The Blunder Years

The Blunder Years
"The Blunder Years"
The Simpsons episode
The Blunder Years.png
Waylon Smithers Sr. (left) and Mr. Burns (right) seen in Mr Burns video tape. Although the tape was filmed by a security camera, this shot suggests that the camera was in fact inside the reactor core.
Episode no. 274
Prod. code CABF21
Orig. airdate December 9, 2001
Show runner(s) Mike Scully
Written by Ian Maxtone-Graham
Directed by Steven Dean Moore
Chalkboard gag "I am not Charlie Brown on acid"
Couch gag The family members freeze in mid-air as the camera pans in bullet time from the TV to the couch.
Guest star(s) Paul Newman as himself
Joe Mantegna as Fat Tony
Judith Owen as herself
DVD
commentary
Mike Scully
Al Jean
Ian Maxtone-Graham
Carolyn Omine
John Frink
Don Payne
Matt Selman
Steven Dean Moore
Joel H. Cohen

"The Blunder Years" is the fifth episode of The Simpsonsthirteenth season. It originally aired on the Fox network in the United States on December 9, 2001. The episode sees Homer, after being hypnotized by the hypnotist Mesmerino while having dinner at the restaurant Pimento Grove, reminded by a repressed traumatic experience from his childhood. The Simpsons set out to find the corpse that triggered Homer's psychological trauma, which evolves into a murder mystery later in the episode.

The episode was written by Ian Maxtone-Graham while Steven Dean Moore served as the director. The original idea for the episode came from current show runner Al Jean, which involved the murder mystery in the episode. The writers then incorporated Homer's flashbacks, at which point the episode was titled "The Blunder Years", a parody on the television show The Wonder Years. Following the release of The Simpsons' thirteenth season on DVD and Blu-Ray, the episode received mixed reviews from critics.

Contents

Plot

After tricking his wife Marge into believing that the model for the Burly paper towel corporation Chad Sexington would have dinner with the Simpsons, Homer takes the family to the Pimento Grove to watch live performers as compensation. One of the acts is a hypnotist called Mesmerino. Homer volunteers, and Mesmerino hypnotizes him into thinking he is twelve years old again. As Homer starts to reminisce, he starts screaming incessantly all through the night. Mesmerino attempts to hypnotize him back into reality, but Homer still keeps on screaming. The next day, Homer's co-workers Lenny and Carl bring him home early from work, still screaming. They finally manage to calm him down with some Yaqui tea. He starts to recall the events leading up to the scream-inducing incident. In a flashback, Homer, Lenny, and Carl are hiking in the woods and are confronted by a young Fat Tony, but they are saved by a young Moe.

Upon noticing that his bar was empty, the present-day Moe arrives at the Simpsons' home and begins to recall the events of that day. Moe remembers that while they sat by a fire that night, they saw a near-meltdown at the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant. The next day, they go to the old quarry for a swim, and Homer jumps in, only to find that there was no water but only mud. Though Homer admits that he remembers falling into the mud, he also recalls that there was no water in the quarry because something was blocking the inlet pipe. When Homer unblocks it, all the water came out and he finds a rotting corpse on top of his legs, causing him to scream incessantly.

Since Homer never told about his painful memory of the corpse to anyone, the Simpsons imply that corpse is still in the old quarry and decide to investigate. They go to the old quarry where they meet Chief Wiggum, who comes with them. Marge uses Burly paper towels to drain the water from the quarry. Then, they find the skeleton and go into the inlet pipe to see where the body came from. They find that the pipe leads to a hatch which, in turn, leads to Mr. Burns's office in the nuclear power plant. They confront him about the body after he accidentally says 'corpse hatch' once they opened the hatch. Knowing that this would come, Burns confesses to them that the dead man is Smithers' father, Waylon Smithers Senior. However, Burn swore that he didn't murder him, and to prove his point, he shows an old surveillance tape, filmed during the imminent meltdown in which the Smithers' father goes into an unstable reactor core to prevent the meltdown. Smither's father succeeds in saving the city, but he dies in the process due to exposure to large amounts of radiation, leaving Burns to raise Smithers as his own son out of empathy. Burns tells the Simpsons and Wiggum that he dumped Smithers Sr.'s body into the sewer pipe to 'cover up all the rage back then', and that he kept the truth from Waylon Jr. because he was a infant back then; Smithers then enters the room, having heard the entire story. Burns apologizes to Smithers for lying to him, saying he wanted to spare him from the trauma of his father's real death. However, Smithers admits that he is glad that his father died as a real hero rather than being killed from a tribe of savage Amazon women, which Burns told him earlier. Declaring the case of the haunted quarry solved, Homer stores the skull in his "Memories" box, despite Marge's insistence to give it to Smithers, to which Homer responds that Smithers will just bury it again.

Production

"The Blunder Years" was written by Ian Maxtone-Graham and directed by Steven Dean Moore. It was first broadcast on Fox in the United States on December 9, 2001.[1] Although the episode was written by Maxtone-Graham, the original idea for the episode, which involved Homer finding Smithers' father's corpse, was conceived by writer and current show runner Al Jean. At that point, the episode was titled "Smithers' Father's Apparent Murder" until the writers incorporated flashbacks to Homer's childhood that resembled the story of the film Stand By Me, based on the novella The Body by Stephen King.[2] At this point, the writers changed the episode title to "The Blunder Years".[3]

Actor and director Paul Newman guest-starred as himself in the episode.

