(S06E01) A long time ago, but somehow in the future . . .
Who would've thunk it? When Family Guy premiered back in 1999(!) many people tossed it away as a pale imitation of The Simpsons and kind of ignored it. Who knew that eight years later, at the start of the show's 6th season, Seth MacFarlane and his crew would be able to get the approval of George Lucas himself to air a spoof of Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope. It shows how far Family Guy has come since it returned to the prime-time airwaves.
It's also shows that they were a tad bit late when it comes to full-on Star Wars parodies. After getting his own go-ahead from Lucas, Seth Green, who voices Chris Griffin on Family Guy, aired his own Star Wars spoof on his Adult Swim program Robot Chicken three months ago. Granted, Green's homage to one of the greatest science-fiction movies ever was broader in its humor and stretched across the entire franchise (although it did concentrate quite a bit on episodes four through six). MacFarlane's spoof, on the other hand, sticks pretty closely to the plot of episode four and is almost like a tribute to the movie.
To fans of the show, this episode of Family Guy may seem a bit, um, corny. There aren't any trademarked segways segues that the animated series is known for, no images of Peter running around naked, no song-and-dance numbers by Brian and Stewie, and barely any mention of or sight of Meg at all (although, that's pretty normal). If anything, the way the episode was set up reminded me of such classic movie parodies like Spaceballs, Airplane, and Hot Shots!.
Take the beginning sequence, for example. After the opening crawl of renegade paragraphs that float through space (and a discussion about a naked Angelina Jolie in the movie Gia) we see the classic first scene of Star Wars where the Star Destroyer is chasing the Rebel Alliance starship. On the back of the Star Destroyer is a huge Bush-Cheney bumper sticker. Later, as the music swells up around Chris/Luke Skywalker while he ponders over Tatooine's two suns, he turns and introduces John Williams and the orchestra. He then asks them to play the theme to The People's Court. Still further in the episode, when the Millennium Falcon is being tractored into the Death Star, we see it being flagged in by a trio of uninterested valets.
Many of these little jokes fit well into the scope of the story. Others didn't work so well. In the scene where Herbert/Obi-Wan and the rest of the Scobby Gang split up in the Death Star the creepy old man suddenly breaks out into (I've Had)the Time of My Life from the movie Dirty Dancing. It was two minutes that slowed everything down and could have been used better.
Then, there was the scene in the garbage chute where Han/Peter and Chewy/Brian find a perfectly good couch that could be used. That was okay, but the parts about getting the couch out of the garbage chute and then onto the Falcon weren't that funny. Although ,the scene where Han is holding onto the bottom end of the couch while the Falcon escapes was amusing. These bits didn't deter too much from the episode, however. I expected that there would be some duds throughout the hour-long show. If it had all been packed into 30-minutes it probably would have killed the episode.
Character-wise, this was a Lois/Peter/Chris episode, although Cleveland/R2-D2 and Quagmire/C-3P0 had quite a bit of screentime themselves. Since they were portraying different roles some of the characteristics that we normally see weren't there in this episode. I don't believe I heard a 'Freakin' Sweet' from Peter, and Chris was less whiny. In fact, Seth Green toned down Chris quite a bit in this episode. Brian and Stewie, who seem to have a majority of screen time lately on the show, didn't really have much to say. However, I did hear Stewie blurt out a 'What the Deuce?' during the final Death Star battle scene.
There were other things that impressed me throughout the season premiere. Here are but a few of them:
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The conference room scene between Darth and his generals. There is that .1% vulnerability on the Death Star. You know, that small hole that, if you shoot a laser into it, the station blows up
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It seems that MacFarlane was able to use a number of scenes from the actual movie and overlay them with animation. It looked very good on-screen.
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John Williams and his orchestra die when Luke's aunt and uncle are killed. Now they have to use Danny Elfman for the score.
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After Lois/Leia records her message to Obi-Wan, she needs to work through R2's Windows Interface to chose the correct media player to make an mpeg file.
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In the Cantina scene I could swear I saw one of the characters from Home Movies sitting at one of the back booths.
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Luke: I got 'em! I got 'em!' Han: 'Great kid! Don't get penisy'
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Red Leader asks for all of his wings to sound off, including Redd Foxx, Helen Reddy, Big Red chewing gum, Simply Red, Red Buttons and Red October.
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National Lampoon's Star Wars Vacation. Clark Griswold wants his kids to see the plight of the Rebellion. Chevy Chase and Beverly D'Angelo provide the voices.
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The other guest voice actors for this episode: Some of them you would be surprised about. Besides Chase and D'Angelo Rush Limbaugh and Helen Reddy also provided their own character voices.
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Chris' little dig to Peter concerning Robot Chicken at the end of the episode. That was probably one of the funnier moments.
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The title 'Blue Harvest'. For those of us who are not total Star Wars geeks, this was the title of the fictitious film used to ensure secrecy during the filming of Return of the Jedi.
Overall, this was a fun episode to watch. I thought that MacFarlane kept to the story pretty well, and there were enough corny jokes to make it amusing. I don't know if the Family Guy purists would have enjoyed the show, but hopefully they gave it a try. Now, it's your turn to tell me what you thought of the episode.













Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
9-23-2007 @ 10:18PM
Whitecat said...
Richard- I have to disagree with you, the couch scene was REALLY funny. haven't you ever tried to move a piece of furniture?
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9-23-2007 @ 10:22PM
Jacob said...
