#MAN HAS A TRAGIC BACKSTORY FULL OF LIES AND BACK AND FORTH ITS PERFECT
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When is someone going to make a ghosts edit to the song âWe Both Reached For the Gunâ SPECIFICALLY FOR THOMAS .
OR LIKE FOR ALL THE GHOSTS AND THEIR DEATHS .
#if no oneâs going to do it. Iâll animate it đ#bbc ghosts#mint thoughts#thomas thorne#MAN HAS A TRAGIC BACKSTORY FULL OF LIES AND BACK AND FORTH ITS PERFECT#I mean you can also do one for capvers but I think thatâs harder because they have few scenes đđ#it can still work but they edit will have to be shorter đ„Č#someone wRITE THIS DOWN NOW
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Rick and Morty Season 5 Finale Review
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This RICK AND MORTY review contains spoilers.
Rick and Morty Season 5 Finale
Itâs been a while, so letâs first recap the consistent problems with season five of Rick and Morty. Problem one is that characterization feels like itâs either pushed aside in favor of crazy, silly sci-fi nonsense or lost in a muddle of convoluted sci-fi nonsense. Problem two is that episodes are so overloaded with plot and dialogue delivered at such breakneck speed that thereâs either no time for jokes or, packed in with everything else going on in these overstuffed episodes, they just donât land. The missing characterization issue isnât exclusive to season five, but the lack of laughs is; this has easily been the least-funny season yet.
Now, finally, after a monthâs wait, we get the two-part season finale! Does it manage to avoid the problems that have haunted this season until now?
Not really! But some of it certainly looked cool.
âForgetting Sarick Mortshallâ
Though theyâre both about testing the strength of Rick and Mortyâs relationship and the first does directly lead into the next by virtue of⊠crows⊠these really are two separate episodes with two different focuses and tones. This first one is closer to a ânormalâ season five episode. Sure, itâs got Rick pissing Morty off so much that he goes off on his own anti-Rick adventure (with a dude fittingly named Nick), but, for the majority of the runtime, itâs not handled like itâs all that big of a deal.
Regardless, the inciting incident here of Morty accidentally getting portal juice on his hand, thus creating a portal in his hand that connects to Nickâs thigh is a really clever one. Itâs unfortunate that an odd side effect of a series with a premise that allows for infinite sci-fi possibilities is that many concepts, no matter how much creative effort is put behind them, feel like retreads that fall into a similar category (e.g., the season premiere with its Narnia world that evolved at hyper-speed felt not entirely dissimilar from the sequence of Morty living an entire life in âThe Vat of Acid Episodeâ which, in turn, felt not so dissimilar from that time he played Roy: A Life Well Lived). However, this portal in the hand thing feels totally new and fresh.
They get some good mileage out of it too, with some cool action sequences (like Jackie Chan!) and inspired moments like Morty making a dude eat shit, literally, by transferring the contents of a chamber pot by way of the hand/thigh portal system or when Nick takes control of the car Mortyâs driving by sticking his hand through Mortyâs portal hand. Itâs also used smartly in the most effective dramatic moment in âForgetting Sarick Mortshallâ when Morty chooses to destroy his portal connection to Rick by placing his hand on a train track so that itâs severed off, and then drops the hand-portal into Nickâs thigh-portal to kill him. Itâs all very clever, well-executed stuff, though, typing it out, it sure sounds weird.
How Morty comes to the decision to sever his hand and connection to Nick is less well-executed. It unfortunately brought to mind the episode with Planetina, perhaps the worst of season five, as in both episodes Morty realizes the person heâs spending time with ainât so great becauseâshock horrorâtheyâre cool with killing innocent people! Yes, Morty has a moral core, so itâs not like it doesnât make some sense, but itâs just that, with the amount of people he and Rick murder out of petty anger or just by happenstance all the time, it feels like they need to sell his change of heart a little more.
The other half of this episode is about Rick replacing Morty with two crows, at first as a joke, but then he gradually comes to realize crows are actually cool and can teach him about empathy. The idea of it is that this âtwo crowsâ thing is engineered to be a silly, one-off inanity, but then the joke becomes so much more as the writers sincerely explore the concept. However, it never really successfully elevates itself above its initial inane premise. I still just found myself thinking âWhat is this crow bullshit? Why crows?â
Itâs also becoming a bit of a predictable Rick and Morty staple that characters that appear incidental at first actually have a whole society and way of life we get to learn all about (the face-huggers, the Narnia people, the Chuds). Itâs an obvious plot device to return to seeing as this is a sci-fi series about visiting new universes and alien worlds all the time, so it would be irrational to suggest they stop doing it altogether, but did this particular plot really need to go in that direction? The introduction of the crow society comes out of nowhere and it isnât convincing that Rick decides to follow a path of empathy with his two crows right after he just killed a whole bunch of other crows. Anyway, the only thing that makes the crow plot âinterestingâ is that the writers commit to it so hard it carries into the next episode.
