Treehouse of Horror VI
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"Treehouse of Horror VI" is the sixth episode of The Simpsons' seventh season, as well as the sixth Halloween episode.
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[edit] Opening sequence
Krusty is the Headless Horseman from The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, holding his laughing head, and hurling it at the camera. This makes "The Simpsons Halloween Special VI" appear on screen in blood. We hear Krusty do his trademark groan.
[edit] Plot
[edit] Attack of the 50-Foot Eyesores
When Homer goes to Lard Lad Donuts to get a "Colossal Donut", he denounces their advertising when he realizes that the "colossal donuts" are not very colossal. So, in an act of revenge, he steals the Lard Lad's giant donut from the statue displayed outside, and in the midst of a freak storm, Lard Lad and other giant advertising statues come to life to terrorize Springfield. Homer eventually returns the donut, but that does not stop Lard Lad and his friends from causing destruction. Finally, Lisa goes to an ad agency, and an executive suggests not to pay attention to the monsters, as they are advertising gimmicks, attention is what keeps them motivated. He tries to write a song, but suggests it would actually sound better coming from Paul Anka. Anka later performs a catchy song with Lisa. The citizens of Springfield stop looking at the monsters, who lose their powers and become lifeless.
[edit] Nightmare on Evergreen Terrace
Bart has a nightmare that Groundskeeper Willie is out to kill him. He is slashed with a rake, and the scratches are still on his body after he wakes up. Many other students at Springfield Elementary School also say they were terrorized by Willie in their nightmares, and what he did actually affected them. When the students take a test, Martin falls asleep and is strangled by Willie in his dream. Martin dies in class, and Bart and Lisa tell Marge about the incident. Marge then asks what this has to do with Willie despite the fact Bart and Lisa did not mention him. She then tells the kids the truth: Willie was killed in a furnace explosion in the school's basement on the thirteenth hour of the thirteenth day of the thirteen month (that thirteenth month being "Smarch" due to misprinted calendars) and burned to death while the parents of the students (in a meeting Marge says was called to deal with the issue of the misprinted calendars) looked on and did nothing. He told the parents he would get his revenge by killing the children in their dreams. The parents ignored him, but he made good on his promise. Bart decides that he is going to go to sleep and dream of fighting Willie. Lisa is supposed to stay awake and wake him up if he seems to be in trouble. Bart appears in his dream and attempts to find Willie, who can also transform into other things. Willie turns into a lawn mower but loses when he is tricked into mowing the sandbox containing quicksand as Bart is celebrating however Willie turns into a bagpipe spider and is about to kill Bart, when Lisa enters, trying to wake him up. Bart realizes that since she is in the dream, that means she has also fallen asleep. They are about to lose the battle when Maggie appears and uses her pacifier to seal the vent on Willie's spider body, resulting in Willie's explosion. Now Bart and Lisa hope they are free of Willie forever, but they are wrong. He does show up again, but just as a normal person with no evil dream-powers, much to the children's relief.
This segment is a parody of Nightmare on Elm Street.
[edit] Homer³
Patty and Selma are about to visit the Simpson family to clean a bucket of seashells. Homer panics and searches for somewhere to hide. He looks behind a bookcase (remarking "I never looked behind this whatchamacallit case before") where he discovers a gateway to an eerie third dimension. Homer explores the peculiar area, being depicted as a 3-D computer-generated animation. Through the walls, he calls Marge for help.
Marge calls Ned Flanders (because he "has a ladder"), Reverend Lovejoy, Professor Frink, Chief Wiggum, and Dr. Hibbert to help Homer get out of the dimension, but they are of no help. "It's like he just disappeared into FAT air", remarks Selma.
Frink outside explains to the others that Homer is in the "third dimension". When Homer accidentally pierces the fabric of the space-time continuum by throwing a cone in the floor and creating a hole in the floor, the third dimension starts to collapse into a black hole, taking Homer and other objects closer to it with increasing force. An enraged Wiggum opens fire on the wall, but the bullets just get sucked into the black hole after narrowly missing Homer, making the force of the black hole stronger. Bart takes command and ties a safety rope around his waist, going into the third dimension to save him, despite Marge's objection. Bart yells at Homer that he has to jump to get hold of Bart, so that they can escape. Homer agrees and tries to, but falls short and into the hole, yelling "Craaaaap!", and Bart ends up back in the house thanks to his safety rope pulled by Wiggum, Ned, Lovejoy, Frink, Grampa, and Hibbert after the third dimension collapsed on itself. Bart tells the truth about what happened ("Well, we hit a little snag when the universe sorta collapsed in on itself"), much to Marge's dismay. Lovejoy assures her that Homer has gone to a better place. Homer finds himself in an even more terrifying world: the real world. He then sees a shop named "Erotic Cakes" and he forgets his troubles. He enters while the humans are staring at him in horror.
[edit] Awards
This episode was The Simpsons' submission for the 1996 Emmy Awards. The show would eventually lose to Pinky and the Brain. The reason this episode was submitted was because of its 3D animation and the writers felt it would be a lock. In several DVD commentaries, the writers and producers talk about how they had many different emotionally driven episodes during the seventh season that probably would have "destroyed Pinky and the Brain" and won the Emmy, episodes such as "Mother Simpson", "Lisa the Vegetarian", and "Bart Sells His Soul".
[edit] Math equations
The codes and Easter eggs that appear in Homer³ are:
- P = NP; this is a reference to the famous P = NP problem, and similarly contradicts the general belief that in fact P ≠ NP.
- 46 72 69 6E 6B 20 72 75 6C 65 73 21; an ASCII-hexadecimal string that decodes as "
Frink rules!
