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"So It's Come to This: A Simpsons Clip Show" is the eighteenth episode of The Simpsons' fourth season. It originally aired on the Fox network in the United States on April Fools' Day, 1993. In the episode, Homer plays a series of practical jokes on Bart, and to get even, Bart shakes up a can of Homer's beer. Homer opens the can, resulting in a huge explosion that lands him in the hospital with a coma. At Homer's bedside, the Simpson family reminisce mainly about moments relevant to Homer's life. Jon Vitti wrote the episode, and Carlos Baeza directed it. This is The Simpsons' first clip show, and it features clips from the first three seasons of the series. It was created to relieve the long hours put in by all of the show's overworked staff. The episode features cultural references to films such as One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Raiders of the Lost Ark, and Fantastic Voyage. The episode received positive reviews from critics. It was described "as good as a clip show ever gets",[3] and acquired a Nielsen rating of 14.9.
[edit] PlotThe story begins on April Fools' Day as Homer is playing pranks on Bart throughout the day. Bart, angered by the numerous tricks he has fallen for, attempts to get revenge by shaking up a beer in a paint shaker. When Homer opens the beer, it results in a massive explosion that puts Homer in the hospital. While everyone waits for Homer to get well, the family remembers surviving similar hardships—shown in the form of clips from past episodes. Mr. Burns, Homer's employer, then tries to pull the plug on Homer's life support system to keep from having to pay for Homer's health insurance. At the hospital, Homer sees a candy machine and, while trying to get chocolate, accidentally tips it on himself. The machine crushes him and puts him in a coma. As Homer lies unconscious in the hospital bed, Bart confesses that he was the one who put him in the hospital with his shaken beer can prank. Homer slowly comes out of the coma, but ends up strangling Bart. Despite this, Marge and the others are happy that Homer is finally well. The episode ends with Homer, still under the assumption that it's April Fools' Day, trying to fool the family by saying he's taking them to Hawaii. However, Bart and Lisa tell Homer that the current date is May 16, and that Homer was in a coma for 7 weeks.[1] [edit] Production The idea for the 32 "D'oh!"s in a row footage came from a montage in David Silverman's college show. The episode originally aired on April Fools' Day, 1993 on the Fox network.[2] It was directed by Carlos Baeza, and written by Jon Vitti with contributions from Al Jean, Mike Reiss, Jay Kogen, Wallace Wolodarsky, John Swartzwelder, Jeff Martin, George Meyer, and Nell Scovell.[4] The idea for the 32 "D'oh!"s in a row footage was from David Silverman's montage that he had assembled for his traveling college show.[5] "So It's Come to This: A Simpsons Clip Show" was The Simpsons' first clip show, created to relieve the long hours put in by all of the show's overworked staff.[6] There was intense pressure on producers of the show to create extra episodes in each season and the plan was to make four clip shows per season to meet that limit. However, writers and producers felt that this many clip shows would alienate fans of the series.[7] The Fox network's reasoning was that clip shows cost half of what a normal episode cost to produce, but they could sell syndication rights at full price.[7] Despite the nature of the clip show, the episode still contained an act and a half of new animation, including the extra scene from "Bart the Daredevil" in which Homer falls down Springfield Gorge a second time after the ambulance crashes into a tree.[6] The network censors initially refused to let the phrase "beer causes rectal cancer" into the show because beer was the only alcoholic beverage which could be advertised on television at the time. The censors eventually relented when they found a medical textbook which stated the link between beer and cancer, but still asked them to "go easy" on beer in the future.[8] As the family reminisces together about the past events, Bart raises a seeming non sequitur. Marge asks "Why did you bring that up?" to which Bart replies "It was an amusing episode," half looking at the camera, before quickly adding "of our... lives." Bart knows he is on a television show and knows the kinds of tricks his own writers use to fill up airtime. Such self-consciousness allows The Simpsons to serve as a lesson in modern media discontinuity.[9] [edit] Referenced clipsThis flashback episode uses clips from episodes released during the first three seasons: four are from the first, five from the second, and six from the third season.[2]
[edit] Cultural references John Williams's theme from Raiders of the Lost Ark plays throughout the scene in which Bart steals Homer's penny jar. The scene where Barney attempts to smother Homer with a pillow and breaks a hospital window with a water fountain is a parody of a scene in Miloš Forman's 1975 film One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest.[2] Professor Frink's suggestion of shrinking a crew of men to microscopic size and sending them into Homer in a small submarine is a reference to Richard Fleischer's 1966 film Fantastic Voyage.[3] There are also many cultural references in the clips from previous episodes. The clip of Homer picking up Marge and carrying her off in his arms into the distance is a reference to the theme of the 1982 film, An Officer and a Gentleman.[6] Bart stealing Homer's penny jar and trying to escape is an almost shot-for-shot parody of the opening sequence in the 1981 film, Raiders of the Lost Ark, while John Williams' "Raiders March" plays throughout.[11] The scene in which Maggie hits Homer over the head with a mallet is an extensive parody of the shower scene from Psycho; the music and camera angles are almost identical.[6] [edit] ReceptionIn its original American broadcast, "So It's Come to This: A Simpsons Clip Show" finished fourteenth in the ratings for the week of March 28 to April 4, 1993, with a Nielsen rating of 14.9.[12] It was the highest-rated show on the Fox network that week.[12] The episode has received positive reviews, being labeled "as good as a clip show ever gets",[3] and containing some memorable gags.[13] It has been seen as one "of the most consistently funny episodes of the series", which "strikes that perfect balance between perfectly selected classic moments and all new story segments..."[14] The episode's reference to One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest was named the 43rd greatest film reference in the history of the show by Total Film's Nathan Ditum.[15] [edit] Notes
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