The Cryonic Woman

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Futurama episode
"The Cryonic Woman"
Episode no. 32
Prod. code 2ACV19
Airdate December 12, 2000
Where Flag of United States United States
Writer(s) J. Stewart Burns
Director J. Stewart Burns
Opening subtitle Not a Substitute for Human Interaction
Opening cartoon Unknown
Guest star(s) Pauly Shore
Sarah Silverman
Season 2
November 1999 – December 2000
  1. I Second That Emotion
  2. Brannigan Begin Again
  3. A Head in the Polls
  4. Xmas Story
  5. Why Must I Be a Crustacean in Love?
  6. Lesser of Two Evils
  7. Put Your Head on My Shoulders
  8. Raging Bender
  9. A Bicyclops Built for Two
  10. A Clone of My Own
  11. How Hermes Requisitioned His Groove Back
  12. The Deep South
  13. Bender Gets Made
  14. Mother's Day
  15. The Problem with Popplers
  16. Anthology of Interest I
  17. War is the H-Word
  18. The Honking
  19. The Cryonic Woman
List of all Futurama episodes...

The Cryonic Woman is the 19th and last episode in series 2 of Futurama. It originally aired in North America on December 12, 2000.

Contents

[edit] Plot

In an attempt to entertain themselves, Fry and Bender borrow the Planet Express spaceship. Unfortunately, the ship is anchored to the building using an unbreakable diamond tether. As the ship is piloted on a round-the-world joyride, the building is dragged behind it, smashing into a number of landmarks, including the Gateway Arch in St. Louis. Professor Farnsworth fires Fry and Bender for taking the ship, and fires Leela as well for leaving the keys in the ship.

Leela reimplants her and Fry's old career chips, but she mixes them up. Fry gets hired for Leela's old cryogenics counselor job, and Leela is forced to be a delivery boy. Fry thaws out Pauly Shore, who was supposed to be thawed out in Hollywood, California. When Fry goes to greet the next thawed person, he is shocked to find that it is his old girlfriend, Michelle.

Fry introduces Michelle to the world of the year 3000, but she has problems adapting. She re-freezes both herself, and Fry, for another thousand years. They awake in a desolate wasteland. They try to make a new life in the world of the future, and join a society of feral adolescents. When the children are picked up for Hebrew lessons by an adult woman in a heavily armored SUV, a confused Fry, tired of Michelle's nagging, leaves her and wanders through the wilderness on his own.

After wandering through a cloud of green mist, Fry finds himself standing in front of Grauman's Chinese Theater. The Planet Express ship lands in the street, and the crew explains that Fry is in Los Angeles, in the year 3000. Fry was in Pauly Shore's tube, and when the delivery crew discovered en route to Hollywood that Pauly Shore wasn't in the tube, they tossed it overboard. A limousine passes by, revealing that Michelle has hooked up with Pauly.

As the Planet Express ship flies home, Bender remarks that Fry was the one who ruined the spaceship and started the whole dilemma and reminds the Professor about his angriness with him earlier. He hits a red switch and a trapdoor Fry is standing over opens and he falls through onto the ground, leaving him there, stranded. As you hear him hit the ground, the credits roll.

[edit] Quotes

  • Fry: So you're saying these aren't the decaying ruins of New New York in the year 4000?
    Professor Farnsworth: You wish. You're in Los Angeles!
    Fry: But there was this gang of ten-year-olds with guns.
    Leela: Exactly, you're in L.A.
    Fry: But everyone's driving around in cars, shooting at each other.
    Bender: That's L.A. for you.
    Fry: But the air is green, and there's no sign of civilization whatsoever.
    Bender: He just won't stop with the social commentary.
  • Zoidberg: Goodbye, friends. (After they leave) Feh, good riddance, now Zoidberg's the popular one!
    Professor: Yes, let's all talk to Zoidberg.
    Amy: What's up Zoidberg?
    Hermes: How you been?
    Professor: So, what's new?
    Zoidberg: Oh, you know.
  • Bender: That Probulator sure knows how to please a man.
  • Fry: These are my friends: Leela (Michelle screams), Bender (Michelle screams again), Professor Farnsworth (Michelle looks at Fry, who nods, and screams yet again), Hermes and Amy (they shake hands), and Zoidberg.
    Zoidberg: AAAAAAAAAUUUUUUGGGGGHHHH!!!!!!!! (he runs out the door).
  • Fry: Michelle, I don't regret this, but I both rue and lament it.
  • Michelle: Fry is it really you?
    Fry: I don't know, is it really you?
    Michelle: What do you mean you don't know, are you or not?
    Fry: Who wants to know?
    Michelle: Oh Fry, it is you!

[edit] Trivia

  • Leela's mug reads,"Universe's #1 Space Pilot" and Fry's mug reads, "Universe's #4307697 Delivery Boy"

[edit] References

  • The title for this episode comes from the 70s TV show The Bionic Woman.
  • The "post-apocalyptic" gang may have been inspired by Mad Max and the Escape from New York - Escape from L.A. films.
  • The language in which the girl counts to three before the "deathrolling" is Hebrew, which makes sense considering Butch's mother comes to pick the kids up for Hebrew school.
  • When Fry and Bender are choosing which of the patients to defrost, they pass a frozen "Weird Al" Yankovic, circa 1980s, in one of the cryogenic tubes and choose not to defrost him. This may be related to the fact that Pauly Shore's movie Bio-Dome was mocked in the song "Albuquerque", which was on Weird Al's album Running with Scissors, released earlier that year.
  • This episode marks the second time that Professor Farnsworth's unbreakable diamond tether is used in the series (after "The Deep South"). Again, it manages to get the crew into trouble.

[edit] Foreshadowing

  • Fry mentions that in the 30th century, "brains fly through space". In the episode "The Day the Earth Stood Stupid", the flying brains will be introduced.

[edit] External links


Preceded by:
" The Honking "
Futurama episodes Followed by:
" Amazon Women in the Mood "