Thursday, October 15, 2020

The Simpsons: "Treehouse Of Horror XIX"



Premiered November 2, 2008.
"I believe in the Grand Pumpkin, almighty gourd, who was crustified over Pontius pie plate and ascended into oven. He will come again to judge the filling and the bread."
-Milhouse Van Houten

This special Halloween episode opens on Election Day of 2008.  Homer Simpson (Dan Castellaneta) goes into a voting booth with a touch-screen and tries to vote for Barack Obama.  However, the machine registers it as a vote for John McCain.  Homer presses Obama's name several more times, but the machine keeps counting votes for McCain.  Suddenly, Homer is sucked into the voting machine...


...it kills him and spits out his mangled corpse.


Like earlier Simpsons Halloween episodes, "Treehouse Of Horror XIX" features three short segments, beginning with:

"Untitled Robot Parody": 

Bart Simpson (Nancy Cartwright) visits a toy store in search of a Christmas gift for his sister Lisa (Yeardley Smith).  When a toy truck flashes its headlights at Bart...


...he tells it that girls don't like trucks.  When his back is turned, the truck transforms into a pink Malibu Stacy Convertible and Bart knows he's found the perfect gift for Lisa. 


On Christmas morning, Lisa is very excited and grateful when she receives the the car.  


However, the Simpsons soon discover that the convertible is actually an alien robot, which transforms all of the Simpsons' electronic household gadgets into killing machines!  Springfield becomes the epicenter of a war between two robot armies! 


"How to Get Ahead in Dead-Vertising":


Marge and Homer take their youngest daughter Maggie to a new daycare center.  When she's nervous about her new surroundings, her parents encourage Maggie to look at the daycare's mural, which features Maggie's favorite TV personality Krusty The Clown (Castellaneta).  


Unfortunately, Krusty himself shows up and orders the mural to be sandblasted since he never authorized its construction, which makes Maggie cry.  Homer visits Krusty to confront the clown about the mural and accidentally knocks Krusty into a wood chipper, killing him. 


After this, an advertising agency gets Homer to kill other celebrities so they can use their likenesses to promote their products.  Homer does what they want and murders several celebrities.  


In Celebrity Heaven, Homer's victims decide to visit Earth (and Springfield) to take revenge on companies for exploiting their images. 


"It's The Grand Pumpkin, Milhouse":


When every kid in Springfield is preparing to go trick or treating, Milhouse Van Houten (Pamela Hayden) announces that he plans to spend Halloween in a pumpkin patch waiting for the arrival of the Grand Pumpkin.  Milhouse tells Lisa that the Grand Pumpkin is a giant pumpkin that appears in pumpkin patches and brings candy to all children who believe in him.  Bart scoffs at this and says he made up the Grand Pumpkin just to mess with Milhouse.  


When Halloween Night arrives, Milhouse waits in the pumpkin patch while the other kids go trick-or-treating.  Lisa decides to wait for the Grand Pumpkin with Milhouse.  


Eventually, she gives up and departs for the school Halloween dance.  Milhouse cries for the Grand Pumpkin to show himself and his "childlike belief" turns a pumpkin into the Grand Pumpkin (Hank Azaria).  However, when Grand Pumpkin learns that humans carve pumpkins for jack o'lanterns and pumpkin bread, he goes on a killing spree!  It seems that Springfield is doomed!  However, hope arrives in the form of another holiday symbol...Tom Turkey (Azaria)!


J.A. Morris says:

This is a great Halloween episode.  My favorite editions of "Treehouse Of Horror" are the ones that have "literal" connections to Halloween.  I mention that because some "Treehouse" epeisodes are just horror stories that don't mention actually All Hallows' Eve or trick-or-treating.  "It's The Grand Pumpkin, Milhouse" is the strongest segment.  