Season five style, âForgetting Sarick Mortshall,â is not funny. I chuckled at the very last moment in the tag when Garbage Goober said âMmm, trash, I love trashâ and I smiled at Rickâs (possibly improvâd) rant about watching sitcoms on your shoes, but that was about it. Still, at least there were the aforementioned clever moments and it got a tiny bit emotional when Morty told Rick âI miss you, manâ and when Rick admitted their relationship was abusive.
âRickmurai Jackâ
Lore, lore, lore! How do you like it? Hopefully you like it lots because âRickmurai Jackâ is chock full of the stuff!
The Rick and Morty team, however, absolutely hate it! Well, they canât totally hate it, or they wouldnât have bothered to make this episode, but they definitely have an acrimonious relationship with continuity and canon. Dan Harmon has stated before that giving Rick a tragic backstory would ruin the character and Rick himself reaffirms that opinion in the episode. In fact, the writers canât help themselves in breaking the fourth wall throughout to remind us how much Rick hates canon and how itâs better to âkeep it episodic.â
Itâs understandable why they resent canon. Itâs got to be much easier to write one-off, funny sci-fi adventures than to sustain serialized plots told over multiple episodes. Unfortunately for them, way the hell back in season one Rick and Morty destroyed their universe, killed alternate universe versions of themselves, and took their places. The series kept this plot point intact, referencing it later, and also gradually made Mortyâs character more jaded in response to this, as well as the many other horrors he witnessed. In other words, they made this canon bed and now they have to have adventures in it (I know how this sounds and Iâm fine with it).
Before it gets to all that serious canon, however, âRickmurai Jackâ has to honor the continuity of the previous episode by tidying away the stupid crow plot. The continuity is certainly sound: the crows werenât funny in the last episode and theyâre not funny in this one either! Thereâs an anime intro. There are villains whose names flash on the screen in big letters. Thereâs an arch-villain named CrowScare who has sex with Rickâs crows. Yeah. Fine. At least this part is done away with relatively quickly. (Side note: Odd that Rick becomes a bird-based superhero and yet there is nary a reference to Bird Person.)
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After this, the episode maintains the season five status quo by continuing to be unfunny. I donât believe I laughed at this one at all, although I liked Evil Mortyâs line, âI lied. That second seatâs a toilet.â The lack of comedy is a bit more forgivable, however, as âRickmurai Jackâ isnât trying as hard to be funny. This really is the loreiest lorepisode theyâve ever done and so the focus is on backstory and continuity to do with Evil Mortyâs long-gestating plan.
As one of the annoying nerds constantly complaining that this show doesnât do enough character development anymore, I know Iâm supposed to be thankful for this episode (Rick angrily says as much) and I am, somewhat. Itâs cool to see Evil Morty again and to hear his awesome theme music. Personally, I was never asking for Rick backstory and Iâm a bit surprised his origins more or less are just the easy answer of âdead wifeâ after all, but sure, thatâs fine. More profound and fucked up is the origin of all the Mortys in the multiverse, engineered by Ricks to be the perfect sidekick.
I just wish all this development hadnât been given to me, season five style, in such volume at such speed. The fact of the matter is I was straight-up confused about what the hell was going on sometimes. I understood Evil Mortyâs plan enough to get that heâs extricating himself from the cycle of Ricks and Mortys (and maybe ending the cycle forever?), but where did he fly to? Did he kill every Rick and Morty ever except our protagonists and whoever they escaped with or just everyone in the Citadel for some reason? Did he remove all portal fluid from the multiverse? I also lost the plot of Rickâs backstory, not understanding why he was going around killing all these other Ricks until I watched it back and realized he was going after the Rick who had killed his wife and kid Beth; I still feel it couldâve been more clearly presented though. Also confusing was the sequence in Rick uses some of his blood to create Big Boy(?) who⊠transfers power to Rick when heâs attacked⊠or something?
Look, I know how this goes. Iâm a stupid moron and the nerds in the comments will be more than ready to let me know that everything that was confusing to me was, in fact, completely obvious, duh-doy, and hereâs why and I should stop watching the series, and so on, and so forth. However, something Iâve always marveled at (as I did only two episodes ago) with Rick and Morty is, despite how crazy and layered its ambitious plotting gets, I never lose track of whatâs happening. So, either my very high IQ is dropping points or this shit was kind of confusing.
Regardless, itâs appreciated the creators of this show finally gave in and threw a bunch of continuity and canon in my whining face. It just wouldâve been nicer if it had been delivered in a clearer way that was easier to process and to feel something about. Like, every time Evil Morty has appeared in the series, heâs been an intimidating and chilling presence. I did get chills when his theme song kicked in this time, but that was more of a Pavlovian response earned from his previous appearances. Otherwise, I was just bewildered by all the information being chucked at me. Still, if nothing else, it was certainly a cool-looking spectacle.
Whatâs best about this episode is what it sets up for the next season. Who knows how long theyâll stick with this, but itâs implied that Rick is out of portal juice, which makes him that much less god-like and which could maybe, finally, reintroduce some actual stakes into Rick and Morty instead of every episode being about a sarcastic unstoppable murderous sci-fi family. I truly do look forward to that.
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The other best thing is Mr. Poopybuttholeâs profound advice that we should be brave enough to love the people who love us back. Thank you for your wisdom, Mr. Poopybutthole.
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