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Rick And Morty

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By/Aug. 13, 2020 10:28 am EST

Ah, Jerry Smith. On the hit Adult Swim animated series Rick and Morty, there may be no more disrespected human being on the planet. While his son Morty (voiced by Justin Roiland) goes on insane intergalactic and interdimensional adventures with Jerry's father-in-law, the alcoholic super-genius Rick Sanchez (also Roiland), Jerry (Chris Parnell) always seems to end up getting the short end of every stick he comes across. He's often treated as an afterthought at best by Morty and his daughter Summer (Spencer Grammer), and he's belittled and demeaned by his wife Beth (Sarah Chalke). Heck, even the wind whispers tidings of his loser-dom into his ear, and Jerry is too much of a loser to argue.

As for Rick, it's obvious that Jerry is the living, breathing equivalent of a splinter stuck under his thumbnail. He's incapable of uttering Jerry's name without it positively dripping with contempt, he's prone to spontaneously excoriating the poor guy in language that Jerry can probably just barely understand, and in one of their rare adventures together, we got an idea as to why.

Having restarted time, Rick, Morty and Summer are in a quantum-uncertain state of existence. An argument leads to the creation of two alternate timelines, which need to be stitched back together fast if they are to escape quantum collapse.

While Rick and Morty has mostly rejected a serialised format in favour of one-off episodes, one of our favourite Rick and Morty theories could have ramifications for season 5. One Redditor posits. Rick, a sociopathic scientist drags his unintelligent grandson, Morty, on insanely dangerous adventures across the universe.

For all of Beth's flaws (and she is very, very flawed), she's still the apple of Rick's eye. As the daughter of the smartest man in the universe, it stands to reason that Beth had potential beyond becoming a simple horse surgeon. On the Rick and Morty season 3 episode 'The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy,' during a time when Beth and Jerry are broken up, Jerry tells Rick that the pair 'had some good times when [they] were younger,' to which Rick replies, 'That's how teenage pregnancy happens, my friend.' Reading between the lines, it's quite clear that Rick blames Jerry for Beth's failure to pursue an exceptional life due to that unplanned pregnancy — but what if there's more to the story?

One intrepid Redditor believes that there is, and they cited evidence that's been right in front of our faces for the series' entire run.

Rick and morty wiki

Rick's lab might offer a clue as to why he hates Jerry so much

Morty

This evidence is a plain cardboard box labeled 'time travel stuff,' which can be seen collecting dust on a shelf in Rick's lab as long ago as Rick and Morty's pilot episode. Now, for all of the wacky and weird plot devices Rick and Morty has employed over the years, the show's co-creators Dan Harmon and Justin Roiland have never been shy about their reluctance to introduce time travel into the show's narrative. Roiland has called that particular device 'a real shark-jumper,' and he's also stated that the one episode that did properly deal with time travel — season 4's 'Rattlestar Ricklactica' — was crafted specifically to reveal the glaring weaknesses of time travel as a plot element. (Pretty bold for a series that began as a foul-mouthed parody of Back to the Future, but we digress.)

The presence of a bunch of old, neglected time travel equipment taking up space in Rick's lab implies that he has dabbled in the activity in the past, and Redditor kibaginji thinks they know why. Citing the fact that Jerry has revealed (on the season 1 episode 'Ricksy Business') that he was abused as a child, our Redditor posits that this abuse was carried out by a time-traveling Rick. Why would Rick do such a thing? To soften Jerry and break his confidence — so that he would never screw up Beth's life (via Express UK).

According to the Redditor, Rick hates Jerry so much because he's tried everything he can to get him out of Beth's life so she can live up to her potential, but he's failed each and every time. Essentially, to Rick, Jerry represents huge failure.

'Beth marrying Jerry is Rick's greatest failure,' u/kibaginji wrote. 'We all know Rick hates time travel yet he keeps a box of time travel stuff in the garage where he will see it every day.. Because Rick failed when he went back in time to get Jerry out of Beth's life.' Eventually, though, 'Rick realizes that no matter what he does Jerry and Beth will wind up together.. He then decides if he can't be rid of Jerry he can at least make him a non-threat to his dominance over the family.'

