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"Marge vs. the Monorail" is the twelfth episode of The Simpsons's fourth season and originally aired on January 14, 1993. The plot focuses around Springfield's buying a monorail from a conman and Marge's dislike of the purchase. It was written by Conan O'Brien and directed by Rich Moore. Leonard Nimoy guest stars as himself and Phil Hartman guest stars as Lyle Lanley.
[edit] PlotAfter being caught dumping nuclear waste in the city park by the EPA, Mr. Burns is fined three million dollars. A town meeting is immediately held so that the citizens can decide what to spend the money on and Marge suggests that the city use the money to fix up Main Street, which is in poor condition. The town shows enthusiasm for this idea and is about to vote for it when suddenly a sleazy silver-tongued, fast talking gentleman named Lyle Lanley suggests that the town construct a city monorail. He leads them in a song, which convinces the town to buy the monorail. Even though Lanley succeeds in winning over the entire town, including skeptical Lisa, Marge is unhappy with the purchase, believing that the monorail is unsafe. While watching TV, Homer sees an advertisement that suggests he become a monorail conductor, and Homer, claiming it to be a lifelong dream, immediately agrees. After a three week course described by Lanley as "intensive", Homer is named the monorail conductor. Still feeling uneasy about the monorail, Marge decides to visit Lyle Lanley and discovers a notebook that reveals Lanley’s true intentions of running off with bags of money while everyone else falls victim to a faulty monorail. Marge immediately drives to North Haverbrook, which Lanley mentioned was a previous purchaser of one of his monorails. Once she arrives, Marge discovers that the town is in ruins, and that those still living there deny that they ever had a monorail, despite the fact that the town is covered in advertisements for it. While exploring, she meets Sebastian Cobb, the man who designed Lanley's monorail. He explains that Lanley cut costs everywhere when building it, and that the entire thing is a scam. At the maiden voyage of the monorail, the entire town has come out, including Leonard Nimoy. Lanley grabs his money and jumps in a taxi, which takes him to the airport. The monorail leaves just before Marge and Cobb arrive. At first things run smoothly, but the controls malfunction, causing the monorail to accelerate dangerously. Meanwhile, Lanley’s flight makes a brief unscheduled stop in North Haverbrook, where Lanley is immediately recognized and beaten down by the locals. Back in Springfield, Cobb tells Homer that in order to stop the train, he needs to find an anchor. Homer grabs the giant "M" from the side of the Monorail and uses it as an anchor. Eventually, it latches onto a giant doughnut, stopping the monorail and saving its passengers.[1][4][3] [edit] Production This is the escalator to nowhere seen in the end. The three people are caricatures of (left to right) Rich Moore, Wes Archer and David Silverman[5] The popsicle stick skyscraper and magnfying glass can also be seen in the background. Conan O'Brien first pitched this episode at a story retreat - to Al Jean and Mike Reiss, who said the episode was a little crazy and thought he should try some other material first. Conan had previously pitched episodes where Lisa had a rival and where Marge gets a job at the Plant and Burns falls in love with her; both went well. James L. Brooks "absolutely loved" this episode when Conan presented it.[6] [edit] CastingLeonard Nimoy was not originally considered for the role as the celebrity at the maiden voyage of the monorail, but the writing staff did not think he would accept, because William Shatner had previously turned the show down. Instead, George Takei was asked to guest star as he had done the show once before. After demanding several script changes,[7] Takei declined, saying he did not want to make fun of public transportation as he was a member of the board of directors of the Southern California Rapid Transit District. As a result, the staff went to Nimoy, who accepted.[6] [edit] Cultural referencesThe episode starts with a tribute song to The Flintstones as Homer heads home from work and crashes his car.[2] Later, Leonard Nimoy makes a guest appearance as himself. References are made to his role in Star Trek, and there is also a brief allusion to his role as the host of In Search of..., a documentary series that ran in syndication from 1976 to 1982. The caricature of Luke Perry, star of Beverly Hills, 90210 appears as well.[8] The episode is also a partial spoof of The Music Man, with "The Monorail Song" strongly resembling the Music Man's "Trouble" and Lyle Lanley's being a doppelganger for Harold Hill.[2] When Mr. Burns is brought into the court room, he is restrained in the same way as Hannibal Lecter in the film The Silence of the Lambs.[2] When Smithers and Burns make their exit from townhall with the use of a grapple-hook this is a reference to Tim Burton's Batman with Burns as Vicki Vale. The commentary states that Homer's Monorail conductor uniform is based on uniforms from Star Wars.[5] The monorail train looks like 0 Series Shinkansen, which opened in 1964. There is a label on the monorail that says "1964 World Fair". [edit] Reception Marge discovers a family of opossums in the monorail, prompting Homer to reveal "I call the big one Bitey." In its original American broadcast, "Marge vs. the Monorail" finished 30th in the ratings for the week of January 11 to January 17, 1993, with a Nielsen rating of 13.7.[9] The episode was the highest-rated show on the Fox network that week.[9] This episode is quite often rated as being among the top Simpsons episodes. In 2003, Entertainment Weekly released a list of its Top 25 episodes, ranking this episode at Number 4, saying "the episode has arguably the highest throwaway-gag-per-minute ratio of any Simpsons, and all of them are laugh-out-loud funny."[10] In his book Planet Simpson, Chris Turner named the episode as being one of his five favorites.[11] In 2006, IGN.com named the episode the best of the fourth season.[12] The BBC website says "An unsurpassed episode. It's hard to know where to start dishing out the praise - Leonard Nimoy's guest appearance, the Monorail song, Marge's narration, the truck full of popcorn..."[2] Vanity Fair called it the third best episode of the show, due to, "An amazing musical number; Leonard Nimoy in a random guest appearance... Besides being replete with excellent jokes, this episode reveals the town's mob mentality and its collective lack of reason. This is the episode that defines Springfield more than any other."[13] Leonard Nimoy's appearance as himself has been praised as being one of the funniest Simpsons guest appearances ever.[7] In a list of the 25 greatest guest voices on the show, released September 5, 2006, IGN.com ranked Leonard Nimoy at 11th.[14] Total Film's Nathan Ditum ranked his performance as the 13th best guest appearance in the show's history.[15] Nimoy would later do another guest appearance in season 8's "The Springfield Files". Conan O'Brien has said that of all the episodes he wrote, this is his favorite.[16] Homer's lines "I call the big one Bitey" and "doughnuts, is there anything they can't do?" are among Matt Groening's favorite Simpsons lines.[17] [edit] Notes
[edit] References
[edit] External links
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