Every Man's Dream
"Every Man's Dream" | ||||
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The Simpsons episode | ||||
Episode no. | 575 | |||
Directed by | Matthew Nastuk | |||
Written by | J. Stewart Burns | |||
Showrunner(s) | Al Jean | |||
Production code | TABF14 | |||
Original air date | September 27, 2015 | |||
Couch gag | A parody of several Beatles album covers. The last cover features a double-decker bus running over The Simpsons who were recreating the Abbey Road walk. | |||
Guest actors | Adam Driver as Adam Sackler Lena Dunham as Candace, Hannah Horvath Laura Ingraham as Therapist Jemima Kirke, Zosia Mamet and Allison Williams as Candace's friends | |||
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"Every Man's Dream" is the season premiere of the twenty-seventh season of the animated television series The Simpsons, and the 575th episode of the series overall. It aired in the United States on Fox on September 27, 2015. In the episode, Homer and Marge go through a trial separation. During this time, Homer dates a female pharmacist and Marge dates the woman's father.
Plot
Homer wakes up at the Power Plant to an alarm, where he accidentally causes an electrical explosion at his desk. He falls back asleep while the fire is extinguished. He is taken to Springfield General Hospital, where Dr. Hibbert discovers Homer has narcolepsy, a sleeping sickness. He receives a medical note, which he uses to excuse himself from performing daily tasks. Dr. Hibbert contacts Marge to ask Homer to get some medication, which he goes to collect. When queuing to collect his medication, Homer complains about waiting in line, before falling asleep on the floor. He returns home later that night without any medication and Marge can smell that Homer has been out drinking. After Marge complains at Homer, the couple agree they should go to see a therapist. The therapist says that Homer and Marge's relationship is falling apart and that the best option for them is separation, which could lead to divorce if things don't improve. Marge, frustrated with the sleeping Homer, agrees and tells him to leave for the time being. Homer packs his bags, and prepares to leave the family. Lisa is confused as to why her father is leaving, so Marge tells the kids that she and Homer are splitting up, and she is unsure when or if she will let him return. After Homer drives off, crying, he sleeps over at the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant, hoping that Marge will forgive him soon like she did after previous break-ups. However, Lenny learns that Marge has changed her social media relationship status to "it's complicated". Homer then calls Marge, to discover on her voicemail she has reverted to her maiden name, Bouvier.
After visiting Moe's Tavern, Homer goes to collect his medication, and meets a female pharmacist named Candace who agrees to go out with him, and they later spend the night together. Homer wakes up the next morning, worried about his marriage to Marge, and tries to call home to speak to her. He speaks to Selma, who reveals that Marge is preparing to go on a date. Homer goes with Candace, to meet her friends, who spend time together at a coffee shop. Candace's friends joke with her, pondering why she is dating Homer. She reminds him of a snowman, to which Homer comments that he'd like to be 'back in snowman shape'. They both get tattoos which they show to Moe. Candace wants Homer to meet her father, and they go out for a meal. Candace's father, Roger, tells Homer not to worry about the age difference between him and Candace, revealing he has been dating a younger woman. Marge enters the restaurant, and she is in shock to see Homer is there, while he and Candace are appalled to see that she's Roger's date and that Roger has been spending time with Bart, Lisa and Maggie. Roger apologies to Candace for not being there for her, before he proposes to Marge. Marge agrees to marry Roger after the divorce is finalized. Candace suggests Homer should marry her, revealing she is pregnant with his child.
Homer wakes up at the therapist's office sitting next to Marge. Homer is relieved to discover it was only a dream, and he and Marge are still together. Homer tells the therapist how she should not have suggested that he break up with Marge, but the therapist admits she did not tell them to break up. Homer makes a promise to try and behave for the next month, in an attempt to stay with Marge. After proposing to spend February on Homer's behavioral improvement, they agree on March. By March 31, the family see an improvement in Homer. Lisa is now eating meat, and Maggie can now talk. She sings "What a Wonderful World" with Homer confused by this, only to wake up in a bar alongside Candace, who hits him with a bottle of beer to wake him up. Homer runs to his family home to see Roger has taken Homer's place at the family dinner table. The family look happy, and Homer walks away, sobbing. Lisa walks out to see Homer, who comforts him, and they hug each other. Lisa is called back indoors by Roger after he mentions pony shopping and tells Homer "I'll Skype you at Christmas". Homer cries out loudly. Marge wakes up in bed, alongside a snoring Homer, and is shocked to discover this was her dream, and wonders if it meant something about her marriage to Homer. They visit the therapist who is about to talk through a solution.
