Part of what made Season 3 so great was that it all flowed naturally from Beth and Jerry’s divorce.
Part of what made Season 3 so great was that it all flowed naturally from Beth and Jerry’s divorce.
If it’s a choice between half-clever but somewhat empty genre parodies or Dan Harmon working through all the insights his many (and clearly desperately needed) therapy sessions have bestowed upon him, I eagerly await Rick & Morty’s take on cowboy movies and/or sparkly vampire teens.
I thought this episode was hilarious and really just bonkers. Also, I do agree that people are taking this shit way too seriously trying to find meaning in every little second. Sometimes, Rick and Morty just have a dumb adventure and we should be able to take a break from the existential dread to have a laugh at that…
I think these episodes are a little over stuffed, which the show has always been occasionally guilty of. I personally don’t think thats a bad thing, as a mid tier episode of rick and morty is still better than almost everything else on tv for my personal tastes. I think the key ingredient that’s been this season is…
rogueindy’s cite is on-point with regard to the cat generally. With regard to people asking about why he can talk, though, I think it’s more a matter of the cat’s being used to engaging with others on the basis of his “mystery”. Without that, there’s really no reason for anyone to particularly care what a cat has to…
I think the problem was that this episode actually had too many good concepts but didn’t explore any of them with enough depth.
I kind of shudder at the thought of what this show will look like by Episode 100.
So does this show have anything to offer anymore beyond genre parodies?
I am not sure if Jerry isn’t just that normally, but I’d imagine Rick wouldn’t be too interested in Jerry asserting himself and growing as a person, since that would loosen his grasp on the family. It’s terrifying that Rick didn’t mellow out after he “lost” to Jerry, he just became more radicalized.
It’s just that it’s easier to ignore for most people because there’s jokes.
Is it me, or is it the fact that Rick routinely scrubs world shattering horrors from the memories of the Morty and Jerry one of the scariest parts of the series?
Also, the dragon hotboxing zoo animals is the funniest small thing I have seen in a while.
Not one of the series better concepts but I laughed a lot, so there’s that.
See, I feel like the problem here (with the review) is sort of expecting too much. People probably have seen that cut and past joke “you must have a high iq to appreciate Rick and Morty.”
The weird thing here is that it feels like this review sort of forgets... like it buys into the critical hype. The show was funny…
Deep down in your gut, you know Bathlormaw is right about Orcs and Dwarves. That slut dragon is the only one with the guts to say anything about it.
That cute dude from Floyd's wedding in 30 Rock said he was a "plushie". That was in 2010. When did they become "furries"? Are "plushies" and "furries" two different things?
School groups + terrible NYC teacher/ chaperones who were just looking for some time to zone out + extremely dark corners x the alluring power of costumes = a lot of me walking the exhibit halls saying, "That's probably illegal kid, freakin' cut it out and go to Sardi's next door where they're tolerant of those…
Wow, it's almost like these people are maladjusted, under-developed deviants. And that the internet has allowed these people, who previously would have kept these weird tendencies private, a place to connect and encourage such behavior. Thanks, internet.
As a former assistant manager at a now-closed NYC event venue, I can attest that any event that prompts it's attendees to feel the need to dress up will, almost 100% of the time, cause SOME level of damage to your space. The combination of big crowds, massive enthusiasm, and the benefit of anonymity that even a…
With the exception of O'Neill, who sits at the back of the room sullenly shaking his head while nursing a whiskey sour.