
Castle: Really? Why?
Castle: She was thrown against the ceiling? That is a superhuman feat, bordering on physically impossible.
Becket: Okay, Castle, let's hear it. What's your outlandish theory?
Castle: Isn't it obvious? Madison made the Hulk angry.
Castle: The outcast, the mean girls, the rage that erupts in a telekinetic attack. This is a real-life Carrie!
Beckett: What were those girls so afraid? What happen in that cafeteria?
Principal Duncan: Just one thing I need to know, Mr. Castle. It's haunted me for years: where did you get the cow?
Castle: Put it this way sir: if you ever need one, I know a guy.
Beckett: They look like they're having fun.
Castle: Yeah. Listen, I know you're a rebel and you hate convention and blah, blah, blah, but Kate would you um... will you go to the dance with me?
Beckett: Oh that reminds me! I had a unit sweep Lucas' house. You know what they didn't find? Wires, magnets, anything that would explain that stuff we saw flying around.
Castle: You don't think...?
Beckett: No. Now shut up and kiss me.

Featured Music[]

  • "In My Veins" - Andrew Belle
  • "Inhale" - Sirah

Trivia[]

  • Neither Beckett nor Castle went to their proms.
    • This contradicts Beckett's story in A Death in the Family; Beckett explained that her date and her father were alone for a few minutes, and when she returned, he seemed visibly distraught.
      • It's possible Beckett was describing her junior prom and she missed out on her senior prom.
    • When recounting the story, Beckett refers to herself as "Becks". This nickname, and her rebellious nature, was first mentioned in Food to Die For.
  • Castle and Beckett's song is "In My Veins" by Andrew Belle.
    • "In My Veins" was the song playing near the end of the episode Always, the episode that established Castle and Beckett's romantic relationship.
    • The song was also played during their wedding in The Time of Our Lives.
  • Castle once went to Faircroft Preparatory Academy.
    • As revealed in Hedge Fund Homeboys, Castle attended, and was expelled from, most of the finer private schools in New York City. While most now claim him as an alumnus and solicit donations from him, his relations with Faircroft apparently never recovered.
    • Like Ryan with his fear of nuns since Catholic School, Castle had detention flashbacks and a fear of his principle from Faircoft.
    • Principal Duncan refers to Castle as "Mr. Rodgers"; however, after being impressed by his performance in the case, Duncan accepts Castle's name change.
    • Castle was kicked out of Faircroft for placing a cow on the top of the school building, which required Duncan to hire a crane to remove it. Although many others participated in the prank, Castle was the only one without wealth or connections and thus the only one who got expelled.
      • At the the end of the episode, Duncan wonders where Castle got the cow, stating the question has haunted him for years. Castle's only response is, "if you ever need one, I know a guy".
      • Castle claimed that he spent more time waiting outside the principal's office than he did in class. It is possible that his disciplinary record, rather than his social standing, was what lead to his expulsion.
  • Although Faircroft students wear a uniform, They each wear a different uniform; some girls wear dresses, others wear buttons down shirts and skirts, and still others wear pullover shirts and different kinds of skirts. Shoes range up to stiletto heels. Boys can be seen wearing sweaters of all colors, some with full sweaters and others with sweater vests.
    • Kris Howard and Hillary Cooper even wear their school uniforms on a cab ride at 9:00 PM, on their way out for a night on the town. This is despite the fact that Kris wore a non-uniform top over her shirt when Castle and Beckett spoke to her at school (a top not present earlier in the day when Castle and Beckett first questioned her).
    • While the skirts at Faircroft may seem unusually short for school uniforms, it's actually common for girls in schools with a uniform policy to fold or otherwise adjust their clothes to be more revealing. Students will also sometimes "cheat" with jackets, shoes, or other easily changed outerwear that is harder for teachers to police.
  • Lucas's use of cerulean blue paint is a subtle reference to an X-Files episode featuring a psychic killer.
  • Beckett points out that uniformed officers didn't find magnets or fishing wire at Lucas's home. Similarly, Principal Duncan investigated the "incident" in the school cafeteria and found nothing, either. The false video of Madison being killed is clearly a fake; however, the fishing wire was clearly visible in the un-doctored video, whereas the cafeteria video was taken by a third party and the items orbiting Jordan were witnessed by Castle and Beckett directly. It's implied that Lucas might indeed be telekinetic.
    • Lucas denies being telekinetic, claiming, "It's pretty amazing what you can do with, like, some fishing wire and magnets. And people are pretty gullible." Castle is chagrined, but if Lucas is indeed telekinetic, he is actually referring to Beckett.
    • Dr. Rampanel's levitation is similarly left unexplained.
    • Castle has frequently incorporated elements of the supernatural in its cases; however, these nearly always turn out to have rational explanations. In fact, nearly always the supernatural is completely ruled out. Time Will Tell and this episode are two exceptions.
      • This thematic shift may be intentional, harkening back to Castle's line in He's Dead, She's Dead, "Because if you don't believe in even the possibility of magic, you'll never find it." Whatever the truth of the supernatural in the Castle universe, having found love with Castle, Beckett is now open to all kinds of possibilities.
  • Beckett's fluency in Russian seen here was established in Deep in Death.
  • While Kris is definitively established as the killer, how she managed to kill Madison, stage the crime scene, and then rendezvous with Hillary in time to "witness" the murder is not explained.
    • Kris's plan was also deeply flawed; she retained the incriminating evidence in her locker, and her supernatural "alibi" was sure to draw scrutiny to her and Hillary, whether they were suspects at first or not.
  • Madison's father, Charles Beaumont, refusing to answer questions about the bearer bonds seems strange considering that it could hardly incriminate his daughter. However, the bonds could incriminate his client, and discussing them might violate attorney-client privilege. Charles's reaction might have been the only option in this bad situation that did not violate his professional ethics... except that it also proves that Charles knew where the stolen goods were stashed, making him an accessory rather than a lawyer.
  • Sam Anderson (Principal Duncan) has appeared opposite Nathan Fillion before, in Two Guys, a Girl, and a Pizza Place. During his career, he's played a school principal several times. He also appeared in the Joss Whedon show Angel as the evil lawyer Holland Manners, and in Murder, She Wrote in a variety of minor roles.

References[]

Related links[]

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