The camera pans out to reveal a tattoo of the entire scene on the back of Hannah Horvath from Girls. When asked what the tattoo meant by her lover, she says it means 'never get drunk in Brooklyn'.
Production
A drug trip scene in the episode features "Big City (Everybody I Know Can be Found Here)", a 1991 song by the British band Spacemen 3.[1] Episode writer J. Stewart Burns selected the song after deciding it would be a good fit for the scene, and was surprised that the song was not replaced with a less obscure choice in editing.[2] The band, who often turn down requests to use their music on television, decided to approve the request because they felt thought the song worked well in context with the scene.[2] The band's co-founder and guitarist Peter Kember told The Wall Street Journal that the song's usage in the scene was "something that’s usually for me a high point of The Simpsons oeuvre. I imagine it is what people in bands secretly, or openly, dream of. Animation is so useful for these sort of stretches of reality."[2]
In a September 2015, interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Al Jean spoke about the episode, saying: "We were trying to get to the nub of the answer to the marital dilemma. Husbands and wives think differently, husbands and wives have friction — how do you solve it? When you get down to it, the therapist says it — and our answer is: there is no answer. We didn't realize it would get all this publicity that Homer and Marge were going to divorce. We were aware that we'd done a number of relationship episodes and people would go, "Oh, not another one!" There are always things that come up in a marriage that I think are worthy of comedy. But the takeaway we wanted was: When you think you've got a handle on it, that's when you're wrong. I would never presume to say I have marriage figured out."[3]
Reception
The episode received a 1.5 rating and was watched by a total of 3.28 million people, making it the most watched show on Fox that night.[4]
Dennis Perkins of The A.V. Club gave the episode a C-, commenting "Just to be clear, there’s nothing inherently wrong with any of [the plot points of the episode]. The problem with this disastrously misguided season premiere is that the episode botches every one, exemplifying the current Simpsons lax and cynical tendencies before throwing the whole thing away with a series of handwaves so perfunctory as to render the entire episode not only thoroughly lousy, but completely inconsequential."[5]
Jesse Schedeen of IGN gave the episode a 4.2 out of 10, saying "Perhaps there are still ways to get mileage out of the idea of Homer working to save his marriage, but this certainly isn't it. This episode wasn't just redundant, it operated on flimsy logic, mostly ignored Marge and seemed to have no problem with the idea of Homer shacking up with another woman. Worse, none of those problems even mattered in the end, because the whole thing proved to be one elaborate, pointless dream sequence. If this is a sign of things to come, Season 27 is going to be a long slog."[6]
References
- ↑ Camp, Zoe (September 28, 2015). "Spacemen 3's "Big City (Everybody I Know Can be Found Here)" Featured on "The Simpsons"". Pitchfork. Retrieved October 12, 2015.
- 1 2 3 Ayes, Mike (September 27, 2015). "Music on TV: Spacemen 3 Touches Down on ‘The Simpsons’". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved October 12, 2015.
- ↑ Lesley Goldberg (2015-09-27). "'Simpsons' Divorce Homer Marge Lena Dunham". Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2015-10-26.
- ↑ Dixon, Dani (September 29, 2015). "Sunday Final Ratings: 'Bob's Burgers' Adjusted Down, '60 Minutes' Adjusted Up + 'Sunday Night Football". TVbytheNumbers. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
- ↑ Perkins, Dennis (September 27, 2015). "The Simpsons premiere threatens Marge and Homer’s marriage, our good will". The A.V. Club. Retrieved September 28, 2015.
- ↑ "The Simpsons: "Every Man's Dream" Review". IGN. Retrieved 2015-09-30.
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