Homer's first flashback shows a clip of him falling down Springfield Gorge on a skateboard, a scene taken from the episode "Bart the Daredevil". The Simpsons' staff were concerned that this would make people think the episode was in fact a clip show, so they kept the clip short.[1] The staff also debated how horrific Smithers' father's corpse would look. The first design was "more horrific" than the one seen in the episode, and it more closely resembled Smithers. The corpse seen in the episode was an altered version of the first design. The video recorded by Mr. Burns' security camera was originally supposed to be shot in the same angle as a real security camera, but according to director Steven Dean Moore, to follow the narrative, the staff "had to lose [the camera angle]".[4] This led to some confusion, since one of the shots were from inside the core, making it look as if the security camera was actually inside it. The staff intended to cut the shot, but they later decided to keep it in; Jean explained in the DVD audio commentary for the episode that "Nobody ever notices it".[2] The end of the episode originally had Chad Sexington showing up for his date with Marge, causing Homer to scream uncontrollably again;[4] however, it was cut in favor of Hank Azaria's improvisation as Moe, which, according to Simpsons writer Carolyn Omine, was Azaria's "favorite thing [he] had ever done" on The Simpsons.[5]

American actor and director Paul Newman guest starred as himself in the episode, however he had only one line of dialogue. Newman recorded approximately five or six takes of his line over the phone from the set of a movie he was shooting at the time.[1][3] According to Maxtone-Graham, Newman recorded his line with no rigmarole; "He just said, 'Sure, I'll do it', and he did it instantly."[3] The episode also features Joe Mantegna, who plays a young Fat Tony.[6] Welsh singer-songwriter Judith Owen, wife of Simpsons' cast member Harry Shearer, also makes an appearance in the episode.[3]

Cultural references

The episode's title is a reference to the television show The Wonder Years. Homer's flashbacks to his childhood were based on the plot of the film Stand By Me, which in turn is based on Stephen King's novella The Body.[2] However, the scenes in the quarry were based on the coming of age film Breaking Away, directed by Peter Yates.[4] Burly, the brand of paper towels featured in the episode, is based on the real brand Brawny Paper Towels.[2] The model for Burly paper towels, called Chad Sexington, was based on the Brawny paper towels' logo; however, the logo, within "a year or two of [the episode]", was changed into a more "right-of-center" looking brunette, according to Dean Moore.[4] One of the walls in Pimento Grove shows photos of several characters and guest stars who have appeared on The Simpsons, including Birch Barlow, Stephen Hawking, and Ringo Starr.[1] Mesmerino later reads a letter in a similarly to Carnac the Magnificent, played by Johnny Carson on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson.[3]

Reception

Following the release of the thirteenth season of The Simpsons on DVD and Blu-Ray, "The Blunder Years" received mixed reviews from critics. Giving the episode a positive review, Dominic von Riedermann of suite101 stated that the episode was one of the season's "comedy gems", praising Paul Newman's guest appearance in particular.[7] Writing for DVD Verdict, Jennifer Malkowski gave a favorable review of the episode, giving a B rating and pointed at the scene in which "Homer says finding a corpse explains everything that's gone wrong in his life—especially his fear of corpses" as the highlight of the episode.[8] Colin Jacobsson of DVD Movie Guide was positive, calling the episode a "reasonably amusing spoof [of Stand By Me]". He enjoyed "Marge's lust for Burly" and "Homer's rampaging fear", and concluded by saying that, while nothing in the episode "dazzles", it still "adds up to a good episode".[9]

Ron Martin of 411mania was less enthusiastic about the episode. Calling the episode a "bad parody of Stand By Me", Martin wrote that "any moments this episode might have had are annulled by the constant annoyance of Homer screaming through the first half of the episode".[10] Writing for Project:Blu, Nate Boss was critical, specifically denouncing the episode's plot as unoriginal. He concluded his review by writing "How crap is this? I. Don't. Know! More crap than dinner with Chad Sexington, the model for Burly towels, that's for sure."[11]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Scully, Mike (2010). The Simpsons season 13 DVD commentary for the episode "The Blunder Years" (DVD). 20th Century Fox. 
  2. ^ a b c d Jean, Al (2010). The Simpsons season 13 DVD commentary for the episode "The Blunder Years" (DVD). 20th Century Fox. 
  3. ^ a b c d e Maxtone-Graham, Ian (2010). The Simpsons season 13 DVD commentary for the episode "The Blunder Years" (DVD). 20th Century Fox. 
  4. ^ a b c d Dean Moore, Steven (2010). The Simpsons season 13 DVD commentary for the episode "The Blunder Years" (DVD). 20th Century Fox. 
  5. ^ Omine, Carolyn (2010). The Simpsons season 13 DVD commentary for the episode "The Blunder Years" (DVD). 20th Century Fox. 
  6. ^ Frink, John (2010). The Simpsons season 13 DVD commentary for the episode "The Blunder Years" (DVD). 20th Century Fox. 
  7. ^ von Riedemann, Dominic (September 8, 2010). "The Simpsons The Thirteenth Season DVD Review". Suite101. 
  8. ^ Malkowski, Jennifer (September 6, 2010). "The Simpsons: The Complete Thirteenth Season (Blu-Ray)". DVD Verdict. http://www.dvdverdict.com/reviews/simpsons13bluray.php. Retrieved December 23, 2010. 
  9. ^ Jacobson, Colin (September 2, 2010). "The Simpsons: The Complete Thirteenth Season [Blu-Ray (2001)"]. DVD Movie Guide. http://www.dvdmg.com/simpsonsseasonthirteen.shtml. Retrieved December 23, 2010. 
  10. ^ Martin, Ron (September 15, 2010). "The Simpsons Season 13 DVD Review". 411Mania. http://www.411mania.com/movies/dvd_reviews/153026. Retrieved December 23, 2010. 
  11. ^ Boss, Nate (September 8, 2010). "The Simpsons: The Thirteenth Season". Project:Blu. http://project-blu.com/reviews/simpsons13.html. Retrieved December 23, 2010. 

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