The Farnsworth Parabox

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Futurama episode
"The Farnsworth Parabox"

The Planet Express crew meet their alternate reality selves.
Episode no. 66
Prod. code 4ACV15
Airdate June 8, 2003
Writer(s) Bill Odenkirk
Director Ron Hughart
Opening subtitle BEATS A HARD KICK IN THE FACE
Opening cartoon Unknown
Season 4
January 2002 – August 2003
  1. Kif Gets Knocked Up a Notch
  2. Leela's Homeworld
  3. Love and Rocket
  4. Less Than Hero
  5. A Taste of Freedom
  6. Bender Should Not Be Allowed on TV
  7. Jurassic Bark
  8. Crimes of the Hot
  9. Teenage Mutant Leela's Hurdles
  10. The Why of Fry
  11. Where No Fan Has Gone Before
  12. The Sting
  13. Bend Her
  14. Obsoletely Fabulous
  15. The Farnsworth Parabox
  16. Three Hundred Big Boys
  17. Spanish Fry
  18. The Devil's Hands Are Idle Playthings
List of all Futurama episodes...

“The Farnsworth Parabox” is the fifteenth episode of the fourth production season of Futurama. It first aired June 8, 2003 as the tenth episode in the fifth broadcast season. The episode was written by Bill Odenkirk and directed by Ron Hughart.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

After nearly dying because of an experiment, Professor Farnsworth decides to destroy the experiment—a yellow box—by dumping it into the sun. Keeping it overnight in the lab, he forbids the Planet Express staff to open it and assigns Leela as a guard to make sure. However, after her shift is over, Leela is tempted by curiosity, flipping a coin to decide whether to open the box. The coin comes up heads, and as such, she does, discovering the box is in fact larger on the inside. She falls into it, ending up in a parallel universe where coin flips come out with the opposite result. Consequently, though everyone in the parallel universe has identical personalities to their counterparts, nearly everyone has a different color scheme (e.g., Bender is painted gold, Zoidberg is blue). Also, Fry and Leela dated and then got married after Leela flipped a coin to decide whether to go out with him or not, and Farnsworth performed an experiment wherein he tried to remove his own brain.

At first, the parallel universe staff believe Leela is evil, and the parallel Leela forces the original Leela’s colleagues (except for Hermes) into the parallel universe. The two Farnsworths discover that, just as the original Farnsworth created a box containing the parallel universe, the parallel Farnsworth created a box containing the original universe. The two Leelas dub the original universe "Universe A", and the second "Universe 1". The two groups agree to watch their counterparts to determine if the other is evil, but after studying the Scriptures, the Professors decide that nobody is evil after all.

When Universe 1’s Hermes comes in to destroy the Universe A box by throwing it into the sun, the crew realize that Universe A’s Hermes must be doing the same thing. They decide to go back through the box to stop Hermes-A. However, the Universe A box is missing, stolen by the two Zoidbergs, who are tired of everyone in both universes ignoring and being disrespectful to them. The two Farnsworths try to recreate the Universe A box, but wind up creating a large number of boxes, all connected to different universes.

The two Zoidbergs return, and everyone else tries to get the box from them. The Zoidbergs jump into another box to escape, and in the process bump into the bookshelf containing the boxes, causing all of them to fall. Unable to tell which box the Zoidbergs jumped into, everyone selects a box to jump into to try to find them, grabbing a length of wire so they can find their way back. Eventually finding the two Zoidbergs, everyone makes their way back to Universe 1, then leaps into the Universe A box.

Meanwhile, in Universe A, Hermes-A, aboard the Planet Express Ship-A, has reached the Sun-A and is about to eject the box-1. At the last moment, everyone else pops out of the box into the airlock. Farnsworth-A orders Hermes-A not to push the eject button. After several moments of consideration, Hermes shrugs and obeys.

Back on Earth, both Farnsworths exchange their boxes by pulling each box into the other’s universe simultaneously. Farnsworth tells the staff to treat the box very carefully as it contains their own universe. Bender then shakes the box, causing earthquake-like effects. Afterwards, while the rest of the staff are watching television, Fry comes into the room and sits on the box, causing the universe to become short and squat. However, this detail is unnoticed by the characters.

[edit] Broadcast and reception

In 2006 this episode was ranked 17th on IGN's list of the top 25 episodes of Futurama. The episode was noted for its humor as a stand–alone episode and in particular for Universe #420 where Professor Farnsworth tells his hippie counterpart to get a job.[1]

[edit] Continuity

  • In a prior episode, "I Dated a Robot", Farnsworth tells Fry that there is only one parallel universe. The only apparent difference between that parallel universe and the original Futurama universe is the presence of cowboy-style clothing. In the commentary, the writers claim that the other universe is the one that has many alternative ones. In the commentary of "I Dated a Robot", the writers say that there is only the one parallel universe, and that the ones in this episode are perpendicular (perhaps because the box is where they cross/become perpendicular). However, these universes were created by Professor Farnsworth, so it is quite possible that until this point, the cowboy universe was the only other alternate universe. It is also possible that Farnsworth is unaware of other universes, while many others might exist.

[edit] Perpendicular universes

  • Universe A—The normal Futurama universe. Boxes in this universe are yellow.
  • Universe 1—The first alternate universe seen; coin tosses have opposite outcomes and almost everything is a different color. The sky is a spiraling array of vibrant colors. Boxes in this universe are light blue.
  • Universe XVII—It appears to be in the era of the Roman Empire, hence the use of Roman numerals. Boxes in this universe are purple.
  • Universe 25—Everyone is born without eyes and is blind. Boxes in this universe are white.
  • Universe 31—Everybody is a clockwork robot version of themselves. Leela saying "Access Denied" to robot Fry made his head explode. Boxes in this universe are green.
  • Universe 420—A hippie universe where in pot smoking is implied both by its smoky haze and its label 420. There appears to be a shortage of boxes in this universe—only one is seen. Boxes in this universe are orange.
  • Universe 1729—Everybody is an extremely rude bobblehead version of themselves. Boxes in this universe are pink. It is possible that 1729 was intentionally chosen to represent this universe by the Futurama writers, because 1729 is the Hardy-Ramanujan number.
  • Other universes—One is very cold, freezing anything that enters it; another contains nothing but women and another is inhabited by beings who have tentacles. Also, the Benders steal treasure from both a leprechaun universe (Bender-1) and a pirate universe (Bender-A).

[edit] Cultural references

  • According to the audio commentary, it was decided to make Zoidberg in the alternate universe blue because approximately one of every two million lobsters is blue.
  • A woman who opens a box that should not be opened is the center of the story of the Pandora's box.
  • The Universe 1 Farnsworth's statement that it is common knowledge that parallel universes are evil is a play on the Star Trek episode "Mirror, Mirror", where Kirk, Uhura, Scotty and McCoy are sent to the mirror universe.
  • The gold Bender-1 could possibly be a reference to protocol droid C-3PO, a notion reinforced by his exclamation, "Our universe is doomed! Doomed!"
  • Farnsworth's use of the word "Baldercrap!" is a portmanteau of "balderdash" and "crap."
  • The labeling of alternate universe by using numbers is similar to that seen in DC comics and Marvel Comics.
  • The title of this episode may be a reference to the EPR paradox.
  • The Benders saying "Make new friends, but keep the old, one is silver and the other's gold" is a quote from a children's campfire song.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Dan Iverson (2006-07-07). Top 25 Futurama Episodes. Retrieved on 2007-09-21.

[edit] External links

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