I thought the entire episode was GREAT. I don't think I stopped laughing during the entire hour. Well, other than the stupid commercials.... I loved having Roger from "American Dad" in the Catina , too.
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9-23-2007 @ 10:23PM
Jacob said...
Oops, meant to type "cantina"
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9-23-2007 @ 10:24PM
Jared said...
Yeah, that was Coach McGuirk in the cantina. Still trying to figure out how he ended up there.
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9-23-2007 @ 10:27PM
Jordan said...
Did Rush Limbaugh lend his voice for the part where C-3PO and Luke are riding in the Landspeeder listening to talk radio. If it wasn't Limbaugh, the impression was spot on. Enough to fool a regular listener.
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9-23-2007 @ 10:40PM
mayorjimmy said...
yeah that was really Rush.
i loved the pimped out TIE.
this whole episode was just great.
and leia is getting laaaaaaarger!!!!
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9-23-2007 @ 10:48PM
sean said...
Bender from Futurama also made an appearance in the bar, in the far back booth
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9-23-2007 @ 10:52PM
Rich Keller said...
When I first heard it I thought it was someone doing Rush. I was surprised that it was actually him when the credits rolled. It also amazed me that Chevy Chase did a voice cameo as well.
As for the couch gag . . . I was actually nodding my head with the way Peter and Luke (and Peter and Brian) were talking to each other. I just thought that both jokes ran a bit long.
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9-23-2007 @ 10:55PM
Danny Smith said...
The couch moving bits were probably meant for the Friends crowd.
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9-23-2007 @ 11:06PM
Ryan said...
"Red Leader asks for all of his wings to sound off, including Redd Foxx, Helen Reddy, Big Red chewing gum, Simply Red, Red Buttons and Red October."
The episode was pretty good, but when they got to this part, I died. I absolutely died. I was on the floor laughing!
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9-23-2007 @ 11:11PM
mayorjimmy said...
As a non-friends watching man who has a couch I'll be keeping for many years to come i found the couch gags amusing. the only part i found could be removed was the dirty dancing part.
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9-23-2007 @ 11:30PM
Topher said...
There is a good reason Coach McGurk from Home Movies was in the Cantina. At the Family Guy Live! show in chicago last weekend, the actor who does the voice of Coach McGurk (H. Jon Benjamin) was there and they announced that he does the voice of a new character this season.
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9-24-2007 @ 12:00AM
SJ said...
Wait, Bender made an appearance? Someone get a screen-grab for me.
The funniest part for me was definitely the discussion about Robot Chicken.
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9-24-2007 @ 12:06AM
Alicia said...
I just about peed my pants at the end when "Chris" was going on about Robot Chicken.
But my fav. was The Blues Brothers homage.
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9-24-2007 @ 12:33AM
Adam said...
How about the dead-on spoof of Dirty Dancing with Herbert and Chris?! I lmao through that whole part. Hilarious.
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9-24-2007 @ 1:04AM
1iPete said...
The animation and effects were very well done, but I thought the humor was kind of mediocre overall with a few real good laughs.
The ending discussion between Peter & Chris about Robot Chicken was definitely the highlight for me.
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9-24-2007 @ 1:07AM
Wil Wheaton said...
This was clearly aimed at my generation, too, with *two* Airplane references, and a Dirty Dancing gag that my wife and I fell over watching, because they matched it pretty much shot-for-shot.
I thought the whole thing was hilarious, well-paced, and a perfect homage to Star Wars from people who clearly love it as much as we geeks do.
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9-24-2007 @ 1:17AM
BigTed said...
I thought this was a great episode too. Even with all the cutaway gags "Family Guy" usually has, Seth McFarlane is really a very old-fashioned storyteller. And while it was a satire, he actually told the story of the original "Star Wars," reminding us what a great movie it is. The fact that people know it so intimately allowed him to make fun of small details (something he couldn't have done with the most recent three "Star Wars" movies).
The only thing I didn't like was the character of Herbert. That guy always creeps me out, and I don't think he's at all funny.
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9-24-2007 @ 1:29AM
nickmagoo said...
what, no mention of the tom baker doctor who sight/music gag when they kick into hyperspace? actually i thought it better than most family guy episodes since the story was more linear and fewer non sequiter gags (which can be very funny sometimes, but they can also just get in the way), and the ones they had actually worked in the service of the episode. and as for the simpsons rip off element of the show...well, the beginning when the power goes out and they think about telling stories is a total take on the simpsons (and of course the danny elfman reference...).
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9-24-2007 @ 1:32AM
BStu said...
I don't know. Don't get me wrong, I thought it was really well done and pretty consistently funny. It just felt REALLY self-indulgent. I mean, it was Star Wars in an hour. As a fan, I admire the faithfulness and attention to detail, but it just seemed really unnecessary. There were lots of little moments that ate up screen time just because they were enamored with recreating Star Wars for Family Gun, especially in the Death Star scene. A lot of it was there just to be a fun space battle. I get why George Lucus did that, just not Seth McFarlane.
Again, its funny and exceptionally well-executed, I just don't quite get why they need to do a one-hour, abridged version of Star Wars. Because they can doesn't quite cut it for me. And would someone tell that writing staff to get over their hatred of Meg. That gag stopped being funny a while ago and now just seems like they don't care about the premise of the show at all. Admittedly, opening a season with an elaborate movie parody/recreation doesn't exactly argue against that notion.
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