This is exactly the approach that Rick takes during the season 2 finale 'The Wedding Squanchers' and the season 3 premiere 'The Rickshank Redemption,' in which Rick executes a ridiculously complicated plot that necessitates his own capture by the Galactic Federation, apparently for the sole purpose of manipulating Beth and Jerry into a divorce. Pretty hardcore, Rick — but at least no stupid time travel was required.

© Provided by GamesRadar Rick and Morty season 5

We may have only seen a glimpse of Rick and Morty season 5 so far but, take a look below the surface, and you'll soon find plenty to get schwifty about.

But bringing all that together would take, roughly, one game of Roy: A Life Well Lived. So, we've put together a little shortcut of a guide for what you should expect from season 5. By hopping into infinite dimensions and even snagging a couple of exclusive interviews, we're here to bring you the complete picture of Rick and Morty season 5 so far: when we should expect it, why it won't take as long this time, and even a very brief taste of what story shockers are in store for the Adult Swim series.

So, get ready to start wub-a-lub-a-dubbing: here's everything you need to know about Rick and Morty season 5.

No Rick and Morty season 5 release date (yet) – but all signs point to a much shorter wait for a return

No Rick and Morty season 5 release date yet – but expect the series to arrive far, far sooner than the two-year-plus gap between the end of season 3 (October 2017) and the start of season 4 in November 2019.

Rick And Morty Season 5

That's mostly thanks to Adult Swim ordering 70 episodes of Rick and Morty back in 2018. Season 4 made up 10 of that batch, meaning 60 more episodes (likely six more seasons) are in the pipeline.

Importantly, that means there's less of a wait in-between new seasons. Where Roiland and Harmon were once twiddling their thumbs waiting for the show to be picked up again, work is well under way on a fifth season.

Roiland confirmed in an interview with Slash Film that season 5 is 'mostly in the can' though '[the animation team] are still gonna be reworking when the animatics come back, so that can extend the process.'

In a promising update, Dan Harmon said (via SyFy Wire). 'We're more on schedule than we've ever been. It kind of makes you have to focus on the whole process when you don't have this office environment anymore.'

Bizarrely, Harmon has even confirmed that work has begun on season seven of all things, indicating that things are all smooth sailing from hereon out.

Spencer Grammer (Summer) even told the Talking Simpsons podcast that working-from-home is always an option for the show.

'We'll continue to have pickups, we always do that for the show… I have a great closet, fully ready for an impromptu recording,' Grammer said.

Rick and morty season 4 episode 6

Rick's lab might offer a clue as to why he hates Jerry so much

This evidence is a plain cardboard box labeled 'time travel stuff,' which can be seen collecting dust on a shelf in Rick's lab as long ago as Rick and Morty's pilot episode. Now, for all of the wacky and weird plot devices Rick and Morty has employed over the years, the show's co-creators Dan Harmon and Justin Roiland have never been shy about their reluctance to introduce time travel into the show's narrative. Roiland has called that particular device 'a real shark-jumper,' and he's also stated that the one episode that did properly deal with time travel — season 4's 'Rattlestar Ricklactica' — was crafted specifically to reveal the glaring weaknesses of time travel as a plot element. (Pretty bold for a series that began as a foul-mouthed parody of Back to the Future, but we digress.)

The presence of a bunch of old, neglected time travel equipment taking up space in Rick's lab implies that he has dabbled in the activity in the past, and Redditor kibaginji thinks they know why. Citing the fact that Jerry has revealed (on the season 1 episode 'Ricksy Business') that he was abused as a child, our Redditor posits that this abuse was carried out by a time-traveling Rick. Why would Rick do such a thing? To soften Jerry and break his confidence — so that he would never screw up Beth's life (via Express UK).

According to the Redditor, Rick hates Jerry so much because he's tried everything he can to get him out of Beth's life so she can live up to her potential, but he's failed each and every time. Essentially, to Rick, Jerry represents huge failure.

