

The two of them become popular by association with Tiny Rick and are blinded by the fact that Rick isn’t actually happy in this body and will die if he doesn’t switch back soon. I was actually somewhat disappointed when it turned out the plot wasn’t focused on hunting this vampire, which would have been just as amazing to watch.Īs the episode progresses, Tiny Rick becomes increasingly popular among the high school kids, and he continues to find reasons to stay a teenager because it is helping Summer and Morty socially. It was bold and fitting for Harmon and Roiland to blatantly have Summer suggest Rick put his mind into a younger physical version of himself to help exterminate a vampire in their high school. The main plot is pretty funny and was actually well-established with no real introduction and transition to the episode’s problem. In this week’s great episode, “Big Trouble in Little Sanchez,” Rick and Morty gets deeps on extremely odd levels (similar to most installments of this show). Rick and Morty pulls off some really great ideas in such a short time span and proves how brilliant Dan Harmon’s mind is. Naturally, the whole cycle of death and suffering is completely unnecessary, just another way for Rick to alleviate the endless boredom of being the smartest man in the universe.As the sophomore season of Rick and Morty continues to inch closer towards its finale, the show is on top of its game. Hilariously, the post-credits scene even puts those giant insect invasions into context, as we learn that the creatures are actually well-intentioned, trying to spread the cure for AIDS across the universe, but are being mutated by entering their portals, and viciously gunned down by the military, or stomped by a GoTron.

It’s a fun, fast-moving episode that doesn’t really reach a cohesive conclusion - but it’s nice to see Rick let loose again, as the family scrabble for his respect, against their own better judgement.

Soon, the Smith family reward Rick’s indifference with a rescue plan, and the incest baby smashes the biggest GoTron to pieces, while Rick is busy with a Scarface parody. military attempted to use her to turn it into a superweapon. Yup, that gross-out gag was more than a throwaway reference to 2001: A Space Odyssey - it turns out that Summer formed a motherly bond with the thing, after the U.S. While Rick enjoys nerding out, the Smith family get together to nurse their wounded egos, and for Summer to explain why the giant incest baby is about to make a comeback. Hence, Rick joins together his now ridiculous collection of GoTrons to form one gargantuan robot (which, to be honest, looks identical to the previous versions - there is no sense of scale to the behemoth). Of course, Summer immediately realizes that her own loyalty is of little value to Rick - he instantly replaces her with one of the anime girls, unaware that their plan is to steal his collection of GoTrons. It doesn’t take long for Summer, drunk with power (and Rick’s approval) to fire her own parents. His loyalty, however, is not rewarded - the Smiths have enthusiastically embraced the Goodfellas life, and kick Morty to the curb. The anime kids, obviously the true owners of the GoTrons, want Rick to stop playing with their toys, but Morty manages to outgun them.
RICK AND MORTY SEASON 2 EPISODE 7 FULL
The new family dynamic begins to collapse after Morty is kidnapped by a group of anime characters, boasting weird speech patterns and everything (for full commitment to the bit, they should have hired the cheapest, most incompetent voice actors they could find, to really replicate the unsettling, out-of-context English dub).