I'm a huge fan of Peanuts and "Grand Pumpkin" pokes fun at both It's The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown and A Charlie Brown Christmas.  Milhouse, like Linus, is often his own worst enemy, so it's appropriate that he's the one spends Halloween waiting in the pumpkin patch.  "Grand Pumpkin" is also more directly connected to Halloween than the other two segments.  Kang and Kodos, who regularly appear in Simpsons Halloween episodes, also make a cameo appearance at the Halloween dance.


"Untitled Robot Parody," which pokes fun at the Transformers franchise, is also good.  It takes place during Christmas, so it's nice to get two holidays featured in one episode, something that rarely happens.  


I thought "How To Get Ahead In Dead-Vertising" was the weakest part, but only because it's not particularly related to Halloween, other than the murders Homer commits for the advertising likenesses.  Its homage/parody of Mad Men's opening montage is great.


Some viewers might watch "Treehouse Of Horror XIX" and think it's dated because it contains references to the 2008 election and Mad Men.  I think these references make this episode a nice snapshot of the pop culture of 2008.  Speaking of which, Homer kills Prince in "Dead-Vertising" and Rip Taylor is part of the "posse" that comes down from Celebrity Heaven.  Prince and Taylor are sadly both now deceased in real life. 


"Treehouse Of Horror XIX" is very funny and should be appreciated by all fans of All Hallows' Eve programming.  The inclusion of Christmas and Thanksgiving elements makes it even more enjoyable.

J.A. Morris's rating: 

4 jack o'lanterns!



RigbyMel says: 

I look forward to The Simpsons Treehouse of Horror anthology episodes every Halloween season.   Anthologies tend to be hit-or-miss, but generally Treehouse of Horror delivers enough spooky seasonal goodness and humor to be satisfying.  Overall "Treehouse of Horror XIX" works pretty well. 


That being said, as J.A. Morris mentions above,  I think the Mad Men parody portion of Treehouse XIX is the weakest link in this episode.   It's just not that funny, and could have made MUCH better use of its source material -  although some of the dead celebrity ads are memorably crass.  


The best bits of it are the homage to the title sequence to Mad Men and the random "dead celebrity" cameos, including an irate John Lennon astride a Yellow Submarine, but overall it just doesn't quite come into focus.  

Simpsonized John Lennon with Bob Denver (aka Gilligan) and Babe Ruth in the background

The satire of the Transformers movies in "Untitled Robot Parody" is much sharper -- skewering holiday commercialism and last minute gift purchases via alien robot battle mayhem.  We also get some amusingly naughty sight gags like Homer and Ned Flanders being trapped in ... interesting positions within their transformed cars.  


"It's the Grand Pumpkin, Milhouse" is most definitely the highlight of this installment,  partly because of the loving homages to the original Peanuts specials from 1960s that it riffs on.  There are some particularly clever bits  including a cameo appearance of Santa's Little Helper in Snoopy v. Red Baron mode, Marge keeps making use of a muted trombone a la the speech of adults in the original specials and the dance scene from A Charlie Brown Christmas recreated with Simpsons characters...and an iPod. 

Santa's Little Helper as Snoopy! 

The Simpsons is certainly not the first TV show to play with the notion of what might happen should the Great... errr...Grand Pumpkin actually show up, but the Grand Pumpkin's outrage at learning that his kind are sliced and carved and cooked is both hilarious and also understandable.  


I also appreciated that Thanksgiving gets mashed up into the Grand Pumpkin stew when Tom Turkey is called upon for assistance! 


"Treehouse of Horror XIX" is not my favorite Simpsons Halloween episode,  but "It's The Grand Pumpkin, Milhouse" is a segment that I do enjoy revisiting seasonally. 

RigbyMel's rating:







.5



2 and a half jack o'lanterns.

Wednesday, September 30, 2020

The Flintstone Comedy Show: Dino and Cavemouse in: "Trick Or Treat"

Premiered October 10, 1981.  
The Flintstones premiered 60 years ago today.  It was the first primetime animated series and it aired on ABC at 8:30 PM..  This Halloween review is our celebration of that milestone!

