A few years ago people were quietly watching "The Simpsons" until someone did what Matt Groenning should have done long ago. Thus, the world was introduced to the darkest interdimensional traveling duo in the cartoon world. So today at "Summing It Up" the adventures of "Rick and Morty".
They live in an ordinary Yankee reality. They are the Smiths, an ordinary family from the C-137 universe consisting of: JERRY as the spineless, failed father BETH as the mother obsessed with winning back the respect of her deserting father SUMMER as the troubled teenage daughter MORTY as the son with incipient puberty RICK SÁNCHEZ as a grandfather like yours, or mine Old Sanchez spends his time drunk doing experiments in his garage, or traveling to different dimensions by opening portals with a gun. But the weird part starts now.
Grab your ass, because you have no idea where that gun can take you. The thing is that there is no "other reality" but many, many realities. Each of them has their Rick, their Morty, their Jerry, and the others.
But since the Ricks are the most intelligent beings in all known and unknown universes, they created their own world, called The Citadel. And as the Mortys are the most influential beings in the universe, they are by their side, obeying them. Except for this one, a kind of bad Morty who wants to do his own thing without being bothered by any Rick.
The truth is that this duo doesn't have a very healthy relationship. Rick is so bitter that he has trouble relating to anyone. Including his other selves, his ex-girlfriend, a hive-mind creature who steals bodies, and the president.
It seems that sometimes he loves his grandson and sometimes he just uses him. So our protagonists spend their time traveling from one reality to another and another and another. .
. Until one day Rick and Morty die. They die in one timeline.
. . because in the others, the duo.
. . is alive!
You thought they were going to kill the protagonists? Well, "Game of Thrones" isn't "Game of Thrones" anymore either. It doesn't matter.
The thing is that the old ones replace the dead without the family's knowledge. Everything is getting darker and darker. But while family is important, friends are also important.
Like this cat-like guy, this guy with bird parts or this guy with a turd's head. The best thing Rick does with them is throw interdimensional parties. It turns out that Rick and his friends met in a rebel gang.
And they're still marked on the terrorist list of the nastiest people in the universe: The Galactic Federation. When this interplanetary state ruled by insectoids finds them, it ruins the Bird Boy's wedding. And they take Rick prisoner to take the secret of interdimensional travel out of him.
He gets very angry because they get into his mind. He then escapes by changing bodies in an ultra-violent escape. One, two, ultraviolent One, two, ultraviolent One, two, ultraviolent During the escape, he destroys the Citadel.
He also destroys the government of The Galactic Federation by devaluing its currency. Whoever deposited dollars will receive dollars. The thing is, the other Rick and Morty rebuild their world.
Here a Morty wants to run for president and reduces the inequality between the evil Ricks and the ignored Morty. Then he runs a campaign and wins the election. But.
. . it's a trap!
Because instead of being the benevolent leader he claimed to be, this is none other than the evil Morty. And he begins his tenure by eliminating the opposition in the most dramatic and best-musicalized scene of the show. But for now this does not affect our favorite Rick and Morty.
They continue with their adventures. Like the time they put a helmet on the family dog to make him smarter and he ends up. .
. look, that one has a tie. .
. and he ends up having them as pets. Or like the time Jerry grabs a box that creates creatures named.
. . They solve a problem and disappear.
But since Jerry is a jerk, they can't solve his problem. And if the Mr Meeseks can't solve a problem, they can't disappear. And when Mr Meeseks can't disappear, they go crazy and want to kill everyone.
Or like that time when Morty uses a love potion to seduce the girl he likes. But he ends up turning everyone into monsters. Or like when a giant head forces Earth to participate in an interplanetary "The Voice".
Or as when parasites that implant memories in the brain get into the house. Or like the time Rick turned into a pickle. Yeah, a pickle!
This is too much. At this point any excuse is a good one to have an adventure or say a catchy phrase. But sometimes it's not all fun and scatological humor.
There are also philosophical and moral dilemmas. Like slavery at the subatomic level, alien gender issues and medical ethics. And sometimes they copy things from movies.
They mix Freddy Krueger with "Inception". They visit a Jurassic Disease Park. And they visit an apocalyptic "Mad Max" style world.
But it's not all fun and games in family life either. Morty's parents aren't having a good time. And, frankly, Rick is no help at all.
He even leads them to express their feelings as monsters. And finally they get divorced. You're a grand old flag Oh great, you got the kid singing.
I hope you're happy now! I'm not happy. And I haven't been happy for a long time.
I want a divorce! But they work things out in the end. And even if Rick doesn't like it, the Sanchez-Smith family is still together to start the next season.
This was the summary of Rick and Morty's adventures until the third season. If you want subscribe, share the video, retweet it, instagram it, Do what you want. See you next week!
XOXO BYE BYE Good night. Summing It Up by Don Jorge Pinarello Scripted and Edited by Don Jorge Pinarello And now, a scene from the adults-only pilot.