Collage of Rick in his lab and Morty on the fear hole survivor board in Rick and Morty
Rick and Morty’s season finales have delivered some of the show’s all-time best episodes, but they haven’t all been great. The finale is arguably the most important episode of a season of television. It has to wrap up all the current story arcs and top everything that came before it. It has to leave the audience satisfied, because it’s the last they’ll see of the show for a while, but it also has to leave them wanting more, so they’ll tune in when the next season premieres.
This episode marked the first official appearance of Space Beth, and the mystery of which Beth is a clone and which is the original became an interesting storyline, but this is still arguably the show’s weakest season finale. By the time Rick and Morty spoofed Star Wars, that joke area was pretty played out.
Satirizing Trump’s America should’ve been a great premise for Rick and Morty to tackle. The series has a bleak, nihilistic tone and uses twisted humor and inventive genre storytelling to capture real-world issues. But “The Rickchurian Mortydate” left a lot to be desired. It doesn’t use a clever sci-fi allegory to reflect the polarized U.S.
4 Rickmurai Jack ✕ Remove Ads Rick and Morty committed to the titular duo’s separation in season 5, episode 10, “Rickmurai Jack.” In the penultimate episode of season 5, Rick and Morty ended their partnership. Rick replaced Morty with two crows and took off to enjoy intergalactic adventures with his new sidekicks in a spin-off franchise. However, early on in “Rickmurai Jack,” Rick is disheartened to learn that he’s the crows’ rebound, which leads him back to Morty.
Rick and Morty still hadn’t quite found its feet by the end of season 1, but it had established the heartbreaking existential dread that runs beneath the show’s absurdist humor with scenes like Rick and Morty relocating to a new universe and Morty pointing out his own grave to Summer. “Ricksy Business” has a great moment of this when Birdperson reveals that Rick’s seemingly meaningless catchphrase, “Wubba lubba dub-dub,” actually translates to “I am in great pain, please help me.
1 The Wedding Squanchers ✕ Remove Ads The final episode of season 2 — season 2, episode 10, “The Wedding Squanchers” — sees the family attending the wedding of Rick’s friend Birdperson and Summer’s friend Tammy, who met at the Smiths’ house party in the season 1 finale. Although he’s dead against the institution of marriage, Rick is forced to attend the wedding to retrieve Jerry, who accidentally got caught in the invitation delivery system.
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