Whoever drew the Mordecai and Rigby composite sketches, nicely done.
Whoever drew the Mordecai and Rigby composite sketches, nicely done.
I enjoyed both episodes. The Mordecai-Rigby friendship figured prominently in both, though in different ways, one dramatic and one comedic. A nice contrast, and a welcome return for a dynamic that's been missing from recent episodes.
I'd like to see next season address why it's such a forgone conclusion that Mordecai won't follow Margaret? What's keeping him where he is, a job at the park? If Margaret is truly what matters most to him, he'd at least consider the possibility. While I don't want to see the show shaken up that way, it would be really…
Linder = Kramer
Excellent analysis of Sonya's reaction to death, which I can relate well to. I've conditioned myself to say "I'm sorry for your loss," in that situation, but mentally, I fixate on "the wave" of repercussions as you describe it. And that very much includes the emotional implications. It's a myth that autistic people…
I enjoyed both of these, and the action in "Blind Trust" was especially hilarious. Thomas has developed into the biggest slacker of all: "Do I have to do this too?"
This episode was delightful in a childish way. Let's just have 5-year-olds write all the scripts from now on. "And then the bad guy turned into a toilet and was blasted into outer space! The end."
Eileen was so geeked-out over the meteor shower she didn't jump at the chance to put the moves on Rigby! Even when he made her go off by themselves!
I like when Regular Show deals with the "real monsters" of everyday life like stress, that we the viewers know well. It reminded me a lot of "Rigby's Body" with junk food addiction. Having experienced anxiety attacks myself, this one hit close to home, and the idea that stress can kill you is no empty threat.
I was hoping for more of a crazy payoff with the vortex, after they built it up so much, such as a monster appears, or they're transported to another dimension. Instead, just cars levitating in a green cone. Your everyday, run of the mill vortex.
"Skinny: No threat. Fat: No threat. Small: No threat." This delights and amuses me for some reason.
Very interested to see where things will go from here.
I enjoyed this one, big time. The physical comedy was hilarious, and expertly choreographed. The meatball stains and the key grabbing had a 3 Stooges-esque brilliance to it (albeit in this case, two). Completely ridiculous and silly, and I loved every minute.
Waterfowl are always funny on this show.
This was Regular Show at its best. Mordecai and Rigby get to live out the dream of all 10 year old boys in the 80's, solving your problems by summoning a giant kick-ass robot with all your cool stuff as weapons. And when "The Touch" came on, my jaw dropped with nostalgic awe. Bravo on 100 episodes, and if they stick…
I liked this one, a clear step above the recent string of disappointing episodes. Not a favorite, but solidly entertaining.
This. The episode started off well, but as soon as Diane showed up it became fairly predictable. I too have been revisiting early episodes, and it's a striking difference.
Agreed - there was great character development from the Rigby-Don relationship. No such insights from Skips and Quips.
Just not a good episode, for me. Quips was a grating, cardboard character brought in to be obnoxious, then learn his lesson and depart. Things I would have rather seen: the main group hanging out playing Drawesome has comic potential in itself. Also, those two snippets of adventures that Mordecai and Rigby "owed"…
Loved the Cars song! Great episode all around.