". - eπ i = -1; Euler's identity where i is the imaginary unit.
- 1 + 1 = 2; This is perhaps one of the most basic and easiest mathematical equations one can understand. This fact can act as a building block to all the other mathematical concepts seen in the episode providing an interesting contrast.
- 734 are the numbers that correspond to the letters PDI (Pacific Data Images, the animation studio) on a phone keypad. This segment was provided by Pacific Data Images (now Dreamworks Animation SKG, creator of the Shrek movies).
- ρmo > 3 H0² / 8 p G; appears shortly before it falls into the black hole. It defines the critical density of the universe above which the universe would collapse. It is part of Einstein's general theory of relativity. G is the universal gravitational constant, H0 is the Hubble constant.
- 178212 + 184112 = 192212.
- Although a false statement, it appears to be true when evaluated on a typical calculator with 10 digits of precision.[2] If it were true, it would disprove Fermat's last theorem, which had just been proved when this show first aired. Cohen generated this "Fermat near-miss" with a computer program. [1]
- That the formula is false is apparent by inspection: the left side is the sum of odd and even numbers, which produces an odd result, but the right side is even. More specifically, any number ending with 2 carried to the 12th power will end in a 6, and any number ending with 1 carried to any power will end in a 1. So this equation would result in a sum that ended with 6 + 1 = 6, which is incorrect.
- Using exact arithmetic, the left side equals 2,541,210,258,614,589,176,288,669,958,142,428,526,657 and the right side equals 2,541,210,259,314,801,410,819,278,649,643,651,567,616, a difference of 700,212,234,530,608,691,501,223,040,959.
[edit] Cultural references
- In 'Attack of the 50-Foot Eyesores' (the title itself a parody of Attack of the 50 Foot Woman) the radio announcement "Astronomers from Tacoma to Vladivostok have just reported an ionic disturbance in the vicinity of the Van Allen Belt. Scientists are recommending that all necessary precautions be taken."[3] is an homage to the "announcements" near the start of Orson Welles' Mercury Theatre radio play The War of the Worlds broadcast on Halloween 1938. In that play, the music of "Ramon Raquello and his orchestra" is interrupted by radio reports of astronomers at Princeton observing disturbances on Mars prior to the Martian invasion.[4]
- 'Nightmare on Evergreen Terrace' is a parody of A Nightmare on Elm Street. When Willie shows the shadow of his rake, it is a homage to Freddy Krueger's famous clawed glove. Willie is also dressed as Freddy would be, in a red and green striped sweater. The scene where Martin Prince dies while daydreaming in class is a spoof of a similar scene from the film A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master. There is also a possible reference to Friday the 13th, as Groundskeeper Willie died on Friday the 13th. Finally, Groundskeeper Willie is killed by Homer, who accidentally sets fire to him. This is perhaps a reference to Krugers 'first death', where he was bombarded with molotov cocktails inside a boiler room.
- The film Tron (the first major film to use computer animation) is also mentioned by Homer as a means of describing his surroundings, as it featured similarly-styled vector-like computer graphics. In what appears to be a sly allusion to the film's lack of success at the box-office, none of the other characters, except possibly Chief Wiggum (who denies it twice, then says yes, then no a third time), are familiar with the reference. Tron's distributor, Disney, would release the first completely CGI-animated film, Toy Story the following month.
- The ornate building Homer encounters inside the third dimension is a recreation of the exterior of the library players encounter in the popular PC game Myst. The calm strings-based music throughout this segment similarly evokes the 'Last Message (Imager Room Theme)' from this game.
- The ad executive tells Lisa that advertisements go away once people stop paying attention to him, and Lisa mentions "Like that old woman who couldn't find the beef?" She is referring to Clara Peller, famous for her line "Where's the beef?" in commercials for Wendy's.
- The segment 'Homer³' is a parody of The Twilight Zone episode 'Little Girl Lost', in which a girl travels through a portal to the 4th dimension. This is referenced when Homer remarks "It's like something out of that twilighty show about that zone". The design of the title 'Homer³' is a parody of the title design of the 1992 horror film Alien³.
- In 'Attack of the 50 Foot Eyesores', some of the mascots are parodies of known mascots. For example, Lard Lad is a parody of Big Boy, the "Zip Boys" are a parody of the Pep Boys and the giant walking unnamed peanut is a parody of Mr. Peanut.
- Willie changing shapes while sinking in the sand box is similar to the T-1000's "death" in Terminator 2: Judgement Day.
- In Homer3, as he is about to fall in the black hole Homer says "There's so much I don't know about astrophysics. I wish I'd read that book by that wheelchair guy". This is a reference to astrophysician Stephen Hawking, one of the main researchers of our time on black holes, who is confined to a wheelchair. Stephen Hawking himself would appear later as a guest star in the episode "They Saved Lisa's Brain" and again in "Don't Fear the Roofer".
- What happens to Homer is sucked in the black hole (he is stretched, sucked in, broken into pieces and then, elementary particles) is quite in accordance with what would happen to someone or something that comes too close to a black hole according to modern science.
[edit] References
- ^ Ray Richmond & Antonia Coffman, The Simpsons: A Complete Guide to Our Favorite Family. New York: HarperCollings (1997): 186 - 187
- ^ Gerald R. Rising, Inside Your Calculator: From Simple Programs to Significant Insights. Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons (2007): Appendix D
- ^ [3F04] Treehouse of Horror VI
- ^ THE WAR OF THE WORLDS - SCRIPT - Orson Welles & the Mercury Theratre on the Air
[edit] External links
- Pacific Data Images on Homer³
- "Treehouse of Horror VI" episode capsule at The Simpsons Archive
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