'Beth marrying Jerry is Rick's greatest failure,' u/kibaginji wrote. 'We all know Rick hates time travel yet he keeps a box of time travel stuff in the garage where he will see it every day.. Because Rick failed when he went back in time to get Jerry out of Beth's life.' Eventually, though, 'Rick realizes that no matter what he does Jerry and Beth will wind up together.. He then decides if he can't be rid of Jerry he can at least make him a non-threat to his dominance over the family.'

This is exactly the approach that Rick takes during the season 2 finale 'The Wedding Squanchers' and the season 3 premiere 'The Rickshank Redemption,' in which Rick executes a ridiculously complicated plot that necessitates his own capture by the Galactic Federation, apparently for the sole purpose of manipulating Beth and Jerry into a divorce. Pretty hardcore, Rick — but at least no stupid time travel was required.

© Provided by GamesRadar Rick and Morty season 5

We may have only seen a glimpse of Rick and Morty season 5 so far but, take a look below the surface, and you'll soon find plenty to get schwifty about.

But bringing all that together would take, roughly, one game of Roy: A Life Well Lived. So, we've put together a little shortcut of a guide for what you should expect from season 5. By hopping into infinite dimensions and even snagging a couple of exclusive interviews, we're here to bring you the complete picture of Rick and Morty season 5 so far: when we should expect it, why it won't take as long this time, and even a very brief taste of what story shockers are in store for the Adult Swim series.

So, get ready to start wub-a-lub-a-dubbing: here's everything you need to know about Rick and Morty season 5.

No Rick and Morty season 5 release date (yet) – but all signs point to a much shorter wait for a return

No Rick and Morty season 5 release date yet – but expect the series to arrive far, far sooner than the two-year-plus gap between the end of season 3 (October 2017) and the start of season 4 in November 2019.

Rick And Morty Season 5

That's mostly thanks to Adult Swim ordering 70 episodes of Rick and Morty back in 2018. Season 4 made up 10 of that batch, meaning 60 more episodes (likely six more seasons) are in the pipeline.

Importantly, that means there's less of a wait in-between new seasons. Where Roiland and Harmon were once twiddling their thumbs waiting for the show to be picked up again, work is well under way on a fifth season.

Roiland confirmed in an interview with Slash Film that season 5 is 'mostly in the can' though '[the animation team] are still gonna be reworking when the animatics come back, so that can extend the process.'

In a promising update, Dan Harmon said (via SyFy Wire). 'We're more on schedule than we've ever been. It kind of makes you have to focus on the whole process when you don't have this office environment anymore.'

Bizarrely, Harmon has even confirmed that work has begun on season seven of all things, indicating that things are all smooth sailing from hereon out.

Spencer Grammer (Summer) even told the Talking Simpsons podcast that working-from-home is always an option for the show.

'We'll continue to have pickups, we always do that for the show… I have a great closet, fully ready for an impromptu recording,' Grammer said.

Chris Parnell (Jerry) even mentioned to us that he thinks there's 'going to be less of a wait' for season 5 and beyond. Parnell added: 'One lucky thing is our show is animated in Canada, primarily, so they don't have some of the same restrictions we might if our show was animated in the Asian countries where things have been a little more locked down.'

The throughline for all of these quotes from the cast and creative team is Rick and Morty season 5 is almost certainly going to coming quicker than anticipated. Security guard required in uae. Whether that's late 2020 (unlikely now, but you never know) or in early-to-mid 2021 remains to be seen, but we'll update you as soon as we hear more.

Watch the first scene from Rick and Morty season 5 now

As early first looks go, they don't get much better than this. Footage from Rick and Morty season 5 has emerged, featuring shots at Marvel, DC, and even the introduction of Rick's new nemesis.

The Rick and Morty season 5 'First Look' begins with Morty carrying a badly wounded Rick to safety on his ship – but not before the mad scientist catches a glimpse of a parallel universe where he and his grandson are Blade-style vampire hunters. Later, Morty discovers that Jessica does, in fact, like him and invites him round for a date. One small problem: he's hurtling towards the Earth and is mid-crash landing when Jessica calls.