It's Halloween Night and the kids of Bedrock are knocking on cave doors and asking for treats, including the door of Fred Flintstone (Harry Corden). 

Fred's dogasaurus Dino (Mel Blanc) observes this and decides to put together a costume and go trick-or -treating. 

Cavemouse, the rodent who lives inside the walls of the Flintstones' home, decides to put on a costume as well and follows Dino.

Dino trick-or-treats and is given an apple.  However, Cavemouse cuts a hole in Dino's treat bag and takes the apple.  When Dino sees this, he chases after Cavemouse, determined to get his treat.  The chase takes them all over Bedrock and they wind up in a creepy old skull-shaped house...

...where they encounter a Venus Fly Trap plant!

Will Dino get his apple back from Cavemouse?  Will they both be eaten by a giant plant?  Will their Halloween be ruined?

J.A. Morris says:

The Flintstone Comedy Show was a series I watched occasionally during its run, but "Trick Or Treat" was new to me.  This is a rather slight cartoon, with a running time of just over five minutes.  It's basically a Tom and Jerry "chase" cartoon transported to a "Modern Stone Age" setting.  That doesn't mean it's bad, it just doesn't have much of a plot.  

However, I've always found Dino amusing and likeable (a dog I used to have reminded me of Dino). "Trick Or Treat" is an enjoyable Halloween short that's action-packed.  Dino and Cavemouse's confrontation with the giant Venus Fly Trap was the high point for me. 

Cavemouse chooses a costume that's exactly like Dino's, which is also a nice touch.  

We try not to spoil endings in our reviews, but "Trick Or Treat" has a happy ending for all the principal characters.  Their Halloween is not ruined.

A note about this series' title:
The Flintstone Comedy Show was called Flintstone Frolics when it was televised in other countries.  I found it on Boomerang under the latter title.  

"Trick Or Treat" should entertain any Flintstones fan, especially fans of Dino, but it's not exactly a classic that I plan to revisit every October.  

J.A. Morris' rating:





.5


2 and a half jack-o-lanterns.  

RigbyMel says: 

Like my co-blogger, I watched this show sometimes when it was new, but didn't remember much in the way of specifics.   

This little short in which Dino and Cavemouse fight Tom and Jerry style over Halloween treats is definitely short on plot, but what there is as well as the Halloween trappings make it fun.   I wondered if the Frankenstones (spooky neighbors of the Flintstones a la The Munsters) were going to make an appearance in this short as it would fit thematically, but alas, they did not.  

All in all, "Trick or Treat" is a cute little Halloween short, if not particularly "classic."  

RigbyMel's rating:





2 jack-o-lanterns 

Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Our 2020 Holiday Season Celebrates Two Animated Families!



Hi everyone, leaves have begun falling off trees and it's beginning to get a little chilly outside.  That means that the holiday season is almost upon us once again!  Here at Holiday Film Reviews, that means it's our busiest time of the year.  We're excited about new reviews of holiday specials, episodes and movies between now and January 6 (the twelfth day of Christmas).

2020 brings milestone anniversaries for two primetime animated series.  The Flintstones celebrates its 60th anniversary this year.  There have been multiple holiday specials and episodes that feature "the modern stone age family," so we're looking forward to taking a deep dive into the adventures of Fred, Wilma and friends.  

This Halloween also marks the 30th anniversary of The Simpsons'  first "Treehouse Of Horror" episode.  It's become an annual October tradition for the series and we plan to review Halloween episodes of The Simpsons from several different decades.  

Holday Film Reviews hasn't reviewed any Flinstones content here, but we have reviewed two installments of "Treehouse Of Horror."  Here are links to those reviews:

The Simpsons: "The Simpsons Halloween Special II"(A.K.A. "Treehouse Of Horror II")

The Simpsons: "Treehouse Of Horror XXIV"

We also plan to mix in reviews of other holiday programming that isn't connected to those series.

So please stop by tomorrow when we begin our holiday season of reviews!