Gallery: 16 cancelled TV shows that were brought back from the dead (GamesRadar)

While the pair survive the crash, it's simply a case of going out of the frying pan or into the fire – or should that be ocean? That's because Rick is confronted by his supposed nemesis, the Aquaman rip-off, Mr. Nimbus.

While it's as-yet-unfinished, it's clear that the trademark pop-culture riffing and irreverent humour still remains for season 5.

Rick and Morty season 5 cast: the same as it ever was

As far as we know, the Rick and Morty season 5 cast will remain exactly the same as those that have come before it – at least in terms of the main players.

Justin Roiland is (obviously) back as both Rick and Morty. Sarah Chalke will continue voicing Beth and Clone Beth while, similarly, Chris Parnell (Jerry) and Spencer Grammer (Summer) are also back.

Expect to see some famous faces crop up, too. Season 4 saw the likes of Thor: Love and Thunder director Taika Waititi and Jurassic World: Dominion returnee Sam Neill drop on by for bit-part roles. No guest stars have been confirmed for season 5 as of writing though.

Rick and Morty season 5 plot: new episode script and the cast reveal what they want to happen next

Rick and Morty season 4 ended with the reveal that Beth may not be who she thought she was. We think? It's confusing, but Rick and Morty's clone saga will definitely continue on in season 5 as confirmed by Harmon. He said 'We're having fun looking at more options with space Beth.'

Alongside that, it's likely the commotion surrounding the return of Birdperson, now renamed Phoenixperson and lying dormant in Rick's garage, will also persist.

The first glimpse of anything to do with upcoming Rick and Morty season 5 episodes arrived in the form of a few obscured pictures on Twitter.

Watch Season 4 Rick And Morty Free

Posted by show writer Jeff Loveness (who's now working on Ant-Man 3), the series of scripts showed that Loveness will be working on '501,' potentially the season 5 premiere. Good luck trying to decipher the redacted portion, though. At least that's something to do in the meantime.

Today was my last day at Rick and Morty. I wrote 5 episodes and worked with amazing people. I hope you like it. pic.twitter.com/WjrMRP7i7jSeptember 21, 2019

Beyond that, there's nothing official out there when it comes to the plot of the new season. The show's meta-commentary on not wanting to return to old favourites, such as 'Interdimensional Cable', could hint that we're in for something entirely new, however.

Spencer Grammer, who plays Summer on the show, revealed to us in an interview she's been pitching the creative team some ideas for future episodes: 'When we had our season premiere party for the first cycle of season 4 I'm like ‘Can we have a Summer episode where she runs a cult? What about a Summer episode where she becomes Rick?''

On what they want to see from their characters in future, Grammer and Parnell shared their hopes for Summer and Jerry respectively.

Grammer said, 'I do always want to see Summer become more evil and sociopathic and more narcissistic for sure. I think that makes her really, really interesting. I also really like for Rick to give her more responsibility in the context of him being able to pull things over in the family.'

Parnell, meanwhile, wants Jerry to be, well, less Jerry: 'There's a lot of room to explore Jerry's competence, because we haven't seen a lot of that. So, I think it'd be fun to see Jerry really excelling and succeeding and doing well, even if it's a particular dimension that's obviously an abnormality compared to the one we live in. That'd be fun.'

Rick and Morty season 5 theories: will Evil Morty return?

While Rick and Morty has mostly rejected a serialised format in favour of one-off episodes, one of our favourite Rick and Morty theories could have ramifications for season 5.

Rick And Morty Adult Swim

One Redditor posits an idea that could certainly rear its ugly, eyepatched head in future. Namely, the 'Vat of Acid' episode isn't our Morty from the C-137 dimension. No – the Morty that Rick taught a valuable lesson (resulting in the deaths of not only thousands of parallel universe Mortys but also his soulmate) might actually become the Evil Morty we love to hate. It'd certainly make for a compelling origin story, if nothing else, and would only add to the high-concept drama and obsession with sci-fi tropes such as the multiverse that the show loves to spoof.





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